Beef                              Humper was supposed to be a punk band, not an electronic                              project. In 1998, Daryl Westfall and Wes White (ex-drummer                              for Nashville's Teen Idols) envisioned the world's                              first "meat-core" band - essentially a parody                              of the straight-edge punk movement. Pro-pollution,                              pro-vivisection, anti-vegan lyrics would be spat out                              from the stage by musicians brandishing "O"s                              instead of "X"s on their hands. The 'joke'                              seemed - to them at least - even funnier due to the                              fact that Daryl was himself a vegetarian at the time,                              a spin on the hypocrisy sometimes found in message-oriented                              bands whose members didn't live by their own rhetoric.
For better or worse, the idea never got past the                              "gee-what-if" stage. Daryl insisted that                              the name itself was too good to go to waste. In 1999,                              he began releasing rudimentary electronic music on                              the Internet as "Beef Humper". It was all                              in fun, and he fully expected to be slagged off or                              ignored completely. Instead, he began getting fan                              mail from at home and abroad.
In 2000, several more CDs were released - this time                              with the assistance of Puerto Rico's DJ Antartica,                              who was living in Nashville at the time and had become                              Beef Humper's "Second Beatle". Upon Antartica's                              return to Puerto Rico, however, the project lost steam.                              In 2001, a final re-mastered compilation of favorite                              tracks was issued. Beef Humper was headed for the                              slaughterhouse.
Or so it would seem. Daryl was still experimenting                              with sound, dropping a track here and there to friends                              and fans. Eventually, he realized he had enough material                              to release a new Beef Humper CD. That CD is now available                              in downloadable form from Comfort Stand Records.