

Unfortunately the band members were not interested in anything except complaining.Go figure. Paul came up with songs for one last album, about the life and times of his dearly departed friend and singer Dave insurgent. Paul agreed for the hell of it and figured it'd be a one time thing until people started talking shit, like Paul was in the band for a second or who played guitar originally So Paul went and got Al Pike and Johnny Aztec, from the 80s, to play live shows but they weren't interested in performing the songs the way Dave Insurgent insisted they be played. 18 years later he moved back into the Lower East Side where he ran into some punk rockers who ended up booking a Reagan Youth show The Woodstock Of Hardcore.

Paul Cripple, pictured above, assumed Reagan Youth was a failure due to the lack of interest during the band's latter half (Reagan's second term) and the fact that the last album was immersed in wicked and malicious situations that affected his mindset for a long time. So Paul Cripple found a rock steady rhythm section and eventually found it with Tibbie X on bass who has played alongside Paul for now over a decade as well as having Reagan Youth’s original drummer Charlie Tripper come back.They are the band's last rhythm section and there won’t be any need for another. Like because Dave wasn't around anymore they thought if they started doing shit like playing drum rolls on the cymbals instead of the toms and making loud fart sounds from the bass, y'know so they could stick out like sore thumbs as if that made them all important or something. Both Al Pike and Johnny Aztec played a bunch of tour dates from 2006 until 2009 because unfortunately those two insisted on playing the songs in a different manner which Dave Insurgent never condoned. Keith Moon's ghost, Johnny Aztec, Pusi Koorahtz/Paul Cripple/Joey Turk and Al Pike who make up all the musicians from their record albums Volumes I & II.

Pictured above from left to right is Steve a.k.a. When Paul Cripple reformed the band in 2006 he was able to get Steve and Al Pike, the rhythm section, from Volume I and the drummer from Volume II Johnny Aztec, as there wasn’t a bassist to access from Volume II because Paul was the bassist on that record as well as the guitarist.
