

False Prophets were formed in June 1980 by singer Stephan Ielpi, bassist
Steve Wishnia, and guitarist Peter Campbell. Matt Superty, Stephan's cousin
and scion of a long line of drummers, joined soon afterwards. We quickly
made a name for ourselves with raw, danceable energy and Stephan's
welcome-to-my-nightmare theatrics, playing gigs at Max's Kansas City and
predawn sets at the A7 Club. Our first single, "Blind Obedience" b/w
"Overkill" and "Royal Slime" came out in June 1981.
Musically, we were part of punk-rock's second generation, which included
the Undead, Heart Attack, Reagan Youth and DC transplants the Bad Brains in
New York, and the Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, D.O.A., and Minor Threat in
the rest of the world. We also drew on British post-punk bands like Joy
Division, Public Image and the Gang of Four; pre-punk rockers like the
Kinks and Stones (Steve and Peter) and Alice Cooper and Mott the Hoople
(Stephan); and rap, reggae, and funk, the sounds of the boom boxes on New
York's streets.
So we never quite fit the hardcore stereotype, being too varied musically
and not thuggish enough personally. "Good Clean Fun," our second single,
released in 1982, was both our first hardcore-speed song and a criticism of
mosh-pit violence.
Matt quit soon after, replaced by the Undead's Patrick Blanck, Donna Baril,
and Ned Brewster, who made his debut at an all-night anarchist ball on New
Year's Eve, 1983. We recorded our first album the next summer, financed
largely by Stephan's uncle hitting the triple at the Aqueduct racetrack in
Queens.
Alternative Tentacles put the album out in early 1986. By then Peter was
gone, having quit after a Southern tour in the summer of 1985. The band
toured heavily over the next two years with new guitarists George Tabb and
Debra DeSalvo, recording the Implosion album in early 1987. It broke up
during a disastrous West Coast tour that fall. Stephan and Debra then
re-formed it with new musicians and kept it going for several more years,
releasing one EP. (Steve and George went on to form Iron Prostate, while
Ned eventually wound up in punk-blues stalwarts the Senders.)
Ronald Reagan was inaugurated a couple days before our first two-night
stand at A7, ushering in a new era of greed, puritanism, and hate. We
wanted to rage against all that, and did. We also wanted to write great
songs, have fun, and get possessed and out of our heads playing
rock'n'roll. Listen to Blind Roaches and Fat Vultures and see how we did.
-Steve Wishnia