
Since it was never released as a CD single, "Fly" didn't technically top Billboard's Top 200, but it managed to spend six weeks at the top of the publication's Airplay charts in a run on the charts that lasted over a year. Atlantic decided to team Sugar Ray with David Kahne, a producer then riding high on the success of Sublime, for the group's second album, Floored.įloored turned out to be Sugar Ray's breakthrough, thanks to the lithe single "Fly." Featuring a guest role by dancehall toaster Super Cat and bouncing to an easy reggae groove, "Fly" became a smash hit. Released in the spring of 1995, Lemonade and Brownies showcased a punk-metal band with an affinity for funk and hip-hop, a combination that seemed ripe for success in the heady days of post-alternative rock, but the record failed to chart. Before the band released their first album, the threat of a lawsuit from Milton Bradley - the owners of the copyright to the original Shrinky Dinks toy - led to the band changing their name to Sugar Ray.Īdding turntablist DJ Homicide - aka Craig Bullock - to their lineup, the band recorded their debut album, Lemonade and Brownies. The clip got them the attention of Atlantic Records, which signed the group to its Lava subsidiary in 1994. The band began playing the Southern Californian corridor connecting Los Angeles to San Diego, financing their own promotional music video. One night in 1992, their mutual friend Mark McGrath jumped onstage to sing, and he soon became a regular member of the group. Rodney Sheppard played in a group of punk pranksters called Shrinky Dinx with drummer Stan Frazier and bassist Murphy Karges, a former touring member of the Weirdos. The roots of Sugar Ray lie in the monied Orange County town of Newport Beach. Once the big hits dried up, McGrath and guitarist Rodney Sheppard - the only other member of Sugar Ray to stay with the band through all its incarnations - happily played to the nostalgia market, while still making music that played to their sunny sweet spot. As the group racked up hit singles on both the Billboard Top 40 and Adult Contemporary chart, McGrath became a fixture on reality TV, running the board on Rock & Roll Jeopardy and co-hosting the entertainment news program Extra. Remarkably, 14:59 and its hits "Every Morning" and "Someday" opened up a lasting career for Sugar Ray and lead singer Mark McGrath, whose stardom soon eclipsed that of the rest of the band. Sugar Ray cannily decided to double down on their pop side on 1999's 14:59, an album whose very title showed that the band were in on the joke (courtesy of its wink to Andy Warhol's notorious axiom that everybody would be famous for 15 minutes). Among the departures on Floored was the breezy reggae tune "Fly," a song that became an unexpected number one hit.

Beginning their life as a mischievous nu-metal outfit with a shameless debt to Red Hot Chili Peppers, the group sharpened and expanded their sound with 1997's Floored. Sugar Ray crystallized the sound of Southern Californian pop during the Y2K era.
