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Englewood Cliffs Teen Drummer Turns Heads In Metal Band

ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N.J. — Seated on the sidewalk behind his shiny drum set, borough resident Eitan Ofeck, 15, turned heads with his three Lunatic Fringe bandmates last weekend outside a Bergenfield eatery as they played music you might not expect youngsters to know by heart.

Lunatic Fringe (from left: Marc Shoji, of Fort Lee; Mary Oneill, of River Vale; Cooper Boyd, of Carlsdadt; and Eitan Ofeck, of Englewood Cliffs.

Lunatic Fringe (from left: Marc Shoji, of Fort Lee; Mary Oneill, of River Vale; Cooper Boyd, of Carlsdadt; and Eitan Ofeck, of Englewood Cliffs.

Photo Credit: Lunatic Fringe
Lunatic Fringe performs outside of Rony's Rockin' Grill, in Bergenfield on Sept. 19.

Lunatic Fringe performs outside of Rony's Rockin' Grill, in Bergenfield on Sept. 19.

Photo Credit: Cecilia Levine
Mary O'Neill, of River Vale, performs outside of Rony's Rockin' Grill, in Bergenfield, with Lunatic Fringe.

Mary O'Neill, of River Vale, performs outside of Rony's Rockin' Grill, in Bergenfield, with Lunatic Fringe.

Photo Credit: Cecilia Levine

Drummer Ofeck, bassist Marc Shoji, 15, guitarist Cooper Boyd, 16, and lead vocalist and guitarist Mary O’Neill, 13, met as students at School of Rock in Tenafly.

After performing an Iron Maiden song for the school at Manhattan's Highline Ballroom last year, the quartet formed Lunatic Fringe.

“Playing music is the only thing I’m interested in right now,” said O’Neill of River Vale. “It's important for me to give back to the community through music because it's only way I can truly communicate and project my voice.”

O'Neill books most gigs online, which often leaves venue owners shocked to see how young the band members are.

“They sometimes make us say how old we are into the microphone,” she said. “They think it’s so funny that I’m this small girl with a big voice screaming curses into the microphone.”

The material includes Black Sabbath, Metallica and other heavy metal and hard rock covers.

“Seeing the crowd’s reaction, the expression on their faces when they see a bunch of young kids playing their favorite heavy metal tunes is a great thing to experience.”

Band members recently began writing their own songs, but O’Neill said they spend most of their time rehearsing.

“[Music] is a great thing to share with others,” she said. “You’ll always meet new friends along the way.

“Just showing people what we’re really capable of makes us happy.”

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