The Jars


The Jars were a new wave band from Berkeley, California active from 1978 to 1982. According to Subterranean Records founder Steven Tupper, The Jars were one of the very first bands to successfully combine 60s garage and 70s punk. They recorded two singles and were known for opening for many top punk and new wave bands that appeared in San Francisco during this period.

Background

Marc Time, Mik McDow and Armin Hammer formed The Jars in 1978 with JD Buhl and Gary Nervo . The Jars helped spearhead the Berkeley punk/new wave scene by playing at the International Café, Aitos Club, Keystone Berkeley, Berkeley High School and various pizza parlors and frat parties. By 1979 the Jars were playing all over the Bay Area at the Mabuhay Gardens, the Deaf Club, the Temple and the Old Waldorf opening for Roky Erickson, The Angry Samoans, Horslips, The Dickies, The Flaming Groovies, Psycotic Pineapple, the Dead Kennedys, The Suspects, The Mutants, and MX-80 to name but a few. JD Buhl left the band in 1979.
Despite its ubiquity in San Francisco's early punk scene, the band's recording history was brief. A 7" EP was recorded in 1979 for Subterranean Records, “Start Rite Now”, a cover of The Sonics' “Psycho”, and “Electric 3rd Rail." In 1980, a second 7" 45, “Time of the Assassins/Jar Wars,” was recorded and released on a label run by Universal Records, a Telegraph Avenue record store. It featured a pic sleeve designed by Grammy-winning artist Hugh Brown showing Jack Ruby shooting Lee Harvey Oswald outside Berkeley's Elmwood Theater. Both songs received airplay on local college stations like KALX and performed strongly on the Mabuhay Gardens Rotten Record Chart. Mike Montalto then joined on guitar. Sessions at Fantasy Studios for an EP "Teenage Rebellion" took place in 1981, but were never released.
After the band's dissolution, Marc and Nervo formed the Art Faggots with Ray Farrell and Nervo's wife Marge on Drums. They also later formed Bo with Marc Monosonic and Snoopy. Bo opened for Isocracy, Rancid, The Offspring, Crimpshrine, Green Day and others at Berkeley's 924 Gilman Street in the late 1980s.
Former Jars members remain active in music. Marc hosts the Sunday Morning Hangover on Eugene, Oregon's KWVA, for which he was honored as the Eugene Weekly's Top Radio Show award; archived recordings of his shows can be found at Archive.org. Mik McDow played with Beltain up until he passed away on February 7, 2019. Armin Hammer is an award-winning recording engineer; he owns San Francisco's A. Hammer Mastering & Digital Media and is still active with his band True Margrit.
In 2014, J.D. Buhl released a new single produced by Gary Hobish with Mik Dow, Michael Montalto and Hammer on guitar, Gary Nervo on organ, and John C. Berry of Psycotic Pineapple on bass. He followed this with several compilation releases including the vinyl issue LITTLE VICTORIES which included several of the first Jars and Saviors garage recordings, and an album of all-new material that included contributions from Hammer, Dow, Montalto, and many others. It was completed and released 2 weeks before J.D. passed away after a long bout with cancer on August 14, 2017.

Discography