1313 Mockingbird Lane

The band had a full-page narrative dedicated to them in Timothy Gassen's book The Knights of Fuzz, about the garage rock and psychedelic music phenomenon of 1980–1995.

With later songs like "Dig Her Up" and an anti-Beatles tune called "I Don't Wanna Hold Your Hand", the prominent lyrical themes of gloom and doom presented by the band were combined with a healthy dose of tongue-in-cheek garage humor.

1313 Mockingbird Lane would perform multiple double bills with Boston-based garage rock legends, Lyres.

[2] In September 1994, Brian Goodman of Rochester, New York band The Projectiles replaced drummer Dave Pollack[3] for the final two singles, released in 1996.

[5] The band recently successfully completed a PledgeMusic campaign[6] which resulted in the April 2015 Cacaphone Records re-release of the debut LP on vinyl, CD, and cassette, remastered with bonus tracks.