Putting their ideas into action, David and Jad released their first recording, an EP titled Calling All Girls, in 1977, and with it Half Japanese began their long career as one of the most original and influential bands in the American underground. While the significant majority of David Fair's recorded work has been with Half Japanese, he's also recorded a handful of albums in collaboration with his brother, beginning with 1996's Best Friends. David and Jad's collaboration continued on 1998's 26 Monster Songs for Children, 2006's Six Dozen Cookies, 2008's Halloween Songs, and 2016's Shake, Cackle and Squall. In 2009, David Fair released his first solo album, I'll Be Moe, a meditation on childhood memories similar to Six Dozen Cookies, with Fair reciting stories over musical beds constructed from sound effects, samples, and loops. In 2010 a second album from David was released, the soundtrack to the independent film The Middle Man.
When not busy with his other pursuits, David also creates visual art, working primarily in sketches and paper cuttings. In 2009, David collaborated with Jad and Charles Brohawn on a book, Moods of Elvis, which featured a variety of stylized renderings of Elvis Presley. In 2015, he was the subject of a short documentary, David Fair Is the King, directed by Skizz Cyzyk. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi