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NOFX is an American punk rock band formed in Los Angeles, California (now based in San Francisco), in 1983.
The original lineup included singer/bassist Fat Mike (Michael Burkett), drummer Erik Sandin, and guitarist Eric Melvin. Since 1991 (and after several line-up changes) El Hefe (Aaron Abeyta) has played lead guitar and trumpet. The band rose to popularity in 1994 with their album Punk in Drublic which was certified gold.
NOFX has released 10 studio full lengths, 15 EPs, and many 7" singles. The group has independently sold over 6 million records worldwide. The band is also set to air their own show on Fuse TV entitled "NOFX: Backstage Passport."
History
1980s
NOFX’s first recording was a demo from 1983, produced by Germs drummer Don Bolles, which did not sell any copies. They released their self-titled debut EP NOFX on Mystic Records in 1985, which was later re-released in 1992 as part of the Maximum RocknRoll CD. For a year, Erik Sandin left the band and was replaced by Scott Sellers, and later by Scott Aldahl. Dave Allen was in the band for about four months, until he died in a car accident. In 1986, the band released So What if We’re on Mystic! Dave Casillas joined the band on second guitar in 1987 and was featured on the EP The P.M.R.C. Can Suck on This!, attacking the PMRC’s campaign for music censorship. The original cover was an edited S&M photo; the cover for the re-released version was changed to a photo of Eric Melvin.
Dave then left the band and was replaced by Steve Kidwiller (a.k.a. ‘Steve the Caucasian’). They recorded Liberal Animation in 1988 (before Dave was replaced by Steve) with Brett Gurewitz of Bad Religion. Although the title and some of the album’s lyrics mocked vegetarianism and animal rights, Fat Mike says that he became a vegetarian after writing the Liberal Animation album. The album was re-released in 1991 on Gurewitz’s label Epitaph Records. NOFX had signed to Epitaph by 1989, releasing their second album S&M Airlines.
1990s
1991 saw the release of Ribbed. By that year, the band’s lineup had undergone numerous changes; however, the original three members had reunited, and Aaron Abeyta (a.k.a. El Hefe) joined to round out the group. White Trash, Two Heebs and a Bean was released in 1992. (The original intended title, White Trash, Two Kikes, and a Spic, was changed because Eric Melvin’s grandmother was upset about the racial epithets.)
It was not until the 1994 release of Punk in Drublic that the band had a commercial breakthrough, with the album going gold. In the same year, punk rock entered the mainstream with the success of The Offspring’s Smash and Green Day’s Dookie. Punk in Drublic was followed by 1996’s slower Heavy Petting Zoo and 1997’s So Long and Thanks for All the Shoes, a return to faster punk, as exemplified by the frenetic opening track, “It’s My Job to Keep Punk Rock Elite.” In 1999, the band released The Decline, an 18-minute single-track EP which served as a fiery and cynical social commentary.
2000s
NOFX released the full-length album Pump Up the Valuum in 2000. It would be their final album on Epitaph, as the band decided to move on to Fat Mike’s own label Fat Wreck Chords.
2002 saw the band record BYO Split Series, Vol. 3, a split album with Rancid in which Rancid covered NOFX songs and NOFX covered Rancid songs.
In 2003, NOFX released War on Errorism, an album of political songs. It became the start of their anti-George W. Bush campaign, and a rallying point for leftist punks. Fat Mike organized the website punkvoter.com, compiled two chart-topping Rock Against Bush CDs, and kicked off a Rock Against Bush U. S. tour. In February 2005, the band launched the NOFX 7" of the Month Club, a subscription-based service which saw the release of one new EP almost monthly, from February 2005 to March 2006 (a total of 12 releases). The cover art for these EPs were chosen from fan-submitted entries. The first 3000 subscribers to the club received all of their records on colored vinyl. Fat Wreck Chords later released full sets of the EPs.
On March 14, 2006, the EP Never Trust a Hippy was released. This EP was followed on April 18 by the full-length album Wolves in Wolves’ Clothing. On September 12, 2006, the video game EA Sports NHL07 was released, featuring Wolves in Wolves’ Clothing on its soundtrack, produced by Bill Stevenson and Fat Mike.
In January 2007, the band recorded three nights of shows in San Francisco, California, for a live album entitled They've Actually Gotten Worse Live!, released November 20, 2007. The live album is described on the press release as “their sloppiest, drunkest, funnest, best sounding recording ever … and they even made sure not to play any songs off their 1995 live album I Heard They Suck Live.”
NOFX launched a world tour in September 2007, which included concerts in Israel (Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Haifa). During their final concert in Israel (7 September in Haifa), vocalist Fat Mike inadvertently struck guitarist Eric Melvin with his bass guitar during their performance of “Bottles to the Ground,” breaking the guitar’s neck and leaving a bloody gash on Eric Melvin’s forehead. (The band completed their scheduled set amidst the audience’s cheers to Eric Melvin’s good humor and perseverance.)
During the same world tour NOFX played four shows in South Africa (one in Cape Town, one in Durban, two in Johannesburg), the band's first concerts on the African continent. The tour of South Africa followed successful tours by bands Frenzal Rhomb, Lagwagon, and Mad Caddies, which are signed to Fat Wreck Chords.
Music style and influences
The band’s sound is diverse, utilizing elements of melodic hardcore, skate punk, ska, and other music genres. Their lyrics generally satirize issues such as politics, society, various subcultures, racism, the music industry, and religion.
They cite their influences as Rudimentary Peni, Adrenalin O.D., Rich Kids on LSD, Sex Pistols, Bad Religion, and The Subhumans.
Relationship with the media
For years the band has consented to very few interviews and have only made a few music videos, citing the fact that they do not need any more exposure and that people were exploiting them. In recent years Fat Mike has consented to more interviews, including four different interviews with Nardwuar between 2002 and 2006. The band has also refused permission for their music videos to be played on MTV, VH1, and similar music channels, although they made a live appearance on NBC’s Late Night with Conan O'Brien in 2004. The credits on the album Heavy Petting Zoo call on MTV, along with major labels, to "leave them the fuck alone."
Fat Mike has also repeatedly conducted friendly interviews with the Australian Broadcasting Commissions' Youth radio station Triple J on its breakfast show with Jay and the Doctor. Jay and the Doctor are both members of Frenzal Rhomb, an Australian punk band that has played many tours and festivals with NOFX, and have their music distribution outside Australia handled by Mike's Fat Wreck Chords label.
NOFX will air a reality show on Fuse TV about their worldwide tour.
Discography
Studio albums
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1988, re-released in 1991 | Liberal Animation | Epitaph | n/a | |
1989 | S&M Airlines | Epitaph | n/a | |
1991 | Ribbed | Epitaph | n/a | |
1992 | White Trash, Two Heebs and a Bean | Epitaph | n/a | |
1994 | Punk in Drublic | Epitaph | 12 (Heatseekers) | Gold |
1996 | Heavy Petting Zoo | Epitaph | 63 (Billboard 200) | |
1997 | So Long and Thanks for All the Shoes | Epitaph | 79 (Billboard 200) | |
2000 | Pump up the Valuum | Epitaph | 61 (Billboard 200) | |
2003 | The War on Errorism | Fat Wreck Chords | 44 (Billboard 200),#1 (Billboard Independent Album chart) | |
2006 | Wolves in Wolves' Clothing | Fat Wreck Chords | 46 (Billboard 200) |
Live albums
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1995 | I Heard They Suck Live!! | Fat Wreck Chords | 198 (Billboard 200) | |
2007 | They've Actually Gotten Worse Live! | Fat Wreck Chords | N/A |
EPs
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1985 | NOFX (EP) | Mystic Records | n/a | |
1986 | So What If We're on Mystic! | Mystic Records | n/a | |
1987, re-released in 1990 | The P.M.R.C. Can Suck on This! | Colossal Wassail Re-released on Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1992 | The Longest Line | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1995 | Leave It Alone (EP) | Epitaph | n/a | |
1996 | Fuck the Kids | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1999 | The Decline | Fat Wreck Chords | #200 | |
2001 | Surfer | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
2003 | Regaining Unconsciousness | Fat Wreck Chords | 187 (Billboard 200) | |
2006 | Never Trust a Hippy | Fat Wreck Chords | 186 (Billboard 200) |
Singles
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1992 | Liza and Louise | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1994 | Don't Call Me White | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1995 | HOFX | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1996 | All of Me | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1999 | Timmy the Turtle | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
1999 | Louise and Liza | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
2000 | Pods and Gods | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
2000 | Bottles to the Ground | Epitaph | n/a | |
2001 | Fat Club 7 | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
2003 | 13 Stitches | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a | |
2005-2006 | 7" of the Month Club | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a |
Splits
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1988 | Drowning Roses/NOFX Split | X-Mist Records | n/a | |
2002 | BYO Split Series, Vol. 3 | BYO Records | n/a |
Compilations
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1992 | Maximum Rocknroll | Mystic Records | n/a | |
2002 | 45 or 46 Songs That Weren't Good Enough to Go on Our Other Records | Fat Wreck Chords | 80 (Billboard 200) | |
2004 | The Greatest Songs Ever Written (By Us!) | Epitaph Records | n/a |
Videos
Date of Release | Title | Label | US Billboard Peak | US sales |
1994 | Ten Years of Fuckin' Up | Fat Wreck Chords | n/a |
See also
References
- ,Crossover ThrashRhapsody.com - Top Skate Punk Bands
- Punk Genres - The Subgenres of Punk Rock
- NOFX: They've Actually Gotten Worse Live! - PopMatters Music Review
- Where The Moshers Are - Time
- History
- Epitaph Records: NOFX - Punk In Drublic
- Allmusic: NOFX EPs & Singles
- Bands: Fat Wreck Chords
- Fuse.tv - NOFX Backstage Passport
- Flipside 1997 July/August
- Flipside 1997 July/August
- Bands: Fat Wreck Chords
- Q & A | Read Answers | NOFX
- All About Q&A // Q&A // NOFX
- Nardwuar vs Fat Mike
- Wilco, Modest Mouse on TV: Wilco : Rolling Stone
- Bands: Fat Wreck Chords
- Punknews.org | NOFX to air world tour documentary on Fuse
- Bands: Fat Wreck Chords
External links
- NOFX Official Website
- NOFX Wiki
- NOFX Online Website
- Warped Tour 2006- NOFX
- NOFX Gigs and tours
- NOFX Polish Website
- NOFX Lyrics
- NOFX year-by-year history
- Flipside Interview - NOFX interview from 1997
- Transform Online interview - interview from 2005
- Template:MySpace
- NOFX in Music & Videos
- { http://www.austin360.com/calendar/content/music/stories/2008/03/0315nofx.html?cxtype=rss&cxsvc=7&cxcat=13 )
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