The first and best wave of
L.A. punk bands from 1977-1979 all broke up under-documented and unsigned, with the exception of
X,
the Germs, and, to a lesser extent,
the Plugz. But the legacy of incredible pioneers such as
the Weirdos,
Dils,
Controllers, and
Screamers was the wide success of the harder, faster, younger bands that followed. The interest the 1977 bands awakened not only inspired the formation of
Black Flag,
Circle Jerks,
T.S.O.L.,
Social Distortion,
Agent Orange,
Fear,
the Adolescents, and others, but helped create a national market, enabling the newer bands to find labels, put out albums, and tour regularly.
The Adolescents were perhaps the first of this second wave to put out an LP widely distributed throughout the U.S., selling well over five digits in 1981 (following on the heels of San Francisco's
Dead Kennedys, who broke the doors open with their immortal
Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables the previous year). Produced by
Middle Class'
Mike Patton, the debut from these five Orange County kids established the mid-tempo,
punk-pop "Southern Cal sound," led by the long, great, pummeling,
Johnny Thunders-derived solos of the two Agnew brothers,
Rikk and
Frank. These soaring, ripping parts still sound great today. As important, songs such as the anthemic
"No Way," the classic
"Amoeba," the schizophrenic
"Kids of the Black Hole," and the glorious
"Creatures" endure precisely because they're not just aggressive and speedy: they're super-catchy, heavy-riffing
rock & roll, proving again that
punk was the true heir to the likes of
Chuck Berry,
Larry Williams,
Bo Diddley, and
Eddie Cochran. For the longest while, L.A. teenagers had the spirit, verve, moxie, and zeal to play charged, zippy
punk. Hundreds of other bands formed right as
the Adolescents recorded, such as
Bad Religion,
Shattered Faith,
Youth Brigade,
Aggression,
M.I.A., and
Channel 3! In so doing, L.A. helped resist the diluted explosion of
thrash hardcore that swept the rest of the U.S., particularly on the East Coast. ~ Jack Rabid