The Offspring Stays a Bit of a Wild Child
The Offspring is on stage pummeling out “Original Prankster” from its new “Conspiracy of One” album, and the band is surrounded. Not by a surging throng of moshing fans, but by row upon row of empty seats.
It’s two days before the start of the Orange County punk quartet’s “Conspiracy” tour--which would bring them to the Forum in early November--and the band is rehearsing in the cavernous Olympic Auditorium.
Minus a crowd, the Olympic’s bunker-like interior and vacant, labyrinth-like hallways are the perfect catalysts for summoning ghosts of punk-rock past.
“Isn’t it weird being here?” Offspring singer Bryan “Dexter” Holland reflects later.
“In there,” he says, referring to the downtown auditorium itself, “it just seems like Offspring world. But I went to use the restroom, and going into the hall I had this flashback of standing in that same hall seeing [British punk band] GBH in ‘83, I guess. I remember exactly what this hall looked like, and standing there it gave me chills.”
It’s been six years since the multimillion-selling “Smash” album catapulted the Offspring to stardom, but the band members have yet to abandon their fan’s-eye-view perspective.
They haven’t adopted rock-star-sized egos, they aren’t whining about the burden of success, and they haven’t used their fortune from four hit albums as their ticket out of their Orange County homeland.
The Offspring also is one of the very few multi-platinum acts that hasn’t toed the music industry’s party line regarding Napster. To the consternation of its label, Columbia Records, and other record business powers-that-be, the Offspring has been unapologetically vocal in supporting the music-file-sharing service rather than lobbying for its downfall.
True to their outsider roots, Holland, guitarist Kevin “Noodles” Wasserman, bassist Greg Kriesel and drummer Ron Welty still seem to get their greatest thrills--other than by firing up a crowd in concert--by defying authority, or at least authority’s idea of how a successful band ought to behave.
“There’s kind of a preconception that the bigger you get the more you’re forced into a certain mold in terms of what your record label says or what your agents say and how you completely lose your freedom, and I’ve never bought that,” says Holland, 34, sitting in a side office at the Olympic, where he’s flanked by Kriesel, 35, and Welty, 29. Several minutes later, after hanging back “to get one more guitar sound down,” Wasserman, 37, pops in.
“Every step of the way we’ve always tried to . . . be creative about what we do,” Holland continues, “whether it’s the way we package our records or the Internet promotion or giving away money. These are all things I don’t think other bands have done, and it’s our way of saying, ‘Hey, you can do things the way you want. You can still write your own ticket.’ ”
True, a band that’s sold 12.3 million albums in the U.S. alone, according to SoundScan, can afford to write its own ticket. But the group regularly puts its money where its principles are, whether being ready to fight Columbia parent company Sony Music defending its stance on the Napster issue or giving a million dollars from the band members’ own pockets to one fan in a contest promoting the new album and single.
The Group Starts Its Own Record Label
Holland and Kriesel also used some of their sales earnings from 5.8 million copies of 1994’s “Smash,” 1.2 million copies of 1997’s “Ixnay on the Hombre” and 4.6 million copies of 1998’s “Americana” to start their own Huntington Beach-based label, Nitro Records.
It’s now home to several area punk groups, including TSOL, the veteran O.C.-Long Beach outfit that the Offspring’s members looked up to during their own clubgoing days. Their experiences during that time seem to shape much of what the Offspring does now, and how the band does it.
“In terms of the Napster thing, that probably goes back to the way we always were as a club band,” says Holland, who formed the group that would become the Offspring with Kriesel in 1984, one bitter night after they were turned away from a sold-out Social Distortion concert.
“It was always about being part of a group. Rather than being a spectacle for people to watch, it was like, ‘Hey, let’s all get together and have a good time.’ It goes back to that grass-roots ethic that’s so much a part of punk rock.”
So even though the four didn’t end up posting the entire “Conspiracy of One” on their own Web site for free downloading as they’d wanted, they headed off a nasty court fight with Sony with a last-minute agreement that allowed fans to download the “Original Prankster” single free at https://www.offspring.com.
“We’re still pretty happy about that,” Holland says with a focused gaze and an easy smile that never leaves his face for long. “I don’t think a band’s been able to put a song on their own Web site, much less their first single. . . . So we were able to get everything done we wanted to, pretty much.
“Kids love that, for sure,” he adds. “They’re not bummed we’re pro-Napster--they were really excited about that. I think they recognized the effort.”
That one-of-the-gang attitude is the foundation of the Offspring’s bond with fans--a bond that continues despite the band’s fame.
That means when they’re not busy in the recording studio or on tour, the four musicians still enjoy doing the kinds of things they did before they became punk-rock kingpins.
“We went down to that place--what’s the name?--Liquid Den [a club in Long Beach] the other night to see one of our friends’ bands,” Holland says. “That stuff’s fun, and it’s the kind of stuff I still like to do. I like going to clubs, getting a beer and watching the band. We can definitely still do stuff like that.”
Doesn’t he get mobbed by fans?
“I think it’s how you act as people,” Holland says. “If you walk around with bodyguards, it would be much more of a scene to go anywhere, and then we’d have to say, ‘Oh, we can’t go anywhere.’ ”
Adds Kriesel, “A lot of it is what you make of it: If you want to be a rock star, you can be a rock star.”
Rockers With Wives and Children
Their lack of interest in the trappings of stardom is one reason they all still reside with their wives and children in Orange County--Kriesel and Holland in Huntington Beach, Wasserman and Welty as proudly and purely Orange County as they come, living on unincorporated county land near Tustin. Each has one child--Holland and Wasserman have girls, Kriesel and Welty boys, with whom they spend much of their free time.
Another big reason the Offspring has reached commercial heights no other punk band except Green Day has hit is that the band has been successful at coming up with hit songs--such as the breakthrough “Come Out and Play” and the new “Prankster”-- without abandoning punk’s energy and attitude.
“Pretty Fly (For a White Guy)” may have been a borderline novelty tune--although it did have an underlying point about bandwagon-jumping--but it also contains at least a half-dozen distinct melodic, rhythmic or lyrical hooks.
Such hook-filled modern-rock radio staples as “Pretty Fly,” “Come Out and Play” and “Why Don’t You Get a Job” naturally figure prominently in the “Conspiracy” tour set list.
But a few days after the rehearsal, the song that truly galvanizes the crowd at the Great Western Forum, the opening date of a tour that has moved on to the Midwest and East on its way to Europe, is “The Kids Aren’t Alright.” The song, from “Americana,” is about the crumbling of the suburban American Dream.
Now the neighborhood’s cracked and torn
The kids are grown up but their lives are worn
How can one little street
Swallow so many lives?
It’s the kind of lyrically evocative, philosophically meaty song with which the Offspring typically counterbalances the lighter material on each album that tends to get the most radio airplay.
Such songs have won the band critical accolades--Rolling Stone praised “Americana” as “a raw, ragged indictment of American culture”--that help offset the barbs sometimes tossed its way, by critics as well as those punk purists who scowl at any sign of commercial success.
The group also wins points from its peers for being unafraid to exhibit its sense of humor. “They’re keeping the punk spirit alive,” punk godfather Joey Ramone told the Chicago Sun-Times last year. “Everybody takes themselves so seriously today; it’s pretty pathetic. . . . The Offspring are kinda cool, kinda fun.”
Adds KROQ-FM (106.7) music director Lisa Worden, “They just write great pop songs. They’ve found a way to have success with the novelty songs as with more serious, harder-edged songs [like] ‘The Kids Aren’t Alright.’ . . . Ever since we started playing ‘Come Out and Play’ and ‘Self-Esteem’ they’ve built up to be one of our Top 10 bands, and the Southern California audience loves them.”
The Offspring also frequently ranges far from the punk-rock template. “Conspiracy of One,” which came out in mid-November, has several songs that veer from the mile-a-minute tempos and “society bites” messages that constitute standard punk fare.
“That’s part of what keeps it interesting for us,” Holland says. “We love the real fast, hard, melodic stuff, and there’s always tons of that on every record, but I think we’d get bored if that was all we did. So we always try to do a few songs that are different.”
On the new album, that manifests itself in “Denial, Revisited,” a heavy-rock ballad in the “Gone Away” mold about the end of a romance.
“We liked the idea of writing something that was . . . what’s the word?” Holland says, pausing, “I hate to say heartfelt, because that sounds a little cheesy. . . . The idea with this was to actually try to make it feel real without being wimpy. We tried to get across the idea that ending a relationship can be painful, but in a real way and not just a testosterone-packed [way].”
Constant Debate on Growth of Music
How far will the band’s sound stretch before it’s no longer punk, or no longer the Offspring?
“That’s something we argue about all the time,” Holland says, laughing. “Ultimately we have to do what feels right for us. It’s definitely necessary for us to grow, so we have to change a little with each record.”
Odds are such changes won’t find the Offspring joining the legions of punk/hip-hop bands that are all the rage.
“I remember friends telling us back in the ‘80s we either had to get a synthesizer and start playing heavy metal or else we were never going anywhere,” says Kriesel.
“I think it’s kind of the same thing now. This is the kind of music we’ve always liked and always made. We’ll extend it a little bit, but I think the spirit of what we started out with will always stay the same.”
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