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EL
NADA

About
the Band...
With a name like El Nada,
"the
nothing", some might conclude that this powerful
Orange County based band is a nilhistic punk outfit with nothing
to say. But they would be wrong. El Nada, through the seven
years of its existence knows the difference between having
nothing, and having a musical core of friendship and family
of the kind that now produces some of the most powerful, aggressive
punk rock music currently coming out of Southern California.
With
the release of their self titled debut album,
El Nada shows that they indeed have something; something born
of new unity and the inherent passion for music that will
not easily be dismissed. Five guys who decided that just because
they grew up on the streets of Santa Ana, Ca did not mean
they had to follow everyone else's notion of musical culture
by playing funk or hip-hop.

Punk
rock, often misperceived as the exclusive
domain for disenfranchised, white suburban males, proved to
be the perfect vehicle for the boys in El Nada to reflect
upon the wild ironies in their world. From the drugs, murders,
guns, multicultural lifestyles, poverty, ignorance and intolerance
to beaches skateboarding, beer, girls, friends and family,
and the freedom to express themselves however they chose.
"Every day is another story in this wild city and behind
the Orange Curtin" guitarist Pat Hernandez states. "Our
songs tell a small part of a much bigger picture."
Seven
years can be a lifetime in the dysfunctional world of punk
rock. The story of how El Nada has survived since 1995 is
one best told by the guys themselves. Suffice to say, that
just seeing Cadillac Tramp and Ex-Member Gabby Gaborno front
man do his thing made being a punker with Hispanic roots look
easy.
Practicing in the same studio and taking cues from those around
them practically insured that the guys in El Nada would take
many a wrong turn in their crazy quest to keep having fun
while trying just to survive. By 2000, after a particularly
long layoff, core member guitarist Pat Hernandez and Santa
Ana born neighbor guitarist Danny Wong reeled in original
drummer and lead vocalist Aaron Maturino for the final time.

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Disgusted and annoyed by all the "pretty" bubble
punk gumming up the airways, El Nada was determined to make
their stand.
The typical band churning of members and breakups ensured
that much like their mentors, the road El Nada would take
would not be an easy one.
Converting
guitarist Arvin Mani to bass proved to be one of the final
pieces of the puzzle. The ensuing return to the club scene
proved to everyone concerned that the time for El Nada had
come. Show after show proved that while slightly older and
wiser, they could still rip it up, and with authority. Besides
everyone was having a gas, and at the end of the day that
was what it was about.
The next step, that step not taken so many times before, was
to record. 21 songs in 48 hours to be exact. That they had
made it this far, far enough to have their songs see the light
of day made it all the better. But this story doesn't end
with that D.I.Y CD that they were now selling out of at each
and every show.
That
El Nada managed to capture so many powerful, good songs in
so little time was stunning to say the least. Finger Records
owner Mel Schantz quickly realized that El Nada played the
kind of old school punk that needed to be heard, and signed
the band. El Nada and Finger Records began to rework the demo
CDR into the album it was to become. That was the push the
band needed. Quickly they began to remix what were obviously
punk rock classics with a particularly soulful, Hispanic twist.
Blown speakers ranchero style Holmes. Songs about standing
up overcoming and being proud of your roots. A 21-song demo
got turned into a representative work that feels like a classic.
Roaring guitars, non-stop bass lines, and shredding drums.
Oh yea, and a bunch of guys who sing like they wanna destroy.
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In
a nut shell, El Nada brings the street experience to vinyl.
They put the Sex and Drugs back into the Rock formula, mix
in tales of their common street experiences with a healthy
sense of humor and saturate it with punk rock riffs which
recall the rich Orange County punk heritage of the Adolescents
and just about any other old school punk band you wish you
saw back in the day. Plenty of attitude, and a dash of what
they call "Varrio style punk". Ferocious riffs
and chord changes that will hook you forever. Old School
is not dead, and El Nada proves it.
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