John Kiffmeyer Parents: Who is John Kiffmeyer’s father?

John Kiffmeyer known in music as Al Sobrante, is an American musician, best known as the former drummer for the punk rock band Green Day.

John Kiffmeyer Parents

John M Kiffmeyer. John M Kiffmeyer was born in their birthplace, New York, to Jacob James Kiffmeyer and Jean R Kiffmeyer.

John Kiffmeyer Biography

Kiffmeyer was born in California on July 11, 1969.

He is 54 years old.

He is 5 feet 6 inches tall

He is American

In 1990, he attended college at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California.

While Kiffmeyer was attending college, Green Day members Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt accepted drummer Tré Cool into the band, which Kiffmeyer “graciously accepted”.

He has a sister. John Kiffmeyer and his sister are selling the Richmond residence with bay views.

He now lives in San Francisco and is married to experimental filmmaker and San Francisco State University professor Greta Snider. He works as a Director of Photography, specializing in green screen and producing mainly commercial work.

He is reported to have children but they are unknown.

John Kiffmeyer net worth or net income is estimated to be between $1 Million – $5 Million dollars. He has made such amount of wealth from his primary career as a musician.

 His name of Al Sobrante is a reference to his hometown, El Sobrante. His work with Green Day resulted in about 961,000 albums sold, which are mostly from the compilation album 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours.

His first exposure in the punk scene was as the drummer of the band Isocracy. The group was popular in the East Bay, and mainstays at the famed club, 924 Gilman Street.

See more:  Checo Perez Children: Does Checo Perez have children?

Kiffmeyer is most well known for his time in Green Day; after Isocracy broke up, he joined Mike Dirnt and Billie Joe Armstrong to form Sweet Children, which was later renamed Green Day.

Because of his experience and knowledge of the underground community, Kiffmeyer was able to get the young band on its feet by placing calls to friends, among them prominent figure of the East Bay Larry Livermore.

The first few performances took place at Contra Costa College, where Kiffmeyer was a journalism student. On the strength of an early performance, Livermore vowed to release a Green Day record on his Lookout! Records.

The group’s first full-length effort, 39/Smooth, would feature a Kiffmeyer original, “I Was There”, which documented the band at that place in time. Being a fan of Ozzy Osbourne, it was he who inspired the mini-covers of some famous songs, such as “I Don’t Know” by Ozzy Osbourne and “Sweet Home Alabama” by Lynyrd Skynyrd during the bridge of “Disappearing Boy,” a practice that is still carried out today.

Kiffmeyer later joined the band The Ne’er Do Wells, leaving abruptly in 1994. Following a stint with punk band The Ritalins, he became manager of The Shruggs until their split. In 1998 he was the executive producer of The Great Lost Trouble Makers Album by The Troublemakers, a garage band from Sacramento, California.

On April 16, 2015, Kiffmeyer joined Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt on stage during a Green Day concert at The House of Blues Cleveland, Ohio where the trio performed as Sweet Children, playing songs that they had not performed since the 1990s including “Sweet Children”, “I Was There”, and “Dry Ice”.

See more:  Jerry Krause Children: Meet David Schiff And Stacy Cooper

He works as a Director of Photography, specializing in green screen and producing mainly commercial work.

Ghgossip.com

Categories: News
Source: thpttranhungdao.edu.vn/en/

Rate this post

Leave a Comment