The group was started by Jeff Lescher (guitar and vocals), John Diamond (bass and backing vocals), and John Valley (drums). This lineup recorded the 1984 four-song EP
The Name of This Group Is Green and the group's 1986 self-titled debut album, which featured 14 songs, including re-recordings of all four songs from the earlier EP. Green established themselves via live shows around Chicago and undertook several national tours with the assistance of manager Cindy Illig. In 1986, Diamond and Valley elected to leave the band as Lescher announced plans for a national tour. Recruited from local music papers and from among their Chicago fan base were new bassist
Ken Kurson (who became a federally convicted cyberstalker later pardoned by Donald Trump, and a 'close friend' to Jared Kushner), rhythm guitarist Stuart Shea, and drummer Rich Clifton. Shea departed following a brief U.S. tour, and the remaining three-piece recorded
Elaine MacKenzie, including the tracks "Heavy Metal Kids", "She Was My Girl", and "Radio Caroline." Writing in
Spin magazine, renowned rock critic
Ira Robbins reviewed
Elaine MacKenzie, noting, "Lescher's voice is astonishing -- a rough but melodic roar that seems to be straining for release" before concluding "The Greening of America starts here."
Away From the Pulsebeat magazine's review of
Elaine MacKenzie stated: "Best American band, best songwriter, best singer, best LP. Sweep year." In 1988, Green released a single called
REM, this after the band
R.E.M. released an album called
Green. The group's membership changed again when Clay Tomasek (bass/vocals) joined the group for the
Bittersweet EP in 1993. In 2001
Eau de Vie was released on the
Jettison label, owned by
Jeff Pezzati of
Naked Raygun and
Big Black. The group released its seventh album, the 16-track concept affair
The Planets, in 2009. The group now includes Lescher, Tomasek, Mike Zelenko on drums, and guitarist Jason Mosher. ==Discography==