ANOTHER NEW DIY SPACE
Last week, the Ratscellar began having shows. It’s actually a warehouse space somewhere in
In all fairness, they were a lot better the following Saturday up at Welfare Records, when they played with Guilty Faces (see demo review below), Fruit Salad and a few other bands who I missed.
I’m still going to do a zine review section—hopefully in the next blog. I don’t want it to come out half-assed and also wanted to get this blog out in a timely fashion…
MUSIC REVIEWS
ANGLEWORM-Ruin Your Scene (Triumph of Life, CD)
It’s town vs. gown! These kids are from
ANTELOPE-Reflector (Dischord, CD)
Minimalist post-punk rock, for want of a better term. Intertwining guitar/bass/drums with a melodic pulse and high-timbred singing that softens the edges—maybe more than I’d like and that’s the weak link here. Some songs, in fact, eschew the guitar for just bass and drums. Even with that softening, there’s still tension in the sound. There’s definitely a nod to the Minutemen and Gang of Four and even early Cure in the rhythmic nature and sparseness of the compositions. Something as hypnotic and hook-laden as “The Demon” is hard to resist. (
CIVIL CRISIS
APESHIT/CIVIL CRISIS-Split (Welfare, 7” EP)
Vinyl debut for two Boston-area bands. Apeshit, fronted by
DEATH SENTENCE-Until The End Of The Sentence (Burrito, CD)
This is the Aussie Death Sentence and the recordings date from the mid to late 80s. A complete anthology and including a number of unissued/rare recordings. This band traded in ultra-fast hardcore, sometimes coming across as disjointed but never flagging in energy. Death Sentence did show some evolution, even as the band had a number of personnel changes and endured the death of one of their drummers. Reading the liner notes, written by their manager Maureen, it’s obvious this was one bad-ass band, especially their vocalist Peter McGrath. He’s lived a self-abusive punk rock life and has apparently paid the price for it. There are some punkier sounding songs in later batches—“My Love” and “Bitchin’,” for instance. The sound quality is spotty at times, especially the unreleased ’85 recording and rehearsal tape from ‘86, both of which sound like a later generation tape copy. We’re talking about hardcore, though, and pristine sound quality isn’t mandatory and there aren’t problems elsewhere. This was one raw-sounding band. These guys were doing something similar to what Heresy were doing in the
DEGENERICS-Generic Record Collection (Soulrebel, CD)
Just what it says, collecting this
DOA-Smash The State: The Raw Original DOA 1978-81 (MVD, DVD)
Oh hell yeah—a collection of DOA performances during their early years, when they were at their best. I never got to see the lineup that included Randy Rampage and Chuck Biscuits and, along with Joey Shithead and Dave Gregg (for most of the songs), and they were absolutely smokin’. Their stage presence and slam-bang, catchy punk ranks among the best that time period offered and these clips perfectly bridge the original punk era and birth of hardcore. Biscuits, in particular, is incredible to watch. He was 15 when he joined the band in ’78, according to Joey’s book “I, Shithead” and is a powerhouse of brawn and finesse. Goddamn I wish I could have seen this lineup—even had a chance in ’81. I had just picked up their “Something Better Change” and “Hardcore ‘81” albums and was stoked to see they’d be playing at the
Back to the review: the live stuff consists of single camera shots, varying in quality but watchable. The best performance, I think, is from the On Broadway in SF, where they were opening for another band (DK’s?). The opener “New Age” sounds a clarion call and there's no let-up. There’s also a TV studio performance of “The Enemy” that has Simon “Stubby Pecker” Wilde on bass, doing his best to mimic Rampage’s bounce around exploits though not quite nailing it. The earliest stuff is from a show they played at the Anarchist Anti-Canada Day in July of ’78. Joey is interviewed and doesn’t exactly articulate himself well, although he does act punk as fuck by shoving a butt up his nose. The audience looks silly and the “norms” and cops are amused. They almost didn’t get to play but the authorities relented. Even at that point, DOA were fairly solid although they’d improve dramatically in the next few years. Finally, there’s a conceptual video of “World War 3” with that lots-of-white background, live in the studio feel and a TV report about the punk scene in
DOWNHILL FAST-s/t (Rock Vegas/Eating Rats, CD)
Being a parochial Bostonian (who lives in the ‘burbs), it always does my heart good to see Boston references on a CD cover—in this case, a “T” train—public transit to you outsidahs. Vocalist Jimmy Flynn is an aficionado of the heavier/metallier
GUILTY FACES
GUILTY FACES-demo (CD-R)
Two guys from Rat Byte are in this band and they’re off to a fine start with this demo. Rockin’ mid-tempo punk and a few hardcore songs. Tommy spits out the vocals with a snotty cadence and the songs are punchy and drip with a bad attitude. Hatin’ life, hatin’ the burbs, longing to get the fuck out, much like Angleworm, who were reviewed above. If I lived in
SANCTUM/STORMCROW-Split (No Options, LP)
Two brutal-sounding bands—Sanctum, from Seattle and Bay Area-ites Stormcrow. Both bands trade in metallic crust and each vocalist exercises (exorcises?) their inner demon—gutteral and necessitating the lyric sheet, which ain’t that easy to read either. They’re printed on the inside of the colorful gatefold sleeve that pictures some kind of medieval battle and maybe that’s the concept here. It’s obviously not cheerful material—it’s doom and bombast to accompany the heavy sounds. Sanctum have a speedier, rampaging attack and make the stronger impression. Their songs have a more-than-effective ravenousness. Stormcrow largely stake out lumbering terrain, an aural decay that gets bogged down under the weight, especially after Sanctum’s obliterative apporoach. Out of their three songs on this split, “Beneath The Earth” is the one that shows the most signs of life, pummeling ahead in authoritative style, making me wish the other songs were in that vein. (
STREET TRASH-Into The Wasteland (No Class, LP)
This was recorded awhile ago and was apparently supposed to come out on My War Records. It doesn’t matter, really. All that matters is this is one scorcher of an LP—well, if 15 or so minutes is considered an LP. The modus punkerandi (sorry) remains the same—phlegmy vocals and a no bullshit tandem of punk and hardcore. The bass-playing is particularly sick-sounding—towards the end of “Five Dirty Fingers,” there’s some dirty-ass Lemmy-isms. Hell, it’s all cool—a wreckless, relentless rush of power and adrenalin. And the yellow/red splattered vinyl makes a bold artistic statement as well. (
TARRAKIAN-The Swarm (No Options, 12” EP)
Three long, heavy songs—well, four if you consider “Surman Suukun 1 & 2” two separate songs, although one flows into the other. Part 1 is actually quite catchy, more of a traditional hard rock/metal tune with an early Sub Pop vibe and, although a lot of that stuff has aged badly, this is a solid song. Some of it is too sprightly to completely fall into a stoner metal category but that’s still the overall vibe, especially for “S.S. Part 2.” I’d like to hear more songs like “S.S. Part 1.” (
TRANZMITORS-s/t (Deranged, CD)
A full-length album for the Tranzmitors and, with “Genocide,” introducing itself with a snappy burst straight out of a late 70s power-pop mold. A balance of force and fluff—you’ve got your noo-wave keyboards, jabbing guitar lines, Brit-affected vocals, angelic harmonizing, the works. They could be kin to old-school British Columbians the Pointed Sticks. Sometimes, I’ll find a little too cutesy but then a song like “Is Your Head Hollow” will come bursting through the speakers and shake things up. Shake it up nicely, in fact. (