Joyride self-recorded their debut album, Johnny Bravo, on a miniscule budget, and landed a deal with the small indie label Dr. Dream, which issued the record in 1992. Although it won enthusiastic reviews from local media, it was also hampered by subpar distribution and a relative lack of promotional resources. The same fate befell 1994's similarly well-received Another Month of Mondays. Joyride completed a third album, to have been titled Promises and Lies, but Dr. Dream folded before it could be released. With no major-label deal having materialized, and with McKnight and Hansen anxious to devote time to their families, Joyride decided to call it a day in 1996. Antista formed the similar-sounding trio Foxy, while Soto moved on to play with 22 Jacks (which briefly included Hansen) and the jokey punk cover band Manic Hispanic. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi