Bodyslam was initially called La-On (Lanna: ละอ่อน) which implies kids or more youthful individuals, enlivened by the name of rookie introductions at Suankularb Wittayalai School, the grade
school the band (the underlying "La-on's") individuals went to. In 1996, the band entered a band rivalry for secondary school understudies called "Hot Wave Music Awards" and won the principal prize, beating about a hundred of different groups. La-on immediately marked a record manage record organization Music Bugs, and discharged a self-titled pop-shake collection in 1997. "Dai Rue Plao" (ได้หรือเปล่า) turned into their most perceived melody. The band individuals depicted parts of themselves in the lakorn (Thai TV arrangement) Thep Niyai Nai Sano (เทพนิยายนายเสนาะ) and later discharged the arrangement's soundtrack in that same year.
The band returned in 2002 under the new name Bodyslam, moving to heavier rock music with just three of the first six individuals remaining. The principal self-titled collection under their new name as a three-piece band was effective. The second collection, Drive, was discharged in 2003, turning out to be similarly effective as their past collection. They won Channel [V] Thailand Music Video Awards for "Favorite Group" for the music video Plai Thang (ปลายทาง: End of the street).
After the second collection, the band experienced numerous progressions. They cleared out Music Bugs and later marked an arrangement with Genie Records, a backup of GMM Grammy, Thailand's biggest record organization. The band's guitarist
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