Brett Gurewitz
- Actor
- Composer
- Producer
A founder and co-songwriter of influential
and venerated Southern California band Bad Religion, Gurewitz is one of
the prime architects of a high energy melodic punk style that continues
to resonate throughout contemporary music. And as founder of
independent powerhouse labels Epitaph and Anti-, Gurewitz created a
sustainable, artist-first model that was prophetic 30 years ago and
perfectly suited to today's ever-changing landscape. Gurewitz came of
age a science fiction reading rock and roll fan in the sprawling sun
drenched San Fernando Valley suburbs of Los Angeles. As a teenager he
was introduced to the primal sound of The Ramones first album at a
local record store. The following year,
while attending El Camino High School, Gurewitz met a handful of
likeminded young rebels united by their love for punk and a disdain for
the surrounding culture of conformity. Along with Greg Graffin and Jay
Bentley, the soon-named Bad Religion began rehearsing in a parent's
garage, an unassuming start for a band who, three decades later,
continue to inspire hope and dissent throughout the world. In the true
DIY spirit of punk's early days, the band recorded and self released a
7"record the following year in 1981. Bad Religion
followed up later that year with their still highly regarded full
length debut "How Could Hell Be Any Worse," a raging, intensely
insightful burst of high speed suburban protest music. Gurewitz
eventually stopped playing in Bad Religion after an ill fated stylistic
change with the group's second album Into The Unknown. He attended art
school and took music theory and philosophy classes at the local
community college. Then he began working for a record distributer
during the day and attending recording school at night. In 1987, along
with a classmate, Gurewitz purchased a tape machine and mixing board
and they opened a tiny studio called Westbeach Recorders in the back
room of another larger studio. "It was basically a closet," Gurewitz
says. In 1987 Gurewitz had stopped supplementing his regiment
with chemicals and rejoined Bad Religion, whose two early records had
gained in stature in the intervening years and become classics of the
genre. And while the music press considered punk a mere remnant of an
earlier time, the audience for the music had only grown. Bad Religion
decided to record again and it was a chance for Gurewitz to capitalize
on the literally thousands of hours spent perfecting his craft. The
first record on what is present-day Epitaph-Records was Bad Religion's
1988 breakthrough album Suffer. It is a work still widely considered
one the most influential and best sounding punk records ever produced.
The album was named record of the year by influential fanzines Flipside
and Maximum Rock N Roll, the only publications that mattered to punks
at the time. As Bad Religion continued to gain in popularity, Gurewitz
was in a unique position. As a touring musician in one of the scene's
biggest bands, he was playing with some of the best new artists, and as
label owner, he was able to sign them. In 1990 he signed the band
Pennywise, in 1991 he signed both NOFX and The Offspring and soon
thereafter Northern California punk band Rancid. It was during this
period that Gurewitz moved Epitaph to a larger location and managed to
persuade reluctant major record chains to stock their independent punk
records. While the
music press was focused on the long-haired flannel-adorned grunge
sensation of the Pacific Northwest, the underground punk scene
continued to flourish. There were massive punk shows throughout the
West and spreading across the country. Along with this thriving and
vital scene, Epitaph continued to grow. By 1994 Epitaph
was already growing wildly but with little fanfare. Then they released
The Offspring's appropriately named Smash album and suddenly everyone
noticed. That one record would go on to sell over eleven million
copies. Next was Rancid's 1995 ...And Out Come The Wolves which went
platinum with gold records for both Pennywise and NOFX on their way. To
keep up with increasing demand, lifelong science fiction fan Gurewitz
naturally gravitated toward the then new technologies of personal
computing and the internet. As Epitaph thrived, so did Bad Religion who
continued to gain in popularity throughout the world. In 1993, in an
attempt to expand beyond their primarily punk audience, Gurewitz and
the band had signed a deal with major label Atlantic Records. Two of
the Gurewitz-penned songs for the subsequent record Stranger Than
Fiction, "Infected" and "21st Century (Digital Boy)," would become the
band's biggest hits and the album would be certified gold. It was a
precarious peak from which Gurewitz would soon plummet. While in the
studio recording Stranger Than Fiction, he decided to quit Bad
Religion. After a stint in rehab, in 1997 a
clean and reinvigorated Gurewitz returned to Epitaph. In 1998, the
label signed the iconic artist Tom Waits. Inspired by the move,
Gurewitz formed Anti-Records, an imprint of Epitaph dedicated to
serving a more eclectic and less classically punk roster. Since then both Epitaph and Anti- have
flourished, signing an eclectic mix of vital and creative artists from
upstart punk influenced acts like Bring Me The Horizon and Falling In
Reverse to visionary and influential artists such as Nick Cave and The
Bad Seeds, Wilco, Mavis Staples, The Swell Season and Tom Waits. The
label has also released several Grammy winning records for artists
including Booker T. Jones, Mavis Staples, Solomon Burke, Tinariwen, and
Tom Waits. In 2001 Gurewitz returned to Bad Religion and the band began
releasing albums on the label they helped to start. They have had
several recent radio hits and continue to sell out concerts throughout
the world.