J. Mascis (b. Joseph D. Mascis; guitar, vocal) formed Dinosaur
Jr. in Amherst, Massachusetts, after his hardcore punk band Deep Wound
broke up in 1983. Hooking up with fellow high school student Lou Barlow
(bass), Mascis initially played drums in Dinosaur, but shortly afterward,
former All White Jury drummer Murph (b. Emmett "Patrick" Murphy), joined
the group, and J. moved to guitar. Over the next year, the
group developed a local following, and in 1985, the trio released
their debut album, Dinosaur , on the Homestead label. The record and the
group's crushingly loud concerts developed a cult following over the next
year. By the end of 1986, a hippie-rock group called Dinosaur -- featuring
former members of Jefferson Airplane and
Country Joe & the Fish -- sued the band, which changed its
name to Dinosaur Jr.
In 1987, Dinosaur Jr. signed to Black Flag's indie label SST and
released You're Living All Over Me , which became an underground sensation,
with groups like Sonic Youth championing Mascis' wild, feedback-drenched
guitar. Early in 1988, they released the seminal single "Freak Scene,"
a song that captured the feeling and tone of the emerging American post-punk
underground. "Freak Scene" became a college radio hit, and it led the way
for their acclaimed 1988 album, Bug . Although the band's popularity continued
to grow, tensions were developing between Mascis and Barlow, who rarely
talked to each other. In 1989, Mascis told Barlow that the group was breaking
up; the following day, he "re-formed" Dinosaur Jr., this time without Barlow,
who went on to
form Sebadoh.
Without Barlow, Dinosaur Jr. relied on a rotating array of guest bassists, including Don Fleming and the Screaming Trees' Van Connor. In 1989, the group had an underground hit with their non-LP cover of the Cure's "Just Like Heaven." The following year, they signed with Sire Records. After "Just Like Heaven," Mascis remained quiet for several years, as he produced acts like Buffalo Tom and collaborated with friends like Sonic Youth and Fleming's Velvet Monkeys. Green Mind , Dinosaur's 1991 major-label debut, was recorded almost entirely alone by Mascis, and its varied, eclectic sound was received poorly in many alternative rock circles. Before the Green Mind tour, former Snakepit member Mike Johnson became the group's full-time bassist. On the subsequent tour, Dinosaur Jr. was supported by Nirvana, whose success with Nevermind soon overshadowed Dinosaur's. Instead of capitalizing on the commercial breakthrough of alternative rock, Dinosaur released an EP, Whatever's Cool With Me , in early 1992 and disappeared to record their next album.
Released early in 1993, Where You Been benefited greatly from
the commercial breakthrough of alternative rock, and many of the articles
surrounding the album's release hailed Mascis as an alternative godfather.
It became the first Dinosaur album to chart, peaking at number 50, and
it generated the modern rock hit "Start Choppin'."
That summer, the group played on the third Lollapalooza tour.
Mascis recorded the band's next album without Murph, who unceremoniously
left the band; he later joined the Lemonheads. Dinosaur Jr. released Without
a Sound in 1994 to mixed reviews, but the album was a moderate hit, thanks
to the MTV and modern rock hit "Feel the Pain." In the fall of 1995, Mascis
launched his first solo acoustic tour, which was captured on his first
official solo album, Martin & Me, released in the spring of 1996. After
contributing several Brian Wilson-styled songs to Alison Anders' 1996 film
Grace of My Heart -- he also made an appearance in the movie -- Mascis
completed Dinosaur's next album on his own, leaving Johnson to his solo
career. Upon its spring 1997 release, Hand It Over was hailed as Mascis'
best album in years, although it failed to generate a significant hit."
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All-Music Guide