*Early last year, something I wrote for another publication was rejected, for reasons I'd rather not get into. Anyway, I'm finally getting around to sharing it in this space, with a few revisions to reflect recent events. I should note it's almost entirely non-music related. Enjoy...
Too early for Thanksgiving?
A MAN
AND HIS LAWNMOWER (AND OTHER NEIGHBORHOOD TALES)
We’ve
lived in our neighborhood for almost 20 years. While I’ve mentioned many times
that Peabody isn’t a city with that high a collective IQ, our neighborhood’s
nice, a quiet, dead end street with little traffic. I've looked out the window at the neighbors’ houses, and realize I’ve never even been
in some of them. I don’t really consider any of our neighbors close friends,
although most of them are friendly enough. I at least wave or say hi to the
ones at our end of street. At the entrance of the street, at the top of the
hill, I only really know one of the families. I’m friendly with the mother,
Traci (we’re even Facebook friends), and her teenage son Chris mows my lawn
sometimes and has done some yard work for me. He's polite and ambitious.
I wish I
could say the same for the kid at the other end of the street, who shall remain
nameless. I admit I haven’t made it easy by having a total “get off my lawn”
moment with him awhile back which really was a get off my lawn moment. He and a
friend decided to set up a ramp on the sidewalk in front of my house to do some
skating tricks. I was trying to sleep and came downstairs, opened the door and
asked if they could do that someplace else. Yes, total grumpy old man reaction.
How pathetic. This was a few years ago and let’s just say we haven’t been on
friendly terms since then. Not that we ever were. It wasn’t helped when he and
a friend decided to lob a snowball at my car when I was driving up the street a
few years ago. I’m acquainted with his parents and they’re OK, although my
opinion of them suffered a little when I walked through their house once and
Fox News was on.
I used to
be really friendly with the elderly couple who live between their house and
ours. When I had my shoulder surgery in 2009, they raked the leaves in our yard
and the woman used to bring us cookies around the holidays. My lawnmower has
been busted for a number of years now and a few summers ago, I decided to mow
it myself again and asked the man if I could borrow his lawnmower while mine
got fixed (I never did do it, though). I did it a total of three times and by
the third, he got pissed about it. “Why don’t you go to the store and get your
own fuckin’ lawnmower?” He muttered something about having just had a heart
attack. Whatever it was, he was in a foul mood. He still let me take it but
didn’t seem all that happy. I might have fucked the mower up a bit when I hit a
rock, unfortunately, but I didn’t mention it. I know that wasn’t the right
thing to do but he’s used it since so maybe there wasn’t a problem. Anyway,
ever since then, he’s been unfriendly.
Things really went south a few months ago when I
was cleaning out my garage after we'd had a drainage system put in and I leaned
a few things against the fence that divides our yards. He came into my yard
(twice) and knocked them over and then came up to the door and proceeded to scream
and yell at me in a completely irrational manner. He'd really fucking lost it. He's really territorial about
that fence. I imagine he might not have been pleased I've hit it a few times
when backing out of the driveway. I guess I am a
shitty neighbor. I thought maybe it was due to his age (I think he's over 90)
but the neighbors on the other side said there didn't seem to be any cognitive
issues. I guess he's just had enough of me. Oh well...
There
were some neighbors—a brother and sister, Ron and Myra--that we were good
friends with but they moved away over ten years ago after running into some
financial problems. We've stayed in touch with Myra on Facebook but haven't
seen them in years and I feel badly about that. Ron was kind of a Mayor of the
Neighborhood type, always keeping a close eye with what was going on and always
quick to lend a hand. He once helped me break into our house after I’d locked
myself out. I’ll admit it was kind of entertaining watching Ron, who isn't all
that thin, go through the second floor window but he did it. He also helped me
when our house got flooded and when my snow blower wouldn’t start.
Whenever
I showed appreciation for his help, he brushed it off and said he was just
being a neighbor. I tried to find out his musical tastes and asked him if he’d
like me to hook him up with some tunes but he didn’t hit me up on the offer,
although I did burn him a disc of a Buffalo Springfield album (Ellen’s copy,
not mine—she’s the hippie in the family). Speaking of music, I forget how it
came up but he mentioned how he’d been on the stage when Jethro Tull played the
Boston Garden in the early 70s and he’d partied with the guys from Ten Years
After after the show. Maybe he was pulling my leg but it’s kind a cool story,
bro.
Neighbors like Ron and Myra are hard to come by. Ron and I didn’t have a ton in common, except for both being passionate Boston sports fans and I suppose that’s a typical thing guys bond over. I miss having him around—and not just because he’s helped me out with stuff. It’s because there’s something comforting about coming home to a neighborhood where people look out for each other. That’s still true to an extent and some nice people have moved here in recent years. But to this day, when I look out of my window after I wake up in the morning, there’s still no red van, no hockey net in the driveway, no Ron walking around outside. And something doesn’t feel right about it…
PS—while
I was working on this column, the kid from the end of the street and his
equally obnoxious friend were outside making a racket trying to do tricks with
his Razor scooter and tossing the pieces of a broken skateboard at the
powerline in front of my house. Would it be mean to want it to come down and...
ZZZZZAPP? I guess it would.
BAD NOIDS
ALPHA
HOPPER-Last Chance Power Drive (One Percent Press/Radical Empathy, LP)
From Buffalo, Alpha Hopper's sound is a potent
mesh of post-punk grind and heavier impulses. Loud and intense, with guitar
lines that weave an often-nightmarish tapestry and that's reinforced with a
rhythmic power-boost (given the space exploration theme, I'm not being very
clever, am I?). Irene Rekhviashvili's vocals have the same sarcastic timbre as
Natalie from Nots. Such songs as "Launch Pad Blues" and "Chief
Of The Edge" have a NoMeansNo-sounding fury. Music to shake up your senses.(PO
Box 279, Buffalo, NY 14213-0279, onepercentpress.com)
BAD NOIDS-Doggie Bag World (Feel It, 7")
Always thought this band had a few screws loose,
especially when seeing them live and their singer set his hair on fire, made an
awful joke about the Marathon bombings and jumped on my head. Anyway, they
continue to ply loopy-sounding punk slop. "Into The Future" is some
Crime-inspired rawk while, on the flip, they rant 'n rave their way through two
quickies. They'd probably be at home on Lumpy. (www.feelitrecordshop.com)
BEASTEATER-s/t (Big Neck, LP)
Tom Potter has been kicking around the Michigan music scene for years, having played in Bantam Rooster, Dirtbombs and others. His new band, Beasteater, includes people from Blowtops and Fatal Figures, two loud Buffalo bands of note. Got all that? Their self-titled album provides plenty of loud, heavy, fuzzy riff-o-rama. Noisy, buzzy and boisterous and, yes, it’s got a garage rock pulse but it’s under a heavy cloud of distortion. More psycho than psychedelic and, to quote the lyrics on the lengthy “I Eat Scum,” they really do sound like they’re about to lose their minds. Cool cover choice in Swell Maps’ “International Rescue,” which is given a good battering. This disc will give your ears a good battering. (www.bigneckrecords.com)
CONCEALED BLADE
CONCEALED BLADE-s/t (Beach Impediment, LP)
A barrage of throat-grabbing hardcore. This crew
was one of the best bands I saw last year. A speedy attack interspersed with
some floor-pounding breakdowns. Not chuggy tough-guy hardcore, just a mean
sound, guttural vocals and lyrics filled with plenty of rage and negativity.
Sounds like fun, huh? Bruising, no-nonsense hardcore and few bands are doing it
as well as they are these days. (beachimpedimentrecords.bigcartel.com)
DAUÐYFLIN-Drepa Drepa (Erste Theke Tonträger, 7”/demo tape)
This mostly-female Icelandic band includes three
members of Börn, but instead of that band’s goth emanations, this is a
thornier, abrasive punk take. I might give the edge to the 7” but the demo is
also worth your time. Screaming vocals that could wake the dead and an unholy,
feedback-laden musical attack. “Elthrellir” is punctuated by a sinister laugh
and the atonal sax squall for “Við erum Daudyflin” is also quite jarring, in
the best possible way. (erstetheke.de; daudyflin.bandcamp.com)
DAVIDIANS-City Trends (Sorry State, LP)
Davidians debut album (following a demo and
7") is a potent dose of nervy, tension and release hardcore with an
abundance of rhythmic complexity. There’s also a haunting guitar sound,
eschewing power chords for something sinewy and sinister. Once again, a band
that could fit into what I’ve been tagging “outsider hardcore”—a frayed
ambiance, a sense of foreboding that doesn’t follow standard verse/chorus/verse
structures. There’s also the willingness to experiment a bit, as with the
minute or so of feedback damage bridging “Lousy With Hagar” and “Track Suit
Glasses." Potent music not fitting in with any specific hardcore niche.
(www.sorrystaterecords.com)
EXTERMINATORS-Product Of America (Slope, LP)
When one hears about a band getting back
together for the first time in 40 years, it usually sets of alarm bells.
They’re louder when the band had never recorded before. Well, you can silence
those alarms because the Exterminators' long-delayed debut album is pretty
damned good. To make the story short, the band formed in Phoenix in 1977,
contemporaries of the great (and also underrated) Consumers but fell apart
fairly quickly and the members scattered into such units as the Germs, Bags and
Feederz—drummer Don Bolles, who wrote the liner notes, was one of the members.
Three of them return, with the late Rob Ritter replaced by Cris Kirkwood from the
Meat Puppets on bass. So what do you get from four guys in their late 50s? Some
damned fine loud, rowdy punk. It may not have the rawness of ’77 and some of
the leads are on the metallic side, but the attitude remains intact. That comes
out for songs like “I Hate You,” “I Don’t Give A Fuck” and “Bionic Girl” (a
song later done by the Feederz). “Sometimes I Don’t Know” delves into thrash a
bit. The closing songs for each side provide a change of pace—the brooding
“Destruction Unit” and “Serena II,” a poem set to a mass of feedback that
really doesn’t work. Otherwise, this is roaring good time. (sloperecords.com)
IN SCHOOL
IN SCHOOL-Cement Fucker (Thrilling Living, 7")
On In School's latest, there are no punches
pulled, just a fuzzbomb attack of vicious guitar and bass lines, spot-on
drumming and harsh lyrical sentiments—“making
my plans for your destruction… “bloodlust is right”… “I have no pity for you
anymore…” Those are just a few snippets and this is In School's most
powerful recording to date. (www.thrillingliving.com)
JJ DOLL-s/t (Katorga Works, 7"),
JJ Doll was formed out of the ashes of Ivy,
shifting Sara from guitar to vocals. It’s not a major musical change, with the
noisy stew of punk, hardcore and garage remaining intact. Sara’s vocals are
something of an acquired taste, as she coos, squeals and yells around the songs
but there’s a certain charm to their uniqueness. It just takes awhile. But the
songs are vibrant and energetic and the personnel change hasn’t hindered
anything. (shop.heavenstreetrecords.com)
MONGOLOID-Plays Rock And Roll (Deranged, LP)
Rock and roll is kid of a misnomer, although
MONGOLOID’s brand of hardcore punk does have a slight rock ‘n roll undertow, if
you count the “Louie Louie”-ish intro and rockin’ fervor of “Slam Pig.” If
anything, there’s a POISON IDEA tilt to this Portland band’s sound and Sam’s
vocals echo Jerry A’s. It’s all done with gleeful, chip-on-the-shoulder
malevolence.
OMEGAS-Power To Exist (Beach Impediment, LP)
The rampaging drums for "Boom Boom"
introduces the first Omegas album in over five years and, as always, they
uncork thorny, high-energy hardcore in brief flashes of fury. Save the nearly
three-minute creepy crawl of "Duster's Blues," only one other song
breaks the 90 second mark. An off-kilter ride that shifts easily from one tempo
to another--kinetic thrash, floor-pounding savagery and good 'ol rock 'n roll
fodder, delivered with lurking around the corner, knife-behind-the-back menace.
(beachimpedimentrecords.bigcartel.com)
POOR LILY-Dirt On Everyone (TV-Mayor, LP)
How did that Nirvana song go? Just because
you're paranoid don't mean they're not after you? I know they got that from
somewhere else but I digress. Poor Lily's latest (their third full-length
overall) is a concept album about NSA surveillance and it plays as one long
piece. The digital download is one long track. It's not the type of
record where you can drop the needle anywhere. The only way is to hear it from
the beginning. As usual, they navigate through a dynamic and complex musical
post-punk/rock/hardcore domain, as one composition flows into another. No
hooks, so to speak, but an attention-grabbing sound and, in this era of
Wikileaks, Ed Snowden and possible manipulation of the election, it's hard not
to feel as though everyone is under constant surveillance, where whatever
nefarious entity you can think of has "dirt on everyone." The album
comes with a collage-style booklet that's a visual assault, a bombardment of
disjointed words and imagery, although there's no missing the point of the
Uncle Sam parody that says "You Got Nothing To Hide Until You Do." A
riveting dystopian musical nightmare. (www.poorlily.com)
REACHAROUNDS-Hunter Gatherer (Push and Pull,
LP)
There have been a few bands named the
Reacharounds over the years--this one's from Springfield, MO and their album
brims with a kinetic energy and a lot of rhythmic muscle. An instrumentally
dexterous unit providing the soundscape for brash vocal emanations and pointed
lyrics that ruminate on life's day-to-day struggles, getting more direct with
the anti-police tirade of "I Can't Breathe." (the title comes from
when Eric Garner was murdered by police in NYC). Stirring energetic
post-punk/hardcore drawing from the well of the Big Boys and some late 80s DC hardcore
and even a touch of Mission of Burma in spots. The blunt production,
emphasizing the bottom end, really enhances the music's power. (511 E.
Edgewood, Springfield, MO 65807, alwaysgodown.bandcamp.com)
S.L.I.P.-Slippy
When Wet (Sorry State, LP)
This band
includes members of Concealed Blade and Blood Pressure, but they offer
something different from those bands. It's a rockin-n-rollin’ concoction
but not cock rock. This is something darker, along the lines of earlier
Annihilation Time, punks scratching their rock itch although they don't
completely leave the hardcore behind, as on "Not Your
Prey." Twin-guitar riffing offering an arsenal of edgy, Ginn-inspired
squalls. “There’s No Hope For The USA,” is a bit of protest music for the New
Dawn, a comment on “the perfect storm of human trash.” “Trend Setter” packs a
whole lot of sarcastic snark for its tongue-in-cheek putdown of every
stereotypical punk subgroup you can think of. (www.sorrystaterecords.com)
UBIK-s/t
(demo)
This
Melbourne band's demo has been logging a lot of time on my various musical
playback devices. A tuneful post-punk meets anarcho-punk sound. Ash’s vocals have
an engaging quality, with a passionate cadence. One song is about a right-wing
Australian crank named Andrew Bolt, who seems to be a racist, down-under
counterpart to the Breitbart acolytes that pollute the political stream in this
country. A stirring message and stirring, sharply-played music (ubikpunk.bandcamp.com)
VIVISEKTIO-Ydintalvi
(multi-label, 7")
This
Finnish band was around the in 80s and got back together in 2008. Their latest
7”, the title of which translates to “Nuclear Winter," is a power-packed
outing. Four old-school Scandi-core rippers plus the more melodic, gothy title
track, which is actually the highlight. An urgent, spirited male/female vocal
tandem, along with the full-on musical attack. (band contact: vivisektio83@gmail.com)
WARTHOG-s/t (Beach Impediment, 7")
Four new tracks of brutal hardcore from this NYC wrecking machine. It's a fusillade of big guitar chords, pulverizing bass and drums and Chris Hansell’s rage-filled vocal howls. Three fast ones and then the brooding ‘n powerful dirge “Coward,” which was a set standout at the last Boiler Room show in Boston, and that song has a fast and blazing conclusion. Big and nasty-sounding. (beachimpedimentrecords.bigcartel.com)
WETBRAIN-s/t (Residue, 7")
X=-5 Walls (self-released, LP)
Spoke compiled by Scott Crawford, Akashic Books
WARTHOG
WARTHOG-s/t (Beach Impediment, 7")
Four new tracks of brutal hardcore from this NYC wrecking machine. It's a fusillade of big guitar chords, pulverizing bass and drums and Chris Hansell’s rage-filled vocal howls. Three fast ones and then the brooding ‘n powerful dirge “Coward,” which was a set standout at the last Boiler Room show in Boston, and that song has a fast and blazing conclusion. Big and nasty-sounding. (beachimpedimentrecords.bigcartel.com)
WETBRAIN-s/t (Residue, 7")
Five new songs (including a cover of a song by
one of guitarist Shaun Filley's old bands Possessor) and it's another dose of
Clevo HC. Not as blown-out or raw-sounding as the old-time purveyors but these
are still throttling songs with hot guitar licks. If there's any sort of theme,
it's how people get anesthetized by their social media while staying in the
dark about drone strikes and other political malfeasance. Cynical punk for
cynical times. (www.residue-records.com)
X=-5 Walls (self-released, LP)
This Pennsylvania band have a number of releases
under their belt, dating back to 2012, but “5 Walls” 12” is the first I’ve
heard. Impassioned hardcore with lyrics that look at the state of the world,
sometimes in straightforward fashion, sometimes a bit more obliquely. A
mish-mash of fast hardcore, more melodic compositions (such as the ear-grabbing
“Body of Evidence”) and some songs that stretch into a rock-meets-Fugazi vein,
as with the title track. Makes me think of some of the late 80s/early 90s
hardcore bands where they were moving into more tuneful realms. It’s not 100%
successful but there are stirring moments. Beautifully-packaged in a screened
sleeve with a screened lyric book and on clear vinyl. Only 100 of ‘em, too. (exequals.bandcamp.com)
BOOK
REVIEW
Spoke compiled by Scott Crawford, Akashic Books
Subtitled Images
and Stories from the 1980s Washington DC Punk Scene, this book is
essentially a coffee table tome that provides a primer to that city's legendary
punk legacy. Crawford has been immersed in the scene since he was a
pre-adolescent in the early 80s, going to shows and publishing Metrozine.
He also produced the documentary film Salad Days, which got
some mixed reviews--I liked it but some found it a bit stylized, some were
disappointed that it didn't have more of a hardcore emphasis--but DC's punk
universe was always evolving and expanding. That's captured here. It's an oral
history format, with quotes taken from the film, accompanied by striking black
and white photography and a clean layout. The narrative is a little choppy but
you do get different perspectives--I especially liked the candor from the
various members of Dag Nasty. Done chronologically, starting with Bad Brains
and the HarDCore bands, through the "Revolution Summer"
period--Embrace, Rites of Spring, Beefeater and Gray Matter--and ending where
things got much more diverse--Fugazi, of course, bands like Ignition and Swiz
taking a page from the earlier era, the more rock-oriented, melodic sounds of
Jawbox, Soulside and Shudder To Think to the provocative, unclassifiable Nation
of Ulysses. Band members, photographers, label people and fans get their say,
including an outsider perspective from the ubiquitous Thurston Moore. It's not
a comprehensive history--that's been covered in other books--but Spoke works
very well as a visual artifact. (www.akashicbooks.com)