Friday, November 28, 2014
WEEKEND DISCOUNTS!
We heard there's some sort of holiday going on? People are out killing each other for cheap TVs or whatever? Well, sounds like a good enough reason to start a sale of our own now. Goes all weekend. Everything in the store is marked down. No code, no hassle, just order stuff. Plenty of distro items and current/new stuff going on the cheap. Stuff from Blood Sun Circle, Dialysis, Moutheater, Godstopper, Tendril, TAXA, Ed Gein, Engineer, Achilles, Ex-Breathers, Spit Spewing Snakes, Like Wolves, Oak & Bone, Black Throat Wind, and plenty more!
Monday, November 24, 2014
GIVE THANKS FOR REVIEWS
As the second best holiday of the year dawns upon us (Halloween is still tops, and yeah, there is a holiday between Halloween and X-Mas) let us give thanks for many wonderful records being made and offered up to us. Give some thanks back and buy a few of these because they're good. So while gorging on mashed potatoes and tofurkey (because I'm just going to assume every one of my readers is vegan... if not, your loss) do it to the soundtrack of a band like Today Is the Day, and pretend the lyrics are about beheading European colonizers and eating squash. It works for me.
BRIEF LIVES, “VHS” cassette
After seeing this band at Fest I was blown away by their
wild set and by how wonderfully they channeled a perfect Quicksand/Helmet
hybrid of post-hardcore awesomeness.
I immediately went to purchase all the recorded music they had
available. Having recently
switched vocalists (Valient Thorr himself now commands the mic) all they had
was a demo on that most silly of formats- the cassette. They made a good joke of it though by
drawing a VHS tape on the front (hence the demo title), but I have nothing to
play it on. So I paid for a
download of it. And what I’m
getting instead is a little less on the heavy-handed Helmet vibe and more of a
DC/Swiz style of hardcore with a good post-hardcore groove. I can most certainly swing with that
just fine. Two of the songs move
along at a pretty good clip, while closing track “Kipple” sticks close to that
slower, riff-oriented vibe.
Enjoyable. Nice little
prank call after the credits roll as well. (Brief Lives)
EX-BREATHERS, “EXBX” 7”
Anyone who peruses this site knows I got a lot of love for
this band. Heck, I even helped
release a record for them (which, shameless plug, you ought to buy). So, on this new 7” they make an effort
to crank out 12 songs in less than 12 minutes. Seeing as their last full length was about the same amount
of songs this is an exercise in making the most out of a small amount of
space. The band does an excellent
job here, and pull out some influences that may have been hanging in the back
previously but are brought to the fore here. Kind of imagine a little less heaviness than their full
length and split 12”, but still really damn fast (duh, 12 songs on a 7” kind of
has to go fast), a good deal of older Mission Of Burma influence appearing in
the song structures and shouted dual vocals, and the ‘cut-the-fat’ approach of
the Minutemen. The only two songs
to surpass the one minute mark, “Hang” and “Auto-Correct”, definitely get on
that aforementioned Mission Of Burma vibe with a slower and plaintive
style. It’s an excellent turn for
the band, who continue to take aggressive music, a bevy of various influences,
and make it all work under some weird unifying umbrella that cannot be easily
categorized. (Texas Is Funny)
EX-HEX, “Rips”
There’s not too much to say about the debut full length from
DC’s Ex-Hex. It’s catchy as hell,
rocks in a Joan Jett/Pretenders/Heart sort of way and has the distinctive croon
and guitar riffery of frontwoman Mary Timony. I would have liked if they didn’t re-record all the songs
from their seven inch (“Hot and Cold” somehow sounds way more pronounced and
full on the single) and threw on some new songs instead to round out the other
nine short and prickly rockers on this record. Whatever the case, Ex-Hex has a heck of a good debut here. It’s to the point and still a little
rough around the edges in the best way possible. I guess they chose an appropriate title for the LP because
it certainly works for them.
(Merge)
IRON LUNG, “Savagery” 7”
Tell me, can your band blast through 12 songs in about 8
minutes? Didn’t think so. Iron Lung can though with ease. And that’s what you get on their latest
7”, “Savagery”. Hell, they start
the record by yelling it at you; you should know what’s coming. I guess the theme of this one here is
starting every song with the letter ‘S’ and then going through their blasting
powerviolence with slow and primal riffs to back it up. It’s not quite as thought out or
refined as the material that makes up their full lengths, but it will do for
now… until the mighty Iron Lung
decides to create another full length that redefines what hostile music can
sound like. (Iron Lung Records)
JAZZ JUNE, THE, “After the Earthquake”
Of all the random bands that do reunions this one comes out
of left field. The Jazz June were
a mid/late 90’s PA band that were fairly prolific in their time, but didn’t
make any sort of huge waves that often warrant drool-worthy reunions that
fanboys jerk each other off to with stories of how many times they saw them
‘back in the day’. That being
said, I saw the band several times, back in the day. Heck, I think I even booked a show for them at one
point. Additionally, the reunions
of bands that weren’t by any means big tend to produce the best results because
they really have nothing to live up to.
There’s no pressure. So I
guess it’s cool this band decided to make another record? I don’t have a great frame of reference
for most of their later material because they did not make a huge impression on
me. I do remember, though, they
had three guitar players, which was pretty unique at the time. It made for a very layered approach and
the band tended to have a very rhythmic and catchy, bouncy sort of style. But hey, people change with age and
this essentially just sounds like a rock record. There’s nothing terribly unique about it. There’s also nothing bad about it
(though I’m not much a fan of the vocals). Some of the guitar parts are a little strange in a fun way,
but mostly it just exists as a middle of the road sort of rock record. Hell, if the band is having fun, why
complain? If they’re stoked, good
for them. I’m neither offended nor
intrigued. (Topshelf)
PALE ANGELS, “Primal Play” LP
After seeing this band play an eardrum-splitting set I was
so impressed by their energy and volume I picked this LP up right away. I guess I should have just stuck with
the live set. While they write
some excellent scrappy songs that are inspired by equal parts all things Bob
Mould (Husker Du and Sugar mostly) and Nirvana the sound on this LP is in
serious need of requiring a better recording. I guess I don’t quite see why a band would take what
essentially amounts to a practice room recording and put it on LP. I mean there are spots all over this
record where the sound goes in and out or sounds like a low quality mp3. I realize the three members of this
band all live in very different places, so getting together must be tough, let
alone arranging schedules for a proper recording. But geez, at least throw in a few bucks for a proper
mastering. It’s a disservice to
otherwise awesome songs, most of which hit the three minute mark save for the
last track that is a 13 minute roller coaster that builds up more and more,
until blazing forth before it slowly sputters out again. Go see them and have your eardrums
blown out. Hold off on the
recordings though, it’s just not the same. (Kiss Of Death)
PSYCHIC TEENS, “Face”/ “All” 7”
The Philly/Jersey psych/goth-y/shoegaze/noise
rock/whatever-the-heck-you-want-to-call-‘em-because they’re just going to throw
it back at you three-piece returns with their first new material since their
incredible “Come” full length.
This time it’s a limited run 7” in a series of PA noise-rock records
being released by the back-in-action Reptilian Records. It comes in a really neat package and
offers up two of the finest slabs of music the band has come up with yet. “Face” opens with a creepy guitar riff
heavy on the reverb that soon explodes into grand torrents of epic guitar wail
and into one of their trademark post-punk/Joy Division worship bass lines and
deep spoken vocals. But those
giant guitars are not far off and soon put about twenty different ‘loud’ and
‘louder’ pedals to work. It’s a
passionate and compelling track. A
good lead-off for this single. On
the B-side is “All”, which is quite different from anything the band has done
before as it is about the closest thing they have to a ballad. Slow, spooky, melodic, and yet sadly
beautiful during the chorus and one of the best songs they may have
written. I could use even more
hyphenated verbiage and adjectives to describe how red I think this is, but
hopefully you get the picture.
(Reptilian)
RESTORATIONS, “LP3”
No doubt this band will always hold a place in my heart as
they have consistently released records of a very high quality. But seriously, how do you top “LP2”? It was so perfect. Instead of feeling pressured by the
accolades that record received and trying to top it it feels as if Restorations
just set out to make a record they felt cool with playing for the joy of
it. In that respect it makes this
record awesome. In another respect
it’s a bit tamer than “LP2” and jams a bit more in certain parts, goes for more
straight-ahead rock in others.
Some of those huge, sprawling songs I love about them show up here, most
noticeably in “Misprint” (my favorite song here), “Tiny Prayers”, “The Future”,
and the bass-heavy rocker “No Castle”.
The songs where they try some new stuff (most apparent on trippy opener
“Wales” and the country-ish slide guitar on closer “It’s Not”) don’t
necessarily succeed as crowd pleasers, but work as a band just giving something
new a shot. Without question worth
getting if you’re already a fan.
If you’ve never given them a chance though I guess I wouldn’t suggest
this as a jumping off point. And
shit, if you just like good rock music as played by a band with limitless
creativity and passion this is certainly worth your attention. (SideOneDummy)
SELF DEFENSE FAMILY, “Duets” 12”
I kind of wonder if Pat wrote the lyrics on this record, or
if it was a collaborative effort with Caroline, who does the other half of the
vocals here? It’s certainly not in
his usual clever prose for the most part.
In fact, lyrically, it’s primarily somewhat standard fare. But both their voices work together
quite well and are actually the highlight of this one-sided 12” record. The band drops five songs that also
fall into a somewhat relaxed indie rock vibe. I realize the band are constantly evolving and shifting
their sound, but for lack of a better comparison (and I imagine they will all
appreciate this) much of their current output has been in a trance-like
repetitive Lungfish style, and I really dig that. Like, I could imagine these songs being on some chill radio
station. Honestly, some of it is bland. “Location Scout” is friggin’ great
though. Get some of their current
7”s (there’s basically a new one every month) for great stuff. This here is for the completist… or people who like mellow indie rock. (Iron Pier)
TAXA/ DOE split 7”
Canadian brethren in Taxa return with a split 7” where they
put forth one new song of their melodic chaos, heavy on the bass and reeking
heavily of Unwound and Shotmaker worship.
That is, of course, a great thing.
Their contribution to this split is a fairly long track and we’re all
better for it because it will improve your life most likely. Doe hails from the UK and reminds me
quite a bit of late 90’s Southern Records output like Beekeeper and Lung Leg. That may not mean much to any of you,
but for me that’s pretty cool.
Think catchy and gruff indie rock with female vocals and a pinch of
spite… but mostly in a good
mood. (Clue #2 Records)
TODAY IS THE DAY, “Animal Mother”
I have not purchased a Today Is the Day record in quite some
time. All their early material
profoundly affected me in my understanding of weird and heavy music. They have always had a way of taking
sharp, sonic stabs at the listener without necessarily having to beat them over
the head to do so. It was sonic
terrorism at its finest and most lethal.
So when they began making moves towards a sound that owed more to death
metal and grind I kind of lost interest because that weird abrasiveness was
gone. I will admit being a bit
ignorant to their last couple of records so I’m by no means an accurate judge;
it’s just what I noticed over the last 10 years. But yeah, “Animal Mother” is sort of a return to form while
still moving forward. I personally
don’t feel the lyrical punch I did on records like “Willpower” and the
self-titled record. The music
though… hot damn. It takes a lot of those fucked up cues
that made “Willpower” so devastating and couples them with the raw, down-tuned
explosive power felt on records like “Temple Of the Morning Star” and “In the
Eyes Of God”. I appreciate that TITD
can take heavy musical concepts and shove them down your throat in less than
two minutes. They can go from
down-tuned sludge with a strange electronic hum over it, to an acoustic track,
and into a fast and abrasive attack, one song to the next. Hell, there’s even a great Melvins
cover at the end. If you were a
fan in the past definitely get this.
If you’ve somehow never heard this group, and like heavy music, give it
a shot. (Southern Lord)
Sunday, November 23, 2014
4 WAY SPLIT IS OUT! NEW DISTRO STUFF AVAILABLE AS WELL!
That 4-way split thing we've been talking about for a few months? Yeah, it's now available! Please pick up a copy! There's brand new tracks from Ex-Breathers, Ovlov, Gnarwhal, and Woozy to cram into your earholes. And, I might add, as an outsider whose input into this record is minimal at best (it was co-released with Community Records), all the contributions are stellar. Go pick up a few copies right here.
Additionally, there's been a few new additions to the distro section of the webstore. We got some copies of the monumentally crushing new Moutheater, "Passing Key" LP, the bizarre- yet satisfying- split 7" between Godstopper and Tendril. We also got a few copies of the split between our homies in Taxa and their new UK pals in the poppy Doe.
And I may have mentioned it before, but we added a new Dialysis t-shirt design to the store. It's pretty weird. I'd get it if I were you.
Stay weird.
Additionally, there's been a few new additions to the distro section of the webstore. We got some copies of the monumentally crushing new Moutheater, "Passing Key" LP, the bizarre- yet satisfying- split 7" between Godstopper and Tendril. We also got a few copies of the split between our homies in Taxa and their new UK pals in the poppy Doe.
And I may have mentioned it before, but we added a new Dialysis t-shirt design to the store. It's pretty weird. I'd get it if I were you.
Stay weird.
Thursday, November 6, 2014
FEST 2014- A REPORT FROM THE FIELD
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Brief Lives
Every year (almost) I go to Fest, down in Gainesville, Florida. Every year I come back with piles of records, a crappy tan, and loads of stories. This year I started off at Pre-Fest in Tampa before venturing up to Fest official. here's what happened.
DAY 1
Airport anxiety. Not a fear of flying, but of airports
taking forever to get through, flights being delayed, connections missed. I dread the hassle. But it’s the Syracuse airport. When have I ever spent more than 15
minutes getting through TSA? Never. This was no different, yet I still
barreled down the highway to get to the airport over an hour early, making sure
I would not miss my flight.
Florida
is the land where everyone smokes.
They ought to just hand you a pack of Marlboros when you get off the
plane as a welcoming gift to their state.
A friend of Glenn’s picks me up.
We have a nice chat. I get
my registration biz sorted out and he then takes me to Glenn’s new record shop
Vinyl Countdown (check it out if you’re in Tampa and enjoy records and
comics… a perfect mix if you ask
me). It’s a small shop, but all
quality stuff. I pick myself up an
old Guilt LP. We go back to
Glenn’s house. I meet his riled up
dogs, and then we head out to Ybor to get on with the business of watching
bands.
Self Defense
Self
Defense Family is first on my list.
It’s been a few years since I’ve seen them play, but I’ve been keeping
up with the musical progression.
They play a bunch of stuff I don’t know and a couple from the recent
LP. Pat’s ramblings are in top
form. One of their guitarists
plugs an old phone into her guitar and plays harmonica into it. I’m not sure the exact effect this is
supposed to produce (the sound here is a little weird), but it sure looks cool.
Self Defense
Honestly,
there are not many bands I have an interest in seeing here tonight, or at
Pre-Fest for that matter. Flying
to Tampa was more of a convenience than the massive headaches I endured in past
years flying into Jacksonville.
But regardless, I’m a stranger in a strange land, may as well check out
some venues. Everyone smokes. Did I mention that already? It’s also like mid-July down here. So the humidity is thick in the air,
mixed with cigars and cigarettes, and it’s fucking with my sinuses that have
just adjusted to Upstate NY Fall chill.
And out of nowhere I blow a nose gasket and blood starts gushing
out. I have a weird thing where I
tend to get nosebleeds from a combination of flying and sudden changes in
climate. Either way, I must have
looked like I got into a fight or something because I’m bleeding out into the
street, over a garbage can and getting blood all over my hand and face. It’s a truly disgusting sight. I could
have passed for a bath salts abuser who just tried to eat someone’s face. I’m certainly in the right part of the
country for it to be believable.
Eventually I make my way into a venue to wash up and take care of my
stupid nose.
That's my blood
Moving
on, and wandering from venue to smokey venue I catch parts of sets from Dowsing
(minor Superchunk feel), Bear Trade (English No Idea style), and Astpai (pop
punk with weird time changes). I
stop to get a falafel sandwich at a place where the waitress is too busy with
her phone to actually provide service to the customers.
And
then a band I had on my short list to see- Cumulus- plays on a patio in an
outdoors type venue. They’re very
poppy, with bits of synth, and a fun and energetic feel.
Cumulus
Then
it’s off to see Restorations. They
play a bunch of new stuff and it sounds tight. They play so goddamned well and solid though it’s impossible
to ignore them. They really have
it dialed in. Stoked for those
dudes.
From
there I catch back up with Glenn and we bail out. Once back at his house the nose starts up again and I’m
preoccupied with making the bleeding stop. I barely sleep the night. Um, this isn’t sounding like a great vacation so far, is it?
When
I do wake up its about 15 minutes before my nose starts bleeding again. What the shit. Why can’t I just get
FestAIDS instead? I think it would
be preferable to a gross and bloody sniffer.
Restorations
DAY 2
I
barely made an agenda for today, and maybe that’s what leads to adventure of
the best kind- unplanned.
I
was dropped off in front of the Orpheum.
Kaiju Big Battle was getting under way and I was excited to see what
surely would be dumb, ridiculous entertainment. And was it ever.
Consider this scenario- dudes wearing monster outfits and wrestling
among cardboard cityscapes while a crazed announcer did the play-by-play
through it all. Some of the
monsters who partook in the madness: Dust Bunny (dusty space rabbit), Kung-Fu
Chicken Noodle (dude with a can of soup for a body), and Gambler Bug
(self-explanatory). It was way too
much fun.
Kaiju Big Battle- Dust Bunny vs. Gambler Bug
Yet
once it was over I had a good six hours to kill before anything else I was
interested went down. I ran into
an acquaintance I barely knew from Philly and basically spent the rest of the
day tagging along on their adventures, which was great because much of that day
was spent exchanging opinions on music, comics, veganism, and other assorted
stories… ya know, the stuff that
lets you know for sure if you got a solid person in your midst or not. Congrats Kate, you pass with flying
colors. Continue being rad. The days travels brought a long walk
downtown to partake in the fabled Taco Bus. It was decent, but way overpriced for what I got. I ended up watching several bands I
wouldn’t normally subject myself to, and they were met with about a 50/50 ratio
of success- The Bennies (and Australian Andrew WK meets weirdo ska hybrid),
Dear Landlord (Fat Wreck/Fest style…
yeah, ‘Fest’ is now a genre of music), Smith Street Band (not my thing,
but I get why people like them, very epic sing-alongs), Laura Stevenson
(indie/folksy, but genuine and quite original). Sprinkled betwixt were bands that were on my list to see-
the fuckin’ Night Birds (intense raging surf/hardcore rippers), Pale Angels
(incredibly loud and manic Sugar-meets-Nirvana rock), PUP (you all know who
they are at this point, deserved hype and so godamned wild to boot).
Night Birds
Crisscrossing town all day, it felt
good. But by 11 PM I was
beat. I gave Glenn a ring but he
was going to be a bit so I decided to take a gander at the Screaming Females
set. I’ve seen them a bunch, and
they always impress, so I guess it couldn’t hurt to see them once more, right?
Finally
I get to the crash pad and am ready to pass the fuck out, but am somehow
convinced to stay up an extra hour or so while the people at the house chat up
about TV and comics (yeah, it’s a running theme this weekend I guess).
Pale Angels
DAY 3 (HALLOWEEN)
Get
me to the bus. Wait in line for
awhile and then jet up to Gainesville for the main event. Rolling into town so many things are
racing through my head to try and accomplish all at the same time- drop off
inserts for the 4-way split LP to the guy from Community Records I’ve never
met, hand out the Hex Records Newsletters, eat and drink something before I
pass out, meet up with my Syracuse connection so I know where I’m sleeping
tonight, take a massive dump… ya
know, essential stuff. Somehow a
miracle appeared before me and I was able to take care of all of these things
in less than two hours. Sounds
like no big deal right?
Wrong. Imagine trying to
coordinate all this stuff in a city where 5000 punks are all congregating at
the same time, all trying to take care of their own shit. Not so easy.
And
yet, I am still so hungry. I need
food. I also need to hit up the
new Arrow’s Aim (AKA, one of the best record stores I’ve ever been in). Which need do you think I satiated
first? Before you take a guess
just understand that I would not do well in a post-apocalypse scenario. After dropping nearly $100 at the
record store I dropped a whopping $4.25 on a couple tempeh tacos from the
always amazing Flacos. Needs=met.
Record haul
Time
to see bands. After catching Ma
Jolie I swung over to 1982 and took in Brief Lives. I’d say they were the most ass-kicking band of the day. They covered Helmet. I was overjoyed. It’s as if Swiz and Quicksand got busy
in a back alley, Cutman perved in on the action and nine months later Brief
Lives were birthed. Destructo-rock. Friggin’ singer of Valient Thorr is
their vocalist strangely enough.
Brief Lives
So
let’s see how this whole Bo Diddley Park thing works out. Lemuria playing outdoors in a park to
thousands of people. It’s the most
ambitious step I think I’ve seen Fest take over the years and it actually works
pretty well. Aside from the corny
barriers which made things a bit impersonal it was about as good as they could
make things overall. I’ll take the
band in a club any day over this, but it was still alright.
Lemuria
After
a handful of songs I shot over to 8 Seconds to see what I could of Paint It
Black. How will this go? Awesome apparently because they took
down the barrier! So yeah, Dan
Yemin- righteous dude, insane stage dives, sing-alongs, destroy everything evil
with overwhelming posi hardcore vibes and harsh riffs. You cannot deny the power of Paint It
Black or the chaos that ensues.
Paint It Black
Halloween
in Gainesville- where it’s totally normal to see a posse of skateboarders all
wearing Devo costumes, or a strapping 6’5” dude in a sexy Snow White get-up.
I
didn’t see PUP again. I saw the
line for PUP. It stretched around
the block. That’s a lot of people
who won’t see PUP.
PUP (Pre-Fest)
I
made a stupid schedule for myself crisscrossing town back and forth and by the
end of the night I thought my feet were going to fall off. But one more time over to 1982 to catch
a little Canadian band called Life In Vacuum who played to a tiny crowd. That’s OK. The small crowds tend to mean the band is usually pretty
awesome. And they were. Loud, tight, crazy dynamics and tones,
mathy, hard, interesting. Like the
sassiness of These Arms Are Snakes and Monorchid, but wound tight and louder
with the discipline of Shellac.
Life In Vacuum
Stupid
schedule attacks again- back across town, and further, to see Dave from
Ex-Breathers play Superchunk songs at CMC. I caught all of 1 ½ songs due to the long walk, but at least
one of them was “Hyper Enough” so that works. But now I’m hungry enough as it is (see what I did there?)
and I get some snacks over at Pop-A-Top, including my first Fest root beer of
the weekend (see last years write-up on that). I roll with a Bulldog brand,
which ain’t too shabby, but not terribly original either. It does the trick though.
Finally,
it’s over to High Dive to see Prawn.
I imagined metal dudes mistakenly showing up thinking Prong is playing
and having a similar reaction as the Motherboy fans had in that one episode of
Arrested Development. Fuck. Prawn was probably the overall best
band I saw today. They sounded
incredible and everyone was singing along, as they should be, because
“Kingfisher” is one of the best damn records I heard all year.
Prawn
On
the way back to the hotel we stopped at a Taco Bell and witnessed a gaggle of
girls dressed as, I don’t know, either Playboy bunnies or hookers, exit the
place. According to our driver
Allyson, she saw them earlier in the night and one of the girls was wearing
underwear where ‘you could see her vag’.
How about that? Imagine the
lonely cashier tasked with working the late shift on Halloween Friday night and
in parades this gang of broads flashing their naughty bits and buying
tacos. Maybe it brightened his
day, maybe he went home a bit more sad.
Who’s to say?
DAY 4
There’s time to kill early on so I
suggest that Mike ought to go see the alligators. He’s never seen them.
Heck, he’s never been to Fest.
You got to see the gators at some point. But it’s like NY weather out here today (as in, it’s like 50
out today) so who knows if the gators will be out. So we seen some gators and they still look like they’re made
out of rubber, but I’ll go ahead and believe they’re real.
Gatorin'
Afterwards
I convince my crew that they need to witness Kaiju, as they’re performing again
today. Some of it was the same as
Tampa, but they also threw in a couple other characters I hadn’t seen, like the
breakdancing Silver Potato being the highlight. “He doesn’t just pop and lock”, as the man says.
Kung Fu Chicken Noodle- Kaiju
I
get word a little bit later that the line at the High Dive stretches back to
Tallahassee so I best get over there and use my magic pass to get in before it
gets tight. I knew Cayetana kinda
had some hype behind them, but this seemed excessive. Nevertheless, I’m happy
for them and am excited to see them again. I had to endure a Weezer cover band before Cayetana would
begin. Yet when the Weezer band
finished half the place emptied out like schmucks. Whatever, more room for me to watch a band that rules. And yeah, Cayetana basically played
their whole album and there was still a good sized crowd there, so all was
right in the world.
Cayetana
I
convinced another crew to go get lunch at Reggae Shack. Why wouldn’t I make at least one trip
there this year? My ignorance in
years past made me pass them up, I have to make up for it. I ate until I felt dumb. The food was great, the service not so
much. Try the Ackee
Bruschetta. It looks kinda gross
and sorta has the texture of eggs, but believe me, it rules.
Wandering
back I figured I ought to queue up for Dangers until I saw that the line was backed
up to Timbuktu. Not even my magic
pass would save me on this one. I
don’t think I’ll even bother. I
suppose I’ll go back to Arrow’s Aim and look at more records. It’s like starring into the abyss and
having it stare back at you. ‘This
is your life, flipping through one record at a time’. Exit stage right I suppose.
Pace
around, wander, watch, repeat.
Into
Durty Nelly’s to see All Eyes West.
It’s a smokey Irish pub and I feel a bit awkward here. But I have
ditched out on seeing this band for like three years so I guess now’s the time
to finally put up and check them out.
They fuckin’ kill it too.
The guitarist, who looks at least seven years my elder wraps himself
around the crowd, banging and pushing, jumping, etc. Now that’s inspiring.
All Eyes West
I
jet halfway through to try and catch a bit of All People’s set at 1982. It’s definitely weird shit. They bring up a self-described drag
queen during their set who self-identifies as ‘Madonnathan’ to sing a show tune
with them and it’s pretty great.
Varied sound, weird vibes, entertaining times.
With
some more time to kill I finally get over to patronize Karma Cream and get some
tea. I catch Dan Yemin and talk
that dude up for awhile. Always a
welcoming dude and genuine human.
Walk back to Pop-A-Top and grab a root beer (an Old Red Eye, not
necessarily worth writing home about).
All People
Now
I’m chilly and I’m wearing a t-shirt.
And I decide to go see the Descendents outdoors. They’re exactly as I’d expect them to
be. Now, I’ve never been a massive
Descendents fan. I enjoy their
music, but don’t celebrate it daily or anything like that. And it’s been approximately 18 years
since I have seen them and not much is different, but it’ still pretty
fun. So after about 20 minutes and
most of the songs I’d care to hear I make a bee line to the Atlantic because I
know as soon as the Descendents are done that line to get in is going to get
stupid again.
It’s a good two hours before Self
Defense plays and every band before them is terrible. And I don’t mean terrible musicians or anything, just music
that I can’t understand for the life of me why it is popular. But I’m also old and have sore feet, so
not much is awesome at this particular moment.
But
finally SDF takes the stage again and play pretty much the same set as the
other night, but the sound is better here and everything comes off crystal
clear. Pat goes off on fighting
internet shit-talkers, and Ecto Cooler.
Perfect stage banter for whatever sort of band they’re supposed to be.
Creepoid
closes out the night. They go off,
but not quite as nuts as I’ve seen them in the past. Then again, I believe they did drive something like 18 hours
straight to get here. They broke
out a couple older songs that I thought they may have retired and that was a
bonus. What wasn’t a bonus: nearly clocking the drunk guy behind me
who kept yelling out chauvinistic bullshit during the whole set (met with a sea
of rolling eyes), who decided to drunk mosh into everyone during the last
song. After getting rammed a few
times I took the fella by his jacket, pulled him forward, then threw him back a
few yards, and told him to relax.
Afterwards he got all sad sack on me and said, ‘don’t be mad at me’. Geez, what a palooka.
Best shirt I saw all weekend
DAY 5
I
had a dream this morning where I was wandering around a house singing a Black
Flag song that didn’t exist. A
circa-’83 Rollins look-alike followed me around singing and dancing too. The song was called “Throw You Off the
Roof”. It had a pretty catchy
chorus too. I hope Greg Ginn
doesn’t sue my dreams. And then
blobs of blood gunk started flowing out my nose in the dream and I figured that
was a good time to wake up.
So,
the last day of fest was fraught with concerns of what to do/who to see/ what
sort of mischief to get into on this, the day of my birth. Yes, most years during Fest my birthday
happens to coincide and generally watching bands is a good way to celebrate.
So
I started with Direct Effect. The
singer of this band will be portrayed by Javier Bardem, no doubt, should a
biopic ever be made about them.
Not as wild live as I thought they’d be considering their record sounds
like it’s coming apart at the seams, but they were still pretty good. Afterwards I got some lunch across the
street at Harvest Thyme, where the tiny dreadlocked waitress looked like a
cross between Beth from Walking Dead, a cartoon, and a crust punk. That sounds terrible but I honestly
mean that in the most complimentary way possible.
Back
to the Atlantic and catch sets from Weak Teeth and Dredger (who were basically
the only powerviolence style band I saw, and they all look like older
dudes. Into it.) before
Ex-Breathers got on, who I was mostly there to see.
Ex-Breathers (not actually taken at Fest)
I
just have to ask though- why does no one go off for Ex-Breathers? This is some hostile/energetic music. What’s wrong with people? Is Fest getting more tame, or am I just
showing up for the wrong bands? Is
moshing over? Am I old? Regardless, they destroy everything
with a non-stop set of thrashy riffs, Fugazi-like dynamics, and weird
transitions. Non-watchers ought to
be ashamed.
I
dash across the street to the Wooly to catch Whores and a scant crowd is
present. It soon starts filling up
though as the band can probably be heard from miles away with the thickest
slabs of noise rock sludge this side of a Melvins show, which, in case you
didn’t know, the Melvins are playing later tonight. Fuck my camera for being dead because these dudes are
basically the most photogenic band around, carelessly throwing their guitars
around and kicking into their cabs, or the air, or other people, whatever. Riff after riff. Avalanche of riffs. Riffy McRifferson.
And
then, back to the Atlantic (again).
Fucking Invincible. Like
I’m not going to watch them. They
had a younger version of their usual bassist/sometimes guitarist George filling
in. I mean, like an exact replica,
only 20 years younger. So yeah,
people moved for them, because if they didn’t I would have figured a bunch of
corpses were watching. They play
Infest-styled blast hardcore with plenty of meaty riffs to pulverize you. I mean, their name is Fucking
Invincible, they have to live up to it.
I
zip over to 8 Seconds to try and catch a bit of the Restorations set and I see
them play two songs, which is fine.
Both are from the so-far fantastic (and just released) “LP3”. One I know, and will probably be my
favorite on the record, the other is one I’m not familiar with yet.
Back
to Wooly! I’m finally going to see
United Nations. I’ve missed them
in years past and I want to know what they buzz is all about. I have to admit-
almost every song kind of sounded the same: open with blast beat part, transition into aggressive
Thursday/screamy part, repeat.
It’s not a bad way to go, just an observation. Lots of snarky chit-chat between songs that sounded sort of
like vocalist Geoff Rickly was trying really hard to be hateful about
things. I don’t know, maybe he’s
got genuine beef against the Beatles.
Time
for a root beer. I go with a
solid, consistent winner: a Sioux
City Root Beer. It’s my birthday,
I can drink whatever root beer I want.
Once again, it’s chilly, I’m in a t-shirt, and I’m about to stand
outside in the dark and watch Lifetime for the first time since 1996. I will not be denied. Life is weird.
Bo Diddley Park
I
see Lifetime. It’s kind of
surreal. It’s like a version of
something I really dig. They’re so
far away, but the songs are so good.
The band is clearly not in their element (which would more likely be a
basement, indoors). Instead
they’re playing on a big stage in a park to about 2000 people. They still play all my favorite stuff
so I’m happy.
Time
to close out the night. I return
to the Wooly early so I can warm up.
On the downside I have to sit through Circle Takes the Square. It’s not my ting, and especially
difficult to take in the incredibly complex music they’re playing when I’ve
been raging through five days of bands non-stop. But my pals Nate and Sarah help me get through it as they
have brought me a delicious birthday cupcake to satiate my appetite, and loads
of laughs as we take pictures of people ‘bored at Fest’. At this point in the weekend it’s
pretty easy to do, a lot of people are wiped out. I’m almost there.
And
then I see Coliseum and all is well.
They barrel through solid rock jams that are well known, one brand new
song that sounds like Swiz, and even a few real old ones. Always a pleasure to see these dudes.
The
Melvins take forever to begin. But
they’re the Melvins, so what do they care? To kill time my cohorts and me dance up on everyone who
walks by. Finally, the Melvins
begin and it’s another set where I know nothing that they play. I have to admit, I really enjoy the
Melvins records that I have. But
that’s all of about 4 LPs out of the Grand Canyon-sized catalog they have to
draw from. And basically they’re
going to play whatever the fuck they feel like playing, no matter how bizarre
and obscure it might be. That’s
part of the ‘fuck you’ charm of this band. So after about 40 minutes I’m ready to check out.
Bored people at Fest, after 5 days of non-stop mania
I
collect my shit, say my goodbyes to Syracuse brethren who are off to greener
pastures in Orlando, and chill in front of the Hampton, where I am to crash
with some other folks for the night.
While
waiting for my party to arrive I see my pal Brian from Kiss Of Death exit the
hotel. I call out to him and we
talk for a minute. He asks what
I’m doing waiting around and I explain that I’m just waiting for my group to
arrive and he just hands me his hotel card. In fact, he just gives me his room. He says he’s paid up to tomorrow, but
wants to get back home to Tampa tonight to sleep in his own bed and I can just
have his whole room. It’s all
mine. No other people. It’s got two king sized beds in
it. I can’t make this up, dude
just GAVE me his room. At a really
expensive hotel. Now that’s
birthday gift. Needless to say,
after a few nights of weird sleep I finally get the best nights rest I’ve had
all week. Fuck partying until the
dawn, I’ll take a good rest.
In
the AM I get up, get out, get food, and board the bus back to Tampa. I wait around in the airport and board
my plane. I make my connection and
then get back to Syracuse late at night.
It’s honestly the first time in years I’ve flown and had absolutely no travel
complications whatsoever.
Thanks Fest, always a blast.