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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:20,459 --> 00:00:23,126 Descendents are the best story ever. 2 00:00:25,125 --> 00:00:29,084 They come from a different time in punk. They come from a different world. 3 00:00:34,334 --> 00:00:39,376 You have this idea that started in seventy-something, and to see it still going? 4 00:00:40,959 --> 00:00:42,626 That�s totally cool! 5 00:00:44,918 --> 00:00:48,127 A lot of what people listen to obviously owes itself to the 6 00:00:48,209 --> 00:00:51,043 fact that those guys made records all those years ago. 7 00:00:51,250 --> 00:00:54,167 I remember hearing the Descendents for the first time and thinking, 8 00:00:54,501 --> 00:00:56,876 Whoa, these guys listen to the Beatles. 9 00:00:57,083 --> 00:00:59,292 There was a sense of melody and songwriting. 10 00:00:59,501 --> 00:01:02,046 What instantly drew me into the Descendents was how 11 00:01:02,071 --> 00:01:04,566 much melody they had. How catchy their songs were. 12 00:01:04,751 --> 00:01:06,667 They were like the punk rock Beach Boys. Their harmonies were great. 13 00:01:06,902 --> 00:01:11,475 And this, like, shameless love song aesthetic, you know? 14 00:01:11,555 --> 00:01:14,107 None of the other bands had the balls to do that. 15 00:01:14,334 --> 00:01:17,042 Everyone was screaming about Reagan or whatever. 16 00:01:20,959 --> 00:01:24,599 I think the Descendents are possibly one of the most underrated bands 17 00:01:24,624 --> 00:01:28,316 that too often don�t get the credit for essentially creating pop punk. 18 00:01:28,626 --> 00:01:31,209 They�re a part of the foundation, the fabric. 19 00:01:31,542 --> 00:01:35,940 This sincere connection of pop and angst at the same time 20 00:01:35,965 --> 00:01:39,983 without it ever being this thuggish tough-guy thing. 21 00:01:42,584 --> 00:01:46,453 You have this singer who looks like a fucking geek singing about 22 00:01:46,478 --> 00:01:50,525 getting screwed over by a chick with the gnarliest band behind him. 23 00:01:50,709 --> 00:01:52,000 It was great. 24 00:01:56,167 --> 00:01:58,542 And they worked very few days off. 25 00:01:59,876 --> 00:02:02,752 They�re always, always pushing themselves. 26 00:02:03,000 --> 00:02:04,709 Almost militant work ethic. 27 00:02:04,918 --> 00:02:08,053 It would be insanely sweaty in the room. It was gross. 28 00:02:08,209 --> 00:02:09,918 They're the most precise band I think. 29 00:02:10,042 --> 00:02:12,209 They were real players, and prided themselves 30 00:02:12,234 --> 00:02:14,400 on playing their instruments very, very well. 31 00:02:17,829 --> 00:02:21,825 With a fury, man. It�s right here in my heart to see these 32 00:02:21,886 --> 00:02:25,025 guys again. This is Milo of the Descendents and, I�m sorry 33 00:02:25,209 --> 00:02:25,959 I�m Bill. 34 00:02:28,375 --> 00:02:30,751 Bill is the brainchild behind the Descendents. 35 00:02:30,959 --> 00:02:33,876 It is trippy that they were a drummer-run band. 36 00:02:36,792 --> 00:02:39,230 Our whole goal was like, �Yeah, it�s cool, there�s this 37 00:02:39,255 --> 00:02:41,692 thing called �punk rock.� Now let�s take it somewhere.� 38 00:02:43,250 --> 00:02:46,403 When I said, �I wanna go be a nerd scientist geek,� then they 39 00:02:46,428 --> 00:02:49,733 said, �Hey, see you later.� And all of a sudden they formed ALL. 40 00:02:50,834 --> 00:02:53,000 Since this band�s inception in 1978� 41 00:02:55,626 --> 00:02:57,501 You�re not gonna get one person� 42 00:02:57,709 --> 00:02:59,083 You�ve probably never heard of them� 43 00:02:59,292 --> 00:03:00,459 ...on this planet� 44 00:03:00,667 --> 00:03:04,042 �They�re formerly called the Descendents. They�re now simply called ALL.� 45 00:03:04,250 --> 00:03:06,542 ...to say they like ALL better than the Descendents� 46 00:03:06,876 --> 00:03:09,375 "Folks, give a nice warm welcome to ALL!� 47 00:03:09,584 --> 00:03:10,584 ...no fucking way. 48 00:03:11,751 --> 00:03:14,918 People literally didn�t know who they were. They�re like, �Who�s ALL?� 49 00:03:15,083 --> 00:03:18,166 And I was like, �Well, it�s Descendents. Same band, different singer.� 50 00:03:19,042 --> 00:03:20,584 So there�s a different singer, big deal, whatever. 51 00:03:20,792 --> 00:03:24,584 There�s no other band like them. Doesn�t matter which one they are. 52 00:03:26,083 --> 00:03:30,125 The caliber of songwriting and subject matter that is 53 00:03:30,125 --> 00:03:34,292 so close and relatable to has not wavered for 30 years. 54 00:03:34,501 --> 00:03:37,167 I don�t think there were any other bands that could do what they did. 55 00:03:37,375 --> 00:03:40,126 It�s good to see that those guys are getting 56 00:03:40,167 --> 00:03:43,167 credit for what they, in a lot of ways, created. 57 00:03:43,792 --> 00:03:46,000 �But the show is far from being over�� 58 00:03:51,042 --> 00:03:53,712 It�s just their time for people to understand 59 00:03:53,751 --> 00:03:55,960 that the Descendents had a big place. 60 00:03:56,167 --> 00:03:58,167 Male VO: �Welcome the Decendents!� [crowd cheers] 61 00:04:00,751 --> 00:04:04,293 Milo: "It�s been a long time for us, so� wow." 62 00:05:29,000 --> 00:05:34,792 VO: [radio weather report] 63 00:05:46,542 --> 00:05:50,168 Bill Stevenson: So going back to before we had the bands. 64 00:05:50,334 --> 00:05:55,709 Before Descendents, before ALL, before Black Flag. 65 00:05:56,042 --> 00:05:59,209 So, there was fishing. 66 00:05:59,959 --> 00:06:05,835 Of all things to have brought would-be future punkers together. 67 00:06:08,125 --> 00:06:10,375 Keith Morris: My history with Bill goes 68 00:06:10,709 --> 00:06:14,918 all the way back to the Hermosa Tackle Box, which was a business 69 00:06:14,959 --> 00:06:18,793 that my father owned on Pier Avenue down in Hermosa Beach. 70 00:06:19,709 --> 00:06:27,084 My recollection is him working for my dad when he was about 14 or 15 71 00:06:27,459 --> 00:06:29,876 and asking me, 72 00:06:30,083 --> 00:06:34,417 �Keith, what music should I be listening to?� 73 00:06:34,501 --> 00:06:38,835 Billy just struck me as that goofy kid that maybe needed some guidance, 74 00:06:38,876 --> 00:06:42,543 maybe he needed somebody to point him in the right direction. 75 00:06:42,626 --> 00:06:45,293 I guess I was giving him a list of things 76 00:06:45,334 --> 00:06:47,835 to do to lead to freakdom or whatever. 77 00:06:48,501 --> 00:06:54,626 Little did we know that Billy was going to grow up to be the drummer of not only the Descendents 78 00:06:55,667 --> 00:06:56,834 and ALL, 79 00:06:56,834 --> 00:06:59,209 but Black Flag in between. 80 00:06:59,626 --> 00:07:04,668 See, we grew up where all of the music around us was Top 40. 81 00:07:05,667 --> 00:07:06,667 The Dooby Brothers 82 00:07:06,751 --> 00:07:08,960 or the worst of Fleetwood Mac. 83 00:07:09,292 --> 00:07:12,375 Most of it was pretty bland, pretty boring, 84 00:07:12,626 --> 00:07:16,001 and there was no bright spot. 85 00:07:16,542 --> 00:07:18,917 With the exception of The Last. 86 00:07:25,876 --> 00:07:28,627 Joe Nolte: Basically, I, like a lot 87 00:07:28,667 --> 00:07:31,251 of others, was really dissatisfied 88 00:07:31,584 --> 00:07:34,251 by the state of rock music. I was like 20, 89 00:07:34,292 --> 00:07:36,876 had been brought up on the Woodstock myth, 90 00:07:37,083 --> 00:07:39,166 and I couldn�t wait to get out there and 91 00:07:39,167 --> 00:07:41,001 start going to all the great shows 92 00:07:41,125 --> 00:07:44,208 only to find that, as the early �70s 93 00:07:44,250 --> 00:07:47,917 developed, all the really good people died. 94 00:07:49,542 --> 00:07:52,001 So I discovered there were these 95 00:07:52,042 --> 00:07:54,793 bands with silly names like the Ramones. 96 00:07:54,876 --> 00:07:57,043 That was my big cue. 97 00:07:57,042 --> 00:07:59,834 I threw a bunch of soundproofing in the garage, and 98 00:07:59,876 --> 00:08:02,543 at that time we came up with the band name The Last. 99 00:08:15,542 --> 00:08:18,917 Keith: Through the Nolte brothers, we happened to 100 00:08:19,501 --> 00:08:21,584 meet characters like Frank Navetta. 101 00:08:21,792 --> 00:08:24,543 Total kook, total freak. 102 00:08:24,751 --> 00:08:27,335 Dave Nolte: Frank came to my school, America Martyrs, in sixth grade, 103 00:08:27,667 --> 00:08:29,834 and I was friends with him straight away. 104 00:08:30,125 --> 00:08:33,667 We both had interest in music. We both started playing guitar at the same time. 105 00:08:33,876 --> 00:08:35,210 Joe: They were just typical kids. 106 00:08:35,459 --> 00:08:37,834 The next thing I know they�re deciding to start a band. 107 00:08:38,125 --> 00:08:42,542 �Yeah, we�re gonna call ourselves the Descendents.� 108 00:08:43,042 --> 00:08:46,668 Dave: Frank came up with the Descendents. He had the funny spelling. 109 00:08:46,876 --> 00:08:48,293 Thought he was clever. 110 00:08:48,709 --> 00:08:52,876 Joe: Mid �77, we�re hanging out and this big kid 111 00:08:53,083 --> 00:08:56,542 on this bicycle that�s three or four sizes too small� 112 00:09:03,125 --> 00:09:05,167 My brother David goes, �Oh my god. I know that guy.� 113 00:09:05,834 --> 00:09:07,793 Dave: I had met Bill before. He was in my Spanish class, 114 00:09:07,834 --> 00:09:09,752 so I already kinda knew what he was like. 115 00:09:09,959 --> 00:09:12,209 And I thought if he could play any instrument 116 00:09:12,417 --> 00:09:15,584 he�d be great to be in a band with, because he had just the right attitude. 117 00:09:15,792 --> 00:09:18,084 Bill: Really I think I was a bother to Dave. I would come 118 00:09:18,125 --> 00:09:20,334 over every day and be like, �Hey, you wanna hang out?� 119 00:09:20,501 --> 00:09:22,835 You know, the friend that just keeps coming over? 120 00:09:22,876 --> 00:09:24,418 And you're like, "Oh it's cool." 121 00:09:24,626 --> 00:09:26,918 And then Joe really, I think, thought I was bother. 122 00:09:28,584 --> 00:09:32,085 Dave: At that time, The Last was making their first album, 123 00:09:32,375 --> 00:09:35,209 and I gave him tapes like rough mixes. 124 00:09:35,542 --> 00:09:37,418 And that, he really got into that. 125 00:09:37,459 --> 00:09:40,001 He was really influenced by our drummer, Jack. 126 00:09:42,334 --> 00:09:45,918 Bill: Once I heard The Last "She Don�t Know Why I�m Here" 127 00:09:46,000 --> 00:09:48,459 I was a totally groupie of The Last. 128 00:09:48,626 --> 00:09:50,626 I thought they were the greatest band in the whole world. 129 00:09:54,751 --> 00:09:57,043 Joe: What happened was Bill was intrigued 130 00:09:57,083 --> 00:09:59,042 by what David and Frank were doing. 131 00:09:59,167 --> 00:10:01,876 Dave: Frank made a demo of his songs, and Bill 132 00:10:01,959 --> 00:10:04,751 took a tape and overdubbed backing vocals on it. 133 00:10:04,959 --> 00:10:06,793 Joe: David and Frank got the tape back and said, �Oh my god.� 134 00:10:07,584 --> 00:10:09,709 �He may smell of fish,� 135 00:10:09,959 --> 00:10:11,710 �and he may seem kinda weird,� 136 00:10:11,918 --> 00:10:14,335 �but this is the guy. He�s better than we are.� 137 00:10:14,542 --> 00:10:17,126 Dave: That was truly the beginning of the band right there. 138 00:10:19,250 --> 00:10:22,834 Bill: Frank got me into punk rock proper: 139 00:10:23,083 --> 00:10:25,959 Ramones, Dickies, Sex Pistols. 140 00:10:26,334 --> 00:10:29,085 Keith: Those guys were like twins. 141 00:10:29,709 --> 00:10:34,876 The double-whammy-ultra-mega duo, Navetta/Stevenson. 142 00:10:35,292 --> 00:10:39,043 Bill: Yeah, we really hit it off and we would go fishing every day. 143 00:10:39,292 --> 00:10:42,292 I was in awe of all these great songs he�d written, and 144 00:10:42,334 --> 00:10:45,293 he would play them on the acoustic guitar really hard, 145 00:10:45,459 --> 00:10:49,085 Johnny Ramone style, all six strings. 146 00:10:50,459 --> 00:10:53,459 He had this bitter resentment that just drenched 147 00:10:53,501 --> 00:10:56,501 every step he took and every word that he spoke. 148 00:10:56,667 --> 00:10:59,917 His songs were just filled with that envy of people 149 00:10:59,959 --> 00:11:02,751 that are better looking and more successful. 150 00:11:02,918 --> 00:11:06,168 It was just really inspiring to just be around someone 151 00:11:06,209 --> 00:11:09,584 that just hated everything that much. It was just great. 152 00:11:12,375 --> 00:11:16,126 Bill: It was not that long afterward where it was trash 153 00:11:16,167 --> 00:11:19,417 day and I was bringing my trash out to the curb. 154 00:11:19,584 --> 00:11:22,626 And one or two houses down, somebody had stuffed this 155 00:11:22,667 --> 00:11:25,834 bass guitar, it was sticking up out of their trash can. 156 00:11:26,000 --> 00:11:28,542 And at that point I had only played drums, and I 157 00:11:28,584 --> 00:11:31,168 was like, �Whoa!� And I went and I got that bass. 158 00:11:31,334 --> 00:11:33,626 And I wrote �Myage� on that. 159 00:11:33,834 --> 00:11:37,418 I thought, �Well, Frank can write songs, so fuck it, I can write songs.� 160 00:11:37,584 --> 00:11:39,876 Dave: Soon after that, we were rehearsing 161 00:11:39,918 --> 00:11:42,252 in Frank�s brother�s garage in Long Beach. 162 00:11:43,876 --> 00:11:46,918 Tony Lombardo: I lived on Walnut Street in Long Beach. 163 00:11:46,959 --> 00:11:50,042 Frank�s brother lived on Walnut Street in Long Beach. 164 00:11:50,459 --> 00:11:54,751 I played in my garage. I played the bass by myself. 165 00:11:55,167 --> 00:11:59,959 Bill: I guess Frank had heard somebody playing bass down the alley, 166 00:12:00,292 --> 00:12:03,251 and he�s like, �Dude, I think�� � Frank has a really high 167 00:12:03,292 --> 00:12:06,292 voice, so when I do Frank I gotta go into the Frank voice: 168 00:12:06,501 --> 00:12:09,335 �Dude, I think there�s some dude down there that plays bass. 169 00:12:09,375 --> 00:12:10,876 Let�s walk down there and see.� 170 00:12:11,042 --> 00:12:13,376 Sure enough, Tony� 171 00:12:14,375 --> 00:12:16,084 Tony: They came over when they heard me, and they were 172 00:12:16,125 --> 00:12:19,917 standing there and asked if I wanted to jam with them. 173 00:12:20,375 --> 00:12:23,625 Bill: He appeared to be somewhat older than us, but I 174 00:12:23,626 --> 00:12:26,960 have to say he looked and acted very young for his age. 175 00:12:27,292 --> 00:12:30,542 Tony: I was in the band when it was �79. I was 176 00:12:30,584 --> 00:12:33,709 34 years old when I started the Descendents. 177 00:12:35,459 --> 00:12:37,251 And they were 15. 178 00:12:37,459 --> 00:12:39,918 Now he looks at me like, �Oh my god, 179 00:12:39,918 --> 00:12:42,210 this guy�s a fucking freak. Beep!� 180 00:12:42,501 --> 00:12:44,918 Bill: It all worked out. There�s me and Frank 181 00:12:44,959 --> 00:12:47,084 being completely ridiculous and asinine, 182 00:12:47,250 --> 00:12:51,375 and Tony was in some ways the voice of reason or the elder ambassador 183 00:12:51,667 --> 00:12:54,501 that would yield a modicum of propriety or 184 00:12:54,542 --> 00:12:57,209 reasonableness to our stupid arguments. 185 00:12:57,334 --> 00:12:59,210 Joe: What happened with Dave and 186 00:12:59,250 --> 00:13:01,751 Descendents, he was playing in two bands. 187 00:13:01,959 --> 00:13:04,293 So he couldn�t commit to practicing with 188 00:13:04,334 --> 00:13:06,668 the Descendents, so they kicked him out. 189 00:13:06,834 --> 00:13:09,543 Dave: It�s not really the Descendents as you know it today. 190 00:13:09,584 --> 00:13:11,460 But I was there just before it happened. 191 00:13:21,417 --> 00:13:24,751 Joe: The birth of the Descendents as a live entity 192 00:13:24,792 --> 00:13:28,376 corresponds with the epiphanal birth of the Minutemen. 193 00:13:29,083 --> 00:13:31,875 Mike Watt: We were called Reactionaries then, we weren�t Minutemen yet. 194 00:13:31,918 --> 00:13:34,544 And the opening band was somebody from Hermosa Beach. 195 00:13:34,751 --> 00:13:38,210 One guy was kinda our age or even older, but the other two were really young. 196 00:13:38,417 --> 00:13:43,584 Their guitar man had fishing boots, rubber fucking� 197 00:13:43,834 --> 00:13:46,418 I hadn�t seen cats like that in other bands. 198 00:13:52,375 --> 00:13:55,458 Bill: Milo was the biggest Descendents fan. 199 00:13:55,792 --> 00:14:01,792 At a certain point he would make me pick him up and drive him to practice, 200 00:14:02,000 --> 00:14:05,751 and he would just sit and watch us practice. I mean I would pick him up every day. 201 00:14:06,083 --> 00:14:08,500 Milo Aukerman: I think one day I was watching them practice and I said, 202 00:14:08,876 --> 00:14:13,168 �I think I could probably sing �It�s a Hectic World.�� And 203 00:14:13,250 --> 00:14:16,625 they said, �Okay. Just go and do it. The mic�s all set up.� 204 00:14:16,876 --> 00:14:20,543 Bill: We were just in there, and in between two songs Frank just 205 00:14:20,584 --> 00:14:24,335 goes, �Fuck it! Let�s just get Milo to sing these fuckin� things!� 206 00:14:24,501 --> 00:14:27,501 And we were like, �yeah!� So Milo just got out of 207 00:14:27,542 --> 00:14:30,334 his chair and started singing and that was it. 208 00:14:30,542 --> 00:14:34,917 It was like Frank saw the obvious that none of us could see. 209 00:15:01,000 --> 00:15:03,834 Mike: One thing about the old days was that 210 00:15:03,876 --> 00:15:06,668 the people involved were very individual. 211 00:15:06,876 --> 00:15:08,418 They were all characters. 212 00:15:08,834 --> 00:15:11,084 Frank�s image was kinda neat. It was kinda 213 00:15:11,083 --> 00:15:14,542 A-frame, with his legs and his guitar up high. 214 00:15:14,709 --> 00:15:18,918 And he was kind of a shorter man, but he was a hard-charger. 215 00:15:19,292 --> 00:15:21,375 Greg Cameron: The second show I ever saw of the 216 00:15:21,417 --> 00:15:23,667 Descendents was at the Dancing Waters in San Pedro. 217 00:15:23,876 --> 00:15:26,918 They broke into the set and he was playing guitar 218 00:15:26,959 --> 00:15:29,835 so hard and so angry that his pants fell down. 219 00:15:30,125 --> 00:15:32,542 He was an odd character, for sure. 220 00:15:32,876 --> 00:15:34,959 I can remember standing in line at a Misfits show, 221 00:15:35,042 --> 00:15:37,125 and all of a sudden he just sat down on the ground 222 00:15:37,292 --> 00:15:41,751 and started holding his head like his ears were ringing or something. 223 00:15:41,959 --> 00:15:46,251 And said something to the effect like, �What am I doing here? Where am I?� 224 00:15:47,250 --> 00:15:48,459 So that was Frank. 225 00:15:48,876 --> 00:15:52,835 Bill: Oh, to understand Frank. I don�t know. I know he had a 226 00:15:52,876 --> 00:15:57,085 rough familial thing growing up. Just a lot of familial discord. 227 00:15:57,250 --> 00:16:01,375 And I think that can fuel a fire pretty well. 228 00:16:09,209 --> 00:16:12,251 I never sat and went, �Wow, what made this guys so weird?� 229 00:16:12,542 --> 00:16:16,126 I mean, I didn�t really have any familial discord, 230 00:16:16,292 --> 00:16:19,168 I just didn�t have any familial at all. 231 00:16:30,209 --> 00:16:34,876 Mike: Tony was a really good bass player. Intense about opinion. 232 00:16:35,083 --> 00:16:38,292 Chuck Dukowski: Tony brings a unique style of bass playing. 233 00:16:38,334 --> 00:16:40,501 Every time their on a chord, it�s a run. 234 00:16:41,459 --> 00:16:44,126 Robert Hecker: He was such a solid monster, you know? 235 00:16:44,167 --> 00:16:45,584 He had that kill bass tone. 236 00:16:45,959 --> 00:16:50,168 That growling bass sound. It was just kill. 237 00:16:50,417 --> 00:16:51,084 Kill! 238 00:16:51,292 --> 00:16:54,959 Mark Hoppus: Tony Lombardo, his bass playing on those albums of 239 00:16:55,000 --> 00:16:58,667 the Descendents is only entirely influential on my playing. 240 00:16:58,876 --> 00:17:03,627 Just that eighth-note downstroke powerful foundation of the melody. 241 00:17:03,792 --> 00:17:05,584 His playing is phenomenal. 242 00:17:05,792 --> 00:17:09,209 Tony: This is duct tape with fishing weights. 243 00:17:09,918 --> 00:17:13,419 I used to wrap this around my wrist, 244 00:17:13,626 --> 00:17:17,835 and I would play�all downstrokes, mind you. 245 00:17:19,250 --> 00:17:22,667 After you took those weights off, you felt lighter, you felt faster. 246 00:17:22,918 --> 00:17:25,168 Might�ve been psychological, might�ve been a little bit to it. 247 00:17:25,375 --> 00:17:27,001 Oh, cool. Headband. 248 00:17:50,167 --> 00:17:54,085 Mike: They all had an image, but Milo, his image especially 249 00:17:54,918 --> 00:17:57,502 I guess people didn�t expect of a dude in a band. 250 00:17:57,709 --> 00:18:00,959 Milo: �While I�m writing songs about girls, I�m also 251 00:18:01,000 --> 00:18:04,375 having these things where I need to rip things apart.� 252 00:18:04,542 --> 00:18:09,293 �So I have to write these songs about girls, but I also have to, like, rip it up.� 253 00:18:09,501 --> 00:18:13,252 Mike: He just became this thing that was powerful. 254 00:18:15,959 --> 00:18:21,042 The hand in the back pocket and sing. This intense projection. 255 00:18:21,250 --> 00:18:24,500 I don�t think he thought about it. He just was what he was, 256 00:18:24,542 --> 00:18:28,001 but it came of being kind of a �thing� that I loved. 257 00:18:32,667 --> 00:18:36,209 Dave: Most other singers were macho or whatever, 258 00:18:36,417 --> 00:18:39,376 or put on some vibe like, �I�m a fucking weirdo.� 259 00:18:40,000 --> 00:18:45,542 But it wasn�t that way. So kids could relate to it. I did. 260 00:18:46,501 --> 00:18:50,793 None of us were fucking getting laid�we were listening to hardcore, you know? 261 00:18:51,292 --> 00:18:54,043 Milo was like our spokesperson. 262 00:19:10,459 --> 00:19:12,668 Milo: We were starting to get into faster 263 00:19:12,709 --> 00:19:14,918 paced music and drinking a lot of coffee. 264 00:19:15,083 --> 00:19:15,875 Bill: Give me my coffee. 265 00:19:16,167 --> 00:19:17,793 Tony: Caffeine. It makes you hyper. 266 00:19:18,167 --> 00:19:19,209 Bill: Come to Stevenson. 267 00:19:19,667 --> 00:19:22,126 Tony: In general, it makes you want to play faster. 268 00:19:29,667 --> 00:19:32,293 Bill: My glasses are fogging up just thinking about it. 269 00:19:33,918 --> 00:19:36,293 People have it easy now, because you can 270 00:19:36,334 --> 00:19:38,459 get killer espresso on every corner. 271 00:19:38,542 --> 00:19:40,917 They don�t realize what it was like back in the day to try to be 272 00:19:41,292 --> 00:19:43,667 overly caffeinated. You had to want it. You had to work for it. 273 00:19:43,834 --> 00:19:47,834 Ten spoons of instant coffee into water, so it was like mud. 274 00:19:48,042 --> 00:19:50,584 And then put a bunch of sugar in there. It would give 275 00:19:50,626 --> 00:19:52,960 you the most hellacious farts known to humanity. 276 00:20:01,834 --> 00:20:04,251 Mike: The scene was so small in those days, stuff 277 00:20:04,292 --> 00:20:06,793 just didn�t come to you. You had to make it happen. 278 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:10,125 Bill: Bands would get together and rent VFW halls, 279 00:20:10,167 --> 00:20:13,043 or rent Eagle�s Clubs, or Knights of Whatever. 280 00:20:13,209 --> 00:20:14,876 The clubs that were doing punk rock 281 00:20:14,918 --> 00:20:16,585 at the time, the ones in Hollywood, 282 00:20:16,792 --> 00:20:20,959 they weren�t down with us guys with no punk rock appearance. 283 00:20:21,167 --> 00:20:24,834 Kevin Lyman: Looks? There was no image or looks for that band. 284 00:20:25,667 --> 00:20:29,585 Back then it would, like, The Addicts had a look, the Buzzcocks had a look. 285 00:20:29,792 --> 00:20:32,042 But the Descendents? They just looked like whatever 286 00:20:32,083 --> 00:20:34,083 they slept in the van they would come out and play in. 287 00:20:34,292 --> 00:20:35,876 Zach Blair: These were these nerdy guys 288 00:20:36,292 --> 00:20:39,043 that didn�t give a shit about an image 289 00:20:39,292 --> 00:20:40,959 or trying to fit in with somebody�s click, and 290 00:20:41,000 --> 00:20:42,709 not even trying to fit in with their own click. 291 00:20:42,876 --> 00:20:45,168 Chris Demakes: Working man�s band. Jeans, T-shirt, BOOM. 292 00:20:45,209 --> 00:20:47,251 Steamrolled you from the time they hit the stage. 293 00:20:54,667 --> 00:20:57,585 Tony: We were just about the music. And kicking ass. 294 00:20:57,626 --> 00:20:58,960 Kicking ass musicially! 295 00:20:59,584 --> 00:21:01,793 Then you can walk out feeling proud. 296 00:21:04,083 --> 00:21:08,458 Bill: "We were real fat people. 297 00:21:08,542 --> 00:21:11,959 I weighed about 240 pounds, and Frank weighed about 190 pounds." 298 00:21:12,083 --> 00:21:13,500 Interviewer: �240?� 299 00:21:13,709 --> 00:21:15,376 Bill: "Yeah. We eat hamburgers and stuff. 300 00:21:15,417 --> 00:21:17,459 People thought, �Oh, they do this funny thing.� 301 00:21:17,667 --> 00:21:20,585 "But we really into that. We were into that." 302 00:21:20,792 --> 00:21:24,751 "I wrote that song about going to Der Wienerschnitzel, 303 00:21:24,918 --> 00:21:27,669 because we were all into it. We were like �YEAH!�" 304 00:21:27,751 --> 00:21:30,793 Bill: I just decided to not write normal songs. 305 00:21:30,834 --> 00:21:32,460 �I Like Food� and �Wienerschnitzel�, 306 00:21:32,626 --> 00:21:34,001 I thought that was the way of the future. 307 00:21:34,042 --> 00:21:36,876 Like, �Yeah, these songs are more cool than normal songs.� 308 00:21:52,083 --> 00:21:56,333 Mike: Then they made an album called Milo Goes To College. 309 00:22:02,709 --> 00:22:05,251 And we were blown away by it. 310 00:22:28,000 --> 00:22:30,542 Bill: By the time we recording "Milo Goes To College", 311 00:22:30,584 --> 00:22:33,293 the pendulum had swung somewhere in the middle. 312 00:22:33,334 --> 00:22:35,584 There�s a lot of melodic and pop elements to it, 313 00:22:35,709 --> 00:22:39,376 but it also has that bitter resentment I was talking about with Frank. 314 00:22:44,042 --> 00:22:48,334 Mike: The songs are like these little films, the movies, these little adventures. 315 00:22:49,959 --> 00:22:53,334 They�re intense. �Catalina�, that�s the big swan song on there, 316 00:22:53,375 --> 00:22:56,709 and it�s the epic voyage. We�re gonna go out fishing and shit. 317 00:22:59,334 --> 00:23:03,043 Bill: You didn�t get bored because Tony�s coming from way over their, 318 00:23:03,083 --> 00:23:06,792 and I�m coming from way over there, and Frank�s over there, and Milo� 319 00:23:09,000 --> 00:23:13,334 Dave: Yeah, I think the Milo record is their �Sergeant Pepper". 320 00:23:13,959 --> 00:23:16,460 Chris Shary: From the moment that I heard the beginning it was like, 321 00:23:17,292 --> 00:23:19,918 This is the music that I have been waiting for. 322 00:23:20,042 --> 00:23:23,376 Trever Keith: We made no secret that Descendents 323 00:23:23,459 --> 00:23:26,418 were an influential band for Face To Face. 324 00:23:26,542 --> 00:23:28,625 Fat Mike: I heard �Kabuki Girl� on Rodney on the Roq and, 325 00:23:29,042 --> 00:23:30,334 kabam! There it is! 326 00:23:30,542 --> 00:23:32,792 Tim Mcllrath: The Descendents were definitely 327 00:23:32,834 --> 00:23:34,710 one of my gateway drugs to punk rock. 328 00:23:34,876 --> 00:23:36,460 Mike Herrera: I wanted to do what they were doing. 329 00:23:36,501 --> 00:23:37,876 I wanted to sound like they were sounding. 330 00:23:38,000 --> 00:23:41,626 Doni/Zach: It resonated with both of us so much, and spoke 331 00:23:41,667 --> 00:23:45,084 to us so much that it was almost like this revelatory� 332 00:23:45,667 --> 00:23:46,709 Holy shit! 333 00:23:46,918 --> 00:23:49,419 Joey Cape: Yeah, it was just an instant love affair. It just changed my life. 334 00:23:50,042 --> 00:23:52,876 I realized that you could make a punk record and have 335 00:23:52,918 --> 00:23:55,669 that kind of pop sensibility but also be intricate. 336 00:23:55,918 --> 00:24:00,377 Dave Grohl: If the Descendents had made "Milo Goes To College" 337 00:24:00,417 --> 00:24:04,876 in 1999, they�d be living in fucking mansions. 338 00:24:06,626 --> 00:24:08,377 That�s a fucking amazing record. 339 00:24:08,584 --> 00:24:10,626 Joey: And don�t even get me started on the artwork. 340 00:24:10,834 --> 00:24:15,168 Chris: It just started off to taunt Milo. I mean it was just to taunt him. 341 00:24:15,417 --> 00:24:19,584 Roger just did these drawings on pieces of paper 342 00:24:19,584 --> 00:24:22,376 and would pass notes to Milo just to piss him off. 343 00:24:22,542 --> 00:24:25,709 Jeff Atkins: Bill shows up at my house and says, �Dude, I need Milo!� 344 00:24:26,000 --> 00:24:28,292 I go, �What do you mean? He�s with you.� He goes, 345 00:24:28,334 --> 00:24:30,459 "No I need the cover for the album. You gotta do it.� 346 00:24:30,626 --> 00:24:32,544 I go, �Roger does the drawing.� He goes, �No, you gotta do it." 347 00:24:32,584 --> 00:24:34,502 I said, �Okay, what kind of Milo do you want?� 348 00:24:34,667 --> 00:24:37,917 So I draw him a Milo. First, it was the crew neck T-shirt. 349 00:24:37,959 --> 00:24:39,835 Then I drew the polo shirt Milo. 350 00:24:40,000 --> 00:24:42,501 Then I drew the Milo with a tie, because he goes to college. 351 00:24:42,709 --> 00:24:45,709 And he goes, �Oh, that�s it.� And it becomes the cover of the first record. 352 00:24:55,792 --> 00:24:59,334 Milo: Bill�s known me since high school, and he knows 353 00:24:59,375 --> 00:25:02,458 that I�ve got this whole dichotomy of desires. 354 00:25:03,125 --> 00:25:06,043 I want to rock out and be a punk rock guy, 355 00:25:06,459 --> 00:25:10,834 but I also have this really strong ambition to be a scientist. 356 00:25:10,918 --> 00:25:13,377 Interview: �So what do you wanna be when you grow up? A biochemist?� 357 00:25:13,667 --> 00:25:19,334 Milo: �Yeah, I�d like to cure the world of all known diseases 358 00:25:19,375 --> 00:25:24,251 and solve the world�s hunger problem and solve war." 359 00:25:24,459 --> 00:25:27,459 "I figure I should be able to do that in 20 years or so.� 360 00:25:27,709 --> 00:25:30,043 Bill: There was never the idea of Milo not 361 00:25:30,083 --> 00:25:32,417 being a scientist and staying in the band. 362 00:25:32,626 --> 00:25:36,835 He was always real clear about being into his science first and foremost. 363 00:25:37,125 --> 00:25:40,876 Mike: After that, Billy becomes part of Black Flag, 364 00:25:40,959 --> 00:25:43,251 and Descendents kind of went on hold. 365 00:26:00,626 --> 00:26:03,210 Kira Roessler: Bill has the little boy. 366 00:26:03,459 --> 00:26:06,335 He�s this very high energy guy. 367 00:26:06,792 --> 00:26:10,084 Childlike in all the best sense of the word. 368 00:26:11,083 --> 00:26:14,375 But who else he was was this incredible work ethic, 369 00:26:14,626 --> 00:26:20,460 just �I will lay down my life to make this great.� 370 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:32,792 Playing in a band when you are not the leader 371 00:26:33,626 --> 00:26:39,001 is a huge challenge, and it�s a wonderful exercise in how to be a better player. 372 00:26:43,626 --> 00:26:45,835 Milo: Bill was recording with Black Flag and he 373 00:26:45,876 --> 00:26:48,251 invited me up to do backing vocals for �Loose Nut.� 374 00:26:48,417 --> 00:26:51,417 And he pulled me aside and said, �Hey, I got these songs, 375 00:26:51,792 --> 00:26:53,543 but they're not Black Flag songs.� 376 00:26:53,709 --> 00:26:56,376 �They�re really more Descendents songs.� And I said, �Let me hear them.� 377 00:26:56,709 --> 00:26:59,168 So, it was just an instrumental track and he sang over 378 00:26:59,209 --> 00:27:01,668 it and sang �Silly Girl� to me, and I was like, �Wow!� 379 00:27:08,626 --> 00:27:10,751 Milo: He said, �I can�t do these in Black Flag,� 380 00:27:10,792 --> 00:27:12,668 and I said, �Well maybe we should do them!� 381 00:27:17,501 --> 00:27:23,210 He and I and Tony. Frank had already took off, so it was Ray. 382 00:27:23,375 --> 00:27:26,209 Bill: At some point, Frank just took off. 383 00:27:26,751 --> 00:27:29,085 He put all of his equipment in a pile, 384 00:27:29,125 --> 00:27:32,167 and lit it on fire. And then moved to Oregon. 385 00:27:33,751 --> 00:27:37,210 Genius, right? Frank�s a genius. 386 00:27:37,459 --> 00:27:40,001 But he and I had a very deep friendship 387 00:27:40,042 --> 00:27:42,167 in the end and that says it all. 388 00:27:44,083 --> 00:27:48,083 Tony: We recorded "I Don�t Want To Grow Up" in two weeks. 389 00:27:48,125 --> 00:27:51,751 We learned the songs and recorded it in two weeks. 390 00:27:52,250 --> 00:27:54,917 Milo: We could�ve put a lot more practice time into it, 391 00:27:55,167 --> 00:27:57,417 but I think that the songs themselves are really good songs. 392 00:27:57,459 --> 00:27:58,626 We play them all better now. 393 00:28:07,626 --> 00:28:11,960 Bill: I got a taste of touring in Black Flag, and I wanted to take that 394 00:28:12,000 --> 00:28:16,542 and spread that laterally to what the Descendents would or could do. 395 00:28:37,876 --> 00:28:41,377 Tony: Bill came. He had just left Black Flag. 396 00:28:41,417 --> 00:28:44,251 And he had a road trip all lined up. 397 00:28:45,292 --> 00:28:48,210 I had just bought this house and the job and the girl� 398 00:28:49,751 --> 00:28:52,793 It was a mistake. I did it. It�s my fault. 399 00:28:53,709 --> 00:28:55,709 Bill always says, �Well, you quit.� 400 00:28:57,501 --> 00:29:01,626 And it�s true, but how long has it been? Twenty-six years? 401 00:29:02,000 --> 00:29:05,125 I�ve seen murderers get off sooner than that 402 00:29:05,167 --> 00:29:07,959 for punishment. Is my attitude showing? 403 00:29:16,000 --> 00:29:18,667 Tony: I feel like I was almost born a Descendent. 404 00:29:18,792 --> 00:29:22,126 It was the perfect vehicle for me to 405 00:29:22,167 --> 00:29:25,876 express my inner emotions and attitudes. 406 00:29:26,042 --> 00:29:29,751 It was the best time of my life, and I�d still be doing it if I could 407 00:29:39,626 --> 00:29:42,544 Doug Carrion: Billy, I, and Milo all went to the same high school. 408 00:29:42,626 --> 00:29:43,960 That was Mira Coasta High School." 409 00:29:44,250 --> 00:29:47,667 Some time goes on, and I get this weird note on my door. 410 00:29:47,876 --> 00:29:50,752 And it says, �Hey, this Bill. I�m thinking 411 00:29:50,792 --> 00:29:53,209 about doing the Descendents again.� 412 00:29:53,375 --> 00:29:57,625 "Tony can�t do it, so I wanted to know if you wanted to give it a swing.� 413 00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:00,626 So we practiced getting me brought up to speed. 414 00:30:00,626 --> 00:30:02,626 As soon as school was ready to stop, 415 00:30:02,918 --> 00:30:05,460 Milo jumped in the van, and we started doing shows. 416 00:30:19,250 --> 00:30:21,500 Dave Naz: "Milo Goes To College" is the record that 417 00:30:21,542 --> 00:30:23,667 you identify the band with the most, maybe, 418 00:30:24,042 --> 00:30:27,626 but with "Enjoy", wow. I don�t want to say they polished 419 00:30:27,709 --> 00:30:30,834 their sound, but they took it to another level. 420 00:30:58,501 --> 00:31:00,501 Richard Andrews: I was a jazz musician, and 421 00:31:00,542 --> 00:31:02,460 I was at Radio Tokyo cutting my own demos. 422 00:31:02,834 --> 00:31:06,752 And the owner of the studio said if you want to learn how to engineer, I need help. 423 00:31:06,959 --> 00:31:10,042 And finally I�m good enough and he�s ready to give me some clients, 424 00:31:10,083 --> 00:31:13,584 and he says, �There�s this record that I want you to do.� 425 00:31:13,751 --> 00:31:16,543 And I�m like �Alright, a record! I got a fucking record!� 426 00:31:16,792 --> 00:31:20,126 And I go in to do it and it�s the Descendents and they�re farting. 427 00:31:21,751 --> 00:31:24,502 Richard: I�m a classically trained musician. I learned to play piano at four, 428 00:31:24,626 --> 00:31:26,335 and I went to a conservatory for two years, 429 00:31:26,501 --> 00:31:29,918 and I went to Berklee College of Music and know all this stuff, and Bill�s like, 430 00:31:30,125 --> 00:31:32,250 Stick the microphone closer to my ass so you can hear this fart.� 431 00:31:33,792 --> 00:31:34,917 It was terrible. 432 00:31:41,501 --> 00:31:43,960 Dave: I think that album best represents them. 433 00:31:44,167 --> 00:31:49,501 There�s a lot of farting, and that goes on when you�re hanging out with those guys. 434 00:31:51,542 --> 00:31:55,917 Richard: But as time went on, I discovered that it�s not about what you know, 435 00:31:55,959 --> 00:31:59,959 it�s about are you expressing yourself authentically through the music. 436 00:32:00,167 --> 00:32:02,959 And these guys totally brought the idea of authenticity 437 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:05,709 to my fore and it changed my perception of all music. 438 00:32:05,876 --> 00:32:10,335 And to have that bing moment from punk rockers was a real mind trip. 439 00:32:11,042 --> 00:32:13,918 Robert Hecker: I love the "Enjoy" line up so much. 440 00:32:13,959 --> 00:32:16,668 I think �When I Get The Time� is so amazing. 441 00:32:17,876 --> 00:32:20,710 I regularly lump it in my top greatest pop songs 442 00:32:20,792 --> 00:32:23,626 of all time with �Hey Jude� and �Under Pressure.� 443 00:32:23,918 --> 00:32:27,460 It is perfect. It is a perfect song! 444 00:32:34,792 --> 00:32:37,875 And maybe if it didn�t have a toilet paper roll on the cover, 445 00:32:37,918 --> 00:32:39,502 it could�ve sold 20 million copies. 446 00:32:47,792 --> 00:32:50,418 Doug: We left at the same time, but we left for different reasons. 447 00:32:50,626 --> 00:32:54,626 I wanted to keep experimenting and that�s it. 448 00:32:54,792 --> 00:32:58,917 It was like, �Okay cool, you�re taking the ship north, I�m going south! Roger!� 449 00:32:58,959 --> 00:33:00,793 And for Ray, I don�t know. 450 00:33:00,918 --> 00:33:04,127 He�s not really the kind of guy who would have that heart-to-heart with you. 451 00:33:04,667 --> 00:33:06,042 A man of few words. 452 00:33:06,250 --> 00:33:09,667 Interview: �Ray�s bummed. He has good reason to be, too.� 453 00:33:09,792 --> 00:33:10,751 Ray: �I�m not bummed.� 454 00:33:10,959 --> 00:33:11,793 Interview: �You�re not bummed anymore?� 455 00:33:12,209 --> 00:33:13,584 Ray: �I�ve never been bummed.� 456 00:33:13,792 --> 00:33:15,084 Interview: �Maybe just irritated?� 457 00:33:15,417 --> 00:33:17,293 Ray: �No. You kidding? No.� 458 00:33:18,542 --> 00:33:23,126 Doug: I don�t think he wanted to be in the center of the tornado of the Descendents. 459 00:33:23,375 --> 00:33:26,417 Milo: So Bill and I are sitting there wondering what to do now. 460 00:33:26,959 --> 00:33:28,460 We don�t have a band anymore. 461 00:33:28,709 --> 00:33:31,585 And he must�ve had a friend up in Utah, and he called him up: 462 00:33:31,918 --> 00:33:35,127 �You wanna do this bass gig with us?� 463 00:33:35,167 --> 00:33:39,126 And said, �I can�t do it.� But Karl was listening in and said, �Give me phone!" 464 00:33:39,876 --> 00:33:40,876 �I�ll do it!� 465 00:33:41,959 --> 00:33:45,710 Which was great because he came down and they locked in completely. 466 00:33:45,918 --> 00:33:49,377 Karl Alvarez: Well, musicians are a lot like people 467 00:33:49,417 --> 00:33:52,792 in that sometimes they have a chemistry thing going on. 468 00:33:52,959 --> 00:33:55,501 And I think Billy and I had a certain connection. 469 00:33:55,709 --> 00:33:57,834 But I can�t help but think, �Well, yeah." 470 00:33:58,167 --> 00:34:00,668 �Because I practiced bass to his records.� 471 00:34:00,959 --> 00:34:04,001 Milo: So Karl says, �Hey, I think I know where we can get a guitar player.� 472 00:34:05,250 --> 00:34:08,126 Karl: I met Stephen when we were twelve years old in 1976 473 00:34:08,167 --> 00:34:12,334 in Bryant Junior High School in Salt Lake. I literally learned to play with him. 474 00:34:12,542 --> 00:34:15,792 Stephen Egerton: Karl joined the band, and I called to congratulate him, 475 00:34:15,918 --> 00:34:19,001 and that�s when I found out they needed a guitar player, too. 476 00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:25,417 Karl: When I met Stephen, he lived in the closet of a one-bedroom apartment, 477 00:34:26,167 --> 00:34:30,501 and he owned a bicycle, his skateboard, a guitar, and not much else. 478 00:34:30,542 --> 00:34:33,376 He didn�t have much money. And the punk rock thing was tailor 479 00:34:33,417 --> 00:34:36,084 made for guys like us, because it�s like, �Oh, all right." 480 00:34:36,334 --> 00:34:38,459 We�re not gonna get anywhere in society anyway 481 00:34:38,501 --> 00:34:40,543 because we�re bottom of the pile. All right! 482 00:34:40,834 --> 00:34:42,834 Very easy to embrace the idea, right? 483 00:34:43,542 --> 00:34:47,376 Stephen: For me, meeting Bill, beyond my massive love for Descendents� music 484 00:34:47,417 --> 00:34:51,500 was my massive love for Black Flag�s music, and he had been in both. 485 00:34:51,751 --> 00:34:56,126 So, the idea that it was Karl, my oldest friend and I joining 486 00:34:56,167 --> 00:35:00,751 this band that was so huge to us, it was like living on a cloud. 487 00:35:00,918 --> 00:35:03,252 We were like, "Uh, just what happened?" 488 00:35:03,542 --> 00:35:05,293 �Uh, we just joined the Descendents. This is gnarly.� 489 00:35:09,083 --> 00:35:14,500 Bill: Stephen harnessed the job of trying to expand some of the melodic boundaries. 490 00:35:14,834 --> 00:35:17,668 And Karl is a creative dynamo. 491 00:35:17,709 --> 00:35:20,543 So it was like, �Oh man, we�re gonna get some music done now!� 492 00:35:38,250 --> 00:35:41,333 Karl: We moved into Descendents Central Headquarters, 493 00:35:41,375 --> 00:35:44,500 which was a storefront on the PCH in Lomita, California. 494 00:35:44,709 --> 00:35:47,792 We lived in a little room with three bunk beds 495 00:35:47,834 --> 00:35:50,626 that Doug, Ray, Milo, and Billy had built. 496 00:35:50,834 --> 00:35:53,752 We had practice space in between the back room 497 00:35:53,792 --> 00:35:56,751 and where the office was and that was our life. 498 00:35:56,959 --> 00:35:59,418 Those first tours were very grueling in the 499 00:35:59,459 --> 00:36:01,834 way that it is when you're not used to it. 500 00:36:02,042 --> 00:36:05,626 Stephen: There�s no money. We�re playing these little, tiny shows. 501 00:36:06,000 --> 00:36:09,542 Karl: And staying on the floor of whoever. It�s the typical punk rock house where 502 00:36:09,584 --> 00:36:13,251 it�s 3 in the morning, the music is up on eleven, 503 00:36:13,459 --> 00:36:15,501 and people are drinking and shouting, 504 00:36:15,542 --> 00:36:17,501 and you�re trying to find a place to sleep, 505 00:36:17,709 --> 00:36:20,668 and this girl has this brain-damaged mouse that can 506 00:36:20,709 --> 00:36:23,418 only run in a circle in the middle of the room. 507 00:36:23,626 --> 00:36:26,168 This is the kind of madness that was normal. 508 00:36:28,334 --> 00:36:31,126 So sleeping in the van was real popular. 509 00:36:32,792 --> 00:36:37,543 Bill: Karl, I�m not sure if the word �savant� might apply, 510 00:36:37,584 --> 00:36:41,751 but he is highly skilled in very specialized areas. 511 00:36:42,000 --> 00:36:46,292 And then normal people shit, he�s not as much into that stuff. 512 00:36:46,626 --> 00:36:52,127 Milo: In late �86, we started working up songs for the "ALL" record. 513 00:37:13,000 --> 00:37:15,417 Bill: Well, the idea of ALL... 514 00:37:22,918 --> 00:37:27,460 My friend, Pat McQuistion, put it into motion when we would be fishing at night. 515 00:37:27,751 --> 00:37:31,377 Orca was a 16-foot boat, and we would fill it up until there 516 00:37:31,459 --> 00:37:35,085 was this much room on each side before it was going to sink. 517 00:37:35,334 --> 00:37:40,334 And I�m like, �Pat, we gotta go in.� And he�s like, �No. ALL!� 518 00:37:40,584 --> 00:37:45,001 Seriously, I would have to force him to not sink the boat with fish. 519 00:37:46,000 --> 00:37:48,959 Milo: And Bill thought, �Yeah, ALL! That�s cool!� And so he started 520 00:37:49,000 --> 00:37:51,626 bringing in this concept of ALL and were like, �Yeah, ALL!� 521 00:37:51,834 --> 00:37:53,418 Bill: The preposterousness of it 522 00:37:53,584 --> 00:37:56,709 might eclipse the realism of it which is going for greatness. 523 00:37:56,959 --> 00:38:01,209 Going for the utmost possible, the total extent, where nothing is left undealt-with. 524 00:38:30,167 --> 00:38:33,417 Bill: Descendents doctrine predicates Milo has to quit the 525 00:38:33,459 --> 00:38:36,418 band every couple years. It�s just part of the story. 526 00:38:37,542 --> 00:38:40,209 Milo: The band was fun I hadn�t achieved ALL, 527 00:38:40,292 --> 00:38:41,751 basically, in music or in science. 528 00:38:41,959 --> 00:38:45,209 And I got the opportunity to go try to achieve ALL more 529 00:38:45,250 --> 00:38:48,250 in science, and I decided to take that opportunity. 530 00:38:48,501 --> 00:38:51,377 Bill: I toured him to death. We did all those tours in a row, and 531 00:38:51,417 --> 00:38:54,168 he said, �I got to focus on my studies and do something real.� 532 00:38:54,334 --> 00:38:57,876 I mean, we were making five or 10 dollars per day and that�s it. 533 00:38:58,167 --> 00:38:59,709 We had nowhere to live, 534 00:39:00,042 --> 00:39:04,125 so you can see how a guy with that kind of brainpower would say, �You know what?� 535 00:39:04,167 --> 00:39:07,626 �I don�t have to sleep next to Bill�s drum set in the practice room.� 536 00:39:07,834 --> 00:39:10,460 Milo: Part of it is that I never really considered music a career, 537 00:39:10,584 --> 00:39:13,793 and so whenever I would leave the band it was like, 538 00:39:14,042 --> 00:39:18,167 �I�m doing this for fun, and my real career in this other thing.� 539 00:39:18,542 --> 00:39:20,709 And actually, the more that the music started to 540 00:39:20,751 --> 00:39:22,960 seem like a career, the less I seemed to like it. 541 00:39:23,959 --> 00:39:26,668 In �87 I left the band, and we did the final tour. 542 00:39:26,709 --> 00:39:30,834 There wasn�t like, �Well, I�m gonna go do this for a while and come back to the band.� 543 00:39:31,042 --> 00:39:35,960 It was like, �I�m embarking on my life�s career to do this.� 544 00:39:48,417 --> 00:39:51,251 Karl: At the end of the day, his gift is science 545 00:39:51,542 --> 00:39:53,792 and he chose that road, and I think that�s great. 546 00:39:53,834 --> 00:39:56,752 But from the standpoint of the guy in the band with him, there�s that moment of, 547 00:39:56,959 --> 00:39:58,418 �Oh fuck. What do we do now?� 548 00:40:13,626 --> 00:40:16,502 Joey: Somewhere in the late �80s, things got really lame. 549 00:40:25,375 --> 00:40:26,876 Their answer was to form ALL. 550 00:40:29,876 --> 00:40:32,918 Mike: I think Billy didn�t push so hard to become �new Descendents.� 551 00:40:33,292 --> 00:40:35,793 I think he wanted ALL to be a new band. 552 00:40:36,876 --> 00:40:39,918 Dave Smaley: I get off the plane, and they�re all in the van. 553 00:40:40,167 --> 00:40:44,001 They drove me to Alfredo�s, we ate at Alfredo's, and we fucking practiced. 554 00:40:44,125 --> 00:40:46,167 I�d been in a plane for 30-million hours. 555 00:40:47,042 --> 00:40:48,834 Alfredo�s, practice, go! 556 00:40:51,584 --> 00:40:55,085 Bill: Here�s your spot on the floor. Here�s your microphone. Yeah. 557 00:40:55,626 --> 00:40:59,043 Dave: We�ve got three Descendents, a Dag Nasty, and a Black Flag. ALL! 558 00:41:05,876 --> 00:41:08,668 Bill: I wasn�t writing for a band name. 559 00:41:08,751 --> 00:41:11,377 I was writing because some girl was treating me poorly, 560 00:41:11,417 --> 00:41:13,709 and I was expressing myself about it. Catharsis. 561 00:41:19,167 --> 00:41:22,668 It had nothing to do with Descendents, ALL, Dave, Milo or anything. 562 00:41:26,751 --> 00:41:31,543 Mike: I know it was Billy now in charge totally. 563 00:41:31,918 --> 00:41:35,460 Richard: ALL is Bill, Bill is ALL. The concept of ALL, 564 00:41:36,292 --> 00:41:39,210 you focus what you want like a dog on a piece of meat and grab it and 565 00:41:39,292 --> 00:41:42,084 you don�t let go until you�ve eaten the whole thing plus the bone. 566 00:41:42,250 --> 00:41:45,667 Mike: He wanted to try this thing where everything was very focused, 567 00:41:45,709 --> 00:41:49,168 and nothing is derivative. No creeks or streams coming off the river. 568 00:41:49,334 --> 00:41:52,501 Just Niagara Falls. 569 00:41:59,667 --> 00:42:01,543 Karl: Bill is very patient, 570 00:42:01,709 --> 00:42:05,251 and part of the byproduct of that is he will make you go 571 00:42:05,292 --> 00:42:08,834 over the part as many times as necessary to get it down. 572 00:42:09,000 --> 00:42:10,375 And I think most people aren't used to that. 573 00:42:10,834 --> 00:42:13,752 Stephen: He would just push and push and push and it could be really hard. 574 00:42:13,918 --> 00:42:15,085 Dave: I don't know what you're talking about. 575 00:42:16,000 --> 00:42:18,167 Just because I had to sing "Just Perfect" for like four 576 00:42:18,209 --> 00:42:20,334 hours in the studio before he got the take he wanted. 577 00:42:20,584 --> 00:42:24,418 Bill: He probably told you that it was excessively meticulous? 578 00:42:24,626 --> 00:42:28,585 Dave: I said, "Dude, I'm really hungry. Let's take a little break and I'll come back to it." 579 00:42:28,792 --> 00:42:30,917 He comes back with this big Snickers bar. 580 00:42:30,959 --> 00:42:33,209 He tapes it to the other side of the glass: 581 00:42:33,417 --> 00:42:34,834 "When you're done you can have it!" 582 00:42:35,083 --> 00:42:38,001 And I'm like, "Oh my god! Are you fucking kidding me? 583 00:42:38,083 --> 00:42:39,750 All right, fucking push play!" 584 00:42:50,417 --> 00:42:52,168 Richard: It was constantly a battle with him. 585 00:42:52,209 --> 00:42:53,835 He had ideas of the way things should be. 586 00:42:54,209 --> 00:42:56,209 Of the way the sounds should be. Of the way the mix should be. 587 00:42:56,459 --> 00:42:57,626 Of the way the songs should be sung. 588 00:42:58,334 --> 00:43:01,043 And it had to be his way. It had to be his way. 589 00:43:01,250 --> 00:43:03,375 And he was usually right, I gotta say. 590 00:43:19,250 --> 00:43:22,584 Greg: People literally didn't know who they were when I'd say, 591 00:43:22,626 --> 00:43:26,043 "Hey, are you going to the ALL show?" They're like, "Who's ALL?" 592 00:43:26,459 --> 00:43:29,126 Milo was kind of iconic. He had his own logo. 593 00:43:29,167 --> 00:43:33,209 And with ALL it just never took off the same way. 594 00:43:40,834 --> 00:43:43,834 Dave: I was on the road for 9 and a half months in one year. 595 00:43:43,959 --> 00:43:45,460 And I remember, we were doing laundry, and 596 00:43:45,501 --> 00:43:46,960 Bill started talking about the next tour. 597 00:43:47,125 --> 00:43:52,001 We were gonna get back in two weeks, and he was already planning the next one and the next recording, 598 00:43:52,209 --> 00:43:56,501 and he looked at me and said, "You're not staying, are you?" 599 00:43:56,709 --> 00:44:00,210 Bill: We just went out and out and out and out, 600 00:44:00,459 --> 00:44:04,501 and I think he did what any smart person would do and moved on. 601 00:44:13,042 --> 00:44:15,960 Karl: There's that instant thing of, "Who do we get as the singer?� 602 00:44:16,209 --> 00:44:19,251 And the obvious choice was the boy next door literally, 603 00:44:19,292 --> 00:44:22,959 because Scott was practicing with his band next door to us. 604 00:44:23,959 --> 00:44:27,585 Scott Reynolds: I had nothing back then. I had no money. I was living in my car. 605 00:44:28,000 --> 00:44:32,501 I couldn't even get a shower. I was basically a bum, a homeless bum. 606 00:44:32,501 --> 00:44:37,960 And to be on tour playing music was the whole reason I left home. 607 00:44:38,250 --> 00:44:40,751 Even though I am too disorganized and right-brained and 608 00:44:40,792 --> 00:44:44,710 underachieving to ever be the poster boy for the quest for ALL. 609 00:44:45,000 --> 00:44:47,751 Karl: Scott's got a great voice. I think he'd got a better 610 00:44:47,792 --> 00:44:50,293 range than most of these guys I see on American Idol. 611 00:44:50,459 --> 00:44:52,751 Stephen: You can just throw him anything in any 612 00:44:52,792 --> 00:44:54,959 key and he can just sing. He's just awesome. 613 00:44:59,042 --> 00:45:01,459 Bill: It was like we had discovered some great gem 614 00:45:01,501 --> 00:45:03,751 sleeping in his car outside our practice room. 615 00:45:09,000 --> 00:45:12,125 Richard: It seems like on each album, Bill would have the song that he 616 00:45:12,167 --> 00:45:15,626 knew was gonna bring people to the band and bring people to the record. 617 00:45:15,834 --> 00:45:18,209 And "She's My Ex" was one of them. 618 00:45:22,542 --> 00:45:27,542 Stephen: That was where Scott got his first taste of how absolutely particular Bill was. 619 00:45:27,542 --> 00:45:31,542 Scott: I've never been in a band where phrasing was so fucking important as this band. 620 00:45:32,209 --> 00:45:36,751 Karl would do some of that, too. Not as bad a Bill. Oh God, Bill. 621 00:45:37,417 --> 00:45:41,459 He'd just stop the tape. And it's terrible because you're going "She'll always be..." 622 00:45:41,459 --> 00:45:43,793 and then all of a sudden the tapes stops. 623 00:45:43,959 --> 00:45:46,751 And you're like, "What?" And he's like, "You're flat." 624 00:45:46,959 --> 00:45:52,418 And he goes back. So we got all done with this thing after days on one song, 625 00:45:52,709 --> 00:45:56,501 and he goes, "That's awesome. We're done." And I'm like, "Phew!" And he goes, "Okay, let's double it." 626 00:46:09,167 --> 00:46:10,709 Stephen: "When Dave was in the band, 627 00:46:10,751 --> 00:46:12,585 we intentionally didn't do any of the Milo songs." 628 00:46:12,792 --> 00:46:17,418 And then we went ahead and introduced a few into the set with Scott. 629 00:46:20,042 --> 00:46:22,918 Scott: The first show I ever played, one dude was yelling, "You're not Milo!" the entire time. 630 00:46:23,125 --> 00:46:26,417 Male VO: Hey! Where's Milo! You're not Milo! 631 00:46:27,250 --> 00:46:30,625 Scott: A lot of what we did was we called in the Descendents crowd, come see this band. 632 00:46:31,083 --> 00:46:33,875 And they'd go crazy when we'd play "Suburban Home," 633 00:46:34,125 --> 00:46:37,834 but I don't think that a lot of people that might have liked what we did 634 00:46:38,083 --> 00:46:43,750 got to hear it, because the Descendents/ALL thing, we just pounded it down people's throats. 635 00:46:43,876 --> 00:46:46,918 Milo: It bothers me because every single record they ever put out, 636 00:46:47,000 --> 00:46:50,584 I just think why isn't this top of the charts?! 637 00:46:50,626 --> 00:46:53,751 If I could take a fan and shake him and just go, 638 00:46:53,792 --> 00:46:56,418 "No! That's not the way it is! That's ridiculous." 639 00:46:56,584 --> 00:46:59,709 Scott: To this day, I still get a lot of that, "You're not Milo," 640 00:46:59,959 --> 00:47:02,126 and I love the Descendents, don't get me wrong, 641 00:47:02,375 --> 00:47:04,042 but we never found our niche because we were 642 00:47:04,083 --> 00:47:05,875 always trying to get back into that other niche. 643 00:47:15,209 --> 00:47:18,209 Reporter: �In our first story tonight, since this band's inception in 1978," 644 00:47:18,542 --> 00:47:20,751 �they've released over a dozen albums, 645 00:47:20,792 --> 00:47:22,917 they're headed for Australia, Japan, and even Europe� 646 00:47:23,125 --> 00:47:25,459 �to tour and yet you've probably never heard of them.� 647 00:47:25,876 --> 00:47:28,959 "They're formerly called the Descendents, they hail from Los Angeles, California." 648 00:47:29,292 --> 00:47:32,375 "They're now out of Brookfield, Missouri and simply called ALL." 649 00:47:32,584 --> 00:47:35,460 Mike: You know, they got this thing, "We're gonna tour a lot." 650 00:47:35,792 --> 00:47:38,543 �Why not start from the middle?" So they move to Missouri, 651 00:47:38,959 --> 00:47:41,626 this little fucking town and, "we're gonna tour from here!" 652 00:47:50,584 --> 00:47:53,376 Karl: That was a financial necessity. 653 00:47:53,709 --> 00:47:58,876 Because L.A. at the level of poverty we were at was not that easy of a place to be. 654 00:47:59,125 --> 00:48:01,167 We were living in a practice space for crying out loud. 655 00:48:01,375 --> 00:48:04,458 Stephen: I mean we made nothing. It was just impractical for us 656 00:48:04,501 --> 00:48:07,543 to live in California, and we weren't there that much anyway. 657 00:48:09,709 --> 00:48:14,501 So Bill came up with the idea, "Hey, my dad has this house out here in rural Missouri where he grew up." 658 00:48:14,709 --> 00:48:17,918 And it worked out to be really good for us because it enabled us to 659 00:48:17,959 --> 00:48:21,084 have bedrooms and neat shit like that. 660 00:48:21,250 --> 00:48:26,834 "To have your own room, that in of itself is just like, "Wow, this is rad!"" 661 00:48:27,167 --> 00:48:33,501 "Where I guess a lot of people my age would sort of be wanting to have a house." 662 00:48:38,626 --> 00:48:41,127 Karl: The chemistry developed and it was basically 663 00:48:41,167 --> 00:48:43,542 go out and tour, make a record, go out and tour. 664 00:48:45,292 --> 00:48:48,210 We got to know each other better than I think families do, 665 00:48:48,250 --> 00:48:50,001 and I think it very much is a family. 666 00:48:57,250 --> 00:49:04,084 Bear in mind all this while that our fortunes rose and fell together. We were all living in the same place. 667 00:49:04,167 --> 00:49:09,709 Kind of like The Monkees on the TV show, only with dirt and smell. 668 00:49:23,292 --> 00:49:26,876 Scott: When I was in the band, it was when we were at our most urgent. 669 00:49:26,918 --> 00:49:28,419 We really needed it to succeed. 670 00:49:28,417 --> 00:49:32,168 We were broke and filthy and we lived like animals. 671 00:49:35,083 --> 00:49:39,333 If you listen to Percolater, this is where the rift started with us, 672 00:49:39,375 --> 00:49:41,876 because our philosophies began to diverge. 673 00:49:43,209 --> 00:49:46,001 When we went to record the "Dot" video, 674 00:49:46,042 --> 00:49:49,209 it was apparent that Bill was dissatisfied. He wasn't happy. 675 00:49:49,375 --> 00:49:53,251 Bill: At that point I was idealizing we would put our foot forward 676 00:49:53,292 --> 00:49:57,084 visually with a song that had more of an eighth-note drive to it. 677 00:49:57,250 --> 00:50:00,751 But on that record I didn't have any good songs, so it's like, 678 00:50:01,000 --> 00:50:04,792 "Okay, a lot of lip from you, Stevenson! Where's your good song? And it's like, "I don't have any." 679 00:50:05,042 --> 00:50:08,793 Scott: The four distinct musical camps, and I think they're all very strong in their own way, 680 00:50:09,000 --> 00:50:11,792 made for a pretty eclectic collection of songs. 681 00:50:11,959 --> 00:50:14,710 Stephen: I think people didn't react well to not having a 682 00:50:14,751 --> 00:50:17,460 consistent sound and knowing what the band sounded like. 683 00:50:18,000 --> 00:50:22,125 Scott: If you consider music our child, our baby, you got four different parents. 684 00:50:22,375 --> 00:50:24,917 What are you gonna do? It's gonna fuck up eventually. 685 00:50:27,542 --> 00:50:31,501 At the end I just wanted so badly to go do something else. 686 00:50:37,751 --> 00:50:39,710 Stephen: We had a great run with Scott. 687 00:50:39,959 --> 00:50:43,710 Bill: He has the best sense of humor and he's so sharp-witted and just so fun. 688 00:50:44,042 --> 00:50:47,167 Scott: Every decision I've made since I left the band has been the wrong decision. 689 00:50:47,584 --> 00:50:51,751 On the one hand, I wanted my independence. On the other hand, ironically, 690 00:50:52,292 --> 00:50:55,210 that's why I'm a bar back now. 691 00:51:10,000 --> 00:51:14,834 Karl: Chad was really good to have come into play at that time because he was very laid back. 692 00:51:15,459 --> 00:51:19,542 Chad's very laconic to the point of speechlessness. 693 00:51:20,042 --> 00:51:25,292 Chad: Uh... it was killer. Uh, I was a huge ALL fan... uh... 694 00:51:25,918 --> 00:51:31,001 I grew up with Descendents and stuff... uh... and whatnot... 695 00:51:31,167 --> 00:51:34,085 Stephen: Chad had been sort of a fan that we just got to be friends with. 696 00:51:34,375 --> 00:51:37,001 Karl: We didn't really know he was that good of a singer. 697 00:51:37,125 --> 00:51:40,542 Bill: It was like wow, man. Listen to those pipes! 698 00:51:40,918 --> 00:51:43,419 It's quite striking really, if you've never heard him 699 00:51:43,459 --> 00:51:45,709 and then you just hear him sing, it's like whoa! 700 00:51:52,959 --> 00:51:55,501 Stephen: I'd say there are few people with more 701 00:51:55,542 --> 00:51:58,084 of a lucky, natural gift for singing than Chad. 702 00:51:58,834 --> 00:52:02,834 Doni: Bill told me about Chad. He said Milo Got great. 703 00:52:03,334 --> 00:52:06,960 It took him a while. Chad Was great. 704 00:52:07,334 --> 00:52:09,626 Milo: Bill said, "Hey, we're trying this guy out for ALL, 705 00:52:10,000 --> 00:52:13,167 what do you think?" And I heard his voice and was like, "Yeah! Get that guy!" 706 00:52:18,000 --> 00:52:22,209 Bill: "Breaking Things" was an accomplishment for us. I think I was 707 00:52:22,250 --> 00:52:26,917 harboring some yearning for that kinda Black Flag power in the guitars." 708 00:52:27,834 --> 00:52:33,251 But I don't think it has the intrigue of musical diversity that "Saves" or "Revenge" has. 709 00:52:35,209 --> 00:52:37,127 You're comparing and contrasting these things, 710 00:52:37,375 --> 00:52:39,584 but it doesn't' work that way, cuz ultimately it's 711 00:52:39,667 --> 00:52:42,001 just us expressing our ideas in our bedroom and then 712 00:52:42,167 --> 00:52:45,085 playing them in a garage together and there's no direction for that. 713 00:52:45,125 --> 00:52:47,751 There's no rudder. So the records come out how they come out. 714 00:52:49,459 --> 00:52:52,293 You have to keep moving forward as a band. And sometimes in 715 00:52:52,334 --> 00:52:55,043 order to get from point A to B there's that middle point 716 00:52:55,459 --> 00:53:00,001 where the result might not be what people expect or what they want, but it's part of your journey. 717 00:53:00,083 --> 00:53:04,166 Because, otherwise, are we gonna just do "Milo Goes To College 19.0"?" 718 00:53:04,626 --> 00:53:06,001 We don't wanna do that. 719 00:53:37,000 --> 00:53:40,042 Karl: It was the 90's, they were just throwing money at anyone who could hold a guitar. 720 00:53:42,042 --> 00:53:47,084 Interview: Have majors been talking to you and trying to steal you away from Cruise? 721 00:53:47,501 --> 00:53:53,835 Bill: �Not blatantly, We�ve been in the music thing and long, long time.� 722 00:53:54,250 --> 00:53:57,500 Karl: It was weird for us because suddenly all these doors were open. 723 00:53:57,834 --> 00:54:00,084 Bill: So it�s funny, people are like, �Oh, the major label�� 724 00:54:00,125 --> 00:54:02,084 and it�s like, no, we don�t think about that stuff." 725 00:54:02,292 --> 00:54:03,876 The major label bought this stuff. 726 00:54:04,083 --> 00:54:05,959 Stephen: The money that we got from the major label 727 00:54:05,959 --> 00:54:07,626 deal, we just built the Blasting Room with it. 728 00:54:08,083 --> 00:54:10,750 Which was the single smartest thing we ever did, really. 729 00:54:12,959 --> 00:54:15,710 TV: "Next up it�s a live performance by ALL, who stopped by the studio 730 00:54:15,751 --> 00:54:19,293 earlier this week and played a few songs off their eighth album Pummel. 731 00:54:19,626 --> 00:54:22,127 Conan: "Ladies and gentlemen, Pummel is the new album from my next guest. 732 00:54:22,167 --> 00:54:24,709 Give a nice, warm welcome to ALL!� 733 00:54:34,292 --> 00:54:38,001 Bill: "We write about things that we have gut feelings about." 734 00:54:38,250 --> 00:54:41,917 "Not stuff that we've analyzed intellectually and want to write a doctoral thesis on." 735 00:54:41,918 --> 00:54:45,794 Karl: "In summation, we write about the way you feel more than the way you think." 736 00:54:51,167 --> 00:54:56,292 That was the last boom time the major labels shall see, so we got our licks in. 737 00:54:56,542 --> 00:54:58,792 And I think we got out of it a lot lighter than a lot of people. 738 00:55:14,542 --> 00:55:20,126 Stephen: We'd gone through our normal touring cycle, started writing a bunch of songs, 739 00:55:20,250 --> 00:55:24,168 and just right after that Milo approached Bill. 740 00:55:24,375 --> 00:55:28,084 Karl: Said he had a bunch of songs and wanted to do stuff. Simple as a that. 741 00:55:30,042 --> 00:55:33,918 Mark: The Descendents were reforming. That blew our fucking minds! 742 00:55:34,125 --> 00:55:36,084 We were gonna get a chance to see the Descendents actually play, 743 00:55:36,167 --> 00:55:38,709 because I had never gotten a chance to see the Descendents play. 744 00:55:38,792 --> 00:55:41,209 Brett Gurewitz: I got a call from Bill saying, "Would you want to do a Descendents record, 745 00:55:41,334 --> 00:55:44,001 not an ALL record?" And I was like, "Hell yeah I would!" 746 00:55:53,209 --> 00:55:56,710 Milo: It was pretty exciting at that point because we just had so much material. 747 00:55:56,751 --> 00:55:59,960 It was like, how are we gonna pare this down to the critical number? 748 00:56:00,167 --> 00:56:03,668 But part of that equations makes you think it's gonna be a fucking great record. 749 00:56:13,959 --> 00:56:18,126 Grohl: When "Everything Sucks" came out, it was, "Okay, this is it! They're gonna fucking happen!� 750 00:56:18,250 --> 00:56:21,834 People are gonna finally recognize that the Descendents are awesome! 751 00:56:21,959 --> 00:56:24,959 Herrera: Every song was amazing, and it sounded so huge and 752 00:56:24,959 --> 00:56:27,835 so present. The guitars were right there in your face. 753 00:56:36,834 --> 00:56:42,209 Bill: That's when Karl really, to me, stepped up his songwriting. He just killed it. 754 00:56:42,501 --> 00:56:46,043 Scott: I can't say enough about what's upstairs with that guy. 755 00:56:46,125 --> 00:56:48,375 Chad: He just has this huge bank of knowledge. 756 00:56:49,918 --> 00:56:52,252 Tony: I consider Karl a better bass player than me. 757 00:56:52,584 --> 00:56:54,959 Mike: A little more out of the box. A little more out there. 758 00:56:55,083 --> 00:56:58,166 Doni: This guy's killing it night after night after night. 759 00:56:58,375 --> 00:57:01,126 Tim: Just him playing, making every other bass player just cry. 760 00:57:01,417 --> 00:57:04,043 Karl: I mean, fuck, I've been doing this a long time. 761 00:57:08,542 --> 00:57:12,168 Zach: Stephen Egerton is a guitar player's guitar player. 762 00:57:12,334 --> 00:57:14,085 Tim: To see the chords that he pulls off. 763 00:57:14,334 --> 00:57:17,668 Dave: He plays these really cool, demonic-sounding leads. 764 00:57:17,834 --> 00:57:21,710 Stephen: What I do is filtered through a lack of true 765 00:57:21,792 --> 00:57:25,084 knowledge of music, just an incredible love for it. 766 00:57:25,167 --> 00:57:27,085 Dave: He's a genuine sweetheart of a guy. 767 00:57:27,542 --> 00:57:30,501 Scott: I used to call him Poppy, because if I had a problem, I could go talk to Stephen. 768 00:57:30,751 --> 00:57:33,793 Mark: It's really gratifying when you meet people that are your heroes 769 00:57:33,876 --> 00:57:37,043 and they're actually as cool and friendly as you hope they're gonna be. 770 00:57:37,209 --> 00:57:38,085 Especially Stephen. 771 00:57:38,250 --> 00:57:41,084 Joey: He's also very smart. Runs very deep. 772 00:57:41,667 --> 00:57:44,251 It's weird that all those guys are in one band. 773 00:57:44,334 --> 00:57:45,751 It's almost unfair. 774 00:57:45,959 --> 00:57:49,751 Mike: It seemed like they were embraced by the punk community again. 775 00:57:49,959 --> 00:57:52,334 Jim Linderg: Descendents were just total heroes to us growing up. 776 00:57:52,584 --> 00:57:55,751 I literally had the tennis racket, pretending to be in the Descendents. 777 00:57:55,959 --> 00:57:59,168 And then our band got really popular in the second wave, 778 00:57:59,209 --> 00:58:02,085 along with Offspring, Rancid, NoFX, and Green Day. 779 00:58:02,417 --> 00:58:05,043 Karl: This was an interesting thing because it was a convergence 780 00:58:05,083 --> 00:58:07,458 of pop culture and what Descendents had always been doing. 781 00:58:20,751 --> 00:58:24,168 Dave: That's when you really saw people appreciate 782 00:58:24,209 --> 00:58:26,876 the Descendents the way they should be. 783 00:58:49,626 --> 00:58:53,418 Brett: Milo is a great, integral part of what the Descendents are. 784 00:58:53,459 --> 00:58:56,793 Tim: He's the anti-frontman. He's the underdog. The nerd. 785 00:59:04,167 --> 00:59:07,334 Milo: A lot of the stuff that we do with our music is based on 786 00:59:07,584 --> 00:59:10,834 having people throw food at you in high school. 787 00:59:11,250 --> 00:59:14,584 Those are the people we address a lot of our songs about, 788 00:59:15,000 --> 00:59:18,709 saying you may think I'm a loser, but you're the loser, really. 789 00:59:18,876 --> 00:59:22,752 Tim: He's the antithesis of Axl Rose or Bono fronting a band. 790 00:59:22,918 --> 00:59:26,960 Brian Baker: He's seminal. He's a seminal American punk rock singer. 791 00:59:40,042 --> 00:59:44,918 Bill: It was one year of fury and then he wanted to resume back into his science stuff. 792 00:59:45,083 --> 00:59:47,333 Mark: Why won't the singer of my favorite band sing in my favorite band? 793 00:59:47,584 --> 00:59:49,667 What are you fucking talking about you're not gonna sing in the Descendents? 794 00:59:49,876 --> 00:59:51,876 You'd rather go off and do smart shit somewhere? 795 00:59:52,083 --> 00:59:54,667 Why would you do that to me? It's hard for people to understand. 796 00:59:54,918 --> 00:59:58,001 Greg Graggin: When you study biology and 797 00:59:58,042 --> 01:00:01,543 you go on to pursue other things, you don't leave punk rock behind. 798 01:00:01,667 --> 01:00:04,709 But then again, you do change your worldview a little bit. 799 01:00:37,834 --> 01:00:40,752 Stephen: At that point we just dove right back into it with Chad. 800 01:00:43,542 --> 01:00:46,334 Chris: Mass Nerder was a huge, huge album for them, 801 01:00:47,083 --> 01:00:49,584 because it was coming hot off the heels of "Everything Sucks." 802 01:00:49,751 --> 01:00:52,168 Roger Manganelli: If it had said "Descendents Mass Nerder" 803 01:00:52,209 --> 01:00:55,292 on it, it would have been "Everything Sucks" all over again. 804 01:00:55,542 --> 01:00:57,834 The songs were so strong. 805 01:00:58,292 --> 01:01:01,667 Bill: Well, on Mass Nerder we decided to take a little bit of a different course, 806 01:01:01,876 --> 01:01:07,543 and we started opening for bands instead of doing our own headlining shows. 807 01:01:14,542 --> 01:01:19,084 We thought we'll suck it up and see if we can play to some of these younger kids, 808 01:01:19,292 --> 01:01:21,709 because there aren't that many people 40-year-olds that 809 01:01:21,751 --> 01:01:24,043 are gonna come out and see us because they have kids. 810 01:01:24,250 --> 01:01:26,168 They're at home watching "Mad About You." 811 01:01:26,334 --> 01:01:29,293 So we thought if we could get in front of some of the younger kids they might like us. 812 01:01:29,501 --> 01:01:31,876 It might postpone our obsolescence. 813 01:01:36,292 --> 01:01:39,501 Chris Demaker: Our band was the ska punk thing of the late '90s, 814 01:01:39,584 --> 01:01:42,293 and we were riding that new band, young band popularity, 815 01:01:42,334 --> 01:01:46,793 and here we have ALL opening for us and going out musically and crushing us every night. 816 01:01:46,834 --> 01:01:51,293 But our fans, some of them got it, but a lot of them just didn't get it. 817 01:01:51,584 --> 01:01:56,085 Brett: ALL never had the commercial success of Descendents. They just never did. 818 01:01:56,125 --> 01:02:00,334 Even though, as a label, we did the exact same thing for one as we did for the other. 819 01:02:02,959 --> 01:02:08,793 Stephen: I think by Problematic we could see the shows were shrinking. 820 01:02:09,042 --> 01:02:11,376 They were smaller and smaller crowds. 821 01:02:11,542 --> 01:02:18,959 Chad: It is frustrating. You want to just keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger. You just gotta deal with it. 822 01:02:19,125 --> 01:02:22,626 Joey: I think that you never really get past when a band changes to something else. 823 01:02:23,375 --> 01:02:26,667 Chris: Yeah and that's all the power of a name. 824 01:02:26,876 --> 01:02:30,794 Bill: We all know that ALL is the band guilty of not being the Descendents. 825 01:02:31,042 --> 01:02:34,960 Scott: Forever people have been saying, "I like the Descendents, and I don't like ALL." 826 01:02:35,209 --> 01:02:42,710 And to me, I get that. I absolutely get that. I don't give a shit, I'm not angry about it. 827 01:02:43,083 --> 01:02:45,500 But the point is that I'm in the middle of it and I agree. 828 01:02:45,667 --> 01:02:50,626 Chad: I don't look at it that way. Musically it is this THING. 829 01:02:51,542 --> 01:02:55,001 And whether it's ALL or Descendents it's the same thing. 830 01:02:55,250 --> 01:02:59,709 Karl: Very simply to me it's a different singer. But I'm not the guy buying the records. 831 01:02:59,918 --> 01:03:04,043 Stephen: Milo really connects to an audience. It's very peculiar to watch. 832 01:03:04,083 --> 01:03:11,125 Dave: Milo is Milo and you can't replace him. The great singers you can't replace. 833 01:03:11,876 --> 01:03:14,585 Milo: "People have kind of idealized that whole period in th early 80's, 834 01:03:14,626 --> 01:03:17,210 and I think that explains a lot of it." 835 01:03:17,834 --> 01:03:23,168 Bill's my best friend and it just bums when these things that he did that I thought were amazing 836 01:03:23,542 --> 01:03:29,667 and world-changing didn't explode into the stratosphere and make his band as big as it should have been. 837 01:03:29,792 --> 01:03:36,459 Grohl: "Believe me, it's hard to be in a really big band and then start another band." 838 01:03:37,459 --> 01:03:41,584 It's a weird position to be in. You do it for the love of playing music. 839 01:03:41,918 --> 01:03:45,335 You don't do it because you want to be better than the last band you were in. 840 01:03:45,501 --> 01:03:46,710 You just want to keep playing. 841 01:03:46,876 --> 01:03:53,835 "So for a band like ALL, it was just never gonna be easy." 842 01:03:54,125 --> 01:03:59,626 Bill: But so what? Who cares? If 50 people like your band then 50 people like your band. 843 01:03:59,834 --> 01:04:01,834 There's nothing wrong with that. That's not shameful. 844 01:04:02,083 --> 01:04:08,584 Where is it said that every band has to be huge like Michael Jackson? Where was that written? 845 01:04:08,918 --> 01:04:14,210 Bill: "When you quest ALL you�re questing something much grander 846 01:04:14,250 --> 01:04:19,292 and greater than getting up and going to work at Winchell�s." 847 01:04:23,042 --> 01:04:26,626 Brett: If you took the Stooges �Raw Power� and did it with a kid 848 01:04:26,667 --> 01:04:30,209 who was raised on �Help Me Rhonda� what would that sound like? 849 01:04:30,459 --> 01:04:32,085 Brian: It would sound like Bill. Exactly. 850 01:04:38,375 --> 01:04:39,959 Richard: You know it�s Bill. Bill was� 851 01:04:40,501 --> 01:04:43,419 Dave: I�m sure that every person who gets interviewed for this movie is gonna say the same fucking thing. 852 01:04:43,626 --> 01:04:46,127 Joey: Bill, I think, is a true anomaly. 853 01:04:46,334 --> 01:04:50,501 Chris: He�s a conundrum. He�s totally a mystery to most people. 854 01:04:50,876 --> 01:04:52,710 Grohl: Oh God, Bill�s so weird. 855 01:04:53,501 --> 01:04:57,543 Bill: �He is Bill Stevenson. We can rebuild him.� 856 01:04:57,876 --> 01:05:01,918 Chris: Dude, you wrote all these amazing songs. They�re so insightful and you�re so brilliant. 857 01:05:02,209 --> 01:05:05,209 Why are you talking like a homeless man? 858 01:05:05,417 --> 01:05:07,918 Bill: "Do you like to eat dogs?" "Yeah, I do.� 859 01:05:08,083 --> 01:05:10,542 "How come I never see you eating them then?" 860 01:05:10,709 --> 01:05:14,001 Karl: A mathematician brain trapped in a caveman�s body. 861 01:05:14,334 --> 01:05:17,376 Kim Shattuck: He�s built like a wolf with all that hair. 862 01:05:17,584 --> 01:05:19,293 Stephen: He can be very intimidating. 863 01:05:19,501 --> 01:05:23,085 Bill: �You fucking shut up! I�ll fucking kick your face in!� 864 01:05:24,292 --> 01:05:27,126 �What�s the deal here? I don�t record you when you talk. 865 01:05:27,125 --> 01:05:28,917 What�s the deal?� �Yeah, because I�m not Bill Stevenson.� 866 01:05:29,918 --> 01:05:32,419 �You�re not fucking filming me, are you?� 867 01:05:36,501 --> 01:05:37,876 Robert: He�s the greatest drummer on Earth! 868 01:05:38,042 --> 01:05:42,001 Grohl: He�s a legend. He�s a fucking drumming legend. 869 01:05:42,334 --> 01:05:44,584 Dave: The great drummers are the ones who have their own signature: 870 01:05:44,626 --> 01:05:47,168 Keith Moon, Stewart Copeland, Neil Peart. 871 01:05:47,459 --> 01:05:49,668 And you can put Bill Stevenson in that category. 872 01:05:49,792 --> 01:05:54,042 Grohl: Watching Bill Stevenson play the drums, he�s in his own fucking world, man. 873 01:06:07,918 --> 01:06:11,001 Mike: That kind of drummer ain�t that common. 874 01:06:11,334 --> 01:06:12,501 Grohl: I fucking worship that dude. 875 01:06:12,709 --> 01:06:19,501 Chuck Dukowski: He�s really a great player, both an inventor and absorber of ideas. 876 01:06:19,918 --> 01:06:22,877 Chris: You can always see the hamster wheel going up top. 877 01:06:23,292 --> 01:06:25,876 Stephen: Remember in The Terminator movies how if you�re 878 01:06:25,918 --> 01:06:28,710 looking at something from the perspective of the Terminator? 879 01:06:28,834 --> 01:06:32,917 That�s what I think happens in Bill�s brain. You say something to him, and he goes� 880 01:06:33,667 --> 01:06:40,543 and he starts thinking about all the various ways that might impact everything. 881 01:06:40,751 --> 01:06:44,918 And so during that time, he may be doing this� 882 01:06:45,834 --> 01:06:48,793 Karl: But, man, the stuff he expresses through music has always moved me. 883 01:06:51,959 --> 01:06:55,793 He�s more reliably delivered goosebumps to me than almost any songwriter. 884 01:07:00,209 --> 01:07:03,543 He will not bow under to be clever. 885 01:07:03,584 --> 01:07:07,085 He will not bow under to making a cheap rhyme scheme. 886 01:07:07,292 --> 01:07:13,334 And he will take the trouble of making you very uncomfortable in the name of making you feel something. 887 01:07:28,792 --> 01:07:32,751 Bill: I don�t know a lot about politics. I don�t know a lot about important socio-economic things. 888 01:07:33,042 --> 01:07:38,084 I just don�t. I feel like it�s my job to only write something if it really matters. 889 01:07:38,125 --> 01:07:40,709 Even if it only matters to me. 890 01:07:53,125 --> 01:07:57,208 Stephen: The great thing about his songs, everything must 891 01:07:57,250 --> 01:08:00,542 absolutely be tied to a real experience in his life. 892 01:08:00,959 --> 01:08:03,251 Bill: I don�t ever have a guitar on when I write a song. 893 01:08:03,542 --> 01:08:08,209 Right when I wake up in the morning, the first 30 seconds, the melody will come with the lyric, 894 01:08:08,501 --> 01:08:11,668 something that I have been ruminating upon in the subconscious. 895 01:08:11,876 --> 01:08:17,959 For instance, �Even though you�ll never come clean you know it�s true; 896 01:08:18,000 --> 01:08:22,292 those sheets are dirty and so are you.� 897 01:08:22,501 --> 01:08:29,085 Okay, that was a complete thought. A melody, lyrics, and chords in my head. 898 01:08:29,501 --> 01:08:32,626 The way you hear it on the record, I heard that when I woke up. 899 01:08:32,959 --> 01:08:38,251 I didn�t strum around or plink around. It was just like, �Oh that�s "Clean Sheets". Done.� 900 01:08:49,959 --> 01:08:53,835 Bill: The song has to come out of me in order for me to be healed or to stop, 901 01:08:54,000 --> 01:08:56,501 grieving or that kind of thing. 902 01:08:56,709 --> 01:09:02,876 The last song I wrote that was murderous was �One More Day.� 903 01:09:03,459 --> 01:09:05,834 Camera Guy: Do you want to talk about your dad a little bit? 904 01:09:06,542 --> 01:09:14,001 Bill: Ugh, I�ll try. I get very upset. Eh, I don�t wanna talk about it. 905 01:09:14,125 --> 01:09:15,459 Camera Guy: That�s alright. 906 01:09:19,792 --> 01:09:21,293 Bill: I don�t want to talk about my dad. 907 01:09:24,959 --> 01:09:30,376 Stephen: His father was a complicated man in many respects, 908 01:09:30,542 --> 01:09:33,542 and I think they had a very complicated relationship. 909 01:09:35,792 --> 01:09:43,917 Bill: I was born when my father was 50, so when Milo Goes To College came out he was 69. 910 01:09:46,209 --> 01:09:52,334 He was a good man, but he was very cruel, very cold. 911 01:09:55,042 --> 01:09:58,918 He would sleep for one hour in the morning when he got home from work, 912 01:09:59,375 --> 01:10:00,876 and then he would go to his other job. 913 01:10:00,959 --> 01:10:06,918 And then he would sleep for one hour in the evening after giving me dinner to go to his night job. 914 01:10:07,083 --> 01:10:11,333 So he would sleep for two hours a day, one hour in the morning and one at night. 915 01:10:13,292 --> 01:10:15,709 He did that for a lot of years. 916 01:10:16,918 --> 01:10:21,627 My mom put us into financial ruination, because she was an alcoholic. 917 01:10:22,667 --> 01:10:27,959 So he had to catch up, and he stepped up to the plate and 918 01:10:28,000 --> 01:10:33,000 did what had to be done so we wouldn�t lose our house. 919 01:10:35,125 --> 01:10:39,043 I had so much admiration for him because of that, 920 01:10:39,209 --> 01:10:43,376 but at the same, he was such a cold man. 921 01:10:45,417 --> 01:10:50,792 And that made it really to have a father-son relationship. 922 01:10:50,959 --> 01:10:53,543 Stephen: There�s no questions that his father did his best. 923 01:10:53,667 --> 01:10:57,917 But he was very demanding. He had high expectations of Bill. 924 01:10:58,209 --> 01:11:01,626 Bill: He had a good plan for me, and I think it worked, 925 01:11:01,667 --> 01:11:04,917 but he about killed me trying to implement the plan. 926 01:11:05,292 --> 01:11:07,876 Stephen: At a certain point, Bill figured out there was 927 01:11:07,918 --> 01:11:10,710 anything in the world that he couldn�t figure out how to do. 928 01:11:10,918 --> 01:11:18,836 He embraced the grassroots, build it from the ground, DIY ethos. 929 01:11:18,959 --> 01:11:21,042 He lives, eats and breathes that. 930 01:11:21,501 --> 01:11:24,918 There�s certainly some parts of his upbringing that bring him to that place. 931 01:11:28,709 --> 01:11:33,251 Stephen: When his dad got really sick, he brought him out from California to Colorado, 932 01:11:33,334 --> 01:11:35,459 and their relationship unfortunately didn�t end well. 933 01:11:35,542 --> 01:11:38,542 Bill: We never had a good relationship, and I tried to take care of him when he was sick. 934 01:11:38,918 --> 01:11:40,794 I would carry him to the bathroom. 935 01:11:41,167 --> 01:11:46,626 I would have to roll him over to change positions to sleep, because he couldn�t move. 936 01:11:47,000 --> 01:11:49,292 You know, carry him and all this stuff. 937 01:11:49,792 --> 01:11:52,875 You know, I did that the last year and a half of his life, 938 01:11:52,959 --> 01:11:55,668 and he hated me every single second I was doing it. 939 01:11:55,709 --> 01:11:58,627 Stephen: They moved him to a nursing home, and he died within a couple days. 940 01:11:58,876 --> 01:12:04,876 Now, I�ve always felt that it was pretty likely that Steve didn�t want to die in front of Bill. 941 01:12:05,375 --> 01:12:07,667 So �One More Day� was just� 942 01:12:07,876 --> 01:12:11,126 His relationship with his father was so complicated. 943 01:12:12,918 --> 01:12:17,168 Bill: The song offered me closure, but it took a few years. 944 01:12:17,918 --> 01:12:21,001 Time heals all wounds I guess is what it is. 945 01:12:50,083 --> 01:12:55,917 Bill: Everyone at some point in their life wakes up and goes, �Ugh, I gotta get a real job.� 946 01:12:56,834 --> 01:13:02,376 At the point where we were opening up for Pennywise making $300 a night, 947 01:13:02,709 --> 01:13:06,543 it was like, �Hey guess what-we need a new plan.� 948 01:13:07,584 --> 01:13:11,210 Stephen: Bill was married. I was married. Karl was becoming unmarried. 949 01:13:11,626 --> 01:13:13,918 Karl: I had just been divorced, you see, so it didn�t matter to me. 950 01:13:14,083 --> 01:13:16,709 It�s like, �Oh, we got a big, empty hall to play to. Big fucking deal.� 951 01:13:18,959 --> 01:13:21,585 Bill: We were trying to figure out how to pay the bills and still be in a band, 952 01:13:21,626 --> 01:13:24,001 and we had children coming along. 953 01:13:24,083 --> 01:13:27,917 Once you have kids, the priorities immediately just reshuffle themselves. 954 01:13:28,125 --> 01:13:30,751 Kids: Our dad smells. He farts a lot. 955 01:13:31,125 --> 01:13:34,792 He�s awesome. And he kicks my butt at basketball. 956 01:13:34,959 --> 01:13:37,835 He doesn�t care what people think of him, which is a good thing. 957 01:13:38,209 --> 01:13:41,918 Bill: "I already had a pretty good foot in the door in terms of producing records, 958 01:13:41,959 --> 01:13:45,877 so I started saying yes to more production work. 959 01:13:46,083 --> 01:13:49,959 Stephen: There was no intentional hiatus. It became kind of impractical. 960 01:13:51,626 --> 01:13:56,460 And maybe that would�ve changed, but I decided to move to Tulsa. 961 01:13:56,667 --> 01:14:01,376 My inlaws were here, and I wanted my family to have extended family close-by. 962 01:14:03,167 --> 01:14:06,668 Descendents or ALL? Descendents! Descendents! 963 01:14:07,459 --> 01:14:11,335 Karl: When we started the band, none of us really expected to make a dime out of it, 964 01:14:11,584 --> 01:14:15,626 and we were just happy to be able to afford the burrito the next day and gas to get the next town. 965 01:14:16,292 --> 01:14:19,793 Hit a point where people have wives and children and they start having expectations. 966 01:14:20,083 --> 01:14:26,166 Suddenly I had no wife and no band. Two things that I thought were permanent factors of my life were gone. 967 01:14:28,459 --> 01:14:31,876 Stephen: I sent songs to Bill. Said, �Hey, here�s a bunch of new stuff.� 968 01:14:32,083 --> 01:14:35,208 The way I saw it, if nothing else we could still make records. 969 01:14:35,417 --> 01:14:41,626 But by the time I was sending him stuff, I think he was starting to head into being pretty sick. 970 01:14:42,334 --> 01:14:45,793 Tim: We were doing a record almost at the height of Bill�s illness. 971 01:14:46,042 --> 01:14:47,501 And we didn�t know what was going on. 972 01:14:47,709 --> 01:14:51,043 We just knew he was really unhealthy and getting unhealthier. 973 01:14:51,250 --> 01:14:53,250 Dave: Every time I saw Bill he was looking worse. 974 01:14:53,459 --> 01:14:56,210 Zach: Everybody could tell something was a bit wrong. 975 01:14:56,417 --> 01:14:59,417 Karl: I thought it was a nervous breakdown, because he�s a workaholic kinda guy." 976 01:14:59,834 --> 01:15:04,752 Brett: The last time I had spoken with him, he seemed like he was in outer space or something. 977 01:15:04,918 --> 01:15:08,210 Chad: He started getting mellower. Started putting on weight. 978 01:15:08,417 --> 01:15:11,126 Milo: He wasn�t going to the studio anymore. 979 01:15:11,167 --> 01:15:15,459 He was sitting in front of the TV like a vegetable and getting incredibly large. 980 01:15:15,667 --> 01:15:18,585 He peaked out at 385 lbs. 981 01:15:18,792 --> 01:15:23,418 Tim: We were worried about him but completely clueless as to what to do. 982 01:15:24,626 --> 01:15:27,001 Greg: I heard this story about how the neighbor saw his dog 983 01:15:27,042 --> 01:15:29,417 out front and went and knocked on the door to check on him, 984 01:15:29,626 --> 01:15:34,544 and Bill was out of it. Called an ambulance, and the next thing, he�s in the E.R.. 985 01:15:36,626 --> 01:15:39,127 Mark Neagle: I got a call from the E.R. doc that there 986 01:15:39,125 --> 01:15:41,375 was a guy downstairs who was in pretty bad shape, 987 01:15:41,584 --> 01:15:45,001 who had a pretty large pulmonary embolism, which is a 988 01:15:45,042 --> 01:15:48,584 blood clot that traveled up to the lungs and got stuck. 989 01:15:48,876 --> 01:15:53,627 This was a clot about a foot and a half long. It was enormous. 990 01:15:53,876 --> 01:15:57,502 I recall at the time showing someone the CT scan, 991 01:15:57,584 --> 01:16:02,376 �Hey, look at this.� And they were like, �Oh, did you get the autopsy?� 992 01:16:02,584 --> 01:16:04,168 And I was like, �He�s alive!� 993 01:16:07,709 --> 01:16:10,751 When it became apparent that he was gonna live through this thing, 994 01:16:10,959 --> 01:16:15,084 I started talking to him and said, �You said you were in the music industry. What did you do?� 995 01:16:15,292 --> 01:16:19,793 And he said, �I was in a band, I played the drums. Some people would call it punk rock.� 996 01:16:20,292 --> 01:16:24,626 At which point, I�m very interested. I said, �Anybody I would�ve heard of?� 997 01:16:24,876 --> 01:16:29,585 And he said, �Black Flag. And the Descendents. And ALL.� 998 01:16:29,918 --> 01:16:34,293 I was like, �You�re hallucinating.� And then I looked down at the chart, and it said John W. Stevenson. 999 01:16:35,042 --> 01:16:39,709 And I said, �So you�re Bill Stevenson.� And he said, �Yeah.� And I�m like, �I know who you are!� 1000 01:16:40,042 --> 01:16:43,251 Because he�s looking at me as some dorky doctor, not as someone who, 1001 01:16:43,292 --> 01:16:46,417 back in the �80s was a huge Descendents fan or anything like that. 1002 01:16:47,459 --> 01:16:53,043 Milo: I went and visited him and he was better but still out of it a little bit. 1003 01:16:53,292 --> 01:16:57,876 Mark: It became apparent when he a came back to see me that everything was not okay. 1004 01:16:58,125 --> 01:17:03,626 And that was when he had the MRI done of his head that revealed he had a meningioma, 1005 01:17:03,876 --> 01:17:08,918 which is a benign tumor about the size of a tennis ball right 1006 01:17:08,959 --> 01:17:13,793 in the middle of his head, compressing both frontal lobes. 1007 01:17:15,584 --> 01:17:18,335 The cure for the tumor is surgery. 1008 01:17:18,375 --> 01:17:21,293 You can�t do surgery on someone when they�re on blood thinners. 1009 01:17:21,459 --> 01:17:25,793 And when somebody has an enormous blood clot in their lungs, you have to wait. 1010 01:17:26,375 --> 01:17:29,293 At five months, I said, 1011 01:17:29,584 --> 01:17:34,210 �I know if we�re gonna get him any better,� and boom, he was in the operating room in three days. 1012 01:17:36,834 --> 01:17:41,793 There was no guarantee that taking this tumor out was going to bring back his personality. 1013 01:17:41,876 --> 01:17:44,752 He might get worse, or he might make no recovery. 1014 01:17:44,959 --> 01:17:48,084 Zach: For us, he�s this unsinkable person. 1015 01:17:48,334 --> 01:17:50,501 Tim: I couldn�t imagine not having Bill around. 1016 01:17:51,501 --> 01:17:52,751 Mike: It�s fucked up. 1017 01:18:01,083 --> 01:18:05,125 Bill: So they put me under, and they sawed my head open, 1018 01:18:05,125 --> 01:18:08,959 and they removed a 6.5 cm meningioma out of my skull, 1019 01:18:09,167 --> 01:18:12,918 and bolted my head back together with titanium plates. And here I am. 1020 01:18:14,292 --> 01:18:19,375 Mark: We were all prepared for a long rehab process, but that didn�t happen. 1021 01:18:19,584 --> 01:18:22,918 Zach: He survived two things that would kill a normal person. 1022 01:18:24,417 --> 01:18:29,001 Bill: When I came up out of the anesthesia, I lifted my head out of the pillow and I remember going, 1023 01:18:29,250 --> 01:18:33,250 �Yeah! Yes! I knew I wasn�t getting old!� 1024 01:18:33,834 --> 01:18:36,376 Milo: He called me two days after they removed it, 1025 01:18:36,375 --> 01:18:38,792 and he was on cloud nine. It was like a veil was lifted. 1026 01:18:40,209 --> 01:18:45,001 Chad: It was like BAM! That�s the Bill I met when I joined the band. 1027 01:18:45,751 --> 01:18:50,293 Bill: Because it had grown exponentially in a parabola over years, 1028 01:18:50,792 --> 01:18:55,501 I had acclimated to that pressure and I just thought that�s what a person�s head feels like. 1029 01:18:56,334 --> 01:19:00,918 And that that�s what I was gonna be like. I was gonna be an old, lame, huge, fat guy. 1030 01:19:01,375 --> 01:19:06,834 So it was so cool when they got it out of there. Everything just became really easy. 1031 01:19:11,959 --> 01:19:16,585 Brett: It was literally a rebirth. His personality was back where it had been gone. 1032 01:19:16,834 --> 01:19:21,251 Dave: He�s really rejuvenated and excited about playing and excited about life. And he should be. 1033 01:19:21,459 --> 01:19:24,085 Karl: And he�s drumming better than he has ever. 1034 01:19:24,292 --> 01:19:25,667 Mark: It�s almost like a novel. 1035 01:19:25,876 --> 01:19:27,043 Bill: I woke up, 1036 01:19:27,459 --> 01:19:31,168 and this Black Flag fan had saved my life. 1037 01:19:31,209 --> 01:19:33,334 And he lives a block from the studio. 1038 01:19:33,667 --> 01:19:36,709 It was so awesome. He made being sick really kick-ass. 1039 01:19:37,125 --> 01:19:43,334 Mike: But I think it put in him, if there could be such a thing, even more drive, more earnestness. 1040 01:19:43,918 --> 01:19:46,960 You know, I gotta get done what I gotta do with the time I have. 1041 01:19:47,209 --> 01:19:51,918 Bill: I�m a lucky man. I�m lucky to be here, and I�m happy to be here. 1042 01:19:52,042 --> 01:19:55,876 And it�s just rad. It�s rad to not die. 1043 01:20:00,209 --> 01:20:03,543 Stephen: With Bill�s health issues now resolved and the 1044 01:20:03,584 --> 01:20:07,502 massive debt that was incurred when Bill couldn�t work, 1045 01:20:07,667 --> 01:20:11,251 with medical bills stacked on top of that. I think Milo was like, 1046 01:20:11,292 --> 01:20:13,334 �Maybe we ought to take a few shows.� 1047 01:20:13,375 --> 01:20:18,500 Reporter: �At FunFunFun Fest today we have the Descendents!� 1048 01:20:18,542 --> 01:20:22,460 Milo: I really wanted to see him back on the drumset. 1049 01:20:22,876 --> 01:20:27,293 I wanted to be able to turn around and watch him doing the Bill thing. 1050 01:20:32,709 --> 01:20:36,501 Milo: Which, sure enough, that�s how it�s been. It�s been incredible. 1051 01:20:42,167 --> 01:20:46,043 I look back and he almost always has a smile on his face. He's back there like� 1052 01:20:46,667 --> 01:20:52,168 As you might expect from someone who almost lost their life twice. He has a new reason to live. 1053 01:20:52,375 --> 01:20:57,792 He�s living it back there on the drums with this big shit-eating grin on his face. 1054 01:20:58,959 --> 01:21:04,293 Stephen: Milo figured out, �I can do this in this limited way and it works for me, and it�s cool." 1055 01:21:04,459 --> 01:21:07,834 Just blast in there, have a ton of fun, and then go back to my science thing. 1056 01:21:08,083 --> 01:21:15,125 Karl: It�s fun, man. It�s easier now because a lot of the problems that might have existed 1057 01:21:15,667 --> 01:21:19,667 personally and professionally don�t exist now. We certainly all have separate lives, 1058 01:21:19,834 --> 01:21:23,834 and we get together and do this music. It�s a little bit like a time machine. 1059 01:21:24,000 --> 01:21:28,334 Part of you is still existing in the time and space where you wrote the song. 1060 01:21:28,834 --> 01:21:31,917 Bill: We can bring our kids to our show and be like, �Check me out! 1061 01:21:31,918 --> 01:21:35,210 I�m rockin�!� Miles is like, �Yeah, my dad shreds on drums!� 1062 01:21:41,167 --> 01:21:44,959 Milo: I figure I gotta do it now before, A) I�m too old, and 1063 01:21:44,959 --> 01:21:48,751 B) they�re teenagers and what to have nothing to do with me. 1064 01:21:53,292 --> 01:21:57,584 Dave: They still sound amazing. Just as powerful as they have been. 1065 01:22:00,959 --> 01:22:03,585 It�s nice to have the audience really dig them. 1066 01:22:03,834 --> 01:22:07,418 Joey: They�re maybe even better than they were, which I don�t understand. 1067 01:22:10,584 --> 01:22:16,502 Doug: It�s not like, �Wheel out the geezers and let them play!� These guys are doing it! 1068 01:22:16,542 --> 01:22:19,460 That�s difficult music to play! And they�re blasting! 1069 01:22:25,626 --> 01:22:30,876 Scott: I didn�t even watch any of the show. I sat just facing the audience the entire time, 1070 01:22:31,042 --> 01:22:35,251 because I just couldn�t get over it. It was like fucking Van Halen or something. 1071 01:22:36,667 --> 01:22:41,418 Mike: They�ve got such passionate fans. They�ve got fans that will die for them. 1072 01:22:41,501 --> 01:22:43,960 Fan: The best fucking songs. They were some of the fastest players. 1073 01:22:43,959 --> 01:22:47,084 Fan #2: How cool is it to have a song about fishing? 1074 01:22:47,125 --> 01:22:50,667 Fan #3: Descendents really spoke to me, and I felt like they 1075 01:22:50,709 --> 01:22:54,293 must be exactly like me because this song is exactly how I felt. 1076 01:22:54,334 --> 01:22:57,085 Fan #4: They wrote the stories of a lot of people�s lives. 1077 01:22:57,334 --> 01:23:02,210 Fan #5: It was like the soundtrack to our youth. 1078 01:23:02,292 --> 01:23:04,667 Fan #6: I can�t tell you enough about what they�ve done for me. 1079 01:23:04,876 --> 01:23:07,210 Fan #7: If I had a child, his name would be Milo. 1080 01:23:07,334 --> 01:23:11,168 Fan #8: He�s a scientist and punk rocker. What cooler thing can you be? 1081 01:23:26,959 --> 01:23:30,501 Grohl: Thankfully there was a point where popular bands 1082 01:23:30,542 --> 01:23:34,084 were influenced by bands that actually meant something. 1083 01:23:34,209 --> 01:23:39,043 The Descendents were a positive influence on generations of musicians. 1084 01:23:39,250 --> 01:23:43,625 Mike: I got to put out a Descendents record on my label. How fucking awesome is that? 1085 01:23:43,792 --> 01:23:50,084 Mark: As far as I�m concerned, they invented pop punk for me. That attitude and that musical sensibility. 1086 01:23:50,459 --> 01:23:53,293 I won�t say that I entirely ripped it off, but heavily influenced. 1087 01:23:53,584 --> 01:23:56,959 Grohl: Those lessons that we learned from them back then were important. 1088 01:23:56,959 --> 01:24:03,042 To this day I bet you I can play that whole fucking "Milo Goes To College" album, note for note. 1089 01:24:03,417 --> 01:24:04,876 That�s how I learned how to play the drums. 1090 01:24:06,292 --> 01:24:09,459 Bug: There�s no other band like them. It�s doesn�t 1091 01:24:09,459 --> 01:24:12,960 matter which one they are. There�s just not another one. 1092 01:24:13,375 --> 01:24:17,500 Chris: They were ahead of their time. They were making music that these band�s that hit in the �90s 1093 01:24:17,959 --> 01:24:21,585 wouldn�t have been making probably if it wasn�t for ALL and the Descendents. 1094 01:24:22,375 --> 01:24:26,417 Tim: Much of the world may not realize that it all started with the Descendents. 1095 01:24:28,209 --> 01:24:34,001 Milo: It�s just been a bunch of best friends who come in and out of each other�s lives. 1096 01:24:35,709 --> 01:24:42,460 Milo: I just wanted Bill to get some fruits from his labor, his toil. Because he has toiled for many years. 1097 01:24:43,626 --> 01:24:45,918 Mark: I think he feels himself a bit of a square peg, 1098 01:24:46,292 --> 01:24:51,210 and the way he made his path in life was by forging it on his own. 1099 01:24:51,501 --> 01:24:56,876 Had he been a poser, he would not have been who he was. 1100 01:24:57,542 --> 01:25:03,251 Chuck: Humanities big gains, including rock bands, are about group efforts. 1101 01:25:03,459 --> 01:25:08,876 If an individual can find a group of people who will share 1102 01:25:08,918 --> 01:25:13,001 that enthusiasm and hard work and focus and keep that going, 1103 01:25:13,375 --> 01:25:16,293 you get incredible productivity from it. 1104 01:25:22,375 --> 01:25:24,375 Bill: It�s a good time right now for us. We�re having fun. 1105 01:25:24,792 --> 01:25:28,293 And Milo and I, when we were walking in Austin, I remember going, 1106 01:25:28,501 --> 01:25:32,085 �Oh, so if we want to hang out, all we have to is book shows and we get to hang out.� 1107 01:25:32,292 --> 01:25:35,375 And he�s like, �Yeah! Why didn�t I think of that?� 103414

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