The Lemonheads' evolution from post-
Hüsker Dü hardcore punk rockers to teenage heartthrobs is one of the strangest sagas in alternative music. Initially, the group was a punk-pop trio formed by three teenage Boston suburbanites, but over the years, the band became a vehicle for
Evan Dando. Blessed with good looks and a warm, sweet voice,
Dando became a teen idol in the early '90s, when
Nirvana's success made alternative bands commercially viable. While his simple, catchy songs were instantly accessible, they tended to hide the more subversive nature of his lyrics, as well as his gift for offbeat covers and his devotion to country-rock father
Gram Parsons. After developing his signature blend of pop, punk, and country-rock on several independent records in the late '80s,
Dando moved
The Lemonheads to Atlantic Records in 1990. Two years later,
It's A Shame About Ray made the group into media sensations, as
Dando's face appeared on music and teen magazines across America and Britain. Though
The Lemonheads were poised to become superstars, the band never quite found the right breakthrough single, and their popularity peaked in the early '90s. Around the same time,
Dando descended into severe drug abuse that he curbed by the 1996 release of
Car Button Cloth. However, he had missed his chance at stardom -- though the group retained their cult, much of their audience had already slipped away.
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