* En anglais uniquement
Singer/songwriter
Mark Lind spent the first seven years of his life in Melrose, MA, and following his parents' divorce, relocated from the suburbs to the predominantly Irish Catholic area of Charlestown, a borough of Boston. As he got older,
Lind and his brother
Rob inevitably got involved in the tight-knit local punk and hardcore scenes.
Lind formed
the Ducky Boys in 1995 with his friend Jason Messina, and acting as the group's lead vocalist and bassist, released the street punk records No Gettin' Out (1997) and
Dark Days (1998) on GMM Records. The band became highly regarded in the Boston punk scene, but things didn't last and though some demos were recorded and some new songs written,
the Ducky Boys broke up in 1999 before anything else was released.
Lind went on to collaborate with his brother
Rob -- who'd made a name for himself playing guitar and singing in the nihilistic hardcore band
Blood for Blood -- in the project Sinners & Saints, and the partnership resulted in the album The Sky Is Falling, released in 2002. Yet soon enough, the brothers were again working separately.
Rob eventually formed another hardcore outfit,
Ramallah, while
Mark went on to work with
Dirty Water in 2002, a band similar to
the Ducky Boys. They released a self-titled EP in 2003 before
Lind grew restless, wanting to again lead a band. The Ducky Boys consequently re-formed in late 2003 and recorded two well-received albums -- 2004's Three Chords and the Truth and 2006's
The War Back Home -- though their reputation was mostly had in Boston, as the group chose to take things easy and not tour a good deal behind the later music. Around this second life of
the Ducky Boys,
Lind also began working on some solo material, which was generally a stripped down affair inspired by songwriters like
Joe Strummer,
Bruce Springsteen and
Paul Westerberg. His first album, Death or Jail, came out in 2006 on Sailor's Grave Records, and was followed a year later by the EP Compulsive Fuck Up. Early 2007 also saw him again breaking up
the Boys to concentrate more fully on this solo work. ~ Corey Apar