Buck-O-Nine is a San Diego-based ska-punk band that gained a small following in the mid-'90s, and whose popularity increased as the third wave ska revival reached the mainstream with the success of
Rancid and
No Doubt.
Buck-O-Nine is comprised of
Jon Pebsworth (vocals),
Jonas Kleiner (guitar),
Scott Kennerly (bass),
Steve Bauer (drums),
Tony Currey (trumpet),
Don Albert (trombone), and
Craig Yarnold (saxophone). The group formed in the early '90s and became a fixture on the California ska-punk scene. In 1994, they released their debut album,
Songs in the Key of Bree, on Taang Records. It was followed in 1995 by
Barfly, which helped expand the group's fan base, especially with a relentless tour schedule that took them all across the U.S. and on their first trip to Japan. In the spring of 1996, the group released the
Water in My Head EP. In 1996,
Buck-O-Nine moved to TVT Records and began working on
Twenty-Eight Teeth with producers
Neill King and
David Kershenbaum. Released in April 1997,
Twenty-Eight Teeth found the group delving deeper into reggae and ska, and the album produced their first nationwide radio single, "My Town." Following a subsequent tour,
Bauer exited the group. The
Pass the Dutchie EP followed in 1998, and a year later
Buck-O-Nine returned with
Libido. By this point,
Bauer had been replaced on drums by
Jeff Hawthorne, and new bassist
John Bell (ex-
Unwritten Law) was on board as well. Demos for the band's next album led to them being dropped from TVT. The live album
Hellos & Goodbyes (randomly recorded at a show in Japan) was later released through
Pebsworth's own Offramp Records in 2000; that same year,
Bell left the band to return to school, and bassist
Andy Platfoot signed on in his place. Though the band continued touring and playing shows over the following years,
Buck-O-Nine decided to ease up on their demanding schedule to be home more. After a seven-year hiatus, during which a best-of album was released, the group returned in 2007 with an album of new material titled
Sustain.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi