The
Original TSOL
When T.S.O.L. blasted onto the
Orange County punk explosion in 1979 with white face
paint, 6’ plus frames and blazing punk anthems, they
were automatically a force to be reckoned with. Their
previous band, Vicious Circle, had already established
themselves in the South Bay and Orange County with large
crowds and several riots at historical venues such as
the Cuckoo’s Nest and the Fleetwood. With the boost
of the now classic Poshboy EP that introduced the songs
“Superficial Love” and “Abolish Government”, TSOL picked
up where Vicious Circle left off, but with an armory
full of ammunition. |
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This
enabled the band to spread it’s popularity around California,
supporting heavyweights like The Damned and The Dead Kennedy’s
in big cities like LA and San Francisco. By the summer of
’81, the band released the highly anticipated debut full
length LP, Dance With Me (Frontier), which propelled the
band to the highest echelon of Southern California punk
status, and enabled them to headline 3000+ seat venues (ala
the Hollywood Palladium) with bands like Bad Religion, Social
Distortion and the Adolescents opening for them.
There
were obvious reasons why TSOL was so huge so fast: They
were cuter, their songs were catchier and their live show
was a lot more energetic and fun then any other band going.
They single handedly initiated the influx of girls into
the early 80’s punk scene. With songs about fucking the
dead, “Code Blue” and gothic punk ballads like “Silent Scream”,
they became the first punk “phenomenon”; it was the “OC
Invasion”.
Jack
Grisham, Ron Emory, Mike Roche and Todd Barnes were four
kids who grew up together in Huntington Beach; now they
were the talk of the West Coast. The band moved on to Alternative
Tentacles records, where they released the Weathered Statues
EP, here they introduced the reggae-tinged “Word Is” alongside
the blistering “Man and Machine”. That gave the fans something
to chew on while the title track hinted at the direction
the band was heading as they put together their masterpiece,
their punk-opera so to speak: Beneath the Shadows. It was
at this time when the band was featured in the motion picture
“Suburbia”, directed by Penelope Spheeris (Wayne’s World,
Decline of Western Civilization, etc.), a stark semi-documentary
on the punk scene of early ‘80s Orange County. The band
appeared both in the film and on the film’s soundtrack.
Beneath
the Shadows (Alternative Tentacles), the band’s second full
length LP, showed just how much the band had rapidly matured.
It wasn’t a breakaway from their previous releases; it was
a progression. The band added keyboards and the arrangements
became more complex and stylized, it made one think that
the London Symphony might be touring with them in the future.
As other bands of their genre fumbled around “into the unknown”,
TSOL forged a new sound, one that didn’t turn fans away,
but made them even more numerous and rabid.
But
with their enormous popularity, and their first tours, the
foundation began to crack. Excessiveness and things that
go along with “bigness” forced changes, including the departure
of Jack and Todd, leaving behind a band that was well on
the way, to instead regressing to a more primitive punk
sound that quickly stagnated and alienated fans.
Today,
10 years since it’s last “reunion”, the band is back to
give us what they gave then. “Superficial Love”, “80 Times”,
“Code Blue”, “Wash Away” and the rest of those vintage punk
nuggets will be blasted live into our faces again. Those
who were not around to witness TSOL in their heyday can
finally see for themselves why the band spawned a generation
of bands and changed the shape of music today.
Click
Here To Read About Original Drummer Todd Barnes