Middle Class (band)


The Middle Class were an American punk rock band established in 1977 from Orange County, California. The band consisted of Jeff Atta on vocals, Mike Atta on lead guitar, Mike Patton on bass, and Bruce Atta on drums.

History

states that "by 1979 the original punk scene had almost completely died out." "They were replaced by a bunch of toughs coming in from outlying suburbs who were only beginning to discover punk's speed, power and aggression";"dispensing with all pretension, these kids boiled the music down to its essence, then revved up the tempos...and called the result "hardcore", creating a music that was "younger, faster and angrier, full of...pent-up rage..."
The band's Out of Vogue record is widely regarded as the first hardcore punk record, a view supported by author Steven Blush in his book. The band themselves have also been called the first hardcore band.
The band pioneered a shouted, fast version of punk rock which would shape the hardcore sound that would soon emerge. The band achieved success in the hardcore punk scene of Southern California. Their first shows were in 1978 in various Los Angeles clubs and ballrooms.
Their only LP, Homeland, is completely different, a skittering and complicated wonder that compares to the records of the Pop
Group. The song "Listen" became a staple on US college radio in the mid-80s.
The band reunited in 2011, with Matt Simon replacing original drummer Bruce Atta, and played sporadically until 2014 when guitarist Mike Atta died of kidney and lung cancer, on April 20, 2014, aged 53. Mike Patton and Matt Simon continued to play together in the band Eddie and the Subtitles.

Discography

;Studio albums
;EPs
;Compilations
;Various Artists compilations