In 1978,
Black Flag guitarist and cofounder
Greg Ginn converted his ham radio business Solid State Transmitters to
SST Records to release the band's first
EP Nervous Breakdown. Soon SST was releasing recordings by other bands as well, beginning with
Minutemen's
Paranoid Time in 1980. Black Flag recorded its first album
Damaged in 1981 at Unicorn Studios and arranged a deal with the studio's record label Unicorn Records, which had distribution with
MCA Records. MCA label president Al Bergamo halted the release after hearing the record, calling it "anti-parent"—though SST co-owner
Joe Carducci asserts this was a pretense for MCA to sever relations with the financially troubled Unicorn. The band obtained and distributed the already-pressed copies of
Damaged and adorned it with a label displaying Bergamo's "anti-parent" quote. Legal troubles erupted when SST claimed unpaid royalties from Unicorn and Unicorn successfully counter-sued, resulting in five days in jail for Ginn and co-founding bassist
Chuck Dukowski and an injunction prohibiting the band from releasing material under its own name. The double album
Everything Went Black—a compilation of earlier, unreleased material—appeared from SST in 1982 without the band's name on it. Unicorn's bankruptcy in 1983 freed the band from the injunction. was a major influence on
My Wars B-side. Ginn had grown frustrated with the hardcore punk scene, and told the
Los Angeles Times in early 1983: "[W]e've never been out to create this punk scene" they had been credited with spearheading; "We want people to listen to us as a band rather than as a stereotype ... A lot of what you call the punk scene is really backward, and it always has been." Following the release of
Damaged, Black Flag absorbed a wider range of influences from the more experimental hardcore of
Flipper,
Void, and
Fang. They listened to little contemporary punk. Ginn was drawn to
Ronnie James Dio's work in
Black Sabbath and
Dio, as well as earlier favorites from his pre-punk days, including
Ted Nugent,
Black Oak Arkansas,
MC5,
ZZ Top,
Deep Purple,
Uriah Heep, and others. Music journalist Andrew Earles believes the band was influenced by the tiny but growing
doom metal scene led by
Saint Vitus (who released via SST). Ginn jealously guarded the new material, fearing other bands would capitalize on the new approach, and bemoaned that fans were unaware of how the band had progressed since they were unable to release recordings. The band toured extensively in North America and Europe to often hostile, violent hardcore punk crowds. The disciplined group rehearsed obsessively, but there was little friendship between members: vocalist
Henry Rollins was introverted and Ginn cold and demanding. Dukowski felt that Rollins' vocal approach was better suited than that of the band's earlier three singers to the new material he was writing such as "I Love You" and "My War". Dukowski, who also wrote poetry and fiction, encouraged Rollins to write as well, and Rollins found inspiration in Dukowski's bleak lyrical style. The band recorded a set of ten demo tracks at Total Access studios in 1982 for a planned follow-up to
Damaged on which
Chuck Biscuits replaced
Damaged drummer
Robo. The rest of the lineup consisted of Ginn and former vocalist
Dez Cadena on guitars, Rollins on vocals, and Dukowski on bass. The band explored new sounds on these tracks, which tended to feature a riff-heavy heavy-metal edge and noisy, energetic free guitar soloing from Ginn. The album never materialized, and the heavily bootlegged demos have never been officially released; re-recordings of several of the tracks from the session were to feature on
My War and other later albums. The line-up did not last long—frustrated with the band's legal troubles, Biscuits left in December 1982, replaced by
Bill Stevenson, and in 1983 Cadena left to form
DC3. Ginn had been frustrated with Dukowski's sense of rhythm, and in Germany during a European tour in 1983 gave Dukowski an ultimatum to quit, or Ginn himself would leave. Dukowski left the band, but stayed on to co-run SST. With Unicorn's demise in 1983, Black Flag was able to release the material they had written since 1981. Eager to get back in the studio but still without a bassist, Ginn took on bass duties under the pseudonym "Dale Nixon" and practiced the new material with Stevenson up to eight hours a day, teaching the drummer to slow down and let the rhythm "ooze out" at a pace Stevenson was unused to; the band called this approach the "socialist groove", as all beats were equally spaced. With
Spot as producer and $200,000 in debt, Ginn, Rollins, and Stevenson headed to the studio to record
My War. ==Music==