Adrenalin OD (or AOD as they were more commonly known as) were the kings of NJ hardcore and also the kings of goofy hardcore. While a lot of bands were all about politics, AOD were a lot less serious and a lot more fun. They were around for a good handful of years, and put out some damn good records before packing it in and going their separate ways. This interview was done via email with Dave Scott. How did you first get into punk rock and how old were you
at the time?
I first got into punk through my half sister. She got into
it really early. She used to date Mick Jones from the Clash. She lived in Miami
and the only time we'd see her was when she'd come up to New York when the Clash
were in town. She got me into the Clash shows for free and I'd always be front
row center. Seeing the Clash live, especially back in 1979 around the Give Em
Enough Rope era was like a religious experience. She was also a writer for the
Florida punk magazine Mouth Of The Rat which years later would morph into the
important N.Y. punk label Ratcage Records.When was it that you started playing drums?
I was horrible when I started. I would jam on breaks with
the band I managed called the East Paterson Boys Choir. We'd play Misfits and
Dead Kennedy's songs while their drummer smoked pot in the parking lot. The East
Paterson Boys Choir featured Bruce on vocals (later in A.O.D.), Tommy K on guitar
(later in Mourning Noise and Bedlam) Paul on guitar (later in A.O.D.), and Jack
on Bass (later in A.O.D.). Where did you meet yr fellow band mates? How did AOD come to be?
I heard that there was a punk shop opening up in my neighboring
city of Passaic, NJ. I was about 15 at the time. I took the bus to check it out.
The store was called Two-Tone and is actually still in business to this day. As
I was leaving the store I heard a blaring version of Pills by the NY Dolls coming
from a small cafe across the street. It was the East Paterson Boys Choir. I went
in and watched them perform Saturday Night by the Bay City Rollers and Sonic Reducer
by The Dead Boys. They rocked in a sloppy screw everything kind of way. We talked
after they played and I ended up becoming their 15 year old manager. I even got
them their historical appearance at The Clifton City Picnic. What was the original line up? I know there was at least
one member who > > came and went and Bruce joined a little later. What happened
to those members who left and why did they leave the band?
From the start the lineup was Paul Richard, Jack Steeples,
Myself, and Jim Foster on guitar. Jim was hard to get along with. He was the grandmother
of the group. He left the band around the time Let's Barbeque came out. He later
went on to be in Electric Frankenstein. Bruce was always around anyway and we
all liked him so he just kind of filled in perfectly.When you started
the band, was it always the intention to be the kings of goofy hardcore?
The only direction we had when we started was that we wanted
to be the world's fastest band. Paul and myself were really getting into the DC
and LA scenes. Black Flag, Circle Jerks, SOA, Minor Threat. The goofy thing is
really because we're goofy assed motherfuckers in real life. We just had that
comedy team kind of connection. We were funny on and off stage. Everything on
stage was 100 % spontaneous which is why people loved the live shows. No props
or rehearsed lines.How
long after you formed did you do Let's BBQ?
Let's Barbeque was over a year of playing out and saving
the money.Tell me about Buy Our Records. How
did it come to be and how did you hook up with them.
Buy Our Records was started by Paul and me as a way to release
Let's Barbeque. We brought in our friends Lenny and Jim (from Bedlam) and
Chris (now an indie film director) when we got too busy to be that involved.
When you did the first single, how
long did it take to sell them all? You ended up doing more than one pressing
so did you gain a pretty strong following early on?
We sold out of the first pressing really fast. Magazines
like Flipside Maximum Rock n' Roll and Jersey Beat all helped the sales of Let's
Barbeque. How long after that single was it that you went in and did
Wacky Hi Jinks...?
I think about a year and a half later. By then Buy Our Records
had some money.When did you tour the US the first time?
We would always take weekend trips to places like Detroit,
Pittsburgh, and Massachusetts. Our first real tour was in July of 1984. We played
10 states in a month. It was so much fun. Every town had a scene blossoming and
it was great to see it back then. That split single with Bedlam was
supposed to be a flexi. What happened that it ended up getting rejected
by Evatone and became a regular single instead. Why didn't you do a sleeve
for it?
Evatone had religious affiliations and were to afraid of
the swearing on the Bedlam side. We were forced into doing it as a regular record.
It had no cover because it was just a limited edition record to sell at shows
and through the mail. Who came up with the title for the second LP?
If I'm not mistaken it was Bruce. With
the third album, your sound changed quite a bit. Was this just a > > result of
playing together so long? Or did you get bored of hardcore and wanted to try
something else out.
I think hardcore was beginning to get redundant. We were
listening to more traditional punk like The Avengers, Blondie, The Buzzcocks,
as well as rock bands like Cheap Trick. It was only natural that it filtered into
what we played. I'd say that around 1986 the creative part of the hardcore movement
was dying off. Why after years of being on the label, did you part
ways with Buy our Records?
Buy Our Records ended up going bankrupt after putting out
some great stuff. We had a manager at the time and he hooked us up with Enigma/Restless.Your last record, Ishtar, didn't really live up to the fine AOD standard, did you realize this at the time and therefore name the album after that movie, which was, well... um... bad?
Yes my friend, you win the golden ticket. We were ready to
break up before we signed with them. The record was over budget, and uninspired.
Hence ISHTAR, one of the all time money losing flops. Why did you guys call it a day and when?
A few weeks after Ishtar came out, Restless Records went
under. We felt defeated. How did the GTA reissue CD come about? How
come you didn't reissue the second LP? It was great and is worthy of a proper
reissue.
Bruce hooked us up with GTA, which have been very good to
us. Brian's a real good guy. As for Humungousfungusamongus. It will be
coming out this year on Relapse Records, remastered and repackaged with a new
cover, a big booklet, and 7 unreleased songs from the Humungous session.How did that demos album come about?
The demo album on Munster Records was set up by our friend
Sal from Electric Frankenstein. You told me AOD played at the New York
Thrash anniversary, any chance there may be another AOD reunion in the future?
I'll never say never, but probably not. The CBGB's reunion
was a great way to go out. It was a lot of fun. What is it you do now, and what are the other guys up to? Are you still all friends?
Of course. Their like my big ugly brothers. Paul and Jack
now play in SUX. Bruce is in the International Brunch Mummies.Do you ever miss being in the band?
It was a fantastic way to grow up. I don't know if I'd want
to do it now. I live in Florida and design merchandise for bands. I manage the
amazing punk power duo NUTRAJET. After A.O.D. I drummed for Atlantic Recording
Artists Lucy's Trance and the Orlando based Sci-Fi Punk band The HYBRIDS.Of all the AOD records, which is your favorite and least favorite?
My favorite album is Cruising With Elvis because we
had a great time making it and touring to support it. My favorite song is "The
Nice Song in the key of D" on Humungous. My least favorite is Ishtar. I
enjoyed working with producer Andy Shernoff (Dictators) but we were recording
at 4 in the morning and the results were disappointing. If you could go back in time and change something about AOD, anything, what would it be?
I would have probably taken a few years off after Ishtar
and come back stronger in time for Green Day's pop punk revival. I look at NOFX
and think we dropped the ball. Any final comments?
Thanks for the interest. Watch out for all the albums to be reissued soon on Relapse Records. AOD Vinyl Discography
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