Brian Vander Ark
Biography
Michigan native Brian Vander Ark is best known as the frontman for the Verve Pipe, which scored a chart-topping modern rock single in 1997 with "The Freshmen." The track also earned the band an ASCAP Pop Award. A veteran songwriter and solo artist in his own right, Vander Ark began playing guitar at age eight; by the age of 16, he'd already begun penning songs. Although still underage, he honed his skills playing nightly one-hour sets in Holiday Inn bars, a modest gig that earned him $275 weekly. He joined the U.S. Army at the age of 18 and, upon his release, returned to Holiday Inns. Vander Ark grew tired of playing covers, however, and soon joined the band His Boy Elroy as a guitarist. He then quit and started the band Johnny With an Eye, eventually disbanding the group in 1992 and forming the Verve Pipe with Donny Brown.
The Verve Pipe fared well, becoming one of the Detroit area's most popular bands in the mid-to-late '90s. Vander Ark and the rest of the Verve Pipe released five albums: I've Suffered a Head Injury (which was re-released as an EP) in 1992, Pop Smear in 1993, the platinum-selling Villains in 1996, The Verve Pipe in 1999, and Underneath (produced by Fountains of Wayne's Adam Schlesinger) in 2001.
Selected Discography

Resurrection
2003
