A strong and diverse indie rock scene grew in Albuquerque in the 90s, and Scared of Chaka was arguably its most prolific band. Created in 1993 by frontman and songwriter Dave Hernandez and bassist Dameon Waggoner, they recorded their first single with drummer Jeffery Jones. They created a local stir by playing a Buzzcocks-meets-The Mummies hybrid of screamy garage pop. Their fanbase grew from regional to coastal, then to national, thanks to their first LP and tour in 1995. In 1996, Ron Skrasek became the permanent drummer, and they recorded another LP that was "self-titled" to give the band a fresh start. 

This started their most well-known and active period, 1996-2001, with tours throughout the US, Europe, and Japan. Between these tours, they released five more LPs and ten more singles. 702 Records, Empty Records, Hopeless Records, Johans Face, Bad Man, and Dirtnap have all released/distributed their music. They've shared stages with At The Drive-In, The Murder City Devils, Dillinger Four, Turbonegro, Smoking Popes, Jawbreaker, Descendants, Nomeansno, Los Crudos, The Descendants, and Rancid. 

Other Albuquerque bands of this period included The Drags (Skrasek joined them to drum on their last album and tour), The Rondelles, and the band that evolved into indie rock stars The Shins and Flake Music. Joining in 1998, Dave Hernandez was the first bass player for The Shins, writing bass lines for Oh, Inverted World, including New Slang. From 2003-2013, he recorded and toured as the guitarist and bassist of The Shins.