THE BUG
 
On Air Now:
 
 

Sublime

Formed
1988 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by John Bush
Formed in 1988 as a {garage punk} band, Sublime rose to fame in the mid-'90s on the back of the California {punk} explosion engendered by Green Day and The Offspring, though Sublime boosted their {punk} influences with heavy elements of { eggae} and {ska}. The band released only two albums during its first seven years, and finally found mainstream success with a self-titled release in 1996. It proved to be Sublime's last proper album, however, as lead singer Brad Nowell died in May 1996, just two months before the record's release.

The three Long Beach musicians who comprised Sublime -- vocalist/guitarist Nowell, bassist Eric Wilson, and drummer Bud Gaugh -- played their first gig on July 4, 1988, at a small Long Beach club (a show that sparked the infamous Peninsula Riot). The group began touring heavily while amassing an increasingly substantial following, especially among the surf/skate beach crowd. After four years of concentrating strictly on live shows, Sublime recorded their first album, 40 Oz. To Freedom, in 1992. The LP was released on Skunk Records -- a label formed by Nowell with Sublime manager Miguel -- and sold at local shows, but it really started to break when local radio station KROQ began playing the single "Date Rape" two years after its initial release.

Read More