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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.synthesis.net/music/bands_and_artists/tag/12/at_the_drive-in At the Drive-In] at Synthesis.net
*[http://atthedrive-inworld.teach-nology.com/ Inworld]
*[http://atthedrive-inworld.teach-nology.com/ Inworld]



Revision as of 14:31, 6 October 2007

At the Drive-In

At the Drive-In was an influential American experimental post-hardcore band from El Paso, Texas, that was active from 1993 to 2001.

History

During their short but influential career, At the Drive-In crafted musically complex songs laced with cryptic and strongly metaphoric lyrics. Influenced equally by hardcore music as by the likes of Pink Floyd and The Smiths, the band was founded in 1993 by guitarist Jim Ward and vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala. ATD-I's first studio recording was Hell Paso (Western Breed), an EP issued in 1994. They played their first live show on October 15, 1994 at the Loretto High School Fair in El Paso, Texas. Much touring would quickly develop a following as intense in loyalty as the band was on stage. The band aggressively sought shows and publicity in its early days, even going to the point where members pretended to be a polka chapel band in order to obtain an appearance on a local television show called "Let's Get Real". This reputation for hard work, the release of perhaps their best-known album (Relationship of Command) and their minor hit radio single "One Armed Scissor" (which had a music video in circulation on MTV) received positive attention in the rock press towards the end of their career. The band's first nationally televised performance was on FarmClub, a now defunct television show which aired late at night on the USA network. After that performance they also appeared on Later with Jools Holland, Late Night With Conan O'Brien and The Late Show With David Letterman, performing their single "One Armed Scissor" on national television.

Not only notoriously energetic and wild at shows, At the Drive-In were noted by the music press for the afros of Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez. The hairstyle became synonymous with the pair's image. (Which was reminiscent in aesthetics of late sixties group The MC5.) However, the two have been very vocal about image. Cedric once explained to a crowd, "I'm not the only guy in the band; you don't have to take pictures of me all the time. There's Jim, there's Paul, there's Tony. Just 'cause they don't have curly hair doesn't mean they're not important."[1]

According to some sources, At the Drive-In struggled to recreate their intense live experience in the studio, much like the great hard rock pioneers The Who famously did in the 1960s. At one point they tried to circumvent this problem by recording their second album, In/Casino/Out (1998), as a live studio album.

Breakup

In January 2001, At the Drive-In traveled to Australia for the Big Day Out. While performing in Sydney, they left partway through their set after telling the spectators in attendance to calm down and observe the safety rules (moshing). After the refusal of the crowd, frontman Cedric Bixler-Zavala told the crowd, “You're a robot, you're a sheep!” and proceeded to baa at them several times before the band left the stage around 10 minutes into their set. "I think it's a very, very sad day when the only way you can express yourself is through slam-dancing," he proclaimed. [2] Later that day, teenager Jessica Michalik died of asphyxiation during a crowd surge in the now infamous Limp Bizkit’s Big Day Out set.

Later in 2001, at the peak of their popularity and following a world tour, At the Drive-In broke up, initially referring to the split as an "indefinite hiatus." The band played their last show at Groningen's Vera venue on February 21, 2001. A combination of excessive hype, relentless touring, artistic differences, and Rodriguez-Lopez & Bixler-Zavala's drug habits all contributed to the demise of the band.[3]

Cedric Bixler-Zavala took responsibility for the breakup for the band, saying repeatedly in interviews that he felt almost as if ATDI were holding him back, and that he didn't want his music to be confined to 'punk or 'hardcore' - that it should encompass many different genres and be even more progressive, alternative, and "against-the-grain". Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez had stated that they wanted their next album to sound like Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, while the other members of the band were intent on progressing in a more typical rock direction.

Following the break-up of ATDI, Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez started The Mars Volta. This project was a departure from their previous work, as it pursued the prog-rock sound that they had been interested in. Meanwhile, the other members of ATDI—Jim Ward, Paul Hinojos, and Tony Hajjar—started the band Sparta. Hinojos has since left Sparta to join Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez in The Mars Volta. Both bands have been very successful in their own right; Sparta's music exchanged the rapturous post-hardcore sensibilities of ATDI for a more mellow yet anthemic sound, while The Mars Volta embarked on a more experimental route, transforming into a progressive hard/Latin rock group.

De Facto

De Facto (formerly De Facto Carde Dub) was Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez' reggae/dub side project since the early days of At the Drive-In. The group's ten-song full-length album, Megaton Shotblast, appeared on GSL in late 2001. De Facto broke up when their vocalist and sound engineer Jeremy Ward died of a drug overdose in 2003.

Members

Final Lineup

Previous

Guitarists

  • Jarrett Wrenn - Guitar on Hell Paso (1994) and Alfaro Vive, Carajo! (1995)
  • Adam Amparan - Guitar on Acrobatic Tenement (1996)
  • Ben Rodriguez -Guitar on El Gran Orgo (1997)

Drummers

  • Bernie Rincon - Drums on Hell Paso (1994)
  • Davy Simmons - Drums on Alfaro Vive, Carajo! (1995)
  • Ryan Sawyer - Drums on Acrobatic Tenement (1996)

Bassists

  • Kenny Hopper - Bass on Hell Paso (1994) and Alfaro Vive, Carajo! (1995)

Discography

Studio albums

EPs

Singles

Compilations

Splits

Music Videos

From Vaya

  • "Metronome Arthritis" (1999)

From Relationship of Command

See also

References