BIOGRAPHY BLINK 182
The new-school punk trio
blink-182 were formed in the suburbs of San Diego, California around guitarist/vocalist
Tom DeLonge, bassist/vocalist
Mark Hoppus, and drummer
Scott Raynor. Originally known as simply
Blink, the band debuted in 1993 with a self-released EP, Fly Swatter. After releasing the album
Buddha in 1994, the trio signed to Grilled Cheese/Cargo and released
Cheshire Cat the following year. The threat of a lawsuit from a similarly named Irish band forced them to change their name to
blink-182, but the group earned a higher profile touring the world with
Pennywise and
NOFX on the 1996-1997 Warped Tour, plus appearing on innumerable skate/surf/snowboarding videos.
The third
blink-182 LP,
Dude Ranch, was jointly released in 1997 by Cargo and MCA.
Dude Ranch
expanded the group's audience and went platinum by the end of 1998, due
in part to the popularity of the infectious teen anthem "Dammit
(Growing Up)." The group also signed officially with MCA, which released
the band's fourth album,
Enema of the State, in the summer of 1999. The album, produced by
Jerry Finn (
Green Day,
Rancid), also welcomed a new member into the trio's ranks;
Travis Barker, formerly with
the Aquabats, settled in on drums after
Raynor left midway through a 1998 U.S. tour.
Enema
was greeted with almost immediate success, and helped the band achieve
the mainstream status of toilet-humored pop-punk kings that
Dude Ranch
had only hinted at. Driven by the commercially successful singles
"What's My Age Again?," "All the Small Things," and "Adam's Song," music
videos for the three songs (whose clips included themes of streaking
and boy band spoofs) were MTV smashes as well.
After selling over four million copies of
Enema of the State, the trio played on with the limited-edition release
The Mark, Tom, and Travis Show (The Enema Strikes Back)
in fall 2000. The album featured their radio hits in a live setting,
intertwined with their quirky sense of humor as well as the new song
"Man Overboard."
Take Off Your Pants and Jacket,
issued in spring 2001, saw the band return to its SoCal punk rock
roots. Maturity, of a sort, came with 2003's self-titled album, released
on Geffen. Not only did the album sport a song ("All of This") that
featured
Robert Smith of
the Cure,
but "I Miss You" also topped the modern rock charts in 2005. In
February 2005, however, popular as ever and seemingly indestructible,
blink-182
unexpectedly announced they would be going on an "indefinite hiatus,"
supposedly to spend more time with their growing families. Asking fans
for help in selecting tracks, the group issued
Greatest Hits that November.
The bandmembers also continued on with other projects.
Barker -- who had previously released an album with
DeLonge as
Boxcar Racer -- continued playing with
the Transplants and running his clothing company, Famous Stars and Straps. His family was also spotlighted in the MTV reality show
Meet the Barkers.
Hoppus carried on with his Atticus fashion venture, began producing -- starting with
Motion City Soundtrack's
Commit This to Memory -- and hosting his own podcasts. He further began work with
Barker in a new band,
Plus 44.
DeLonge also continued work with his lifestyle clothing company, Macbeth, and formally announced his new project,
Angels and Airwaves, that fall.
In 2009,
blink-182
announced that they were reuniting and would be getting back to work on
new material as well as touring again, hitting the road with
Weezer
for their reunion tour. They went into the studio later that year and
began laying down the groundwork for a new album, which would be plagued
by delays until 2011, when they were eventually able to release their
sixth studio album,
Neighborhoods.