Blink-182  is an American rock band consisting of vocalist and bass guitarist Mark  Hoppus, vocalist and guitarist Tom DeLonge, and drummer Travis Barker.  They have sold over
27 million albums worldwide since forming in Poway, California in 1992. With original drummer Scott Raynor they released their debut album Cheshire Cat in 1994 and achieved moderate success with its follow-up, 1997's Dude Ranch, which went on to sell over one million copies. Raynor was replaced by Barker midway through a 1998 tour.
The band achieved
greater success with 1999's multi-platinum selling Enema of the State, which reached number 9 on the Billboard 200 on the strength of the singles "What's My Age Again" and "All the Small Things", the latter of which became the highest-charting song of their career by reaching number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100. Blink-182 gained popularity for their irreverent sense of humor, and the follow-up album Take Off Your Pants and
Jacket (2001) reached number 1 in the United States, Canada, and Germany. The eponymously-titled Blink-182 followed in 2003 and was a stylistic shift for the group, infusing experimental elements into their usual pop punk formula which resulted in a more mature sound.
DeLonge left Blink-182 in early 2005, sending the band into indefinite hiatus. He went on to form Angels & Airwaves while Hoppus and Barker formed +44. Hoppus also pursued a career as a television host while Barker continued working in music as a producer and solo artist. Blink-182 reunited in February 2009 and their sixth studio album, Neighborhoods, is scheduled to be released September 27, 2011.
History
Formation (1992–93)
After moving to San Diego in the summer of 1992, Mark Hoppus was reunited with his sister Anne, to whom he expressed his desire to be in a band. Anne attended Rancho Bernardo High School, where she became friends with new student Tom DeLonge who had been previously expelled from Poway High School for showing up drunk at a basketball game. DeLonge often expressed the desire to be in a band as well, so in August 1992 Anne introduced him to her brother Mark Hoppus.[1] The two played for hours in DeLonge's garage, showing each other songs they had previously written, and writing new songs together – one of which would become the track "Carousel".[1] To impress DeLonge, Hoppus climbed to the top of a streetlight outside of DeLonge's home – however, he broke both ankles on the way down, resulting in being in crutches for the next few weeks.[1] The two decided they needed to officially start a band, so DeLonge recruited friend Scott Raynor, whom he had met at a party.[2] (However, according to Raynor, he and DeLonge started the band together, which Hoppus later joined.[3]) The three began playing together and called themselves Duck Tape, until DeLonge thought of the name Blink.[1]
27 million albums worldwide since forming in Poway, California in 1992. With original drummer Scott Raynor they released their debut album Cheshire Cat in 1994 and achieved moderate success with its follow-up, 1997's Dude Ranch, which went on to sell over one million copies. Raynor was replaced by Barker midway through a 1998 tour.
The band achieved
greater success with 1999's multi-platinum selling Enema of the State, which reached number 9 on the Billboard 200 on the strength of the singles "What's My Age Again" and "All the Small Things", the latter of which became the highest-charting song of their career by reaching number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100. Blink-182 gained popularity for their irreverent sense of humor, and the follow-up album Take Off Your Pants and
Jacket (2001) reached number 1 in the United States, Canada, and Germany. The eponymously-titled Blink-182 followed in 2003 and was a stylistic shift for the group, infusing experimental elements into their usual pop punk formula which resulted in a more mature sound.
DeLonge left Blink-182 in early 2005, sending the band into indefinite hiatus. He went on to form Angels & Airwaves while Hoppus and Barker formed +44. Hoppus also pursued a career as a television host while Barker continued working in music as a producer and solo artist. Blink-182 reunited in February 2009 and their sixth studio album, Neighborhoods, is scheduled to be released September 27, 2011.
History
Formation (1992–93)
After moving to San Diego in the summer of 1992, Mark Hoppus was reunited with his sister Anne, to whom he expressed his desire to be in a band. Anne attended Rancho Bernardo High School, where she became friends with new student Tom DeLonge who had been previously expelled from Poway High School for showing up drunk at a basketball game. DeLonge often expressed the desire to be in a band as well, so in August 1992 Anne introduced him to her brother Mark Hoppus.[1] The two played for hours in DeLonge's garage, showing each other songs they had previously written, and writing new songs together – one of which would become the track "Carousel".[1] To impress DeLonge, Hoppus climbed to the top of a streetlight outside of DeLonge's home – however, he broke both ankles on the way down, resulting in being in crutches for the next few weeks.[1] The two decided they needed to officially start a band, so DeLonge recruited friend Scott Raynor, whom he had met at a party.[2] (However, according to Raynor, he and DeLonge started the band together, which Hoppus later joined.[3]) The three began playing together and called themselves Duck Tape, until DeLonge thought of the name Blink.[1]
The band practiced constantly, which angered Hoppus's girlfriend.[1] She told him he had to choose between the band and her, so he left the band just as it was starting. DeLonge then informed Hoppus that he borrowed a 4-track from a friend and he and Raynor were using it to make a demo tape. Upon hearing this, Hoppus decided he would leave his girlfriend and return to the band. The demo tape, titled Flyswatter, was recorded in May 1993 in Raynor's bedroom. The 4-track used to record the material resulted in poor sound quality. According to Hoppus only a small number of demos were released, primarily to their family and friends. The same year, the band recorded another demo tape, this one untitled and known simply as Demo #2. It featured re-recordings of a few Flyswatter songs and also included new songs, some of which would go on to be re-recorded and re-released on the band's albums Buddha, Cheshire Cat, and Dude Ranch.
  Buddha, their third and final demo, was recorded in 1993 over three  rainy nights on a 24 track recording system at Double Time Studios in  San Diego, California, according to the CD's liner notes. It was  released on cassette in 1993 with around 1,000 copies of the tape  produced by Filter Records, an independent record company headed by  Hoppus's boss. The album was one of the few Blink-182 productions  released with the band name as Blink. A remastered version was released  on Kung Fu Records in 1998 (with three of the original tracks omitted  and two new tracks added).
  Early days in the band included carrying and tuning their gear at every  gig and living in a van.[4] The band's first goal was to headline SOMA,  a San Diego all-ages club only (then) capable of holding 1,500 people.  After eventually playing other small clubs in Southern California,  Hoppus recalls "[we] worked our way up from there."[5] DeLonge called  clubs constantly in San Diego asking for a spot to play, as well as  calling up local high schools convincing them that Blink was a  "motivational band with a strong anti-drug message" in hopes to play at  an assembly or lunch.[1]
 Early albums (1994–1998)
  The band gained notoriety for humorous stage shows and were eventually  signed to a small record label named Cargo Music, where they released  their first full-length album, Cheshire Cat, in February 1994. Recorded  in three days and fueled by both new songs and re-recordings of songs  from previous demos, Blink began to gain fame outside of California  throughout 1995 and 1996. "M+M's" and "Wasting Time" from Cheshire Cat  were released as singles, but both failed to chart. Although the album  never made a commercial impact, it is cited by bands and fans as an  iconic release.[6]
  Shortly after the release of the album, the band was threatened with  legal action by an Irish pop band of the same name. To avoid a legal  dispute, the band appended "182" to the end of their name.[6][7] In  1994, the band released a split EP with Iconoclasts titled Short Bus.  The 3-track EP They Came to Conquer... Uranus was released the next  year. The band moved to Encinitas, California in 1996, where they would  record their second album Dude Ranch with producer Mark Trombino.  Blink-182 recorded the album under Cargo Records, but did well on U.S.  modern rock charts, so they signed with MCA in 1998 in order to handle  increased distribution. The album was released in 1997 and was  relatively commercially successful, selling 1.5 million copies  worldwide. The single "Dammit" became one of Blink's biggest hits, and  the band received a small degree of mainstream success.[6]
  Thanks to the success of Dude Ranch, Blink-182 embarked on multiple  worldwide tours during 1997 and 1998. Midway through a U.S. tour in  1998, original drummer Scott Raynor was asked to leave the band. Various  conflicting reasons have circulated the Internet for years; a largely  popular explanation is that Raynor had a serious drinking problem and  was asked to leave. When he agreed to abstain from alcohol, bassist Mark  Hoppus and guitarist Tom DeLonge doubted his sincerity and he was fired  from the band through a telephone call. In a 2004 interview, Hoppus  described the touring for Dude Ranch as "rough", with DeLonge adding  "That was the worst tour ever. At that time, our drummer had a drinking  problem. One show he dropped his sticks 10 times. It was so disturbing  to see someone ruining himself."[8] Raynor, in a 2004 interview with  AbsolutePunk, stated the reason for his departure was his desire to stay  in a small non-mainstream band against the increasing popularity  Blink-182 was achieving.[3]
  Hoppus and DeLonge asked drummer Travis Barker of Blink-182's support  band The Aquabats to fill in for Raynor for the remainder of the tour.  He was later offered the position of a full-time drummer and  consequently left The Aquabats. Barker reportedly learned the entire  setlist of the tour (which consisted of 20 songs) in less than one  day.[9] The band entered the studio in October 1998 to begin work on  what would become their breakthrough album, Enema of the State.[10]
 Mainstream breakthrough and continued success (1999–2004)
  After finishing up production of Enema of the State with new producer  Jerry Finn, the album was released in June 1999 and became a huge  success, largely due to popular singles "What's My Age Again", "All the  Small Things", and "Adam's Song". The singles led to an incredible  amount of airtime on music video channels, bringing the band to a new  audience. The band's popularity soared to new horizons and the band made  a cameo in the teen comedy American Pie (1999).[11] A home video titled  The Urethra Chronicles (1999) featured behind-the-scenes information,  and was released in November 1999. "Adam's Song" caused a stir in 2000  when it was set to replay indefinitely on a stereo as 17-year-old  Columbine survivor Greg Barnes hanged himself in the garage of his  family's home.[12] Enema of the State would go on to sell over 15  million copies, solidifying Blink-182 as one of the biggest pop punk  acts of the era.[6]
  The Mark, Tom, and Travis Show (The Enema Strikes Back!) was released  in November 2000, a live album based on tracks recorded in November 1999  in both San Francisco and Universal City, California.[13] Although the  album’s name references Blink-182’s highly publicized summer 2000 tour  (The Mark, Tom, and Travis Show Tour), the album was actually recorded  on the Loserkids Tour (during the tour’s arena shows early on in the  tour) in 1999.[14] The album quickly went out of print. Two singles were  released from the album, the sole studio track "Man Overboard" and a  live version of "Dumpweed".
  The band continued its commercial success with Take Off Your Pants and  Jacket in 2001, which was a small change from their direction in Enema  of the State. The album sold more than 350,000 copies in the first week.  It contains the hit singles "The Rock Show", "First Date" and "Stay  Together for the Kids", while "Anthem Part 2" also received radio  airplay. The album has sold more than 14.5 million records worldwide,  while going double platinum in the US. The album was released on three  different CDs: yellow, red and green versions, each one featuring two  unique bonus tracks. A European tour in winter 2001 was delayed in the  aftermath of the September 11 attacks. Rescheduled dates in early 2002  were also canceled due to DeLonge's back problems. In 2001, Mark Hoppus'  sister released a book about the genesis of the band entitled  Blink-182: Tales From Beneath Your Mom.[15] Blink-182 co-headlined the  Pop Disaster Tour with Green Day during summer 2002,[16] which was  documented on the DVD Riding in Vans with Boys.
 Blink-182 performing live in the Middle East in summer 2003.
  During time off from Blink-182, DeLonge and Barker formed side project  Box Car Racer with David Kennedy of Hazen Street. Created to experiment  with darker ideas not "Blink-friendly", the band recorded and released  their debut album Box Car Racer in May 2002 to commercial success.[17]  The album is a salute to DeLonge's post-hardcore influences, such as  Fugazi and Refused.[18] Meanwhile, Barker was invited to join rap rock  outfit Transplants and accepted; the band's eponymous debut album being  released in October 2002.[19] After finishing up the side-projects near  Christmas of 2002, the band regrouped and began production of their next  album.[20]
  The band rented a house in San Diego to record the album, which took  much longer than expected, causing the band to be kicked out of the  house before finishing the album.[21] Whereas previous Blink-182 albums  took less than three months to record, the new record would take Blink  nearly all of 2003 to complete.[21] The band embarked on a short tour in  the Middle East in summer 2003, as well as co-headlining Britain's  Reading and Leeds festivals for the first time, alongside Linkin Park  where they performed new songs.[21] The album was in production so late  that final mixes were still being judged by Hoppus, DeLonge, and Barker  in early October 2003.[22] DeLonge described the final days of mixing  the album as "crazy stressful", with "literally hours to turn [the  album] to have it come it out on time."[22]
  Blink-182's eponymous fifth studio album was released on November 18,  2003 through Geffen Records, the band's first with the label. The album  was commercially successful (bolstered by hit singles "Feeling This" and  "I Miss You") and received favorable reviews from music critics, who  praised the band's new direction and sound. The album represented a more  "mature" Blink-182 than seen in the past,[23] with the band infusing  experimentalist elements into their usual pop punk sound, inspired by  lifestyle changes (the band members all became fathers before the album  was released) and side-projects (Box Car Racer and Transplants).[21]
  Shortly before the release of Blink-182, the band embarked on the  "DollaBill" tour, named for the ticket cost of $1 each. They played ten  club shows throughout the US and one in Canada.[24] Barker broke his  right foot after a gig in Melbourne, Australia in March 2004, forcing  the band to cancel several shows there and Japan.[25] Blink-182 toured  with No Doubt in the summer of 2004.[26] Two more singles from  Blink-182, "Down" and "Always", were issued during 2004, the latter  celebrating the band's longevity.[27] However, tensions were arising in  the band as they completed a European tour in December 2004.[6][28]
 "Indefinite hiatus", side projects, and Barker's plane crash (2005–2008)
  A North American tour, in support of Blink-182 and "Always" was planned  for spring 2005. Tensions, however, arose between the band members as  DeLonge expressed his desire to cancel the tour and enter a half-year  respite from touring.[28] At a band meeting which coincided with the  beginning of Blink-182's final European tour, DeLonge expressed his  desire to spend more time with his family. He also declined recording a  new album. "The conversation got heated and lasted for two or three  hours. It went around in circles, and the end result was the canceled  tour, with no idea when we would be doing anything with Blink-182  again."[28] During the band's six-month break, Hoppus expressed his  desire for the band to perform at Music for Relief's Concert for South  Asia, a benefit show to aid victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.  DeLonge agreed to perform, and the band subsequently began rehearsing  for the event. Further tensions, however, arose between the band members  during rehearsals, and they began arguing about the band's "forced  break, the greatest hits record, and the possibility of recording the  next album."[28]
  DeLonge stated that he would only record his contributions to the  band's next studio album at his home in San Diego, and that Hoppus and  Barker could send him ProTools files to work on. Regarding the band's  final moments together as a band, Hoppus states that: "One person was  dictating everything. We told Tom this. Things got hot. [...] We said,  'You are trying to control everything, and it's wrong.' He said he  couldn't be a part of anything he couldn't control, and he left the  rehearsal space."[28] DeVoe phoned Hoppus and Barker the following day  to tell them that DeLonge had quit the band, stating: "As of today, Tom  DeLonge is no longer a member of Blink-182."[29] DeLonge subsequently  changed his telephone number to avoid discussing the matter with Hoppus  and Barker. In 2010, whilst reflecting upon the band's break-up, Tom  Delonge stated that: "My biggest failure was the breakup of Blink. That  was a failure of friendships, businesses and communications. In our  hearts, we thought that was forever and gone. What's funny is, at the  time, I looked at it as a triumph."[30] Following the subsequent  speculation as to whether the band had, in fact, broken up, Blink-182  announced that they had entered an "indefinite hiatus".[31]
  Hoppus and Barker announced in April 2005 that had formed a new band,  +44.[32] During the hiatus, Hoppus shifted his attention to producing  albums for Motion City Soundtrack and hosting his podcast,  HiMyNameisMark, while drummer Travis Barker launched a shoe line and  worked on no less than three other musical projects — the Transplants,  TRV$DJAM, and +44.[33] He also starred in the MTV reality series Meet  the Barkers with his then-wife, former Miss USA Shanna Moakler. The show  documented the former couple's lavish wedding and private life. Their  later split, reconciliation and subsequent breakup made them tabloid  favorites.[34] Meanwhile, DeLonge disappeared from public eye, making no  appearances, granting no interviews and remaining silent until  September 16, 2005, when he announced his new project, Angels &  Airwaves, promising "the greatest rock and roll revolution for this  generation."[33] DeLonge later revealed he was addicted to painkillers  at the time, recalling "I was losing my mind, I was on thousands of  painkillers, and I almost killed myself," not realizing his  communication sounded highly ambitious.[35]
  +44 eventually recorded and released their debut album, When Your Heart  Stops Beating, in 2006. The record was primarily based off feelings of  resentment toward the break-up, with one track, "No, It Isn't", directed  at DeLonge.[36] Angels & Airwaves, which still continues to record  and tour, released two studio albums during the hiatus: We Don't Need to  Whisper (2006) and I-Empire (2007).[37] Geffen Records released a  Greatest Hits compilation album on November 1, 2005. A previously  unreleased The Only Ones cover song, "Another Girl, Another Planet", was  included. The song was used as the theme song to Barker's reality  television show, Meet the Barkers. This track was the final studio  recording completed by the band prior to their hiatus. The album reached  number 6 on the Billboard 200 in the United States.[38]
  On August 21, 2008, the band's frequent producer Jerry Finn died of a  cerebral hemorrhage.[39] This event would become one of the catalysts  for DeLonge to begin communicating with both Hoppus and Barker again in  September 2008. On September 19, 2008, Travis Barker barely survived a  plane crash after performing an event with Jane's Addiction vocalist  Perry Farrell (see 2008 South Carolina Learjet 60 crash). Adam Goldstein  (better known as DJ AM) and Barker were the only survivors. Barker  sustained second and third degree burns on his lower body and torso and  expected to recover within a year. While in the hospital, Mark Hoppus  and former bandmate Tom DeLonge visited, allowing the band to reconcile  and patch up their differences. Regarding Barker's incident, in 2010 Tom  DeLonge stated that "if that accident hadn't happened, we wouldn't be a  band. Plain and simple. That was fate."[40]
 Reformation and Neighborhoods (2009–present)
 Blink-182 on May 14, 2009, in their first live performance since 2005
  At the 51st Grammy Awards ceremony on February 8, 2009, DeLonge,  Hoppus, and Barker appeared onstage together for the first time since  December 2004.[41] Barker announced the band's reformation, stating that  "we used to play music together, and we decided we're going to play  music together again", with Hoppus adding "Blink-182 is back!"[41]  Expanding on the announcement on their website, the band stated "To put  it simply, We're back. We mean, really back. Picking up where we left  off and then some. In the studio writing and recording a new album.  Preparing to tour the world yet again. Friendships reformed."[41]  Blink-182 embarked on a reunion tour of North America from July to  October 2009, supported by Weezer and Fall Out Boy.[42] A European  festival tour followed from August to September 2010.[citation needed]
  Completion of Blink-182's sixth studio album was delayed several times.  In November 2010, Hoppus said that the band wished to release the album  in April or May 2011.[43] In February 2011, Barker speculated that they  would "turn in our album in June or July, honestly, and, I mean, the  stuff's awesome. It's coming close, to the point where these are  completed songs and they're not going to change. These are album  versions."[44] The following month, DeLonge stated that the album would  be out in time for the group's planned European tour that July, and that  they would "not tour if there is no new record".[45] That April,  however, the band announced the postponement of the tour due to delays  in completing the album, stating "We hoped we would have some new songs  to play rather than do another 'greatest hits tour'".[46] Geffen Records  gave the band a deadline of July 31, 2011 to complete the album.[47]  "We thought we were closing in on the end, and literally a week ago we  pumped out a whole set of stuff that I think will be some of the best on  the album", said DeLonge that May. "Recording is never really finished.  You slide or limp into home base."[47] The album, titled Neighborhoods,  is scheduled for release September 27, 2011.[48] The album's first  single, "Up All Night", premiered July 15, 2011.[49] The Blinkumentary, a  documentary film about the band, is also scheduled for release in fall  2011.[50]
  Blink-182 is currently headlining the 10th Annual Honda Civic Tour with  My Chemical Romance, which runs from August to October 2011, with  additional dates scheduled in Canada with Rancid and Against  Me!.[50][51]
 Musical style and influences
  Blink-182's musical style has been described by various sources as "pop  punk"[52][53][54] and "punk rock".[55][56][57] When playing live, the  band typically plays their songs at a faster tempo and often replaces  certain lyrics with toilet humor and various gags.[58] Blink-182 songs  are known for their simple melodies, teen angst and occasional lyrical  toilet humor. They are often targeting subjects such as love and growing  up, these being fused into multiple hit singles such as "Dammit" and  "What's My Age Again?". Before the release of their fifth album, more  emotional songs by the band include singles "Adam's Song" and "Stay  Together for the Kids". While writing, the trio take their songs very  seriously, and intend to, according to DeLonge, "really write songs  about things that we genuinely and sincerely think kids can relate to."  The songs often deal with love, family, friends, and relationships.[59]  Bill Lamb of About.com described their music as being "marked by a  radio-friendly sheen, but it still maintains much of the speed and  attitude of classic punk rock".[60]
  The band has cited Descendents, Screeching Weasel, Bad Religion,  Pennywise, NOFX, The Undertones, The Vandals, and Buzzcocks as  influences,[5][61] and they themselves have particularly been cited for  their influence on contemporary pop punk music, with MTV News declaring  "...Without them, there'd be no Fall Out Boy, no Paramore, or no Fueled  by Ramen Records."[6] All Time Low has cited Blink-182 as a major  influence,[62] as have bands such as Paramore,[63] Relient K,[64] Panic!  at the Disco,[65] Fall Out Boy,[6] Motion City Soundtrack,[66] New  Found Glory,[67] We the Kings,[68] Good Charlotte,[69] Hey Monday,[70]  The Cab,[71] Forever the Sickest Kids,[72] Cute is What We Aim For,[73]  and Yellowcard.[74] Blink-182 is one of the bands to be featured in a  documentary about modern punk music. The film, entitled One Nine Nine  Four, was due to be released in 2009 but has been delayed. Professional  skateboarder Tony Hawk will narrate the film, which will also feature  other punk acts such as Rancid, Bad Religion, Green Day, NOFX, and The  Offspring.[75] In 2011, The New York Times asserted that "no punk band  of the 1990s has been more influential than Blink-182," stating that  even as the band receded after their 2005 split, "its sound and style  could be heard in the muscular pop punk of Fall Out Boy or in the  current wave of high-gloss Warped Tour punk bands, like All Time Low and  the Maine."[76]
 Band members
 Current members
 Mark Hoppus – bass guitar, vocals (1992–2005, 2009–present)
 Tom DeLonge – guitar, vocals (1992–2005, 2009–present)
 Travis Barker – drums, percussion (1998–2005, 2009–present)
 Former members
 Scott Raynor – drums, percussion (1992–98)
 Discography
 Main articles: Blink-182 discography and List of Blink-182 songs
 Studio albums
 Cheshire Cat (1994)
 Dude Ranch (1997)
 Enema of the State (1999)
 Take Off Your Pants and Jacket (2001)
 Blink-182 (2003)
 Neighborhoods (2011)
 Awards and nominations

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar