By 1986, the group had gone through several personnel changes, and both Clarke and Brill had departed, but the line-up solidified somewhat with the addition of Alec Morton on bass guitar.
The group began to build a steady and loyal following around the New York City and New Jersey area, playing many shows with the Butthole Surfers[2] and also with Strzempka and Steinman's then next-door neighbours, White Zombie.
[2] The cover art was executed by Marvel Comics artists Pat Redding and Pete Ciccone, and Raging Slab began to tour across the United States.
To help support this album the group also produced a video, and the clip for their song "Don't Dog Me" featured the band being dragged around the Mojave Desert by a monster truck.
By this time the group was touring extensively, opening for big-name acts such as the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Ramones, Molly Hatchet and Warrant.
It was during this time that Strzempka and Steinman purchased a rural property in Pennsylvania and built "Slabby Road", the group's personal recording studio.
[2] In 1992, the group began to record a new album with producer Brendan O'Brien as well as former Led Zeppelin member John Paul Jones who had agreed to work with the band, contributing string arrangements.
In 1997, however, the group began gigging and recording for their next release, utilizing the talents of drummer Phil Ondich who subsequently left the band in May 1998 to form Zakk Wylde's Black Label Society.
Scheduled to depart New York City bound for London, England on September 11, 2001, the infamous atrocity that occurred on that date postponed the European leg of their tour until later in 2001.
After the release and European tour for Pronounced: Eat Shit, the band took a long hiatus, before announcing that longtime bassist Alec Morton was suffering from congestive heart failure.
In March 2017, founding member and frontman Greg Strzempka announced the death of guitarist Elyse Steinman on the band's Facebook page.