In early 1979 the Cutz were formed out of the ashes of the infamous Calgary rock country band the Famous Brothers. Sally (vocals) and Sandy (guitar/vocals) gathered Al (bass) and Lonnie (drums) and a litte later Don (guitar). The Cutz were along with other small bands part that made up the early Punk scene in Calgary. Their music can be described as a cross between X, Patti Smith and Jefferson Airplane, combining the energy and emotion of the late 70s Punk ethic blended in with the musicality and idealism if the late Sixties creating a hybrid that was engaging yet rebellious at the same time. Starting out like most other bands back in the day playing house parties, community halls and pretty much anywhere that would let them, The Cutz set list at first heavily influenced by choice 60s covers envolved into more and more original songs and the result was they started to find their own sound. After playing everywhere theuy could for the better part of a year the Cutz saved up their money and went into Jonathon Sound in January 1980 and recorded three songs and in April they released their only 7Inch with two goodies on Aura Records in an edition of 500 copies.
The band continued to play around Calgary as well as a few out of town gigs that would come their way. With other heroes from the Calgary scene releasing records right around the same time (The Verdix, Hot Nasties, The Sturgeons), the litte scene was starting to gather attention and build momentum. As odd as it sounds legendary blues and rock icon John Baldry saw the five play at a house party and expressed interest in taking the band into the studio to record. This is summertime 1980, with a record out, a loyal local following and endorsement from a rock legend, the Cutz seemed to be on their way. But by the end of 1980 exhaustion, internal struggles and personal conflicts broke up the band. The Cutz reformed once in 2007 to perform a few songs at a celebration of life gathering for close friend Mick Memorex (Verdix) RIP.