Born on April 12, 1962, in West Los Angeles, Arthur Paul Alexakis was the youngest of five children and was raised primarily by his mother (his father walked out on the family when he was only five years old). Life was hard for Alexakis, as he and his family relocated to a housing project in Culver City, California. To escape the unhappiness of his home life, he turned to drugs at an early age as a form of escape, but when he was 12 years old, his older brother died from a heroin overdose. Instead of using the tragedy as an example to end his own drug abuse, the youngest Alexakis sunk further into drug abuse, and even witnessed a girlfriend die the same way his brother had (Alexakis also attempted suicide shortly after his brother's passing).
Alexakis' penchant for trouble didn't subside throughout his teenage years, as he had numerous run-ins with the law, resulting in stays at both juvenile hall and jail. It was also during this time that he picked up a guitar, yet drugs remained his main interest in life. After nearly dying from a drug overdose in 1984 (at the age of 22), Alexakis decided to clean up his act once and for all, quitting drugs, smoking, and drinking. Free of all the excess baggage, Alexakis pursued music fully as a member of such local bands as Easy Hoes and Shakin' Brave, in addition to being a road manager and driver for other groups. Around the same time, Alexakis also took film courses at Santa Monica College and UCLA (which he would later put to use while directing several Everclear videos).
After relocating to San Francisco in 1987, Alexakis formed his own independent record label, Shindig Records (which was distributed via Rough Trade Records). Although his roots lay in hard rock, the label specialized primarily in country-rock, and ultimately proved to be a bust. Alexakis found himself in an alt-country band around this time, Colorfinger, issuing a lone album, 1990's Deep in the Heart of the Beast in the Sun (several Colorfinger tracks would later be reworked by Everclear, including "Heartspark Dollarsign," "The Twistinside," and "Why I Don't Believe in God"). Despite building a local following in San Francisco, Colorfinger broke up shortly thereafter, resulting in Alexakis relocating once more, this time to Portland, Oregon. With his recent discovery of the Pixies, and alternative rock just about to break through to the mainstream (via Nirvana, Pearl Jam, etc.), Alexakis sought to assemble a new group that reflected the current musical climate. Joining Alexakis was bassist Craig Montoya and drummer Scott Cuthbert (via an ad in a Portland newspaper), which led to the birth of Everclear. The newly instated lineup recorded a cheap demo in 1992, World of Noise, which would be reissued as their debut album a year later.
The year 1994 turned out to be a pivotal point in Alexakis' and Everclear's career, as Cuthbert was replaced with newcomer Greg Eklund, and the band inked a major-label recording contract with Capitol Records. Everclear quickly became one of alt-rock's top dogs, after a pair of albums became sizeable hits, 1995's Sparkle and Fade and 1997's So Much for the Afterglow. With Everclear's career already well-established, Alexakis invested his time into other projects during the late '90s: producing Frogpond's Count to Ten, sharing the stage with his childhood heroes Cheap Trick for their 25th anniversary concert (documented on the 2001 CD/DVD Silver), and testifying before Congress in support of the Hyde-Woolsey Child Support Bill.
With Everclear taking a much-needed break from touring in the late '90s, Alexakis began work on what was to be his solo debut. But, when the other Everclear members became involved, they soon served as the basis of a new Everclear album, Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 1: Learning How to Smile. Never one to rest on his laurels, Alexakis and his Everclear pals issued a follow-up recording just four months later, Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 2: Good Time for a Bad Attitude.
During 2002, Alexakis formed Popularity Records, a subsidiary of Artemis. He produced the debut from the label's first signing, Flipp, but the imprint shuttered in 2003. By then, a project that was intended to be an Alexakis solo project turned into a full-blown Everclear album.
Released in March 2003, Slow Motion Daydream was Everclear's last new album for Capitol Records; they wrapped up their contract with the label with 2004's Ten Years Gone: The Best of Everclear 1994-2004. With a new lineup featuring guitarist Dave French, the band moved to Eleven Seven for 2006's Welcome to the Drama Club, then transitioned to 429 for 2009's In a Different Light. The band re-recorded a bunch of their hits for Return to Santa Monica, a 2011 album for Cleopatra, then headed to eOne for 2012's Invisible Stars.
Black Is the New Black appeared on The End Records in 2015. Alexakis finally went solo in 2019 with Sun Songs. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi