No matter where you’re at, the sound of the East Bay has reached you, encompassing a subculture that countless bands have referenced for decades. In the ’90s, especially, the region was booming, becoming a mecca for young punks to escape their home lives. Berkeley’s 924 Gilman Street was at its center, helping to bring bands up from the underground and into the mainstream. Elsewhere, Larry Livermore grew Lookout! Records out of his bedroom, becoming the home to many influential East Bay bands, including Green Day, Operation Ivy, and Neurosis. “It was far beyond the wildest dreams of the young assembly line steel mill worker that I started out as,” he reflected in 2017. That said, we wanted readers to tell us the best East Bay bands, regardless of era. You can find the top fan picks ranked below.
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5. Operation Ivy
Before Green Day made East Bay punk popular, they were taking notes by watching Operation Ivy — a band that masterfully blended ska, punk and hardcore. Though they weren’t for long, they made a huge impression, opening a lane for ska-punk bands to rule the radio in the mid-’90s. “We really brought a lot of the energy to the show,” frontman Jesse Michaels told AP in 2017. “It’s a fun challenge to go into a room full of grumpy hardcore people and try to win them over. [In the late ’80s], there were a lot of bands that were doing something a little bit more generic. [We did] something new in that context where everything felt a little burned out.” Their only album, Energy, has since reached classic status, with its infectious mashup of genres influencing countless groups.
4. Rancid
After Operation Ivy packed it up, vocalist/guitarist Tim Armstrong and bassist Matt Freeman took their ska smarts and formed Rancid in 1991. Considered Op Ivy’s “spiritual successor,” they melded their raw ska-punk energy with touches of reggae. That became a defining influence on their 1995 breakthrough, …And Out Come the Wolves, particularly the inescapable, hugely catchy single “Time Bomb.” From there, most of their releases leaned into that winning combination in some form or another. Rancid would also go on write autobiographical songs about where they were from — most notably “Journey to the End of the East Bay,” which detailed the beginning, success, and breakup of Op Ivy.
3. Green Day
Green Day are a cornerstone of the East Bay sound, putting out their first two albums on Lookout! Records. They quickly made a home at Gilman, which became legendary in its own right. “Gwar and Operation Ivy — I was at that show!” Billie Joe Armstrong recalled in a 2017 interview. “We played on some of the strangest bills, too. We were kids in this little pop-punk band, and we played with the Dwarves, one of the world’s most dangerous bands at the time. There would be some avant-garde artist that would come up and make this Yoko Ono type of noise… But under the roof of Gilman, it all made sense.” Though the were banned for decades (and then unbanned in 2015), its rich history, and the East Bay at large, is a major part of their story, leading them to executive-produce the documentary Turn It Around: The Story of East Bay Punk.
2. Stay Out
Oakland’s Stay Out are carrying forward the tradition of East Bay punk. Their sound is fun and melodically hard-hitting, but so is their approach to promoting themselves. Last year contained several unexpected pop-ups: The band crashed Warped Tour’s Long Beach Block Party, covering blink-182’s “Dammit” on a megaphone. They took over a Denny’s in SoCal, packing it out alongside Clarion and Domino Effect. They set up a generator outside of Green Day’s Berkeley show, tearing through songs and giving away CDs. If East Bay culture is important to you, they’re a group worth keeping an eye on.
1. AFI
If you know our readers, you won’t be surprised by this result. AFI are forever shaped by the East Bay, forming in 1991 near Ukiah but finding their identity and sound in Berkeley. The band were regulars at Gilman Street, both as performers and audience members, where they honed their aggressively cathartic hardcore. Though they’d eventually evolve beyond that brash sound, tapping into death rock, new wave, and emo, the East Bay has been their bedrock from the very start. That remains true on their latest, last year’s excellent Silver Bleeds the Black Sun… When asked if he could still hear the East Bay in AFI, Davey Havok responded, “On this new album? Absolutely. When I think about [Silver…], this is a punk record. Who knows what that word even means now?”
