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In addition to claiming "7 years of touring under their belts, 478,000 miles traveled, over 1,000 quality shows delivered, over 90 pounds of marijuana consumed in the form of 272 strains, 210,000 cases of beer drank, 15 trips to the emergency room", the Kings also own and run their own record label, Suburban Noize Records, which currently boasts 16 artists. Daddy X fronts the legendary punk band Humble Gods (of which '''Doug Carrion''' is also a guitarist) and a solo career. Pakelika, the "visual assassin", has his own solo career. D-Loc works with DJ Bobby B in Tsunami Brothers and Johnny Richter in Kingspade, the Kings' manager Kevin Zinger's clothing and production company, as well as a solo career as Shaky Bonez. Saint Dog, who has left the band, is working on his own record label, US Circle A, and solo career.
(source: en.wikipedia.org)
EMUSiC
Dag Nasty
Formed: 1985
Disbanded: 1989
Group Members: Brian Baker , Colin Sears , Dave Smalley , '''Doug Carrion''' , Peter Cortner , Roger Marbury , Scott Garrett , Shawn Brown
Years Active: 1980s, 1990s, 2000s
Dag Nasty kept roaring D.C.-styled hardcore alive during the mid-'80s. Although the group was more accessible and melodic than Minor Threat, they never lost their bracing, blistering edge. Formed by former-Minor Threat and Meatmen guitarist Brian Baker and ex-DYS vocalist Dave Smalley, Dag Nasty recorded their first album, Can I Say (1986), with D.C.-punk guru Ian MacKaye assisting on the production. The following year, Smalley left the group; he was replaced by Peter Cortner, who added more pop elements to the band's sound. Dag Nasty moved from MacKaye's Dischord label to Giant in 1988, releasing their last album, Field Day. Along with former-Big Boy Chris Gates, Baker formed the metal band Junkyard in 1989, which released two records on Geffen before fading away. Dag Nasty came back together in 1992, releasing Four on the Floor for the growing underground punk scene that was only a few short years from breaking into the mainstream. The response was enthusiastic, but the band stepped away from the business again. Ten years later, they reunited with the emo rock call-to-arms Minority of One and released it on Revelation Records.
— Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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