In the mid-1990s, local ordinances and economic considerations led to difficult times for
San Francisco Bay Area bands whose members were under 21. Multiple bars and nightclubs were driven out by the bustling
dot-com economy. Others, fearful of losing their liquor licenses, stopped allowing minors to attend or perform on their stages. By 1996,
924 Gilman Street was the only one all-ages music venue in the East Bay. With the rise of
Green Day,
Rancid, and other former underground bands who had popularized the
punk rock genre, Gilman had become an insular community, rejecting those who did not fit an increasingly narrow definition of punk. Though Gilman was not by design exclusively punk rock (they were and are explicitly devoted to independent music and arts), a combination of internal politics and aesthetic tastes of the Gilman staff kept other types of music off the stage.
S.P.A.M. Records grew out of the efforts of underage musicians and artists from
Pinole, California frustrated with the situation. The fringe Gilman band,
The Hope Bombs, encouraged the S.P.A.M. crew, most notably by letting them jump on stage at Hope Bombs shows to play as "The Bob Weirdos" (whose shows consisted of crazed songs like "Help I'm On Fire" which actually involved setting singer John Geek on fire). But this support was the exception and the bands were generally deprived of any meaningful access to the Gilman audience. S.P.A.M. Co-founder John Geek (now vocalist for punk band
Fleshies) alluded to this in an interview:
"Along with Dan and Corbett of Bobby Joe Ebola and the Children MacNuggits (and joined soon by Robert Eggplant and Dylan McPuke), I started the S.P.A.M. Records Collective in 1995 because no one else would put out our shit or let us play." Select work from the S.P.A.M. Records Catalog circa 1996-2002: The S.P.A.M. bands, most notably
Bobby Joe Ebola and the Children MacNuggits, had been rejected by the punk scene due to perceived superficial differences in dress and musical style . Label co-founder Corbett Redford, who was the singer for Bobby Joe Ebola and the Children MacNuggits, said "''We were all living in Pinole and we couldn't play Gilman because they said we weren't punk. We couldn't take out an ad in
MRR because they said we weren't punk. ... We were thrashfunk and silly folk I suppose.''" They decided, in a
DIY spirit, to create their own venue, one where nobody would be rejected for having the wrong fashion sense. The name "Geekfest" was chosen partly because the S.P.A.M. collective saw themselves as
geeks; they realized their
idiosyncrasies made them unpopular at parties, but made no effort to change. Their rejection by the punk scene was viewed as just another chapter in a long history of being uncool; but, as John Geek says, "
Our pride in maladjustment ran too damn deep." == First Geekfest ==