Buy your Punk Rock Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
Detroit, MI | Change Location
Home > Concert Tickets > Rock Tickets > Punk Tickets > No Use for a Name Tickets  

No Use for a Name Tickets

No Use for a Name tickets are currently unavailable. Be the first to get email alerts and exclusive discounts for No Use for a Name tickets. Complete the form below and click 'Subscribe'.

First time subscribers! Get 10% off No Use for a Name tickets when you sign up for Insider Alerts.

Sign up with TicketsNow for Email Alerts of Hot events.
Name
Email
Mobile
Zip
TicketsNow Privacy Policy

You can also bookmark this page and check back often as our inventory is updated frequently.
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

No Use for a Name Biography

Hardcore punks No Use for a Name formed in Sunnyvale, CA, in 1987, originally comprising singer/guitarist Tony Sly, guitarist Chris Dodge, bassist Steve Papoutsis, and drummer Rory Koff. Making their recorded debut later that year with Turn It Around -- their contribution to a double 7 released by ~Maximum Rock'n'Roll magazine -- NUFAN next resurfaced in 1989 with the single Let 'Em Out, followed a year later by their full-length debut, Incognito. After 1991's Don't Miss the Train, the group signed with Fat Wreck Chords for 1993's The Daily Grind lineup changes regularly plagued No Use for a Name, and by the middle of the decade only Sly and Koff remained from the original roster. After 1994's Leche con Carne, the band kept a relatively low profile before resurfacing three years later with Making Friends, recorded with new guitarist Chris Shiflett and bassist Matt Riddle. Shortly after completing 1999's More Betterness, Shiflett exited NUFAN to join the Foo Fighters he was replaced by former Suicidal Tendencies guitarist Dave Nassie. The NRA Years followed in 2000, and the following tour was promoted with a live album a few months later. The band stepped back into the studio at the end of 2001 and reappeared the next year with Hard Rock Bottom. Sly issued a split acoustic album, aptly titled Acoustic, with Lagwagon's Joey Cape in 2004 before Keep Them Confused followed for NUFAN in 2005. The band's ninth studio release, The Feel Good Record of the Year, was recorded at the ~Blasting Room studio with producer Bill Stevenson and released in April 2008. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi