The enduring L.A. punk band Social Distortion has overcome numerous personnel shifts, the demise of the Los Angeles hardcore scene that spawned them, and the heroin addiction of singer/guitarist/bandleader
Mike Ness to achieve a measure mainstream acceptance for their rootsy, hard-hitting punk without compromise. Inspired by the fertile L.A. punk scene,
Ness formed the group in 1978 with drummer
Casey Royer and brothers
Frank (bass) and
Rikk Agnew (guitar). When the brothers left to join
the Adolescents,
Ness' schoolmate
Dennis Danell joined on bass; the next few years saw a revolving-door membership. When the group finally recorded its debut album,
Mommy's Little Monster in 1983, the band consisted of
Ness,
Danell (now on guitar), bassist
Brent Liles, and drummer
Derek O'Brien. Their music was often described as a punk version of
the Rolling Stones, and Another State of Mind was one of the few punk videos to air on MTV in 1984. However, the band took four years to record a follow-up, as
Ness descended into heroin addiction and self-consciously rebellious behavior.
Liles and
O'Brien left, and
Ness, after straightening himself out, finally regrouped in 1988 with
John Maurer on bass and
Chris Reece on drums. This lineup recorded
Prison Bound, a mature album broadening Social Distortion's roots rock influences with a country feel. Their self-titled 1990 effort included a cover of
Johnny Cash's Ring of Fire and returned the group to MTV via Ball and Chain.
Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell became their most popular album to date, producing a minor radio hit in Bad Luck and keeping with their now-established blend of punk, blues, country, and rockabilly.
Social Distortion took an extended hiatus following the release of Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell, returning in 1996 with White Light, White Heat, White Trash, which proved to be a moderate hit on MTV and modern-rock radio; former Black Flag and D.O.A. drummer Chuck Biscuits made his debut on the album, following the departure of Reece. Live at the Roxy followed in 1998, and a year later Ness issued a pair of solo albums, Cheating at Solitaire and the covers collection Under the Influences. Danell died February 29, 2000 of an apparent brain aneurysm; the guitarist was just 38-years-old. In the fall of 2000, Jonny Wickersham signed on as the group's new guitarist, and Charlie Quintana took over on drums from the often busy Biscuits. After extensive touring, the band went back into the studio in 2004 to record Sex, Love and Rock 'n' Roll. Another six years passed before Social D returned to recording. Produced by Mike Ness himself, 2011's glossy-but-muscular Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes featured a new lineup, with bassist Brent Harding and the son of Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo, drummer David Hidalgo Jr. joining Wickersham and Ness. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi