L.A. Guns signed a recording contract with major label
PolyGram in 1987, and changed its lineup significantly at the same time. Lead vocalist
Paul Black was replaced with former
Girl and
Tormé frontman
Phil Lewis, former
Faster Pussycat member
Kelly Nickels joined on bass, and previous bassist
Mick Cripps moved over to rhythm guitar to replace Robert Stoddard. The band commenced recording for its self-titled debut album in June. Recalling the process, Lewis reported that "We got the whole thing done in six weeks", adding that "we like that
Sex Pistols type of edge and energy, so we decided to get in and out of the studio as quickly as possible." Sessions took place at
The Village Recorder in
West Los Angeles with producer Jim Faraci, who had most recently worked with
glam metal bands
Poison,
Lizzy Borden and
Ratt. Prior to its release, 1,500 advance copies of
L.A. Guns were sent to rock clubs, music retailers and radio stations. PolyGram's Steve Kleinberg commented at the time that "We wanted to create a ground swell, and it seems to be working. Our preorders on the album are more than 65,000, and a number of major retailers have yet to place their orders." Videos were also produced for "One Way Ticket" and "Cry No More" by Phillip Detchmendy, and for "Bitch Is Back", "No Mercy" and "Nothing to Lose" by Ziman and Katy Lynne. The album was promoted on a three-month United States
concert tour starting on January 15, 1988, All five members of the band are credited for songwriting on
L.A. Guns. The majority of songs were written by lead guitarist
Tracii Guns with Lewis, while some feature co-writing credits for former vocalist Black. The album also features
cover versions of Lewis's former band
Girl's "Hollywood Tease", and Nickels's former band Sweet Pain's "Shoot for Thrills".
L.A. Guns is the only studio album by the band to feature drummer
Nickey "Beat" Alexander, who was replaced by
Steve Riley before it was released. In 1999, the reunited "classic lineup" of the band recorded new versions of several songs for
Greatest Hits and Black Beauties. "Sex Action" was also later included on the 2002 release
Ultimate L.A. Guns, alongside a range of other previously released re-recordings and live tracks. Early demo recordings of several tracks were included on the album
Hollywood Raw: The Original Sessions. == Music ==