Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Death Wish Kids – “There’s Nothing In School They Can’t Teach You On The Streets” (Hopscotch Records)


I’m a huge fan of Andrea Zollo and Derek Fudesco’s bands (The completely forgotten Pretty Girls Make Graves and The Hookers) so enjoying the band Death Wish Kids is a no-brainer. The band wasn’t around for long enough to do more than a demo and this ep, but their sound was so brash and fast that I’m not surprised. It’s definitely closer to their formative years in The Hookers than it is to Pretty Girls Make Graves. The Death Wish Kids record starts out with the undeniably harsh “A.A.”, a song that’s heavy enough and contains enough guitar feedback to be more popular in the 2013’s hip-to-be-noisy scene than in any 90’s punk scene. The second track, “Hood”, is a one minute buzz saw guitar song with an unfortunate minor-bass riff. No Song on this record is longer than a minute and a half, a fact that works very well because the painful guitar sound and tremble-heavy cymbals force your ears to beg for a break. I think every song might start out with fast guitar followed by the rest of the band coming in (or in the case of the song “Lucky”, guitar followed by vocals), which makes the urgency of the record much more noticeable. You know what’s coming next, but it’s still exciting when it breaks through. Andrea Zollo’s vocals on this record are incredibly painful sounding. I imagine her forcing every track into the red and then not bothering with a second take on any of them. It’s a perfect fit for the music.
There are parts of this record that almost sound like Nine Shocks (specifically the main riff of “Outsider”) but there are still songs that really do a good job of telling the listener when this record was made. It’s not a completely unique record, but considering what the members of the band went on to do, it’s absolutely worth tracking down. Plus you get a Vibrators’ cover!



The fact that these two were able to make so many records together, and cover such a broad spectrum of music while still having a cohesive sound is what draws me to them. It doesn’t hurt that two members of the band (including Fudesco) went on to be in Murder City Devils, a band that “borrowed” the last track on this ep.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Sexy Kids – “Sisters Are Forever” b/w “Drown Me” – Slumberland


Slumberland resurgence as a powerful record label in the latter part of the last decade warmed my little pop-loving-heart. While the label never really went away after their 90’s heyday (they never stopped releasing records), they really didn’t seem to put out much that was noteworthy until the “Searching For The Now” series of singles they started releasing in 2008. There are a few really obvious standouts since the label restarted: the early Pains of Being Pure At Heart, Crystal Stilts, and Brilliant Colors records. There are also quite a few flops, and then a few records like this Sexy Kids single, which never really went anywhere, but contain totally amazing music.
The unfortunately named Sexy Kid released this single in 2008 and I never heard anything else from them or about them. I know that they were part of the band The Royal We, who put out one forgettable record, and an alright single that I think I sold soon after hearing it. The Sexy Kids might have some similarities to their previous band, but the execution is so much better. The first song is a straight-up Raincoats worshipping pop monster of a song. If Sexy Kids weren't from the UK, it would be easy to accuse them of ripping off the Silva/Birch vocal harmonies, but because of their Scottish accents, I’m willing to excuse it and enjoy how seamlessly they pull of the jangle guitar harmonies. There are also some pretty clear lines drawn to the almighty Black Tambourines but it’s impossible to ignore The Raincoats influence (or even Dolly Mixtures). It’s definitely Twee.
The flip side, “Drown Me,” could very well have been in an Wes Anderson montage, right up to the “hahahaha” bridge, bass fills, and hand-claps. There is a certain Belle and Sebastian quality to the chorus that again, I might only be attributing because of where they’re from, but the whisper guy/girl vocals don’t shy away from the comparison.
A follow up to this single would have surely made some important Top 10 lists, but again, another band that released one record and disappeared before anyone had time to take in how great it was.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Sacred Shock- You're Not With Us


(Residue Records, 2009)
I saw this in someone's distro for 5 or 6 bucks the other day.
I believe Sacred Shock, as a band, are responsible for a multi-format demo recording, a 7" proper, a split with Deskonocidos and this here LP. The band (post-Army of Jesus/pre-The Young, if we're speaking venerably) is still just as exhausting to me now as they were 4-5 years ago. Many bands have aimed for this end and they have missed in comparison. It's euro. It's Moto-. It's crusty as the Chihuahuan Desert (TEXAS FRIED). It's catchy a fuck because these RIFFS are singular. For any of the album's shortcomings (there are some), it more than overcompensates by offering riffs that you've never been presented with before. Not exactly, anyway...
Everything this band accomplished was done on the backs of forerunners, but who the fuck can be bothered by all that? If you destroy a painting yet admire the outcome, is that not still art? If you like punk music, then there will always be inalienable aspects of the form that can't be reduced. Accept that and appreciate what's being created before you. Or sit at home and grow bald with memories of the "glory days". Just don't ring me up.
MP

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Various – “Noah Found Grace” – Social Music Records


In 2010 I signed up for the Social Music Records Club because a few of the records interested me, and because they had helped (along with Mississippi Records) put out “Oh Graveyard You Can’t Hold Me Always,” a really fabulous collection of gospel songs that span the last century and cover straight soul songs, choir groups, r&b, and even a pretty unbelievable anonymous song. Sure, Mississippi might have a somewhat shady connotation with a lot of blues collectors, but this LP was fantastic, so buying into a music club related to it was a no brainer for me. After what seemed like 2 years of waiting, I finally had all of the records in the club, and the “Noah Found Grace” compilation was a clear standout. Recently I’ve seen three different copies for under 5 bucks, so it’s earned its way into the Doll Bin Rippers blog.
“Noah Found Grace” is a compilation of Jamaican gospel music from the 60’s and 70’s (I assume). Of the 17 tracks on this album, I had only heard of two of the artists, Otis Wright and Ken Parker. Not surprisingly, both of their tracks are solid, but somewhat more surprising is that every single song on here is solid. I wouldn’t hesitate to purchase records by any of these groups if anything surfaced.
Most (all?) of the songs are standards that all fit together well and I’d wager that anyone familiar with southern gospel or folk music has heard most, if not all of these songs. But there is something very different about the delivery of the Jamaican versions. The guitars almost all use slides that sound closer to calypso guitar than Folkways, and the vocals all have a very eerie recorded quality to them. There is something slightly more upbeat about the rhythms, but it still sounds much darker than a lot of other versions I’ve heard. Whatever mixing and mastering was done to these songs was done well, because the record plays through like a well sewn shirt. A lot of compilations sourced from bad or old masters end up sounding like garbage (re: most of the blues compilations that live on shelves in my house), but Social Music did a very nice job making this record sound like it was all recorded in one shot. I think the biggest weakness this album has is that the art is just bad. It’s just a sticker with almost zero information on it, including a complete lack of the fucking title of the record! I get that it’s supposed to feel more personal or intimate or something, but it just comes off looking cheap and being very confusing for someone that might want to buy it. I think it’s why online, where you can see what’s actually on the record and where the hell the record is from, it actually sells for more than a few dollars, but in stores where you don’t have instance access to google, people are left holding a record with no information and a big cross on the cover and just put it back down. It’s a shame that any of these records end up in budget bins because it’s SO GOOD and will end up being passed on by tons of people that might really dig it.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Timber – "Timber" 7” – Something Crucial Records


One of the most fun shows I’ve ever played was at a pool in Gaithersburg Maryland. The wonderful Ambrose Nzams (and Pat?) set us up with a pool and food and getting to see a group of very young suburbanites called Timber absolutely kill it was pretty awesome. I knew nothing about this band when we played with them, and I still don’t really know anything other than that I have this 7”, and a tape that is two other demos from 2007 and 2008. This record is five songs of “emotional” punk that came out much too late to be a part of the hip screamo scene of 2002, but was gone too early for the current influx of this genre. There are guitar heavy parts that would make Cap’n’Jazz fans swoon, there are a few faster punk parts, and there are catchy sing-along choruses on almost every song. All of the music on this is concise and well executed, which isn’t always the case in this genre. It’s also recorded really well, another thing that seemed to be missing from a lot of bands that played this kind of music. The drumming really makes a few of these songs. The track “Ritual Curse” is especially powerful because of the rhythm section. What would have been a song that had zero standout qualities ends up being mix-tape worthy because of the drum-heavy mixing.
I think that "sincerity" is often something that gets tacked on to shitty bands to make their inability to write songs excusable to young punks, but in the case of Timber I feel like I should actually say it: These almost cringe-worth lyrics actually seem sincere. The track “Youth Wasted on the Young” is the clear standout on this record, and its lyrics have a total sing-along-anthem quality to them. They sing about actual things instead of weird vague poems about leaves or bushes or anything, which is nice, and I’m impressed that a group of young people writing lyrics like this had the guts to print them in the insert instead of hiding them “artistically” in some distorted ugly photoshop botch job.
It’s a shame this band didn’t continue because while this is a pretty good record, it still feels like a record made by novices. It works for them, but with a few years under their belt I feel like this band could have actually been able to do more. The songs that are good on this record are REALLY good it’s just a shame that I’ll never hear anything else from them.   On the other hand, a band like this could have very easily become a boring rehash of a kind-of-alright genre, so it's possible that their demise was for the best.



I’ve said this before about bands on here, but if you know anyone in this band or what they’re up to now, please let me know.
“You say the youth gets wasted on the young well fuck you. I know exactly what it is I’m living through.”

Friday, October 18, 2013

Poison Planet “Boycott Everything” 7” (Refuse Records)

Happy (late) Edge Day my collector scum friends! This next post comes a day late, but every day is a good day for the straight edge in my book. West Hasty has been a close friend of mine for many years, and after some cooersion he finally felt like adding his voice to the Dollar Bin Rippers. He has immaculate and unapologetic taste in hardcore punk ranging from first wave DC to whatever is hot in Malaysia this week. His collection is nothing but raging, and according to a rumor I heard, he's never sold a single record that he's purchased. Anyway, here is West's take on a should-be-classic straight edge release:

POISON PLANET immediately caught my attention due to the fact that their name is taken from the song of the same name by one of my personal favorite bands – Corrosion of Conformity. The paradox here though is that this band is an anarchist, straight edge, vegan, and pro-animal liberation band, with the cover of this very 7” having a very Crass Records feel to it. Why is that a paradox though? I mean all of those things seem to go hand in hand right? They do…but typically that ideology/aesthetic is most often executed by either really shitty spinkick metal, boring “epic” crust, or some jug blowing, hippie fuck who worships Penny Rimbaud. POISON PLANET is none of those. Actually, Poison Planet is totally ripping hardcore rooted in the 80’s sound, not unlike their namesake C.O.C, or maybe SSD (particularly in the vocals) with some very obvious Black flag influence as well; especially in the first song “Liquor Flesh Trade”. As soon as the needle drops on “Liquor Flesh Trade”, it comes in with a steady hi-hat roll, followed quickly by a single string riff like one that maybe Ginn himself may have indulged in towards the end of the “Damaged” era. There’s even a discordant, noisy Ginn-esque solo in the track as well. Simple, but speedy riffing throughout these 5 tunes, executed extremely well with everything else falling into place perfectly. The 49 second closer “Tidal Leveling” does just that…it levels you. It’s a mid-paced stomper that you feel will eventually burst into a swell of speed, but just like “that” it’s over just as quick as it began, no fast part to close it, just an abrupt ending that leaves you wanting more.
The 7” version of this record released by Poland’s own Refuse Records seems to be overlooked due to the fact that it was re-released in a much more striking 12” format. Apparently the band really wanted to add a lot more topical imagery and more essays, thus making the 12” format appropriate I suppose. An ignoramus like me who thirsts for nothing more than ripping hardcore can be appeased by the 7”, but if you want to flex your head as well, then maybe you should check out the 12” version. Either way, not cramming these 5 songs into your earholes would be a huge disservice to yourself.
-WJH


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Puberty – “Invitations” b/w “Parties” – Telephone Explosion Records


Susanna Welbourne and Lars Finberg get together with Shins guitar player and other Intelligence related side projects to put out one single, and it sounds exactly like you expect it to. It’s catchy, a little groovy, and fun to listen to.
The single, “Invitations”, is a real head-bobber. The bass drives the song while the wandering surf/shins guitars wobble in and out opposite the vocals and bubble induced keyboards. It’s a little bit of a downer in the way that you want it to be, but it still is poppy enough to continue listening for all four minutes. I’m not sure the bass riff changes a single time during the long side. It sounds not unlike an A-Frames b-side, but it’s pretty clear Finberg didn’t write the song by himself.
The second, aptly titled song, “Parties” is a an outright jam with a woodblock as the primary rhythm section. It’s faster, the drums and guitar and tighter, and it feels less like an opium den and more like an In The Red CD sampler. I like the song a lot, but at the end of the day I feel like this song is just a more digestible Intelligence song with a pretty nice riff overtop of it. “Invitations” really is the standout on this single. Another Finberg project that only lasts one record.


If you’re in a band and putting out a record, put your goddamned name on the record. 

Sunday, October 13, 2013

The Feeling of Love – “Dissolve Me” – Kill Shaman


More proof that, even if just for a moment, Metz France was a creative powerhouse. The Feeling of Love were one of the more easily digestible of what was an otherwise abrasive and noisy scene. Their records before this LP dabbled in psych while still being very much rooted in nu-garage. I thought that the “School Yeah” single on Sweet Rot was considerably better than the other singles, and while I liked the long player “OK Judge Revival”, I was never really sold on this band. However, I was appreciative that the French weirdos were able to master more than just the in-your-face-noise of AH Kraken and The Anals. This LP is a huge step forward, and is much more my bag than their other full length on Kill Shaman.
The record starts out as almost Suicide influenced rock-n-roll album. Once the guitars come in, and the vocal effects subside a little bit, The Feeling of Love’s ability to write actual songs becomes much more apparent. There are certainly more than one examples where this album wanders into the more garage territory that their other releases have fallen into, but where it really shines is when they’re pushing into straight psych traps while still applying garage principals of short and simple. The times when their old ways pay off are when they are straight up playing A-Frames or Intelligence songs. It’s kind of mind blowing when your ears wake up and you realize how much of a tribute they’re paying at a couple points.
This record brings you back to it over and over because of how simple it is, but also because the pay off for listening to the psyched out parts is great. My only complaint is that there are a few songs that are just completely forgettable, but are so close to being great that all they really needed was someone to come in and write a hook or turn down the keyboard in the mix. Definitely a solid genre record and well worth the price if you are into any of the other French bands. I could picture 2007 Black Lips and 1998 Brian Jonestown Massacre fans that have moved on being really into this.


Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Mutating Meltdown– “Fantasy” b/w “Six Minutes Underground” – M’lady


The venerable Veronica was on my porch, walked into my living room, lifted up a painting we had on the wall, and declared “I can’t believe it’s still fucking here!” A few months before, when her band Mutating Meltdown played in my kitchen, she put a boy’s skin-mag behind a painting assuming we cleaned our walls I guess? It didn’t really make that much sense, but it’s an anecdote that seems to fit with this single.
The two songs on this single have vastly different vibes, but they maintain the same feeling. The single, “Fantasy”, is a slow moving, whisper vocals song with a keyboard lead over punk drumming. It’s jerky enough that it wouldn’t have been out of place with some of the 90’s west coast keyboard happenings, but I think it’s a much more impressive output than any of that. Veronica’s vocals are eerie and the “Fantasay” chorus is perfect. A saxophone erupts from the song and plays a solo that changes the song, but when it leaves you have female/male vocals singing in tandem till the end. Not a ripping song, but it grows on you.
The other side is the very upbeat “Six Minutes Underground”. The verses are sung in Spanish while the chorus is yelled in English. It’s a punker song and it’s more how I remember this band sounding live. The tempo change at the end of the song feels a little bit forced, but it’s a head-bobber for sure so I’ll let them get away with it as an outro. There are definite nods to some of the more proto punk female groups of the 60’s, but I doubt there really isn’t any painful pulls at trying to sound like the Shang-ri-blahs or Haram or anything like that. It’s just good music with keyboards and drums (and that one saxophone part).


Thursday, October 3, 2013

California Lightening ‎– Penitentiary (Troubleman)


What's up guys, Chris here. For my first post on DBR, I'm reviewing California Lightning's sole 7", which was the first thing that came to mind when Rob mentioned this blog to me. I first heard this record get namedropped on VLV by James Fella, owner of the excellent Gilgongo label out of Tempe, AZ, and filed it in the back of my mind to pick up if I ever came across it. A trip to the Williamsburg Academy in 2008 yielded the Troubleman Unlimited pressing of this 7" in the dollar bin, and it's been spun pretty consistently since then.
California Lightning are a two-piece guitar and drum band from San Francisco, concurrent with the beginnings of Erase Errata. Singer/guitarist Jenny Hoyston and drummer Bianca Sparta, both of whom are members of Erase Errata, had this band on the side or something. I don't know, there's no information about this band on the Internet! I gave "Other Animals" a listen a little while ago and to be honest, it holds up way better than most other early 2000's "dance-punk" records. Eat shit, Radio 4! California Lightning sound almost nothing like EE, however - they might be best described as "dark indie pop," although "dark" and "indie pop" as qualifiers don't really apply to California Lightning. Maybe a couple contemporary comparisons would be a faster, scrappier Broken Water, or the first Sex Church 12" that came out a few years ago on Convulsive, but with almost all "garage" influence stripped away. Something that turns me off about a lot of indie pop is that singers (both male and female) tend to sound kind of 'precious' - you know exactly what I mean, that Aladdin soundtrack shit that Velocity Girl can get on sometimes - but Hoyston's voice is anything but, as you can hear on opener "Penitentiary," which sounds like a more pitched-down and atonal Black Tambourine. The second track on the A-side, "Angel Outfit," continues the downer jangle of the first track, but quickly slips into a weird, almost Hot Snakes-style sizzler of a two-note guitar hook, a curveball that would hopefully bum out your local Burger Baby expecting the nth copy of a copy of the Vivian Girls in the past five years. B-side "Just Broke Up" takes more of a rhythmic no wave slant, not far off from a stretched out DNA song or "Sister"-era Sonic Youth, specifically bringing to mind the unsettling "Pacific Coast Highway".
So, why is this record floating around in dollar bins, instead of being hailed as a minor modern classic? Well, it was released on Troubleman Unlimited, a label that your local record store probably has a ton of records on the cheap. This isn't a dis to TMU, they put out some great records, and a lot of quality records can be picked up on the cheap by virtue of thousands upon thousands of copies being pressed. I'd also guess that part of the reason why this record floats around in dollar bins is because nobody knows what it is. There's not really any information about California Lightning online. This record came out around 2000, just enough time for the webzines of the time to have gone down permanently. There are also multiple pressings of this record - copies exist under the band names "California Lightening" on the original Sound on Sound pressing from 2000, and "California Lightning" on the TMU repress, making things even more confusing! The Discogs entry has the additional E, but I used the TMU spelling because that's my copy, and "California Lightning" sounds more badass, like the Tampa Bay Lightning or something. I guess they did a split 7" with Sic Alps in 2004, too, but I haven't heard that (and my previous experiences with Sic Alps have been underwhelming, to say the least). Anyway, pick this up if you stumble across it, or just head straight to Discogs - there's a copy up for a whopping 97 cents right now.