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Milo Goes to College

Milo Goes to College is the debut studio album by the American punk rock band Descendents, released on September 4, 1982 through New Alliance Records. Its title refers to singer Milo Aukerman's decision to leave the band to attend college, and its cover illustration introduced a caricature of him that would go on to become the band's mascot. Milo Goes To College was Descendents' last record (up until 2021's 9th & Walnut) with founding guitarist Frank Navetta, who quit the band during the hiatus that followed its release.

Milo Goes to College

September 4, 1982[1]

June 1982

22:10

New Alliance (NAR-012)

The album's mix of fast and aggressive hardcore punk with melody and semi-ironic love songs led to it being considered one of the most significant albums of the early 1980s southern California hardcore movement. In the decades since its release, it has received highly positive reviews and is now considered among the most noteworthy and important punk albums by several publications. Milo Goes to College has been cited as influential and a favorite by several notable artists and musicians. It is considered by many to be a foundational record for the pop-punk genre.[5]

Writing[edit]

The Descendents' 1981 Fat EP had established the band's presence in the southern California hardcore punk movement with its short, fast, aggressive songs.[3] While still short and fast, the songs the band wrote for their first full-length album were also melodic, described by singer Milo Aukerman as melodic hardcore.[3] "I think with those songs we were expanding beyond the kind of fast-fast-fast-fast thing", he later recalled. "There are some of the similar coffee-driven songs, but I know that melodically there was actually an attempt at singing and making more pop-flavored music. Obviously we all really loved that, growing up with The Beatles and stuff."[8] Drummer Bill Stevenson reflected that "By the time we recorded Milo Goes to College the pendulum swung somewhere maybe in the middle. There's a lot of melodic and pop elements to it, but it also has that [sense of] bitter resentment."[9]


All four band members made songwriting contributions to the album.[10][11] Stevenson had written the lead track, "Myage", several years earlier using a bass guitar he had found discarded in a trash bin.[12] His song "Bikeage" is about "a group of girls who were sort of turning into sluts", while "Jean Is Dead" deals with "a girl who was not stable, but I had really not known."[13] Fishing was a favorite hobby of Stevenson's; "Catalina" describes a fishing trip to Santa Catalina Island, California.[9] Guitarist Frank Navetta's song "I'm Not a Loser" expressed resentment and envy toward those he viewed as more attractive and successful, while "Parents" stemmed from his own familial discord, with lyrics such as "They don't even know I'm a boy / They treat me like a toy / But little do they know / That one day I'll explode".[14][15]


Bassist Tony Lombardo, some 20 years his bandmates' senior, wrote songs expressing his desire for stability and individuality.[16] "I'm Not a Punk" reflected his disinterest in being part of the anarchic, destructive aspect of the punk scene: "That whole thing turned me off. I just wanted to play the music and do it as best I could and I had a lot of fun doing that [...] It's like 'I'm Not a Punk'. I want to be my own person."[16] "Suburban Home" was quite literal, expressing his desire for "a house just like mom and dad's": "I definitely wanted a home. I couldn't live in a place where all the people are cool. I don't like dysfunctionality. I have an abhorrence of dysfunctionality because my mother was an alcoholic, my parents are divorced, I just don't need that assault on my emotions and psyche."[7][11]

Release[edit]

Milo Goes to College was released through New Alliance Records, an independent record label run by D. Boon and Mike Watt of the San Pedro-based punk band the Minutemen, who were contemporaries of the Descendents.[10] The album sold around one thousand copies locally from its initial pressings.[19]


There was no tour to support the album. With Aukerman away at college, the Descendents recruited Ray Cooper as both singer and second guitarist and continued performing locally for a time during 1982 and 1983.[18][23] They would occasionally perform as a quintet when Aukerman would join them during his return visits to Los Angeles.[18][23] The band was mostly on hiatus for the next few years while Stevenson played in Black Flag.[20] Guitarist and founding member Frank Navetta quit the band during this time, burning all his musical equipment and moving to Oregon to become a professional fisherman.[24][25][26] The Descendents reconvened in 1985, with Cooper on guitar, for the recording of I Don't Want to Grow Up.[18][24]


In 1987 New Alliance was sold to SST Records, who re-released Milo Goes to College on LP, cassette, and compact disc. It was also reissued in 1988 as part of the compilation album Two Things at Once.

"Myage" by Thrillionaire

[I]

"I'm Not a Loser" by the ,[II] Jake & the Stiffs[III], Manic Hispanic (as a parody version titled "I'm Just a Cholo"),[IV] Sublime,[V] and Strung Out.[VI]

Voodoo Glow Skulls

"Parents" by Squatweiler with Asteroid Wilhanna and by Milo Greene[I]

[III]

"I'm Not a Punk" by the Melting Hopefuls

[III]

"Catalina" by Black Train Jack and by The Bronx[I]

[III]

"Suburban Home" by ,[VII] MxPx,[VIII] and FIDLAR featuring Brian Rodriguez[I]

Taking Back Sunday

"Statue of Liberty" by FF

[III]

"Kabuki Girl" by Frank Phobia and Clem and by Mike Watt + The Secondmissingmen[I]

[III]

"Hope" by Sublime, The Skints, Ben Bridwell[I] and Blink-182 [XIV]

[IX]

"Bikeage" by ,[X] Plow United,[II] Years from Now,[XI] Joey Cape with Punk Rock Karaoke,[XII] and Baroness[XIII]

Face to Face

"Jean Is Dead" by Shirk Circus

[III]

Milo Goes to College has been included in several lists of noteworthy punk albums. Spin has listed it several times, ranking it 74th in a 1995 list of the best alternative albums and 20th in a 2001 list of "The 50 Most Essential Punk Records", and including it in a 2004 list of "Essential Hardcore" albums.[35][36][37] In these lists, critic Simon Reynolds described the album as "Fifteen Cali-core paroxysms that anatomize dork-dude pangs with haiku brevity", while Andrew Beaujon called it "Super clean, super tight, super poppy hardcore about hating your parents, riding bikes, and not wanting to 'smell your muff.' Obviously, Blink-182 owe this bunch of proud California losers everything."[36][37] In 2006 Kerrang! ranked it as the 33rd greatest punk album of all time.[38] The LA Weekly ranked it the fourth greatest Los Angeles punk album of all time in a 2012 list, with Kai Flanders remarking "Every song speaks to [the listener's] teenage fucked-up-ness, from feeling incredibly horny to just wanting to hit someone for no reason."[39] Rolling Stone ranked the album fourth in their list of "The 50 Greatest Pop-Punk Albums" in 2017, with critic Hank Shteamer writing that "the trademark silly-sappy blend of Milo Goes to College would become the blueprint for pop-punk as we know it."[40]


Several notable artists and musicians cite Milo Goes to College as a favorite and influence, including Mike Watt of the Minutemen, David Nolte of The Last, and Zach Blair of Hagfish, Only Crime, and Rise Against.[9] Dave Grohl of Nirvana and the Foo Fighters opined that "If the Descendents had made Milo Goes to College in 1999, they’d be living in fucking mansions. That's a fucking amazing record."[9] Joey Cape of Lagwagon remarked that the album "was just huge in punk and to me. I don't think there would have been a [Lagwagon] song like 'Angry Days' without that album."[42] Fat Mike of NOFX has cited Milo Goes to College as his favorite record of all time, and said that hearing the song "Kabuki Girl" on Rodney Bingenheimer's Rodney on the ROQ program on KROQ-FM was a significant moment in his youth.[9] Chris Shary, who has done artwork for the Descendents and their successor band, All, since 1998, remarked that "From the minute that I heard the beginning it was like 'this is the music that I have been waiting for.'"[9] Photographer Glen E. Friedman, who photographed the band during the early 1980s, recalled that "the album had just come out, and coincidentally I had my own little heartbreak as a teenager, and I heard that song 'Hope' and I gotta say that I had never in my life related to a song about love ever before until I heard that song [...] I was just 'Wow, this is fucking heavy. This guy's hurting even more than I am, and this is desperation.' A whole new world opened up of a depth of emotion in music for me."[23]


In the decades since its release, many artists have recorded cover versions of songs from Milo Goes to College for other releases, including:

vocals

Milo Aukerman

bass guitar

Tony Lombardo

guitar

Frank Navetta

drums

Bill Stevenson

Adapted from the album liner notes.[10][17]


Band


Production

I On Milo Turns 50: Songs of the Descendents (2013)[43]

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II On The Potty Training Years 1988–1992 (1993), under the title "Descendents Song"[44]

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III On Homage: Lots of Bands Doing Descendents' Songs (1995)[45]

^

IV On Grupo Sexo (2005).[46] Manic Hispanic also parodied Milo Goes to College's title and cover artwork for their 2003 album Mijo Goes to Jr. College.[47]

^

VIII On On the Cover II (2009)[51]

^

IX On 40oz. to Freedom (1992)[52]

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X On Big Choice (1994)[53]

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XI On Years from Now (2008)[54]

^

XII On Punk Rock Karaoke (2008)[55]

^

XIII On "A Horse Called Golgotha" (2010)[56]

^

XIV On "BBC Radio 1" (2003)[57]

^

at YouTube (streamed copy where licensed)

Milo Goes to College