"One of the defining jam bands of the entire 1990s, the carefree Spin Doctors blew through America's grunge-inspired musical decade with a Pocket Full of Kryptonite and the intent to use it. The funky rock group made their debut on the music scene with 1992's ""Jimmy Olsen's Blues,"" immediately banging down the door of the rock charts while continuing to rock the country with a cool cat persona that would eventually propel the group into full-blown pop/rock fame.The Spin Doctors' saga begins in 1988, when the New York City quartet scored a record deal with Epic Records/Sony Music by A&R executive Frankie LaRocka. Recording their first EP Up for Grabs in 1991 at a live performance at Wetlands in Lower Manhattan, the New Yorkers debuted the album soon thereafter. Garnering average success, the Spin Doctors next released Pocked Full of Kryptonite later that year. The album would become the Spin Doctors' breakthrough album, eventually landing at number one on the Heatseekers chart and number three on the Billboard 200. Before it was picked up by the mainstream circuit, however, Pocket Full of Kryptonite fared just averagely. After MTV caught onto the album's single ""Little Miss Can't Be Wrong"" a year after its release, everything changed for the New York jam band. It had taken several months, but suddenly the Spin Doctors had become part of the trendy music scene of the ‘90s.After Pocket Full of Kryptonite cooled down, the Spin Doctors spun their sophomore album, 1994's Turn it Upside Down. Picking up steam, the group next released You've Got to Believe in Something in 1996 before being dropped by Epic that fall. Shopping around, the Spin Doctors eventually settled with Uptown/Universal, releasing the highly-anticipated album Here Comes the Bride in 1999. The ultimate jam band disbanded after the album's release, but several years later the Spin Doctors were resurrected in 2005 for the album Nice Talking to Me."