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  1. D. Boon breaks down the walls between genres like no other punk player, yet he’s often overlooked because of the Minutemen’s firmly cult status. Bio. Dennes Boon was in 1958 in San Pedro, California, meeting future band-mate Mike Watt at an early age. The two grew up together, with Boon soon taking up the guitar and Watt picking up the bass.

  2. On this day, December 22, 1985, Boon’s fiancee Linda Kite was was driving a van along an Arizona highway. Her sister Jeannine was sitting beside her in the passenger seat. Boon, who had been suffering from a fever was sleeping in back, not wearing a seatbelt. The van ran off the road and Boon was thrown out the back door and died instantly ...

  3. Boon’s full name was Dennes Dale Boon. His shortened name came from three things: 1. “D” was his own, personal slang for marijuana, 2. It recalled American frontiersman Daniel Boone, and 3. It sounded similar to the name of Blue Oyster Cult’s E. Bloom. 2. Boon was a major history and politics buff. His obsession with the subjects can be ...

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  5. Dennes Dale Boon. Profile: American vocalist and guitarist, born 1 April 1958 in Napa, California, USA and died in a van accident 22 December 1985 on the I-10 50 miles east of Quartzsite, Arizona, USA. Sites: Wikipedia. In Groups: D. Boon and the Stone Puppies, Hammerdown, MinuteFlag, Minutemen, The Reactionaries. Variations:

  6. D. Boon was a pioneer of the punk scene in the early 1980s in Los Angeles, California. As singer, songwriter, guitarist and vocalist for the punk rock trio the Minutemen, D. Boon mixed funk, punk, metal, country and a healthy dose of rage that influenced the likes of Nirvana for generations.

  7. equipboard.com › pros › d-boonD. Boon | Equipboard

    Guitar Amplifier Heads. "D. Boon’s penchant for low-cost, ad-hoc gear applied to his amps as well. “He had an old blackface Fender Bandmaster head,” Spot says. “At that time, it was considered the low version of a Fender piggyback.”. He also had a 2x12 cabinet with mismatched speakers, which were wired out of phase.