It’s a little known fact that, for all his “wake up America, you’re dead!” proclamations, Anthony H. Wilson looked at a certain faction of the ‘90s American indie-rock scene with a great deal of paternal affection. How could he not? Just look at Sub Pop’s aping of Wilson’s hype machine, or the whole Unrest/Teen Beat scene and their Factory-worshiping record sleeves. It was a dark day in Virginia when Unrest had to sate their rampant Anglophilia by cutting a deal with 4AD. Truth is, when the ‘80s became the ‘90s, Wilson doggedly clung to his dreams of running a label that held a mirror up to the unwashed faces of E-addled British youth, meaning he had to hurriedly cram his box of rare Simple Machines seven-inches underneath Factory’s overpriced boardroom table whenever Keith Allen or Alan Erasmus were around.Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Unwound - Mkultra (Kill Rock Stars)
It’s a little known fact that, for all his “wake up America, you’re dead!” proclamations, Anthony H. Wilson looked at a certain faction of the ‘90s American indie-rock scene with a great deal of paternal affection. How could he not? Just look at Sub Pop’s aping of Wilson’s hype machine, or the whole Unrest/Teen Beat scene and their Factory-worshiping record sleeves. It was a dark day in Virginia when Unrest had to sate their rampant Anglophilia by cutting a deal with 4AD. Truth is, when the ‘80s became the ‘90s, Wilson doggedly clung to his dreams of running a label that held a mirror up to the unwashed faces of E-addled British youth, meaning he had to hurriedly cram his box of rare Simple Machines seven-inches underneath Factory’s overpriced boardroom table whenever Keith Allen or Alan Erasmus were around.
Labels:
factory records,
kill rock stars,
seven inch single,
unwound
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Monday, February 11, 2008
Gallon Drunk - The Last Gasp (Safty) (Clawfist)
Maracas are an underrated part of any band's arsenal. When Gallon Drunk were touting their wares around some unforgiving London venues in the early '90s, they employed a guy, Joe Byfield, to simply stand on stage and play maracas. Incredible as it may seem, Byfield's bean-shakers were key to the band's sound--just listen to the way they kick in 30 seconds into 1991 single "Draggin' Along," lifting the song out of the mire of Birthday Party pastiches and into something altogether more exotic. The band certainly had the specter of Mr. Cave looming over them during these early stages in their career (singer/guitarist James Sunday, February 10, 2008
Liars - Warsaw, Brooklyn, February 9, 2008
Our parents got it wrong about metal. There was never any real threat from boys who used hair straighteners and ran overpriced merch tables at their shows. I went to a Slayer concert when I was a teenager. There was a faint whiff of unpleasantness in the air, but nothing really bad was going to happen to you at a Slayer show. It was too controlled,
too orderly. I wanted to be in the presence of bands who looked like they might actually cause some physical discomfort if you got too close to them. Slayer, with their upside-down crucifixes and songs about Satan, never really got that concept. Or, if they did get it, were just really bad at executing it. Liars, on the other hand, are a band who look like they'd indoctrinate you into their cult, flay the skin off your body, and have a good laugh about it as they chowed down on your entrails. And instead of Satan, Liars sing about witches. At last night's show in Brooklyn's Polish National Home, singer Angus Andrew brought his peculiar brand of grotesque vaudevillia to the stage once again. Andrew was hampered by a back injury that he picked up earlier in the tour, forcing him to sit in a chair for some of the performance.
But it didn't stop him periodically leaping up and lunging toward the crowd, performing some misshapen dance moves and spilling his ugly words right into the faces of exuberant fans. The problem facing Andrew and his band is the uphill battle against the monolith that is Drum's Not Dead. In the hands of lesser talents, songs such as "Freak Out" and "Pure Unevil" would respectively sound like pleasing takes on Nuggets-style psychedelia and Psychocandy-ish pop. But these songs from 2007's Liars album suffocate when you stack them up next to the bewitching "Let's Not Wrestle Mt. Heart Attack" and "A Visit From Drum." The latter is a stunning tour de force in its live incarnation, with Aaron Hemphill and Julian Gross pounding away at their respective drum kits, offering a considered take on the ferocious double-drumming of early Adam & the Ants. Hemphill is an underrated cog in the Liars' machine;
much of the press attention on the band focuses on Andrew's antics, but Hemphill's contributions are considerable. The huge drone (somewhat reminiscent of Pylon's "Driving School") that blisters to the surface via Hemphill's fingers on "Let's Not Wrestle Mt. Heart Attack" is an immense, all-consuming presence in the middle of Liars' set. Meanwhile, Andrew inhabited a somewhat restrained version of his usual Gibby-Haynes-meets-Nick-Cave persona, only momentarily threatening mischief as he half-heartedly grabbed a large Polish flag from the side of the stage. But while their singer may have been performing at half-speed, the band still summoned up enough energy to serve Brooklyn a deliciously acidic sip of their grubby beauty.
too orderly. I wanted to be in the presence of bands who looked like they might actually cause some physical discomfort if you got too close to them. Slayer, with their upside-down crucifixes and songs about Satan, never really got that concept. Or, if they did get it, were just really bad at executing it. Liars, on the other hand, are a band who look like they'd indoctrinate you into their cult, flay the skin off your body, and have a good laugh about it as they chowed down on your entrails. And instead of Satan, Liars sing about witches. At last night's show in Brooklyn's Polish National Home, singer Angus Andrew brought his peculiar brand of grotesque vaudevillia to the stage once again. Andrew was hampered by a back injury that he picked up earlier in the tour, forcing him to sit in a chair for some of the performance.
But it didn't stop him periodically leaping up and lunging toward the crowd, performing some misshapen dance moves and spilling his ugly words right into the faces of exuberant fans. The problem facing Andrew and his band is the uphill battle against the monolith that is Drum's Not Dead. In the hands of lesser talents, songs such as "Freak Out" and "Pure Unevil" would respectively sound like pleasing takes on Nuggets-style psychedelia and Psychocandy-ish pop. But these songs from 2007's Liars album suffocate when you stack them up next to the bewitching "Let's Not Wrestle Mt. Heart Attack" and "A Visit From Drum." The latter is a stunning tour de force in its live incarnation, with Aaron Hemphill and Julian Gross pounding away at their respective drum kits, offering a considered take on the ferocious double-drumming of early Adam & the Ants. Hemphill is an underrated cog in the Liars' machine;
much of the press attention on the band focuses on Andrew's antics, but Hemphill's contributions are considerable. The huge drone (somewhat reminiscent of Pylon's "Driving School") that blisters to the surface via Hemphill's fingers on "Let's Not Wrestle Mt. Heart Attack" is an immense, all-consuming presence in the middle of Liars' set. Meanwhile, Andrew inhabited a somewhat restrained version of his usual Gibby-Haynes-meets-Nick-Cave persona, only momentarily threatening mischief as he half-heartedly grabbed a large Polish flag from the side of the stage. But while their singer may have been performing at half-speed, the band still summoned up enough energy to serve Brooklyn a deliciously acidic sip of their grubby beauty.
Labels:
Brooklyn,
Liars,
New York City,
Polish National Home,
Shows,
Warsaw
Friday, February 8, 2008
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Stretchheads - Eyeball Origami Aftermath Wit Vegetarian Leg (Blast First)
According to Wikipedia, the nightlife in the Scottish commuter town of Erskine, which lies in close proximity to Glasgow International Airport, simply consists of a Chinese restaurant and a few local pubs. The Stretchheads formed in Erskine in the late 1980s, giving birth to a sound that paired the gibbering soliloquies of singer P6 with a furiously agitated musical backing. Presumably the terminal boredom of life in Erskine played a big part in bringing the berserker punk of the Stretchheads into the world, and while this was always a band that wasn't meant to last, they left a suitably muddy footprint behind them. "Eyeball Origami Aftermath Wit Vegetarian Leg," their first release for Blast First, is a Sunday, February 3, 2008
Friday, February 1, 2008
Codeine - Pickup Song (Glitterhouse)
While many New York bands entered the '90s at breakneck speed, there was an anomaly among them in Codeine. The slowcore scene was invented around this great lumbering beast, and listening to them now, it's still difficult to see who, if anyone, has surpassed them. Bands such as Idaho and Low are fine, but no one could make quiet music as loudly as Codeine. "Pickup Song" begins with some gently plucked guitar and the droney monotone of singer Stephen Immerwahr. Then it arrives. "It" is the woozy sweep of heavily tremeloed guitar that brusquely enters and exits
Labels:
chris brokaw,
codeine,
glitterhouse,
seven inch single,
stephen immerwahr,
sub pop
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Action Swingers - Fear of a Fucked Up Planet (Primo Scree)
Lead Action Swinger, the irrepressible Ned Hayden, pulled Julie Cafritz and Don Fleming into the band's ever-rotating line-up for this 1990 single. Ned's music is a pitiless concoction of grazed guitars and low production values. The none-more-punk sound of the Swingers is pockmarked by Ned's gruff vocals, which emerge from somewhere deep inside the musical mêlée, and are usually drawn from a base lyrical palette that simply revolves around the words "fuck" and "motherfucker." "Fear of
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