In this episode, we take a deep dive into Willis, the Pietasters' 1997 record and the album that brought the DC-bred ska band to their widest audience. Formed at Virginia Tech by a group of suburban Washington kids, the Pietasters spent the early '90s grinding through DMV dive bars and building a following on Moon Ska Records before a backstage conversation with Tim Armstrong of Rancid led to a deal with Hellcat, his new Epitaph subsidiary. Willis was the result: recorded in Los Angeles with Brett Gurewitz, guitarist for Bad Religion and founder of Epitaph Records, the album pushed the band's sound in a harder, more rock-forward direction than anything they'd released before.
The Pietasters had always drawn from a wide pool including ska, soul, punk, and R&B, reflecting the same mixed-bill show culture that defined the DC scene they came up in. Willis captured that range while giving it a sharper edge, and "Out All Night" became one of the few ska songs to receive genuine mainstream radio play during the genre's late-90s commercial peak. Songs from the album landed in Hollywood films and on video game soundtracks, and the band toured relentlessly behind it, sharing stages with many legends including James Brown.
For this episode, we're joined by Steve Jackson, lead vocalist and co-founder of the Pietasters. We discuss the band's DC roots, the making of Willis, and thirty-plus years of keeping the party going.
Go Further:
The Pietasters – Wikipedia || Website
Follow Us:
Social media: @dcrockpod
Email:
[email protected]
Hosts:
Philip Basnight – Broke Royals
Alex Vidales – Pilot Waves
Podcast Artwork by Rebecca Basnight
Fler avsnitt av DC Rock History
Visa alla avsnitt av DC Rock HistoryDC Rock History med dcrockpod finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
