In 1990, Stephen Jackson and Chris Watt met at
Virginia Tech, through mutual friend
Tal Bayer, who was attending nearby
Radford University, and they formed a ska band called the Slugs with their former schoolmate Tom Goodin, and an architecture classmate, Ben Gauslin. They changed their name to the Dancecrashers for a few months, before taking the name the Pietasters. The newly formed band convinced the local college booking agency to bring the band
Bad Manners from England to perform at the Virginia Tech auditorium, with themselves as the opening act. This was their first public performance, following shows they had staged in the living room of Jackson and Watt's rental house. The two bands later toured the U.S. and Europe together. In the early 1990s, a similar band from the DC area,
the Skunks, asked the Pietasters to play a local ska night at a bar in Georgetown, which was followed by a series of shows at dive bars in DC, Maryland and Virginia. The manager of one of the bars, Nick Nichols, befriended the band and helped them record their first record,
The Pietasters, also known as
Piestomp. In the summer of 1993, the Pietasters set out on their first national tour in a used school bus they had bought for $900. By the end of the tour, almost all of the original members quit the band, with only trumpeter Carlos Linares and lead singer Steve Jackson now remaining as original members. The Pietasters recruited Jeremy Roberts, Toby Hansen, and Alan Makranczy as their new horn players, Rob Steward (Covington) on drums, and Paul Ackerman on keys. Tom Goodin remained on guitar. The new line-up continued to tour, and soon came to the attention of
Bucket Hingley, front man of
the Toasters and owner of
Moon Ska Records, who invited the Pietasters to join a tour package called "Skavoovie 94" with the Toasters and
the Scofflaws. They also performed with artists including
No Doubt, the
Dance Hall Crashers,
Hepcat, Let's Go Bowling, and the Skatalites. By the end of the tour, the Pietasters began recording
Oolooloo on Moon Ska with
Victor Rice producing.
Oolooloo came out in the summer of 1995, after which bassist Chris Watt left the Pietasters to perform with Eastern Standard Time, and Todd Eckhart moved from rhythm guitar to bass. In 1995, the lead singer of the Mighty Mighty Bosstones,
Dicky Barrett, approached the band at a show in Providence, Rhode Island, while they were considering breaking up, and offered to take them on the road over the next few years. As the Pietasters continued to tour, they recorded
Strapped Live! between stops in the
Cat's Cradle in
Chapel Hill, North Carolina and
the Black Cat in Washington, DC., which was released in 1996. Throughout this period, the Pietasters had been recording new songs and covers, and re-recording older tracks. The results ended up as a new/compilation album,
Comply. Meanwhile, the band filmed their first video in 1996, a live video filmed at the Scooter Rally and F'n Rock Party they produced at an old outdoor soul venue called Wilmer's Alley in
Brandywine, Maryland. The video was filmed by Burning Toast Productions and featured scenes of the festival and live performance of the Pietasters playing their
Jimmy Holiday cover, "The New Breed". While backstage at a show in
Los Angeles during a tour with the Mighty Mighty Bosstones,
Tim Armstrong, guitarist with
Rancid, and his business partner, Chris Qualiana, approached the band and asked if they would join a new label they were creating,
Hellcat Records, also featuring
the Slackers,
Hepcat and
Dropkick Murphys. After clearing the move with Moon Ska, the Pietasters signed with Hellcat, a subsidiary of
Epitaph Records, and their next album,
Willis was recorded and released in 1997, produced by
Brett Gurewitz, owner of Epitaph Records and guitarist for
Bad Religion. The band recorded their second video, "Stone Feeling", to support this album, another live video with the assistance of Burning Toast Productions, filmed at a venue in Washington, D.C., and another video for "Out All Night", also filmed in Washington, D.C., and directed by
Grady Cooper. They toured the U.S., followed by their first European tour, as well as making appearances on the
Warped Tour and opening or headlining for
the Reverend Horton Heat, the
Ramones, the
Cherry Poppin Daddies,
Bad Brains,
Ozomatli, the
Bouncing Souls,
Dropkick Murphy's,
Murphy's Law,
Fugazi,
They Might Be Giants,
H2O, the
Skatalites and
Flogging Molly. Their song "Out All Night" was featured in the videogames
Street Sk8er for the PlayStation, and
NCAA Football 06. In 1999, the Pietasters went back to the studio to record
Awesome Mix Tape No. 6 for Epitaph's
Hellcat Records, again recorded and produced by Brett Gurewitz, with portions of the album recorded at Tim Armstrong's house. The album was named after the mix-tape from
Boogie Nights. The Pietasters recorded another video, "Yesterday's Over", to support the album. They finished the album and toured Europe with the Warped Tour, then the US again with the
Pilfers and
Spring Heeled Jack, ending 1999 with a period opening for
Joe Strummer. Paul Ackerman and Tom Goodin left the band, as did bassist Todd Eckhardt, who was replaced by Jorge Pezzimenti. Erick Morgan, formerly of the Skunks, took over keys, and Toby Hansen replaced Tom Goodin on guitar. In late 2001, the Pietasters were recording their next album when they learned that former bassist,
Todd Eckhardt, had died of a viral heart infection. The Bouncing Souls included "Todd's Song" on their album ''
Anchor's Away in his memory. The Pietasters released a new album in 2002 entitled Turbo'', Eckhardt's nickname. In 2003, the Pietasters released their live DVD,
Live at the 9:30 Club. In 2006, the Pietasters played the International Ska Circus in
Las Vegas. On August 21, 2007, the Pietasters released a new studio album entitled
All Day. In 2010, the Pietasters performed at the 9:30 Club's 30th anniversary in Washington, D.C., and were introduced by
Henry Rollins. In November 2011, Connecticut's
Asbestos Records and Chicago's Underground Communiqué Records launched a fundraiser on
Kickstarter to release
Oolooloo on vinyl, among other third-wave ska classics from
Pilfers,
Edna's Goldfish, and
Suburban Legends. On April 20, 2020, the band announced that former keyboard player Erick Morgan had died on April 18 of
pneumonia. ==Band members==