Oakland’s own Lethal Limits, the solo project of Bay Area punk lifer Jeff Corso, has released the new EP Elevate. Dropping on March 13, 2026, the four-track collection is a high-octane jolt of East Bay grit, blending the melodic punch of 90s college radio with the raw, nervous energy of Gilman Street matinees.
Order Elevate Music and Merchandise here
Survival as Fuel
Elevate arrives nearly four years after the project’s self-titled debut, but it carries a newfound weight. Having survived a near-death experience, Corso writes with the urgency of someone who knows how quickly it can all slip away. Every note on this EP counts, serving as a defiant celebration of being alive.
The Sound: Punk Crunch meets Power Pop Clarity
Recorded at Vam Vam Studios in Oakland and mixed/mastered by the legendary Jack Shirley at Atomic Garden, the EP achieves a rare balance of polished clarity and unrefined grit.
- The DNA: Think Hüsker Dü and The Pixies meeting the “roughshod elegance” of The Wipers.
- The Evolution: While rooted in punk, Elevate introduces flashes of Thin Lizzy-style guitar swagger and heavy 90s grunge weight.
- The Players: Corso handles almost everything—guitars, bass, vocals, keys—while the powerhouse drumming of Aesop Dekker (Hickey, Agalloch) provides the precision beneath the hooks.
A Bay Area Pedigree
Jeff Corso’s fingerprints are all over the Northern California underground, with a history spanning bands like Nightstick Justice, No Dice, Coffin Party, and Second Opinion. Lethal Limits is the distillation of those decades spent in practice spaces and loading gear into small cars—music made for people who grew up on skate videos and flyer-stapled lampposts.

What first got you into music?
I started playing guitar when I was 9 after my parents divorce when my brother gave me a guitar. I began learning music by ear and started writing music in middle school.
Who inspired you to make music?
Minor Threat played a big role in me wanting to play in a band.
What is your creative process like? So far with Lethal Limits, I had been demoing songs from home playing all instruments, then sending it to my recording partner in crime Aesop Dekker where he tracked drums, sending it back to me where I would track everything else to it. I’ve had the pleasure of mixing and producing but for ELEVATE my friend Jack Shirley (Grammy winning producer) did the mixing/mastering duties.
If you could go open a show for any artist, who would it be?
Oasis because they are the best band in existence.
Are you finding the isolation of the pandemic conducive to your writing or is it hindering the experiences about which you can write? Surprisingly, I feel as though I flourished in songwriting and recording in the pandemic. I collaborated with friends on multiple projects as well as writing/recording my own projects (Lethal Limits, Coffin Party, and Pearl of truth). It allowed me to dig deeper in home recording/ sound engineering as well as transforming demos into formal recordings before releasing them. Somehow, it was one of the most productive and exciting periods for me musically.
How do you go about writing a song? Do you have a melody in your head and then write the other music for it?
Often, riffs and melodies come to me at random times- I generally record the riffs on my phone. When I am home, I use my loop pedal for rhythm and lead ideas, ultimately helping me form songs. I journal a lot- usually I match journal doodles to appropriate riffs. Occasionally I come up with a hook or chorus and base the song around that but mainly a lot of the process is subconscious and sometimes accidental. Also, I don’t believe in forcing songs.
What do you think of garden gnomes?
Well, one day when I was 14, my friends and I raided our friend’s dad’s weed later to find out it was laced with PCP- We began seeing gnomes before us and have had a fear of them ever since.
What two nonessential items would you want if you were shipwrecked on a deserted island?
Deathwish coffee and American Spirit blacks.
Are you a cat or dog person? I have a cat I consider my son named Savvy Prosciutto Mannaro.
If you had a time machine, would you travel to the future or back to the past?
I would most definitely time travel back back to the past in the 80’s and 90’s where I would stay. I don’t think a time travel to the future would be very rad the way things are going, jus sayin’!
Who would play you in a movie about your life?
Michael Imperioli.
Lethal Limits Online