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We started in 1978. Rejection, food, coffee, girls,
fishing, and food, were the main forces that drove
this cross-section of spastic rejects to become the
band we know as the Descendents. The long
forgotten trio lineup of Frank Navetta, Tony
Lombardo, and myself honed the band's sound into
the coffee'd out blend of rock-surf-pop-punk music
that it is. It's hard to define musical influences, but if I
had to narrow it down to 2 things, they would be
The Last, and my friend Pat McCuistion. The sound
consisted basically of Lombardo's hard driving,
melodic bass lines, Navetta's tight guitar riffing, and
my "caffinated" surf beats.
This
singerless
"power-trio" lineup lasted for a couple of years - long enough to record
a 7" single called
"Ride The Wild", and to begin looking for a singer. In 1980 we got a
singer named Milo
Aukerman, and started our way on a long and intense journey to the
bottom of our next cup
of coffee. Shortly thereafter the "Bonus Cup" was invented. We took 1/3
of a cup of instant
coffee grounds, added some hot water, threw in about 5 spoons of sugar,
and proceeded to
play 10 second songs. The Bonus Cup became a part of everyday
Descendents life. All just
innocent fun until late one night while fishing on my boat, Orca, Pat
and I discovered the
concept of All - The Total Extent, as sent forth by the Basemaster
General himself. The quest
for All became the main catalyst of the band, and we adopted this
omni-ambitious way of life,
for better and for better. "Weinerschnitzel" would be the first song
that came about as a result
of our undying devotion to All. Pat insisted that we quit writing
"stupid girl songs", and start
writing about things that really matter - like food and fishing. So he
and I wrote
"Weinerschnitzel", "All", and "No! All!!" in a fit of Allular
frustration. The songs were only
seconds long, but that was all the time we needed to make the point. We
temporarily put
aside all of our so called "girl-songs" and recorded the "Fat" EP.
This
is the only record we
ever made without a single love song on it. The rigorous momentum of the
band brought about
a series of lineup changes leaving me as the only original member. The
first change was when
Ray Cooper joined the band as guitar player, later to become singer.
This happened right
after we released the "Milo Goes To College" LP. During these months I
had become close
friends with Greg Ginn of Black Flag, and before I knew it I had joined
Black Flag, thinking
that I could be in both bands at the same time.
During the next 2 years
Descendents weren't
very active, because I was too busy touring or recording with Black
Flag. I soon learned that
it is impossible to be in 2 bands at once. In April 85 I left black
Flag, and put the Descendents
back on our feet again, this time as a full time touring band. Frank had
disappeared to
Oregon, but Ray, Milo and Tony wanted back in the band, so Ray switched
back to guitar,
and we recorded "I Don't Want To Grow Up". Tony was unable to tour with
us, so he was
replaced by Doug Carrion for the 3 tours that followed. We recorded
"Enjoy", and at the end
of the "Enjoy Tour" (Summer 86) Doug and Ray went their separate ways.
One week later,
on my birthday (Sept. 10), Karl Alvarez and Stephen Egerton (friends
from Salt Lake City)
stepped in on bass and guitar.
We recorded the "All" LP, the record that
finally revealed the
concept to All to the public. After the 60 day spring "All" tour and the
50 day summer "Finall"
tour, Dave Smalley took over on vocals, and the band became All. While
recording "Allroy
Sez…", I received a call telling me that Pat had died (Dec. 16, 1987).
His boat sunk out in
the ocean during a storm. He had 15,000 pounds of fish on board, so I
guess you could say
he died in heated pursuit of All. He was always the "5th member" of the
band, besides being
my best friend, next to Milo. Three records and 2 national tours later
the All family grows
closer, including our two crew members Bug and Gooch, who have been with
us for six tours.
The eternal quest for All continues.
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