Rodrick Heffley: Difference between revisions
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#REDIRECT [[List of Diary of a Wimpy Kid characters#Rodrick Heffley]] |
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{{Infobox musical artist |
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| name = Rodrick Heffley |
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| image = Devon Bostick, 2024.png |
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| caption = Heffley in 2016. |
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| background = solo_singer |
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| birth_name = Rodrick Bostick Heffley |
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| alias = Human Metronome |
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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1977|6|24}} |
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| birth_place = [[Kent, Ohio]], U.S. |
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| death_date = |
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| instrument = {{hlist|Drums|percussion}}<!--- If you think an instrument should be listed or removed, a discussion to reach consensus is needed first per: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Infobox_musical_artist#instrument---> |
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| genre = {{flatlist| |
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* [[Country music|Country]] |
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* [[country rock]] |
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* [[roots rock]] |
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* [[alternative rock]] |
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* [[Southern rock]] |
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* [[neotraditional country]] |
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}} |
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| occupation = {{flat list| |
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* [[Musician]] |
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* [[singer]] |
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* [[songwriter]]}} |
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| years_active = 1992–present |
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| label = [[Roadrunner Records|Roadrunner]], [[Epic Records|Epic]], Rev-Ola, [[Rounder Records|Rounder]] |
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| past_member_of = [[Devo]] |
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}} |
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'''Rodrick Bostick Heffley''' is an American [[Country music|country]] and [[Rock music|rock]] drummer best known for being the first and most prominent drummer of the [[country rock]] band [[Devo]] (originally known as Löded Diper). Heffley's drumming was recorded on Devo's first eleven studio albums and he appeared in several home video releases and music videos. |
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==Early life== |
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Rodrick Bostick Heffley was born in 1976, in [[Kent, Ohio]], and graduated from Firestone High School in 1994. His mother, [[Susan Heffley]], is a homemaker, and his father, Frank Heffley, was a retired film fight coordinator. His younger brother is author [[Greg Heffley]], best known for creating the child-oriented website ''[[Poptropica]]''. |
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His maternal grandparents are English immigrants, and his father is of part Norwegian descent. Heffley had been playing percussion since junior high school. |
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{{Redirect category shell| |
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{{R to section}} |
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==Music career== |
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===Löded Diper=== |
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In 1994, Heffley, along with longtime friends [[Mark Mothersbaugh]] and [[Bill Walters|Bill Walter]], formed the garage band Löded Diper (pronounced "Loaded Diaper") and the band would later expand to include [[Bernie Leadon]] and [[Randy Meisner]]. The group covered songs by various [[Rock music|rock]] and [[Country music|country]] artists, including [[Aerosmith]], [[Bon Jovi]], [[Merle Haggard]], and [[George Strait]]. |
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Löded Diper's first public show was on March 14, 1995 at a local talent show. The band's setlist consisted of an original song, "Exploded Diper", and a cover of [[J. D. Souther]]'s "[[How Long (J. D. Souther song)|How Long]]". Mothersbaugh and Heffley had requested that Löded Diper's performance be taped, so that it be sent to a [[record label]] to help the band get noticed. The gig did not go as planned, as the video was rendered useless after it was found that Heffley's mother [[Susan Heffley|Susan]] (who was taping the video) had talked the whole time and everything she said was heard on the tape, infuriating both Mothersbaugh and Heffley. In addition, when the rest of the band came over to watch the talent show on TV for fragments of their performance, they saw Susan dancing on the stage, with the camera zoomed right in on her, which meant that the band did not have anything to send to record label companies. However, after appearing on ''[[America's Funniest Home Videos]]'', the video went viral due to Susan dancing in it. As a result of the video's popularity, Löded Diper gained a new level of visibility and became colloquially known as "The band from the 'Dancing Mom' video." After Löded Diper returned to perform in the Student Governance Center at the 1995 Creative Arts Festival, the band recorded several demos and appeared in several home movies. |
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In May 1996, Löded Diper released their debut album ''[[Loded Diper|Small Town Band]]''. "Witchy Woman", which Heffley co-wrote with Leadon and sang lead vocals on, was the album's first and only single. The following year, Bill Walter allegedly attempted to fire Heffley and replace him with Mothersbaugh's brother [[Jim Mothersbaugh|Jim]] as the band's drummer, despite Mothersbaugh and Heffley being the ones that started the band. During a performance in [[East Troy]], [[Wisconsin]], Heffley kicked Walter out of the band in retaliation. The following year, Löded Diper were faced with a lawsuit from a trading card company that owned a similarly named card called Loaded Diaper. Not wanting to risk going into an expensive legal fight, the band was, per Mothersbaugh's insistence, renamed "Devo and the Emergencies" (later shortened to Devo). The renamed band released their sophomore studio album, ''[[Long Hard Road (Jerrod Niemann album)|Long Hard Road]]'', in October 1999. |
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In 2001, Devo signed with [[Sony Music Nashville]]. The band wanted [[Bobby Braddock]] as their producer, as the band members liked a number of country songs written by Braddock, including songs by [[George Jones]], [[Johnny Paycheck]] and [[Mark Chesnutt]]. Upon the release of their major label debut album, ''[[The Wanting (Cody Jinks album)|The Wanting]]'', the group met with near instantaneous success, due largely to the strength of their hit singles, "[[Take It Easy]]", "[[How Long (J. D. Souther song)|How Long]]" and "[[Peaceful Easy Feeling]]", all of which highlighted the precision of Heffley's drumming. Their follow-up, ''[[Desperado (Eagles album)|Desperado]]'', was another strong neotraditional country venture. Heffley had a prominent role on the album, but it was met by surprisingly lukewarm reviews and lackluster sales. As a result, the band attempted to distance itself from the neotraditional country label for their fifth album ''[[On the Border]]''. In doing so, Mothersbaugh fired Braddock as Devo's producer and replaced him with [[Nickelback]] producer [[Joey Moi]]. Moi wanted a harder-edged guitarist for the song "Good Day in Hell" and the band remembered Bernie Leadon's childhood friend [[Thomas Rhett]] (the son of [[Rhett Akins]]), who was invited to join the group as its fifth member the next day. Rhett also appeared on one other song on the album, the guitar-heavy top 20 hit "[[Someday (Nickelback song)|Someday]]". ''On the Border'' also produced Devo's first consecutive number one single on the country charts, "[[Best of My Love (Eagles song)|Best of My Love]]", which Heffley co-wrote and sang lead vocals on. This number one streak has continued to the present day and is unmatched. |
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[[File:Devon Bostick 2008.jpg|left|thumb|Heffley in September 2008]] |
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After [[Bernie Leadon]] quit the band shortly after New Year's Day 2005, he was replaced by guitarist [[Ryan Peake]] (also of [[Nickelback]]). This lineup, which became the most popular incarnation of Devo and lasted from 2005 until Heffley's departure in January 2016, would produce six studio albums: ''[[All the Right Reasons]]'', ''[[Long Road Out of Eden]]'', ''[[The Long Run (album)|The Long Run]]'', ''[[One of These Nights]]'', ''[[No Fixed Address (album)|No Fixed Address]]'', and ''[[Tangled Up (Thomas Rhett album)|Tangled Up]]''. Heffley also played drums on the song "Go Monkey Go!" which Devo recorded in late 2015 for the [[The Powerpuff Girls (2016 TV series)|2016 reboot]] of ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'', his last studio appearance with the band. |
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He performed his last live show as Devo's drummer on November 4, 2015, at the 2015 [[49th Annual Country Music Association Awards]]. Devo performed with [[Boney M.]] singer [[Liz Mitchell]] at the event, playing their single "[[Joy (Bastille song)|Joy]]" (which featured backing vocals from Mitchell) alongside the Boney M. song "[[Daddy Cool (Boney M. song)|Daddy Cool]]". |
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===Departure from Devo=== |
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{{See also|Bro-country#Criticism}} |
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Beginning with 2012's ''One of These Nights'', Devo helped to pioneer a style of country music known as "[[bro-country]]", which incorporates production elements from [[Rock music|rock]], [[hip hop music|hip hop]], [[Contemporary R&B|R&B]], [[disco]], and [[new wave music]], and tends to cover subject matter such as partying, drinking, driving trucks and romantic attraction. The genre drew criticism from other country singers, including Heffley, who in particular felt creatively disillusioned and increasingly frustrated by the band's direction away from his preferred styles of country rock and alternative rock. During this time, Heffley's acoustic drums were phased out and recordings would feature the artificial sound of programmed drum patterns on sequencers, electronic drum synthesizers, percussion samples, and drum machines; much of the music on their next album ''[[No Fixed Address (album)|No Fixed Address]]'' was created by electronic means, while ''[[Tangled Up (Thomas Rhett album)|Tangled Up]]'' was made almost entirely by Mothersbaugh and Meisner using the [[Fairlight CMI]] digital sampling synthesizer. Mothersbaugh and his brother [[Jim Mothersbaugh|Jim]], in a support role, would help Randy Meisner and producer Joey Moi program sequencers and be a [[Roland Corporation]] liaison, providing Devo access to state-of-the-art equipment. By the time of 2015's Suits and Boots Tour in support of ''Tangled Up'', Heffley played electronic drum pads to a click track, then switched to acoustic drums for the older songs in the second half of the set. |
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Heffley officially quit Devo on January 18, 2016; his stance was that he left because of his lack of artistic freedom and the band's increasing dissimilarity to country rock. From the sketchy information given by Mothersbaugh and Meisner it can be interpreted as bias because they did not feel Heffley would be angered by bro-country or the increasing use of electronic drums. Although Randy Meisner has said that he begged Heffley not to leave, an apocryphal account states that he left in disgust after an argument with Meisner, where the latter threatened to replace him with the [[Roland TR-808]] drum machine on the next album. Other band members each have their own thoughts behind Heffley's ultimate departure from the band. [[Ryan Peake]] felt that Heffley betrayed Devo, while Mothersbaugh claimed Heffley gave up on Devo. [[Thomas Rhett]], in an interview with [[WGNA-FM]], said Heffley very much wanted to stay in Devo and that neither Mothersbaugh nor Meisner made an attempt to bring Heffley back into the band to complete ''[[Dig Your Roots]]''. Devo's former guitarist [[Bernie Leadon]], however, seemed to agree with Heffley that he was driven out of Devo by the band's music being too hip-hop, pop and R&B to be country music. |
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Heffley's decision to quit the band was praised by many reporters and [[neotraditional country]] artists (including Leadon) who had criticized Devo's music for its lack of similarity to country music's "roots", the same reason that led Heffley to quit the band. In March 2016, Devo reformed with new drummer [[Joe Besser|Joe "Mama" Besser]], formerly of [[A Perfect Circle]], to replace Heffley. |
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===Post-Devo=== |
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In an interview with [[Reuters]] in June 2016, Heffley affirmed that he remains friends with fellow former Devo members [[Bill Walters|Bill Walter]] and [[Bernie Leadon]]. However, as far as the band was concerned, Heffley stated that he was "completely out of the loop" and that returning was "not something [he]'d be attracted to". In August that year, Heffley would team up with Leadon once again, touring with his backing band The Tone Deaf Hippies. Heffley and Leadon also produced fellow country singer/songwriter [[Tyler Childers]]' 2017 album ''[[Purgatory (Tyler Childers album)|Purgatory]]'' after previously being introduced to Childers by Leadon. The duo would work with Childers again as producers on his next album, 2019's ''[[Country Squire]]''. |
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==Personal life== |
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Heffley and his wife Christine Myers married in 2004, and the young couple had a son, Dana Scott Heffley in November 2004. |
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Heffley's father Frank Heffley died of cancer in October 2012. Heffley later revealed that his Devo bandmates had paid the expenses for the funeral. |
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===Political issues=== |
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A lifelong supporter of the [[Libertarian Party (United States)|Libertarian Party]], Heffley has also been a generous donor to political campaigns of Libertarians. Several tracks on the 2007 Devo album ''[[Long Road Out of Eden]]'' (including the title track, which Heffley co-wrote) are sharply critical of the [[Iraq War]] and other policies of the Bush administration. |
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==Discography== |
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{{Main|Devo discography}} |
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'''with Devo''' |
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*''[[Loded Diper|Small Town Band]]'' (1996) |
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*''[[Long Hard Road (Jerrod Niemann album)|Long Hard Road]]'' (1999) |
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*''[[The Wanting (Cody Jinks album)|The Wanting]]'' (2002) |
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*''[[Desperado (Eagles album)|Desperado]]'' (2003) |
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*''[[On the Border]]'' (2004) |
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*''[[All the Right Reasons]]'' (2005) |
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*''[[Long Road Out of Eden]]'' (2007) |
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*''[[The Long Run (album)|The Long Run]]'' (2009) |
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*''[[One of These Nights]]'' (2012) |
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*''[[No Fixed Address (album)|No Fixed Address]]'' (2014) |
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*''[[Tangled Up (Thomas Rhett album)|Tangled Up]]'' (2015) |
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{{S-start}} |
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{{Succession box| |
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| before=''Original'' |
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| title=[[Devo]] drummer |
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| years=1994–2016 |
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| after=[[Joe Besser|Joe "Mama" Besser]] |
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}} |
}} |
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{{S-end}} |
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{{Devo Discography}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:1977 births]] |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:21st-century drummers]] |
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[[Category:Devo members]] |
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[[Category:American country drummers]] |
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[[Category:American country singer-songwriters]] |
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[[Category:American male drummers]] |
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[[Category:American male singer-songwriters]] |
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[[Category:American drummers]] |
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[[Category:American rock drummers]] |
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[[Category:Musicians from Ohio]] |
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[[Category:Singers from Ohio]] |
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[[Category:Songwriters from Ohio]] |
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[[Category:21st-century American drummers]] |
Revision as of 03:29, 15 December 2024
Rodrick Heffley | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Rodrick Bostick Heffley |
Also known as | Human Metronome |
Born | Kent, Ohio, U.S. | June 24, 1977
Genres | |
Occupations | |
Instruments |
|
Years active | 1992–present |
Labels | Roadrunner, Epic, Rev-Ola, Rounder |
Formerly of | Devo |
Rodrick Bostick Heffley is an American country and rock drummer best known for being the first and most prominent drummer of the country rock band Devo (originally known as Löded Diper). Heffley's drumming was recorded on Devo's first eleven studio albums and he appeared in several home video releases and music videos.
Early life
Rodrick Bostick Heffley was born in 1976, in Kent, Ohio, and graduated from Firestone High School in 1994. His mother, Susan Heffley, is a homemaker, and his father, Frank Heffley, was a retired film fight coordinator. His younger brother is author Greg Heffley, best known for creating the child-oriented website Poptropica.
His maternal grandparents are English immigrants, and his father is of part Norwegian descent. Heffley had been playing percussion since junior high school.
Music career
Löded Diper
In 1994, Heffley, along with longtime friends Mark Mothersbaugh and Bill Walter, formed the garage band Löded Diper (pronounced "Loaded Diaper") and the band would later expand to include Bernie Leadon and Randy Meisner. The group covered songs by various rock and country artists, including Aerosmith, Bon Jovi, Merle Haggard, and George Strait.
Löded Diper's first public show was on March 14, 1995 at a local talent show. The band's setlist consisted of an original song, "Exploded Diper", and a cover of J. D. Souther's "How Long". Mothersbaugh and Heffley had requested that Löded Diper's performance be taped, so that it be sent to a record label to help the band get noticed. The gig did not go as planned, as the video was rendered useless after it was found that Heffley's mother Susan (who was taping the video) had talked the whole time and everything she said was heard on the tape, infuriating both Mothersbaugh and Heffley. In addition, when the rest of the band came over to watch the talent show on TV for fragments of their performance, they saw Susan dancing on the stage, with the camera zoomed right in on her, which meant that the band did not have anything to send to record label companies. However, after appearing on America's Funniest Home Videos, the video went viral due to Susan dancing in it. As a result of the video's popularity, Löded Diper gained a new level of visibility and became colloquially known as "The band from the 'Dancing Mom' video." After Löded Diper returned to perform in the Student Governance Center at the 1995 Creative Arts Festival, the band recorded several demos and appeared in several home movies.
In May 1996, Löded Diper released their debut album Small Town Band. "Witchy Woman", which Heffley co-wrote with Leadon and sang lead vocals on, was the album's first and only single. The following year, Bill Walter allegedly attempted to fire Heffley and replace him with Mothersbaugh's brother Jim as the band's drummer, despite Mothersbaugh and Heffley being the ones that started the band. During a performance in East Troy, Wisconsin, Heffley kicked Walter out of the band in retaliation. The following year, Löded Diper were faced with a lawsuit from a trading card company that owned a similarly named card called Loaded Diaper. Not wanting to risk going into an expensive legal fight, the band was, per Mothersbaugh's insistence, renamed "Devo and the Emergencies" (later shortened to Devo). The renamed band released their sophomore studio album, Long Hard Road, in October 1999.
In 2001, Devo signed with Sony Music Nashville. The band wanted Bobby Braddock as their producer, as the band members liked a number of country songs written by Braddock, including songs by George Jones, Johnny Paycheck and Mark Chesnutt. Upon the release of their major label debut album, The Wanting, the group met with near instantaneous success, due largely to the strength of their hit singles, "Take It Easy", "How Long" and "Peaceful Easy Feeling", all of which highlighted the precision of Heffley's drumming. Their follow-up, Desperado, was another strong neotraditional country venture. Heffley had a prominent role on the album, but it was met by surprisingly lukewarm reviews and lackluster sales. As a result, the band attempted to distance itself from the neotraditional country label for their fifth album On the Border. In doing so, Mothersbaugh fired Braddock as Devo's producer and replaced him with Nickelback producer Joey Moi. Moi wanted a harder-edged guitarist for the song "Good Day in Hell" and the band remembered Bernie Leadon's childhood friend Thomas Rhett (the son of Rhett Akins), who was invited to join the group as its fifth member the next day. Rhett also appeared on one other song on the album, the guitar-heavy top 20 hit "Someday". On the Border also produced Devo's first consecutive number one single on the country charts, "Best of My Love", which Heffley co-wrote and sang lead vocals on. This number one streak has continued to the present day and is unmatched.
After Bernie Leadon quit the band shortly after New Year's Day 2005, he was replaced by guitarist Ryan Peake (also of Nickelback). This lineup, which became the most popular incarnation of Devo and lasted from 2005 until Heffley's departure in January 2016, would produce six studio albums: All the Right Reasons, Long Road Out of Eden, The Long Run, One of These Nights, No Fixed Address, and Tangled Up. Heffley also played drums on the song "Go Monkey Go!" which Devo recorded in late 2015 for the 2016 reboot of The Powerpuff Girls, his last studio appearance with the band.
He performed his last live show as Devo's drummer on November 4, 2015, at the 2015 49th Annual Country Music Association Awards. Devo performed with Boney M. singer Liz Mitchell at the event, playing their single "Joy" (which featured backing vocals from Mitchell) alongside the Boney M. song "Daddy Cool".
Departure from Devo
Beginning with 2012's One of These Nights, Devo helped to pioneer a style of country music known as "bro-country", which incorporates production elements from rock, hip hop, R&B, disco, and new wave music, and tends to cover subject matter such as partying, drinking, driving trucks and romantic attraction. The genre drew criticism from other country singers, including Heffley, who in particular felt creatively disillusioned and increasingly frustrated by the band's direction away from his preferred styles of country rock and alternative rock. During this time, Heffley's acoustic drums were phased out and recordings would feature the artificial sound of programmed drum patterns on sequencers, electronic drum synthesizers, percussion samples, and drum machines; much of the music on their next album No Fixed Address was created by electronic means, while Tangled Up was made almost entirely by Mothersbaugh and Meisner using the Fairlight CMI digital sampling synthesizer. Mothersbaugh and his brother Jim, in a support role, would help Randy Meisner and producer Joey Moi program sequencers and be a Roland Corporation liaison, providing Devo access to state-of-the-art equipment. By the time of 2015's Suits and Boots Tour in support of Tangled Up, Heffley played electronic drum pads to a click track, then switched to acoustic drums for the older songs in the second half of the set.
Heffley officially quit Devo on January 18, 2016; his stance was that he left because of his lack of artistic freedom and the band's increasing dissimilarity to country rock. From the sketchy information given by Mothersbaugh and Meisner it can be interpreted as bias because they did not feel Heffley would be angered by bro-country or the increasing use of electronic drums. Although Randy Meisner has said that he begged Heffley not to leave, an apocryphal account states that he left in disgust after an argument with Meisner, where the latter threatened to replace him with the Roland TR-808 drum machine on the next album. Other band members each have their own thoughts behind Heffley's ultimate departure from the band. Ryan Peake felt that Heffley betrayed Devo, while Mothersbaugh claimed Heffley gave up on Devo. Thomas Rhett, in an interview with WGNA-FM, said Heffley very much wanted to stay in Devo and that neither Mothersbaugh nor Meisner made an attempt to bring Heffley back into the band to complete Dig Your Roots. Devo's former guitarist Bernie Leadon, however, seemed to agree with Heffley that he was driven out of Devo by the band's music being too hip-hop, pop and R&B to be country music.
Heffley's decision to quit the band was praised by many reporters and neotraditional country artists (including Leadon) who had criticized Devo's music for its lack of similarity to country music's "roots", the same reason that led Heffley to quit the band. In March 2016, Devo reformed with new drummer Joe "Mama" Besser, formerly of A Perfect Circle, to replace Heffley.
Post-Devo
In an interview with Reuters in June 2016, Heffley affirmed that he remains friends with fellow former Devo members Bill Walter and Bernie Leadon. However, as far as the band was concerned, Heffley stated that he was "completely out of the loop" and that returning was "not something [he]'d be attracted to". In August that year, Heffley would team up with Leadon once again, touring with his backing band The Tone Deaf Hippies. Heffley and Leadon also produced fellow country singer/songwriter Tyler Childers' 2017 album Purgatory after previously being introduced to Childers by Leadon. The duo would work with Childers again as producers on his next album, 2019's Country Squire.
Personal life
Heffley and his wife Christine Myers married in 2004, and the young couple had a son, Dana Scott Heffley in November 2004.
Heffley's father Frank Heffley died of cancer in October 2012. Heffley later revealed that his Devo bandmates had paid the expenses for the funeral.
Political issues
A lifelong supporter of the Libertarian Party, Heffley has also been a generous donor to political campaigns of Libertarians. Several tracks on the 2007 Devo album Long Road Out of Eden (including the title track, which Heffley co-wrote) are sharply critical of the Iraq War and other policies of the Bush administration.
Discography
with Devo
- Small Town Band (1996)
- Long Hard Road (1999)
- The Wanting (2002)
- Desperado (2003)
- On the Border (2004)
- All the Right Reasons (2005)
- Long Road Out of Eden (2007)
- The Long Run (2009)
- One of These Nights (2012)
- No Fixed Address (2014)
- Tangled Up (2015)