Wasted Youth (American band)

(Redirected from Black Daze)

Wasted Youth (also known as LA's Wasted Youth) was an early 1980s hardcore punk band from Los Angeles, California. The band followed in the footsteps of Black Flag and the Circle Jerks. It was a prominent and popular act among the Los Angeles punk underground. Other bands active in the early 1980s Los Angeles punk scene were The Adolescents, T.S.O.L., Social Distortion, Bad Religion, Agent Orange, and The Stains.

Wasted Youth
Also known asLA's Wasted Youth
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
GenresHardcore punk
Crossover thrash (later)
Years active1981–1988
Past membersChett Lehrer
Jeff Long
Allen Stiritz
Danny Spira
Paul Rossi
Tim Gallegos
Jay Bentley
Jeff Dahlgren
Dave Kushner
Joey Castillo

Footage of the original lineup (1981–1983) can be seen in the film Slog Movie, which is a film documenting the Orange County punk scene.

History

edit

The original members of Wasted Youth were Chett Lehrer, Jeff Long, Allen Stiritz, and Danny Spira.[1]

Reagan's In

edit

The band's first album Reagan's In, is in the early West Coast hardcore punk music style.[2] It is known for the Pushead artwork of Ronald Reagan on the front cover.[1] The back of the album features Edward Colver's photograph of an upside down stagediver in midair. Though this album consists of ten tracks, it is less than fifteen minutes long.

Get Out of My Yard

edit

Jeff Dahlgren, front man after Allah Akhbar (1983–1985), left the band. His work was re-recorded by Paolo Rossi co-produced with Darin Scheff and titled "Get out of My Yard". Paolo Rossi (the last generation of Wasted Youth front men) went on to start an indie label "Open Circle Records" in Glendale, California (Open Circle released Get Out of My Yard LP). Wasted Youth led a successful "Crack Across America Tour" in the late 1980s to support "Get Out of My Yard." Michael Licalsi, a club and show promoter from the SF Bay Area, served as their manager, with Louis (VideoLouis) Elovitz taking part in management for a period of time as well. Wasted Youth performed with bands such as Bad Brains, The Ramones, and Circle Jerks on this final tour.

Black Daze

edit

The band's later releases moved towards a heavy metal sound, including a cover of Van Halen's "On Fire". The more advanced musical and lyrical development on Black Daze brought Wasted Youth to new thrash metal audiences. The video for the album's "Good Day For a Hanging" depicts a motorcycle spinning amongst concert-goers in a mud-pit.

Aftermath

edit

Members went on to perform in the tribal-industrial group Savage Republic; Joey Castillo became a drummer for Danzig from 1994 to 2002, and later Queens of the Stone Age from 2002 to 2012 and is now the drummer for The Circle Jerks as of July 2021; while Dave Kushner, who played bass on Black Daze, went on to become a member of Velvet Revolver from 2002 to 2008.[1]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Cogan, Brian (2008). The Encyclopedia of Punk. Sterling. p. 356. ISBN 978-1-4027-5960-4.
  2. ^ Blush, Steven (2010). George Petros (ed.). American Hardcore: A Tribal History Second Edition. Feral House. pp. 90–91. ISBN 978-0-922915-71-2.