The original lineup for D Generation consisted of vocalist
Jesse Malin (who had previously played with New York band
Heart Attack during the late 1980s), guitarist
Danny Sage (also an ex-Heart Attack member),
John Carco on bass,
Howie Pyro on guitar, and drummer Michael Wildwood (Danny Sage's brother). The band had not yet been named, although much of the material would later be performed and recorded by D Generation. The line up did not last. After bassist John Carco quit (later to join forces with
Dee Dee Ramone), Malin and Pyro (who had switched to bass) continued to play, naming the band and adding Richard Bacchus on guitar, and Sage and Wildwood left briefly to finish up their previous projects and were replaced for a brief time, 4 months only, by Georgie Seville and Belvy K respectively. Sage and Wildwood soon returned, solidifying the lineup that lasted for the majority of their career.
Debut release, No Lunch and touring The band first signed with
Chrysalis Records, with whom they released their debut album,
D Generation. Despite a generally favorable critical and audience reaction, the album's promotional support was abruptly pulled following the appointment of a new executive at the label, who didn't like the band's music. The band left Chrysalis at the beginning of 1995, and signed with
Columbia Records in April of that year. The band released their second album,
No Lunch, on the label in 1996.
The Cars frontman
Ric Ocasek produced the record. Around this time D Generation played shows supporting such bands as
Social Distortion,
Ramones, and
Kiss. Shortly after, Bacchus left the band, and was replaced by ex-
Murphy's Law and
Agnostic Front member
Todd Youth. The band toured Europe with
Green Day in early 1998. in
Asbury Park, NJ as part of the Light of Day Foundation Festival in 2016.
Through The Darkness and band split D Generation then recorded their third album,
Through the Darkness, this time with
David Bowie and
T.Rex producer
Tony Visconti. However, once again the album failed to reach the sales that were hoped for, despite scoring the lead-off single on the soundtrack of the film
The Faculty just a few months prior. Just prior to the tour in support of that album, Youth and Wildwood left to form the short-lived but critically acclaimed
Chrome Locust with bassist
Jim Heneghan (formerly of Richard Bacchus's Vásquez), and released one self-titled album. For the tour, the band recruited drummer Joe Rizzo, and Richard Bacchus briefly returned on guitar and was then replaced during the band's last few dates by Jim Wallerstein. The band toured the US with
The Offspring and
The Living End, before playing their final show in their hometown at
Coney Island High on April 24, 1999. This show was recorded by
Greg Di Gesu from the
Rolling Stones Mobile Studio, and has since remained unreleased. After this, D Generation broke up.
Post-D Generation After the demise of D Generation in 1999, Michael Wildwood formed the critically acclaimed
Chrome Locust with guitarist
Todd Youth and bassist
Jim Heneghan, releasing only one self-titled record. Wildwood then toured with New Jersey's
Monster Magnet and played on their album
Monolithic Baby!. In 2005, Wildwood joined
Atomic#76. The group disbanded in 2007. Both Wildwood and Sage lent their hands to help
Hurricane Katrina victims, backing up
Deborah Harry at a benefit in 2005. Danny Sage recorded a solo album in 2002 (which has remained unreleased) and released two EPs, the self-titled
Danny Sage and ''Don't Look Down'', in 2003 and 2007, respectively, and has performed live. Jesse, Howie and Joe Rizzo formed the band PCP Highway with guitarist Esko Poldvere. The band recorded a number of demo tracks and toured the east coast of the United States. During the beginning of 2000, Howie Pyro was invited to join
Glenn Danzig's band (which then included former D Generation member
Todd Youth on guitar). Pyro accepted and PCP Highway disbanded; a planned album, titled
Dreamless, was never released. Meanwhile, Bacchus was performing with his new project, Vásquez, which included Eric Kuby on drums and former
Hanoi Rocks bassist
Sami Yaffa (who replaced original bassist Jim Heneghan when he left to join Chrome Locust). This group released an independent
EP, entitled
Two Songs. Malin began playing a series of solo shows and released a self-produced EP titled
169 in 2000. However, by the end of that year, Malin had re-teamed up with Esko and Joe Rizzo, along with bassist Johnny Pisano, to form a new band which was initially called Tsing-Tsing (a handful of shows were played under that name) and then re-christened Bellvue. Together they released one album,
To Be Somebody in April 2001 on Goldenseal Records. This album was re-released in October 2001 with a slightly different track list. The following year, Bellvue disbanded, and Jesse revived his solo career, releasing the
Ryan Adams-produced
The Fine Art of Self Destruction in late 2002, followed by
The Heat in 2004. He released his third album,
Glitter in the Gutter, on March 20, 2007. The fourth album,
On Your Sleeve, was released in April 2008. It consists entirely of famous rock covers, such as "Wonderful World" by
Sam Cooke and "Walk on the Wild Side" by
Lou Reed. Currently, Bacchus is recording and touring with his band The Luckiest Girls. He released an album produced by Hanoi Rocks / New York Dolls bassist Sami Yaffa titled
Jet Black and Beautiful on Stay Gold Records, an independent CD titled
The Bicycle Diaries, and a split 7-inch on Old Grey Cat Records. Howie Pyro and Todd Youth had also both left Danzig. Pyro went on to host the weekly Intoxica Radio show on LuxuriaMusic Internet Radio. Youth continued to play with a number of acts, including
Ace Frehley, and has sporadically played in Jesse Malin's touring band over several years. Todd Youth died in 2018.
Reunion and Nothing Is Anywhere On April 17, 2008, the band (consisting of Mailn, Pyro, Bacchus, Sage and Wildwood) re-formed for a one-off performance at the John Varvatos store in New York City (located in the space of the former
CBGB) as part of a
VH1 Save The Music benefit, during which they played a three-song set. In April 2011, almost 12 years after their final show, the band announced that they had re-formed to play shows in September of that year in
New York City,
Los Angeles and Spain. The band also performed a sold-out
London show on September 5 as well as the 2011
Riot Fest Chicago in October 2011 and Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin, Texas, in November 2011. As a warmup for their New York City shows, the band performed on September 15 at the Wonder Bar in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Following these dates the band opened two shows for
Guns N' Roses in December 2011 on their US tour stops in
Auburn Hills, Michigan, and
Cincinnati,
Ohio. On December 13, 2011,
Jesse Malin stated, in an interview with
Rolling Stone, that the band would go into rehearsals for a new album in January 2012. It was later announced, via various tweets from the band's Twitter page, that the band had entered the studio to start work on a new album to be produced by
Ryan Adams; however, the material from those sessions remains unreleased. On April 18, 2015, D Generation released a 10-inch single titled "Queens of A" for
Record Store Day, that featured two new songs ("Queens of A" and "Piece of the Action"). These songs were the band's first release of new music since 1999. D Generation's first album in 17 years was released on July 29, 2016, and was titled
Nothing Is Anywhere. In May 2022, Pyro, who had already suffered from liver disease, died from
COVID-19-related pneumonia. On June 14, 2023, Jesse Malin announced that he suffered a rare spinal
stroke in May 2023 that has left him paralyzed. Malin and friends were commemorating the one year anniversary of the passing of Howie Pyro when Malin suffered a stroke that left him unable to walk. Malin is expected to be released from the hospital in late June and a donation campaign has been set up by his manager and other artists to help pay for his medical expenses. ==Members==