Showing posts with label Teenage Bottlerocket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teenage Bottlerocket. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2013

All the Small Things: Top Singles, E.P.'s etc. of 2013


If you missed our Best Albums 
of the Year list, please go HERE!



Our second BotY list covers all the releases too short for that "Best Underappreciated Albums That Rocked 2013" (see HERE). Once again the list is a little punk/pop-punk heavy due to the fact that both genres worship at the altar of brevity plus I'm old and set in my ways. For more musical awesomeness



(All artist name links go directly to a homepage - or some such thing.)

The New Trocaderos - Money Talks/The Kids CD single
Geoff Palmer & Kurt Baker form their own Rockpile!




Jeffrey Lewis &The Rain - WWPRD EP
An ode to Pussy Riot from the New York ant-folk cartoonist/singer-song-writer Jeffrey Lewis.




Teenage Bottlerocket - American Deutsch Bag 7"
A German language original, a fun throwaway HC song and a Tony Sly cover from Wyoming's finest.




The Livids - (Some Of Us Have) Adrenalized Hearts  EP
A return to gunk-rock glory from Eric Davidson, formerly of The New Bomb Turks.



7 Seconds - My Aim Is You/Slogan on a T-Shirt 7"
Who-oah it's a comeback for Kev. & co.




Science Police - You Are Under Arrest In The Future EP
The Name Merry-Go-Round that the members of The Steinways have ridden since the band broke up five years ago (See Skinny Genes as well), makes for some bewilderment but ultimately the ride brings us a shitlot of great lo-fi and low-self-esteem pop-punk.




Bad Religion Christmas Songs EP
Bad Religion have been doing Christmas songs for years in live settings ("KROQ"S Agnostic Christmas") but till they recorded this fierce set of traditionals you had to track down bootlegs to hear them!




Young Rochelles - Cannibal Island E.P
Y'like hearing a juvenile phrase sung repeatedly over chugging guitars with a strategic key change? God, I do.




Anchovy: Get It Wrong EP
Did I mention The Power-Pop?




Barracudas - God Bless the '45 7"
A class of '79 band gets back on the board and 




The #1's S/T E.P.
More Songs About Chocolate and Girls from Ireland!


The Blendours - Here We Go Again split EP
C'mon "I Was a Teenage Drag Queen" is a good song title AND a fun sing-along, a combination at which The Blendours just rock!



The Slow Death - No Heaven EP
If Crimpshrine had moved to Minneapolis to get Paul Westerberg to produce their album of Merle Haggard covers, it might sound like just a bit like The Slow Death.






WHAT DO YOU MAKE OF THESE SINGLES/E.P.'S?

WHAT ARE YOUR FAVOURITE SINGLES/E.P.'S OF 2013?

WE LIVE AND DIE BY FEEDBACK HERE, SO PLEASE SAY YOUR PIECE IN THE COMMENTS SECTION!!





Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Sack (Lillingtons, Teenage Bottlerocket): Get Wrecked (2003)



So while The Lilligtons (more HERE) were on hiatus and before he hopped onto the Teenage Bottlerocket to Russia (more HERE), Wyomingite Kody Templeman formed a one-off party-punk-rock band called, Sack back in 2003.





While the steadfastly pop-punk Lillington's switched topics from high school politics to old movies, Sack just wanted to get drunk. As the lamentably short-lived Pop Songs and Anarchy put it "All twelve songs are like the soundtrack to the greatest teen movie never made; simple, stupid and drunken (I cannot stress the drunkenness enough)." Check out the song titiles if you think either one of us is exaggerating. (Also see HERE for the Teenage Bottlerocket re-recording of Sack's "Headbanger")


1          One Helluva Party        
2          King Of The Beach        
3          Headbanger        
4          The Born Loser        
5          Bitchin Haircut        
6          Pimp Got Stuck        
7          Let's Get Blind        
8          Pool Party        
9          Rad Biker        
10         Roach Clip        
11         Stag Time        
12         Tico's Taco House        
13         The Classic

Clearview Records, 1993


 


To Sack or not to Sack?
Give us us your view on this most in-between 
of bands in the COMMENTS section!


TEENAGE BOTTLEROCKET!


Update: While this CD is out-of-print, Jollie Ronnie Records still has some copies left, so if you liked this why not go BUY it HERE!

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Teenage Bottlerocket: Freak Out!



Bottlerocket's Back!

There've been rumbles that Teenage Bottlerocket's new album, Freak Out!, is uneven but that's just part of their M.O. As long as the ratio of hits to hmmm's remains this high we can all be fuckin' thankful that these Wyomingites are like no band on earth. Okay, it's a pop-punk album by a pop-punk band but hook-filled tracks "Maverick", "Done With Love", "Never Gonna Tell You" and "Summertime" up the pop to dangerously cool levels. Also, there's a metallic undercurrent here exemplified, poorly, in "Cruising for Chicks" and excellently in  "Headbanger" (explained here).





So sure Freak Out! has some filler tracks (though few agree which ones) but even Screeching Weasel's My Brain Hurts has a couple weaker tracks. And sure TB re-recorded re-used the originals from last year's Mutilate Me E.P.  but the Mr. T Experience did the same thing for Milk, Milk Lemonade and who (other than me!) remembers that now?

Bottom-line: Bottlerocket's back, baby!






Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Teenage Bottlerocket: Joy Division 7" (2012)




Now this comes as a bit of a surprise. Wyoming's favourite Ramonesophiles, Teenage Bottlerocket (more HERE), have self-released a strictly-limited edition 7" of Joy Division covers. So, while plundering new source material, means some trickier guitar lines, some martial drumming and a certain seriousness, it's still recognizably TB. Joy Division may have been moody, atmospheric, blah, blah, blah but they were capable of writing such drop-dead perfect choruses that it made Ian Curtis' suicide that much more gut-wrenching. In tribute to Joy Division's depth, Teenage Bottlerocket stayed away from the most obvious choices, "Love Will Tear Us Apart", "She's  Lost Control" et al and instead rip through ferocious versions of "Ice Age" and "Walked In Line".

 





HOMEPAGE

Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Lilligtons: Live at The Fireside Bowl (2000)



Just as pop-punk was about to enter its millennial hibernation, Newcastle, USA's The Lilligtons offered the genre one last shot at redemption. Despite being championed by both fellow Ramones-fanatic Ben Weasel (see HERE) and soon after by the Green Day-powered Lookout Records (more HERE) The Lilligtons' of 1999 weren't anybody's knock-off. (However, The Lilligtons' of 1995-1998 were a bit too Weasel/Queer-esque for their own damn good.)





The band's volte-face was most evident both in their rocket-powered tuneage and in their newly focused lyrics which had switched from sophomoric to sci-fi. Gone were song titles like "My Genitals Itch" and "Pom Pom Girls" and in rushed psychotronic  late-night creature features titles like "I Saw the Apeman ("On the Moon) and "Invasion of the Saucermen". It was a brilliant experiment, a sort of like a Ramones-Misfits mutation that escaped its captors and bred in the wilds of Wyoming!


Of course, I can only plead with you to go and buy Death by Television or any of the albums by Kody Templeman's more famous band, Teenage Bottlerocket. If you've done so, here's a live set from the Death by Television tour recorded in Chicago's legendary Fireside Bowl. The sound is just fine for this sort of thing and the fact that it's all one track may just increases its force.

Let us know what you think of The Lillingtons in the The COMMENTS section (where you'll find the Live at The Fireside Bowl link).


Support the band(s)
 
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Interpunk

iTunes

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Saturday, April 24, 2010

Teenage Bottlerocket: Having A Blast


This is a fuller (but still edited for brevity) version of an interview I did with Teenage Bottlerocket’s Ray Carslile which I turned into an article for the Manitoban (please go and read that version here).

If someone’s never heard your band, how do you describe what you sound like?
I always say we sound like the Ramones.

So you’re from Wyoming, has being so isolated affected how the band has developed?
Absolutely. The limitations are there’s nothing to do tonight, the weather’s keeping us inside…if we go outside we’re gonna slip on sheet of ice and break our arms – so it’s grab your sticks and your picks…let’s play some rock music!

You’re heading out on tour with NOFX, led by Fat Mike who runs the label you’re now on, Fat Wreck-Chords. What was your reaction when they asked you to join the tour?
“Yes”, my reaction was “Yes!” We had goals in mind with [the album] “It Came From the Shadows” and one of those was we’re gonna do a headlining tour for as long as we possibly can throughout the U.S. and then hopefully we’re gonna score a support slot for a band that’s huge. And by huge just somebody bigger than us. NOFX was definitely on the list of top five bands you would ever want to go on tour with in your life before you die.

Who else would be on that top five tour-with before-you-die list?
Alkaline Trio and of course the heavy-hitters like Bad Religion, Green Day, Rise Against or some of the newer bands like National Anthem. But NOFX is on the top of the list, there’s no other band I want to go on tour with.

Do you all still have to book time off jobs to go on tour?
No one’s making a living off this yet. Miguel’s just graduated, Kody works full-time in a grocery store and Brandon and I work for this oil company…we go out and we’ll work for months at a time in certain areas and then we’ll have a chunk of time off afterwards, for instance in August we were in Russia working on this oil well for a solid month.

What do you do on the wells?
We’re telling oil companies how much oil is left in their reservoirs – I always tell people we’re dipstick guys - not to be confused with dipshit guys!

Back to touring, what sort of music do the guys in the band play in the van on the road?
Toxic Holocaust, Municipal Waste, Ben Harper, Lawrence Arms, Dead to Me...The Hanson Brothers....The Varsity Weirdos from Moncton, New Brunswick.

One common theme of pop-punk is a sort of nerdy, self-deprecation, yet on your last single, the admittedly tongue-in-cheek, “Bigger than Kiss” (where you “beat the piss/out of Peter Criss”) you sound very self-confident. Do you think Teenage Bottlerocket’s playing at the top of their game right now?
We’re four full-length into it and we’re constantly learning…we don’t put any restrictions on our song-writing either. If I say, “Hey I wrote a new song", no one’s gonna say, "that’s not Ramones enough we can’t play that one". There’s a certain confidence level you need to achieve to go up there and play your music. If you’re insecure about that, the audience can smell that from a mile away. Part of punk rock is being cocky. A part of our personality is very arrogant and yet at the same time we don’t take ourselves too seriously. The song is meant to be funny but there’s also a seriousness about it; whenever we play it live you can’t help but grit your teeth and headbang as hard as you can when you’re down-stroking – it s a let-take-on-the-world kind of feeling. It kind of works in all directions. It’s not a serious song - we’ll never be bigger than Kiss - but those guys just make themselves an easy target and I’m glad we took them down.

Everyone I showed that video to just flipped out. How did it come about?
Our friend Ben Levin from New York did it…we tossed a couple of ideas at him but he came up with most of that stuff on his own.

Would the band ever consider following Green Day to a major label (such as they are these days)?
If I was an A & R rep for a major label I would go after a young, attractive band - which we’re not, that could tour all the fucking time - which we can’t. I don’t think major labels are functioning on the ‘these guys write great songs let’s release them’ level. So I think that proposition would never come up. If someone wanted to give me a million dollars to record an album, yeah I’d do it.

Any forgotten, under-appreciated bands you’d like to talk-up now that you’re getting more famous?
This band from Seattle called, Head. They’re really cool and I really liked all their albums.

And I liked the shout-out to Jodie Foster’s Army on “Skate or Die”.
It was originally going to be D.O.A. but I chimed in and said, it should be J.F.A., they are the skate-punk band. Then the original plan was going to be sing D.O.A. on the vinyl and the CD would have J.F.A. but in the studio the D.O.A. line never came out.

So Kody Templeman from the comparatively more famous band The Lillingtons joined Teenage Bottlerocket after your first album. Is it hard to bring aboard another singer/song-writer/guitarist without all the usual ego troubles?
No, it’s not difficult at all. I think all the best bands out there have two lead singers; Alkaline Trio, Dead to Me, Dillinger Four and what you’re saying reminds me of Rancid, where Lars wasn’t in the band all the time and then all of a sudden you have this new lead singer plus guitar player.
What happen is, Kody and I get competitive with our song-writing. Kody will play me a song over the phone and blow me away and I’ll pick up my guitar and crank out a tune with Brandon and send it to Kody who’ll listen to it and he’s fricken’ stoked and fired up and the same time and he’ll write a song. That’s how we write records - we try to out-do each other but we’re all batting on the same team.

“Screeching Weasel on their worst day is a million times better than Teenage Bottlerocket on their best day.” So Joe Queer of legendary pop-punk band The Queers told you kids to get off his lawn and you were all pretty gracious in response. Why do you think that punk bands never have publicity-generating feuds?
Like Notorious B.I.G. versus Tupac – I’ll cap you Joe Queer, you motherfucker (laughs). No, I’m not gonna lie and say I was born with a Mohawk, Green Day Dookie got me into punk music from there I discovered the Lookout catalog, I was the only kid in my high school listening to Screeching Weasel, the Queers. So there’s no bad blood. Just the fact that Joe Queer’s talking about me interviews is flattering, because I was listening to his records before I lost my virginity.

After the big tour, what’s next for the band?
We’re doing a West Coast tour with Banner Pilot in July – which is gonna be frickin’ awesome and we’re playing Insubordination Festival and Skatopia with The Meat Puppets, D.I., C.J. Ramone, Gwar and Fishbone.

Any new recordings in the works?
We’re constantly writing songs and we some new ones that are…pretty awesome – the humour has not gone away.

When NOFX comes to Winnipeg, Fat Mike sometimes sings a couple of bars of The Stretch Mark’s “Professional Punks”. Would you guys ever consider covering a song by a band from Winnipeg when you play here?
“Ska Sucks” of course…whenever I think of Winnipeg I think of Propagandhi.

So what’s the best song ever written?
I’d say “With or Without You” by U2 or “I Want to Hold Your Hand” by The Beatles and I’ve heard Kody say “Summer of 69” By Bryan Adams. It seems like these songs existed before they were written.

Oh and by the way would you ever play with your fellow identical twin bands Nelson, Good Charlotte, and Tegan and Sara
I think we’d be the opening band for that show

Teenage Bottlerocket open for NOFX at the Burton Cummings Theater on April 26th 2010

Thanks to Ray for a great interview and Melanie Kaye for setting everything up!