[1] Haggis formed the band in Hollywood, California, when he decided to leave The Cult, switching from bass to rhythm guitar.
[2] He had previously worked with Rick Rubin, the producer of the Electric album for the Cult, who introduced Haggis to the vocalist Frank Starr.
[2] Their debut album, Nobody Said it Was Easy, produced by Rubin, was released in 1991, following a two-year delay when Starr was arrested on drug charges and spent six months in jail.
[4] This, combined with poor album sales as the grunge scene started to take over from traditional rock, caused the record label to drop them in 1992.
In 2005, Haggis and Lizmi assembled as much archive footage of the band as they could gather, and released a two disc retrospective, Left for Dead.