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Merle Allin

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Key Information

Merle Colby Allin Jr. (born April 9, 1955)[1] is an American bass guitarist. He is the elder brother of the late punk rock vocalist GG Allin.[2]

Allin played electric bass for three groups that featured GG Allin: Malpractice, The AIDS Brigade and the third version of The Murder Junkies; he currently continues the latter, his brother's final backing band, with original drummer Donald ("Dino Sex") Sachs, and several younger members.[3]

Allin is featured extensively in the documentary film Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies, by filmmaker Todd Phillips.[4]

Allin was also bass player in late 70s Boston punk group Thrills (a.k.a. City Thrills),[5] who released several singles and were the subject of a later CD discography.[6] He subsequently joined the band Cheater Slicks, and played bass guitar on their debut album On Your Knees.

Allin also appears in the full-length Allin family documentary GG Allin: All in the Family (2018), directed by Sami Saif.

Outside of his work as a musician, Allin is a noted collector of serial killer memorabilia and was featured in three installments of Soft White Underbelly.[7][8]

References

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from Grokipedia
![Allin in 2008](./assets/Merle_Allin_2008_croppedcropped Merle Colby Allin Jr. (born September 1, 1953) is an American punk rock bassist recognized primarily as the elder brother of the notoriety-driven performer GG Allin and as the longtime bassist for his backing band, the Murder Junkies.[1][2] Raised in rural New Hampshire alongside his younger brother, Merle shared an early and intense enthusiasm for rock music, sparked by appearances like The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show, which fueled their dedication to the craft through relentless listening and informal acquisition of records.[3] This bond extended into their musical collaboration, with Merle laying down the rhythmic foundation for GG Allin's raw, confrontational punk output in bands leading to the Murder Junkies, whose live shows often escalated into chaos marked by physical aggression, self-inflicted harm, and deliberate audience provocation as core elements of their aesthetic.[3][4] Following GG Allin's death from a heroin overdose in 1993, Merle persisted with the Murder Junkies, recruiting subsequent vocalists to sustain the group's visceral performances and recordings within the underground punk circuit.[3] In reflections shared in interviews, he has portrayed his brother's trajectory as ensnared by intensifying personal excesses and alcohol dependency rather than habitual narcotic use, underscoring a familial perspective on the perils of unbridled extremity in pursuit of artistic transgression.[3]

Early Life

Birth and Family Origins

Merle Colby Allin Jr. was born on April 9, 1955, in Lancaster, New Hampshire, though some discographies list an alternative date of September 1, 1953.[4][1] His parents were Merle Colby Allin Sr. (October 20, 1923–June 23, 2001), a lifelong resident of northern New Hampshire who worked in paper mills and logging, and Arleta Marie Gunther (August 17, 1936–August 7, 2019), who was born in Gilman, Vermont, to John and Emma Gunther.[5][6][7] The couple married on August 23, 1954, in Dalton, New Hampshire, when Arleta was 18 years old; their union produced two sons before ending in divorce.[5] Merle Sr., a reclusive figure with reported religious visions and survivalist inclinations, imposed unconventional naming practices on his family, influenced by messianic delusions; he initially lived off the grid in a remote cabin after being laid off from mill work.[8] Arleta, who later remarried and resided in Franconia, New Hampshire, until her death from pulmonary fibrosis and heart failure, had a reportedly strained relationship with her sons' upbringing amid the family's socio-economic instability in the rural Northeast.[7][9] Merle Jr.'s immediate sibling was his younger brother, born Jesus Christ Allin on August 29, 1956—the name chosen by their father under the belief that the child represented a divine reincarnation—later known as GG Allin.[8] The family's working-class origins were tied to seasonal employment in New Hampshire's mills and forests, prompting frequent relocations within Coos County and adjacent Vermont areas during the mid-20th century.[6][5]

Childhood in New Hampshire

Merle Allin, born in 1955 as the elder brother of Kevin Michael Allin (later known as GG Allin), spent his early childhood in a remote log cabin in Groveton, New Hampshire, lacking running water or electricity, which contributed to the family's profound isolation from neighbors and society.[10] [11] The family resided in this rural setting amid economic hardship, with the brothers experiencing limited socialization and frequent bullying from local children due to their reclusive lifestyle and unconventional family dynamics.[10] This environment fostered a close sibling bond between Merle and his younger brother, born in nearby Lancaster, New Hampshire, in 1956, as they navigated shared hardships without broader external support.[12] Their father, Merle Colby Allin Sr., exerted strict authoritarian control over the household, enforcing rigid religious indoctrination and reportedly issuing threats of murder-suicide against the family, which instilled an atmosphere of fear and instability.[10] These episodes of verbal and physical intimidation, documented in family accounts, marked the early years before the father's abandonment around 1961-1962, when Merle was approximately six to seven years old.[8] Following the divorce, custody transferred to their mother, Arleta, amid ongoing neglect and exposure to domestic violence that characterized the paternal influence during the New Hampshire residence.[10] The brothers' limited access to education and community—exacerbated by the cabin's remoteness—highlighted the causal role of familial dysfunction and material deprivation in shaping their formative experiences.[11]

Musical Career

Formative Years in Punk and Early Bands

Merle Allin, born in 1955 in New Hampshire, began his musical involvement during adolescence by purchasing an electric guitar in ninth grade, around age 14 or 15 circa 1969-1970. He initially focused on guitar before transitioning to bass, developing his skills through personal practice amid the era's rock influences.[13] By the mid-1970s, Allin's tastes shifted toward glam rock acts including T. Rex, Roxy Music, Slade, and Mott the Hoople, which preceded his immersion in the emerging punk movement. These influences aligned with the raw, rebellious energy of pre-punk rock, setting the foundation for his entry into punk without formal training or institutional guidance.[14] In the late 1970s, Allin relocated to the Boston area and joined Thrills, a punk band active from approximately 1977 to 1980, later rebranded as City Thrills. As bassist, he contributed to the group's high-energy performances in the vibrant Boston punk scene, characterized by small clubs and grassroots networking among acts drawing from garage rock and proto-punk roots. The band emphasized straightforward, aggressive songwriting, reflecting the DIY principles of independent production and anti-commercial ethos prevalent in early U.S. punk.[13][15] Thrills/City Thrills produced several singles in the late 1970s and culminated in a self-released 10-inch EP in 1981 featuring four tracks, including "Wait for Me" and others showcasing power-pop-infused punk. This output exemplified punk's emphasis on accessible recording—often via local studios or home setups—and unpolished live shows, prioritizing ethos over technical polish or mainstream appeal. Allin's role in these efforts marked his initial foray into punk's underground circuit, predating more structured collaborations.[16][17]

Role in GG Allin's Projects

Merle Allin served as bassist for his brother GG Allin's early punk band The Jabbers starting around 1977, providing foundational rhythm on singles such as "Beat, Beat, Beat/Bored to Death/One Man Army" and "Cheri Love Affair/1980s Rock N Roll."[18] He contributed bass lines to the band's 1980 debut album Always Was, Is and Always Shall Be, where his playing contrasted GG's volatile vocals and drumming by maintaining consistent punk drive amid the raw, garage-style production recorded in New Hampshire.[19] This period marked Merle's initial role in supporting GG's musical output during the late 1970s and early 1980s tours, emphasizing logistical continuity for live sets despite evolving performance intensities.[20] Transitioning with GG to The Scumfucs from 1982 to 1984, Merle continued on bass, bolstering the band's shift toward more explicit and aggressive punk recordings and East Coast performances.[20] His contributions focused on delivering propulsive bass support for GG's confrontational style, aiding band cohesion during 1980s tours that involved empirical challenges like venue disruptions and sporadic arrests tied to crowd interactions rather than premeditated spectacle.[20] This phase highlighted Merle's musicianship as a stabilizing element in GG's projects, rooted in their shared familial immersion in music from rural isolation.[3] In the late 1980s leading to GG's 1993 death, Merle played bass in GG Allin & the Murder Junkies, formed around 1991, including on the final album Brutality and Bloodshed for All released that year.[20] During this era's live shows, Merle's role involved anchoring the instrumentation through high-energy sets that tested band endurance, with post-1993 accounts from Merle attributing their collaboration to a mutual, lifelong vision of uncompromised punk expression rather than unilateral enabling or restraint.[3][20]

Leadership of the Murder Junkies

The Murder Junkies served as GG Allin's backing band from their formation in 1991, with Merle Allin performing on bass during the singer's final U.S. tours in 1993.[21] Following GG Allin's death by heroin overdose on June 28, 1993, Merle Allin took over leadership of the group, deciding alongside surviving members to continue operations without a new frontman initially focused on Allin's repertoire.[22][23] Core personnel under Merle's direction included longtime drummer Donald "Dino Sex" Sachs and guitarist William Weber, enabling the band to resume live performances by the mid-1990s across the United States and later internationally.[24][25] This period emphasized continuity in the band's raw, aggressive punk style, characterized by high-energy sets drawing from Allin's catalog while incorporating original compositions to sustain audience engagement in underground circuits.[14] Merle Allin expanded the band's output with releases such as the 1999 album Feed My Sleaze, where he handled bass and lead vocals, signaling an evolution toward self-contained punk recordings independent of GG Allin's direct involvement.[26] Subsequent activities into the 2000s and beyond included sporadic albums and tours, maintaining viability through dedicated fanbases in punk scenes despite limited mainstream commercial metrics.[27] The lineup saw occasional changes, with Dino Sachs remaining a constant on drums, supporting Merle's vision of perpetuating the Murder Junkies' transgressive ethos.[28]

Ongoing Performances and Releases

In the 2010s and early 2020s, Merle Allin maintained the Murder Junkies' presence through sporadic U.S. performances, adapting to niche punk circuits amid declining mainstream interest in extreme genres. The band resumed touring after a hiatus, with shows emphasizing raw energy in venues catering to hardcore and punk audiences. By 2025, activity intensified with the Scumfuc Family Tour, featuring dates such as August 6 at Cafe Nine in New Haven, Connecticut, and August 7 at Meat Locker in Montclair, New Jersey.[29] Additional 2025 performances included a full set at Reggie's in Chicago on August 16 and appearances in Detroit and Buffalo, reflecting persistence in East Coast and Midwest scenes despite logistical challenges for a California-based act.[30][31][25] Releases remained limited, focusing on archival or live material rather than new studio output, consistent with the economic constraints of underground punk distribution. The band issued the seven-track EP Feed My Sleaze and the three-track single The Right to Remain Violent, available via streaming platforms, though these drew from established punk aesthetics without significant innovation.[32] Platforms like Discogs list ongoing sales of vinyl and CDs from the band's catalog, including compilations, supporting fan-driven rather than commercial viability.[33] Interviews in this period highlighted Allin's emphasis on endurance over spectacle, as in the 2023 Soft White Underbelly discussions where he addressed lifestyle adaptations and familial legacy without romanticizing past excesses.[11] A 2025 appearance on The New York Hardcore Chronicles further detailed touring logistics and band resilience, underscoring practical motivations amid punk's marginal economics.[34] To supplement income from infrequent gigs, Allin operated "Murder Mart," an appointment-based sales operation from his Murrieta, California, residence, offering punk memorabilia, records, and personal items post-tour.[35] This venture illustrates the self-sustaining model required for longevity in a scene with limited revenue streams.[36]

Personal Life and Relationships

Family Dynamics and Siblings

Merle Allin, born Merle Colby Allin Jr. on April 9, 1955, grew up alongside his younger brother Kevin Michael Allin (later known as GG Allin, born August 29, 1956) in a severely dysfunctional household dominated by their father, Merle Colby Allin Sr. (1923–2001), a reclusive and abusive figure influenced by fundamentalist religious beliefs. The family resided in an isolated cabin near Lancaster, New Hampshire, lacking electricity or running water, where the father enforced strict isolation and reportedly dug makeshift graves in the basement while threatening murder-suicide against his wife Arleta and sons, fostering an environment of constant fear and trauma.[37][38] As the older sibling by less than 16 months, Merle assumed a protective role toward his brother during this period, shielding him from the worst of their father's rages amid shared experiences of physical and psychological abuse that later informed their mutual rejection of authority.[12] The parents' divorce in 1961 marked a pivotal shift, with mother Arleta (1936–2019) gaining custody and relocating the boys to a modest home in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, establishing a single-mother-led household characterized by relative stability but lingering effects of prior trauma. Arleta worked multiple jobs to support the family, while the brothers developed a close bond, with Merle introducing GG to music through early experimentation on drums and guitar, laying the groundwork for their later punk involvements. This post-divorce dynamic emphasized resilience and sibling reliance, as the absence of the father's influence allowed the brothers to channel accumulated grievances into rebellious outlets, including GG's adoption of the nickname "GG" (derived from Merle's childhood mispronunciation of "Jesus," a name their father had imposed) around their teenage years.[39][12][7] The brothers' shared immersion in punk rock during the 1970s and 1980s served as a direct causal response to their paternal trauma, manifesting in collaborative bands like Little Sister's Date and later GG's projects, where themes of defiance and extremity echoed their upbringing's chaos without replicating the father's fanaticism. Merle participated as bassist, enabling GG's escalating performances while pursuing a parallel but less self-destructive path, reflecting a divergence in how each processed the family legacy—GG toward unchecked extremity, Merle toward sustained musical output. In later reflections, Merle has acknowledged this dynamic, stating in a 2023 interview that GG "got trapped in his own insanity," attributing his brother's 1993 death not primarily to addiction but to an inability to escape self-imposed cycles rooted in early abuse, while emphasizing personal accountability over external excuses.[3] Arleta's death on August 7, 2019, from pulmonary fibrosis, and the father's earlier passing in 2001 amid continued reclusion, underscored the long-term fragmentation of family ties, with Merle maintaining the musical legacy as a form of fraternal continuity rather than full endorsement.[7][40]

Adult Life and Residences

In the 1980s, Merle Allin moved from New Hampshire to New York City, a key hub for the punk rock scene, where he maintained an apartment amid the city's underground music culture.[41] By the early 1990s, following his brother's death, Allin shifted his base to Los Angeles, establishing a residence there that served as a focal point for band activities and personal collections.[42] Post-1990s, Allin's daily life in California involved supplemental non-musical work, including interactions with local video rental stores to distribute band materials in the mid-1990s, reflecting the economic realities of sustaining a fringe music career.[43] In recent years, he has operated "Murder Mart" sales from his apartment in Murrieta, California—located between Los Angeles and San Diego—offering custom merchandise, personal video messages, and artwork such as 5x7 canvas prints via platforms like Facebook, as a means of direct fan engagement and income.[36] Allin has kept his personal relationships private, with no public records confirming marriages or children, consistent with his low-profile approach outside musical endeavors.[44] As he has aged within the punk subculture, Allin continues independent living in Southern California, managing health challenges typical of long-term participants in high-intensity lifestyles through ongoing public appearances and sales, without detailed disclosures on specific medical conditions.[45]

Public Perception and Media

Interviews and Documentaries

Merle Allin featured prominently in the 1997 documentary Hated: GG Allin & the Murder Junkies, directed by Todd Phillips, which chronicles his brother GG Allin's final months through concert footage and interviews conducted in 1993.[46] In the film, Allin appears as the bassist for the Murder Junkies, offering firsthand accounts of the band's operations and GG's unscripted stage behaviors, emphasizing their roots in raw emotional release over contrived shock value.[47] In a March 13, 2023, interview with Soft White Underbelly, Allin detailed his upbringing under an abusive father, Merle Sr., whose physical punishments—such as beatings with belts and isolation—created lasting environmental pressures on the family, yet he framed these as contributing factors rather than justifications for destructive choices.[11] A follow-up on April 24, 2023, expanded on punk's role as a therapeutic outlet for genuine suffering, with Allin defending GG's extremism as an authentic response to trauma, distinct from media portrayals of mere sensationalism.[45] He contrasted this with sanitized narratives, arguing that GG's actions reflected unmediated personal agency amid hardship, not performative fakery. Recent radio and podcast appearances have reinforced these views. On the Dead Mill Talk podcast on April 12, 2024, Allin recounted GG's commitment to visceral punk expression as a conduit for unresolved pain, rejecting claims of staging for publicity.[](https://open.spotify.com/show/ something wait, use https://creators.spotify.com but better: actually from result, Spotify link not direct, use description.) Wait, for citation, use https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/deadmilltalk/episodes/Merle-Allin-GG-Allin--Murder-Junkies-e2i63qn but approximate. On August 5, 2025, during a Chaz and AJ radio segment, Allin addressed myths surrounding the family legacy, attributing GG's path to paternal abuse as a causal environmental trigger but underscoring individual accountability in channeling it into art versus self-destruction.[48] Similarly, in a February 19, 2025, episode of The New York Hardcore Chronicles, he highlighted punk's value in externalizing real anguish, positioning the Allin brothers' work as a defiant counter to institutional narratives that pathologize such outlets without acknowledging their origins in verifiable hardship.[34] Allin's media engagements often involve fan-driven discussions, such as responses in dedicated online communities where he clarifies misconceptions about GG's intentions, promoting an interpretation of their legacy as rooted in unvarnished causal chains from childhood adversity to artistic extremity.[49] These appearances consistently prioritize empirical recounting of events over speculative psychology, debunking sensationalized accounts by grounding claims in direct familial experience.

Criticisms and Defenses of Family Legacy

Critics of the Allin family legacy have argued that Merle Allin's involvement in his brother's performances enabled and perpetuated GG Allin's extreme stage behaviors, which glorified violence and self-destruction at the expense of musical substance, often reducing the act to a sensational sideshow that overshadowed any artistic intent.[28] Such critiques portray Merle's continued association as irresponsible, prioritizing notoriety over accountability for the physical and psychological risks borne by voluntary participants in an environment emphasizing personal agency rather than imposed victimhood.[28] In defense, Merle Allin and supporters frame the family's punk endeavors as an authentic rebellion against commercialized music and societal constraints, positioning GG's envelope-pushing antics as a raw expression of individual freedom that exposed hypocrisies in conformist culture, with Merle's post-1993 leadership of the Murder Junkies demonstrating sustained commitment to the genre's anarchic roots rather than opportunistic fame-seeking.[14][50] Merle has described his brother as a "genius" whose legacy merits preservation without mimicry, critiquing contemporary acts for lacking genuine defiance in favor of superficial trends.[50] This perspective underscores punk's role as a medium for unfiltered truth-telling, where audience engagement reflects deliberate choice amid chaos, rejecting narratives that recast participants as unwitting victims. The Murder Junkies' reception reflects this divide, sustaining a niche cult following through underground performances in venues like dive bars, bolstered by tours with acts such as Hank Williams III, while facing mainstream dismissal for inhering GG's controversial shadow.[50][14] Merle's insistence on playing original material independent of audience expectations further evidences a dedication to punk's core principles of autonomy and non-conformity over broad appeal.[14]

Involvement in GG Allin's Performances

Merle Allin served as bassist for GG Allin's backing band, the Murder Junkies, which formed in the late 1980s and toured extensively through the early 1990s, enabling the band's raw punk performances characterized by onstage nudity, self-inflicted wounds, defecation, and confrontations with attendees.[20] During these events, Merle maintained his instrumental role amid the disorder, providing continuity to the music as GG Allin escalated physical provocations, including coprophagia and assaults that often prompted venue evacuations or police intervention.[20][51] A documented incident occurred on November 16, 1991, at the Antenna Club in Memphis, Tennessee, where the Murder Junkies performed while GG Allin inserted a microphone into his rectum, contributing to the show's reputation for bodily extremity; Merle, on bass, supported the set without direct participation in the frontman's actions.[51] Similarly, on May 18, 1993, in Austin, Texas, the band played a gig that ended abruptly when GG Allin defecated onstage and hurled feces at the crowd, resulting in his arrest for indecent exposure—Merle's bass duties aligned with the support role that spared band members from primary charges in such disruptions.[52] The Murder Junkies' final show with GG Allin took place on June 27, 1993, at The Gas Station nightclub in New York City's East Village, lasting mere minutes as GG performed two songs, mutilated himself, and bolted naked into the street, inciting a melee; Merle executed bass lines through the brevity, exemplifying the band's adaptation to GG's unpredictable volatility, which led to over 50 arrests for GG across his career but fewer for accomplices due to their peripheral involvement.[53][51] This pattern of escalation, rooted in GG's personal commitments rather than band directives, was amplified by familial familiarity—Merle and GG shared an upbringing marked by paternal abuse that normalized defiance, though empirical records show GG as the sole instigator of peak excesses.[20]

Post-1993 Incidents and Band Activities

Following GG Allin's death on June 28, 1993, Merle Allin sustained the Murder Junkies with drummer Dino Sex through 1995, regrouping in 2003 to mark the tenth anniversary of his brother's passing by touring alongside acts including Hank Williams III and CKY.[50] By 2007, the lineup included singer Pauly Duvee— the third vocalist post-GG— and guitarist Scotty Wood, enabling extended performances with diminished risk of abrupt halts or venue pullouts compared to prior eras.[50] Band shows retained confrontational punk attributes but eschewed GG Allin's extreme self-harm and audience invasions, incorporating select tracks from his catalog like those on Brutality and Bloodshed for All alongside originals.[50] A 2012 concert in Avon, Connecticut, however, escalated into physical altercations, featuring nudity and an audience member assaulted atop a pool table during the melee.[14] The group issued Roadkiller in 2010 and tracked a 10-song LP in Cincinnati that year, slated for 2013 release to observe the 20th anniversary of GG Allin's demise, emphasizing self-composed songs over replicas of his repertoire.[14] Merle Allin articulated the band's trajectory as autonomous persistence in punk expression, declaring, “We’re just doing our thing, doing what we’ve always done, and we don’t give a fuck what anybody thinks or cares,” while rejecting emulation of GG as disrespectful to his singular artistry, which Allin deemed genius-level.[14][50] In advance of a 2017 Fort Myers, Florida, gig, assurances were extended against defecation or unprovoked scuffles—contrasting GG-era norms—though Dino Sex drummed nude and lyrics probed taboo subjects like violence, sex, and narcotics to provoke broadly.[54] Such evolutions facilitated steadier touring into the 2010s and beyond, bolstering fringe punk's underground vitality via consistent output and gigs, albeit with sporadic disruptions from residual notoriety; venue hesitancy persisted intermittently, exemplified by a 2023 tour cancellation, yet empirical records indicate fewer outright prohibitions than in the pre-1993 phase.[50][55] Allin positioned this endurance as fidelity to raw musical ethos over sensationalism, countering pressures for sanitization amid evolving cultural sensitivities toward offensive content.[14][54]

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