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nofx
Formed in Berkeley, CA, in 1983 and relocating to Los Angeles
not long afterwards, NOFX steered clear of major labels and commercial
exposure over the course of their career, recording an impressive
number of full-lengths albums plus an assortment of EPs and singles.
The band started out as a trio comprising vocalist/bassist Fat
Mike (Mike Burkett), guitarist Eric Melvin, and drummer Erik Sandin
(aka Erik Ghint/Erik Shun). Sandin quit in 1985, and his place
was taken by Scott Sellers; that same year, NOFX also recorded
two 7" EPs for the Mystic label, No F-X and So What If We're
on Mystic? Sellers quit shortly thereafter and was replaced by
Scott Aldahl for only two weeks, upon which point Sandin re-joined
the band; vocalist Dave Allen also joined in 1986, but his tenure
was tragically cut short by a fatal car accident. Dave Casillas
joined as a second guitarist later in the year, by which point
NOFX's touring schedule had become far-ranging and rigorous. The
EP The P.M.R.C. Can Suck on This was released on Fat Mike's own
Fat Wreck Chords label in 1987. Casillas departed the group in
1989 and was replaced by Steve Kidwiller for NOFX's first full-length
album, S&M Airlines, which was released on the legendary punk
label Epitaph; the band remained there ever since, despite the
release of several albums -- such as 1995's I Heard They Suck
Live -- and EPs on Fat Wreck Chords, which gradually grew into
a premier stable of punk revival artists.
Having appeared on 1990's Ribbed and 1991's Liberal Animation
(which was actually recorded in 1988), Kidwiller left the band
in 1991, and Aaron Abeyta became the permanent second guitarist
(as well as trumpeter), adopting the nickname El Hefe. Dragged
into the mainstream spotlight by the mid-'90s success of labelmates
Bad Religion and the Offspring, NOFX compensated with albums like
1992's White Trash, Two Heebs and a Bean that were even closer
to the anti-commercial extreme; exemplified by White Trash's accompanying
single "Please Play This Song on the Radio," which lured
un-alert radio programmers with a tight melody, but ends with
a stream of obscenities. The El Hefe-anchored lineup continued
to blossom with 1994's Punk in Drublic; often regarded as the
band's best, the album was eventually certified gold. Releases
on Fat Wreck Chords continued throughout the '90s, as did the
full-length Epitaph albums, like 1996's grungier, less up-tempo
Heavy Petting Zoo, 1997's punkier So Long & Thanks for All
the Shoes, and 2000's Pump Up the Valuum and Bottles to the Ground;
the latter album followed an experimental Fat Wreck Chords EP
titled The Decline, which consisted entirely of the 18-minute
title track. In 2002, NOFX sifted through countless tapes and
recording sessions, eventually collecting 47 song for 45 or 46
Songs That Weren't Good Enough To Go On Our Other Records. "Pimps
and Hookers", which was the only new song on the album, was
recorded in one day. Later that year, BYO Records got the band
to release the NOFX/Rancid split album BYO Split Series Vol. III.
This particular album had Rancid covering six NOFX tracks while
NOFX returned the favor by switching up six Rancid songs. The
Surfer EP showcased select sloppy cuts in spring 2003, the first
500 copies on colored vinyl.
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