Encyclopedia > The Descendants

  Article Content

The Descendents

Redirected from The Descendants

The Descendents are a punk rock band from southern California, formed in 1978 by guitarist Frank Navetta[?], bassist Tony Lombardo[?] and drummer Bill Stevenson. However their only release with this original lineup was "Ride the Wild"/"It's a Hectic World", a double A-side of melodic surf-pop.

In 1980 they enlisted singer Milo Aukerman[?] and reappeared as a punk band, firmly entrenched within the hardcore scene developing in Los Angeles at the time. Their first release, 1981's Fat EP, was a furious six-minute barrage of teen angst and goofball humour, featuring such songs as "My Dad Sucks" and "I Like Food". Their debut album the following year, Milo Goes to College[?], introduced an element of melody and sensitivity that set them apart from most other hardcore bands. Songwriting was shared among the band members and Stevenson's songs in particular were to greatly influence the melodic punk-pop bands of the '90s.

Milo Aukerman really was off to college, to embark on an education that would take him as far as a doctorate in biochemistry, while Bill Stevenson became for a while the drummer with fellow hardcore punks Black Flag. The band did not record again until 1985 with the album I Don't Want to Grow Up[?]. This, and the subsequent albums, Enjoy![?] (1986) and All (1987), saw the band playing a slower and less angry style of rock music with less impact than the debut album, although songs like "Coolidge" still packed an emotional punch. There were also several lineup changes over this period: bassist Lombardo was replaced first by Doug Carrion and then Karl Alvarez, while guitarist Navetta was replaced by Ray Cooper and then Stephen Egerton.

The band finally disbanded in 1987 to be replaced by All, who continued the legacy of the Descendents. They reformed with Milo Aukerman in 1996 to record and tour the album Everything Sucks[?], a return to their early-80s punk style, and are now rumoured to be working on a new album.

Discography

Also available are the live albums Liveage (1987) and Hallraker (1989) and the compilation Somery (1991). The debut single and EP were packaged as Bonus Fat in 1985 and this was combined with Milo Goes to College[?] to produce Two Things at Once in 1988.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Shinnecock Hills, New York

... (842.9/mi²). There are 928 housing units at an average density of 173.1/km² (447.3/mi²). The racial makeup of the town is 89.99% White, 4.23% ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 33.9 ms