the vandals
Orange County punk veterans the Vandals traced their roots back
to the earliest days of their local scene, but didn't really make
much of an impact as recording artists until the '90s. By that
time, their snide, terminally juvenile humor and catchy punk-pop
had done a great deal to set the tone of Orange County's thriving
punk and ska scene. Clear spiritual forefathers of bands like
the Offspring, blink-182, and Less Than Jake, the Vandals took
their cues from early punk comedians like the Dickies and the
Descendents, ratcheting up the wiseass factor and delighting in
dumb, lowbrow jokes. Sometimes satirical and mostly silly, the
Vandals also remained staunchly independent for their entire career,
releasing records on a variety of punk indies that afforded them
financial and creative control. What was more, their steady lineup
from 1989 on afforded them a degree of stability uncommon in punk
circles. Solid career management allowed the Vandals to thrive
up into the new millennium, over two decades after their formation.
The Vandals were founded in Huntington Beach, CA -- also home
to the Crowd and T.S.O.L. -- by guitarist Jan Nils Ackerman in
1980. Their inaugural lineup was completed by vocalist Stevo,
bassist Steve Pfauter, and drummer Joe Escalante. Their riotous
early shows around Orange County got them banned from several
venues, but also worked up enough buzz that their 1982 debut EP,
Peace Thru Vandalism, was released by Bad Religion's Epitaph label.
It featured signature early numbers like "Anarchy Burger
(Hold the Government)," the local radio hit "Urban Struggle,"
and "The Legend of Pat Brown," about a real-life roommate
of Escalante's who went after some undercover cops with his car
at a Vandals show in Costa Mesa. The following year, they appeared
as themselves in director Penelope Spheeris' punk drama, Suburbia.
The Vandals continued to play around Orange County when they
could over the next few years, including a tongue-in-cheek benefit
show for the Young Republicans in 1984. The following year, they
issued their first full-length LP, When in Rome Do as the Vandals,
on the small National Trust label; it featured new bass player
Chalmer Lumary, as well as the local radio hits "Lady Killer"
and "Mohawk Town." Substantial personnel shifts ensued
over the next few years; ex-Fallen Idols singer Dave Quackenbush
joined up later in 1985, and Escalante switched from drums to
bass. More members came and went; guitarist Warren Fitzgerald
came on board in 1987, and drummer Josh Freese joined in 1989,
completing a new Vandals lineup that would endure for over a decade
afterward.
The album Slippery When Ill, a snarky piss-take on country music
that was later reissued under the title The Vandals Play Really
Bad Original Country Tunes, was released in 1989. The group subsequently
signed with punk indie Triple X, with which they made their first
big splash via 1991's Fear of a Punk Planet. With their back catalog
out of print, the Vandals next re-recorded much of the band's
early material on the 1994 live album Sweatin' to the Oldies.
In the meantime, Fitzgerald moonlighted as the guitarist for Oingo
Boingo until the group's dissolution in late 1995. Freese also
began to branch out with recording sessions for Suicidal Tendencies
and Infectious Grooves; by the late '90s, he had become an accomplished
session drummer for a wide variety of pop and alt-rock acts, and
also served stints in Guns N' Roses (the inactive, studio-bound
incarnation) and Maynard James Keenan's prog-metal side project,
A Perfect Circle.
With the California punk revival in full swing by 1994, the Vandals
switched over to the Offspring's new imprint, Nitro Records, for
which they cut two albums -- 1995's Live Fast Diarrhea and 1996's
The Quickening. Later in 1996, Escalante and Fitzgerald formed
their own label, Kung Fu, which was designed to ensure the band's
financial independence in the wake of their growing cult popularity
on the punk scene. They inaugurated the label at the end of the
year with the holiday album Oi to the World: Christmas With the
Vandals, and soon set about signing other acts as well. The Vandals
returned to Nitro for the 1998 set Hitler Bad, Vandals Good, and
completed their contract with 2000's Look What I Almost Stepped
In. Having built up Kung Fu into a viable enterprise, they subsequently
left Nitro to stick with their own label. Meanwhile, Fitzgerald
embarked on another side gig, playing lead guitar with the newly
electrified Tenacious D on their 2001 debut album. Freese's session
career was also booming by this time, and although he remained
a studio regular, he was often replaced during live gigs by a
rotating cast of four to five drummers, the most prominent of
whom was Brooks Wackermann (later of Bad Religion). Now firmly
committed to Kung Fu, the Vandals returned in 2002 with Internet
Dating Superstuds.
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