Joey Allen has a day job, which is not a big deal if Joey Allen were Joey next door.
Heโs a rock star.
Bonafide.
For most of his adult life, heโs played lead guitar with the 1990s glam rock band Warrant, but for the past 19 years, heโs also the guy who manages big league retail and e-commerce accounts for one of Americaโs top drum manufacturers.
Not that rock star doesnโt pay enough to make ends meet, mind you; Allen says he just has an inner need to always be busy.
When his band pulls in to do the soundcheck at Fox Tucson Theatre before their show on Friday, June 21, Allen will already have worked four or five hours at his day job. Once the sound check is done, heโll likely put in another hour or so before going on stage.
โThe working hard, thatโs what everybody does,โ he said during a phone call last month to talk about the Fox show, his bandโs encore to their Dec. 31 Taco Bell New Yearโs Eve Downtown Bowl Bash, presented by Arizona Bowl. โThatโs a reasonable, responsible adult.โ
Who woulda thought in a million years that members of one of the biggest big hair bands of the โ90s would transform into โreasonable, responsibleโ adults.
So responsible, notes Allen, that they no longer drink cases of beer in their dressing room. These days, itโs Perrier water, โa bottle of Advil and Tums,โ he said.
But while you can strip away the window dressing and the accoutrements that surrounded them in their rock โnโ roll youth, Warrant is still that hard-rocking band that spun gold out of โCherry Pieโ on their way to selling 10 million albums during their 1989-96 heydays.
โWe are still having fun,โ said Allen, who is an original member along with Jerry Dixon, Steven Sweet and Erik Turner; lead singer Robert Mason joined in 2008, replacing Jani Lane, who died of acute alcohol poisoning in 2011.
The band is bringing its โLet the Good Times Rock Tourโ to the Fox with openers Lita Ford and the Gavin Evick Band.
Expect to hear the bandโs biggest hits, from the ubiquitous pop-rocker โCherry Pieโ to the driving โUncle Tomโs Cabinโ and โI saw Red,โ songs that became MTV gold and Billboard platinum.
Throughout the height of their career, Warrant scored six Top 40 hits and only one, โHeavenโ off their 1989 debut album โDirty Rotten Filthy Stinking Rich,โ came close to topping the charts at No. 2.
The band has released nine studio albums, the last one 2017โs โLouder Harder Faster.โ
โI imagine we have one more in us if we really dig deep,โ Allen said, but with family and life obligations, making a record is not on the top of anyoneโs to-do list.
โItโs such a chore getting five guys together and a producer,โ Allen, 60, lamented as he waited for his 12-year-old son to get the lunch he had picked up for him that mid-May morning. โWeโre older guys now and we look at our return on investment. As much as itโs a passion, itโs also a business to us. ... You weigh the pros and the cons and right now the cons say letโs just tour and have fun.โ
When heโs not having fun on stage, heโs calling on his day job clients, none of whom really care that heโs a moonlighting rock star.
โIโm just Joey next door,โ he said. โThe music, the playing โ thatโs for me. I do it for the people that want to come and see it. But Iโm really that guy: Iโm a dad. Iโm a husband. Iโm a father to my daughter and son. Thatโs what I love doing more than anything. I just happen to be in a band that had half-a-dozen Top 40 hits. Most of us are still alive and we enjoy our friendships and we enjoy playing the music, and it comes across.โ
Fridayโs show begins at 7:30 p.m. at Fox Tucson, 17 W. Congress. Tickets ($20-$77.50) are available through foxtucson.com.
Six months after it played the Tucson New Year's Eve Taco Drop event, Warrant is back for a concert with Lita Ford at Fox Tucson Theatre.




