Sunday, July 20, 2014

AN INTERVIEW WITH GOB - July 14, 2014, by Legs

(conducted at Budgies Burritos on July 14, 2014, originally for Beatroute magazine)

I remember when I used to work here and you would come in for a burrito and I'd be like “We gotta put on Soda, Theo from Gob just walked in!”

Theo:  I would probably just feel embarrassed
Steve: ‘Soda’ is a Tom Song.
T: One CD we did, the first EP, in the liner notes you would open it up and it would say “All odd songs by Theo, all even songs by Tom”
S: And it’s funny because Theo still writes odd songs.
T: We usually write our own songs that we sing but I’ve written songs for Tom to sing because the range of his voice fits the key of the song, like “Nothing New” (off How Far Shallow Takes You), “Perfect Remedy”, there’s some other ones too I just can’t think of them. We’ll get into writing songs and be like, I think you should change this whole entire verse, but we work together. This last record Tom wrote most of the songs and I wrote some, but it’s a democracy, we all pick the songs.

During the recording process of your new album APT 13, you didn’t have any label to give you a timeline so it was a lot more loose, how did that affect the outcome of the record?

T: It was cool that we did it ourselves, Tom and I recorded the whole thing, and I mixed the whole record. It was cool that there was no compromising in that respect, there was no one saying, do this, don’t do this. But it took a lot longer and a lot of things happened in that time. We recorded most of the tracks at Steve’s parent’s house in White Rock, his parents are gone 6 months of the year so we took advantage of that and it was really cool, it was awesome.
S: [We recorded] all of the bass, a little bit of the vocals, and I think all of the guitars were done there. There’s this walk-in closet and we made a little booth.
T: We have all the right equipment, all the pre-amps. Especially if we’re doing it just using one or two channels for guitars and bass.
T: We did the drums in two or three days at Armoury Studios, because there are so many options for the drums, and we wanted them to sound good. But it was still all us in there. Tom finished his vocals in New York . And a lot of stuff happened to us during that period of recording. My dad passed away, there were break-ups, a marriage, all these different things, all in a couple years. We’re pretty tight, as a band and as friends. It was just life, you know, you gotta get back up.

So you’ve been playing a lot of festivals lately, with smaller shows in between?

S: Yeah this summer has kind of festival season, so we fly out for the festival and then we do some shows in between. We’re doing a whole big tour in October.  Just Canada, hopefully next year we’ll do Europe and America.
T: We’ve been doing smaller shows like back in the old days, and they’ve been crammed with people, and everyone is singing along, yelling at as, and screaming the lyrics. They’re grabbing the mics and we’re getting bashed in the face, chipping our teeth. Actually I had to get my teeth fixed a while ago for that. The shows have been awesome. It’s great to have people show up at the shows and they’re ready and their stoked. Smaller shows are more intimate and you hang out with people after the show, you know, you walk off stage and have a beer and say “Hey, how’s it going?” I mean we’ve always done that.

The Amnesia Rock Fest line up was insane! It looked fake.

S: We’re looking at it like, Misfits is playing, and Danzig? Black Flag and Rollins Band? It was like the 90s was back.
T: Guttermouth played right before us and Fishbone played right after us, it was a crazy line up. There were probably 100,000 people there.
S: Weezer is playing the small stage? We’re at the hotel and I looked at the sign-in sheet, next to Gob it said Danzig.

He’s in the room right next to you.

(Various impersonations of Danzig ensue)

Did you watch Danzig?

S: Nah, we had to leave, we had a seven-hour drive.
T: Saw a bit of Guttermouth, Belvedere, Fishbone. It was weird to see all our friends we hadn’t seen in so long, a band we toured with on Warped Tour, 88 FINGERS LOUIE from Chicago, they just walked up and they were like “Hey Theo!” it was like, I haven’t you guys since 1999! But it was 100 bands in two days, that’s too many bands. There were two main stages and then two smaller ones. They had  NOFX, Megadeath & Alice in Chains on the big stage. The kid doing it is a huge metal and punk rock fan, and he had a bunch of money he won from the lottery or something, so he just spent his winnings on that I guess. It shoulda been over three days, it was too many bands for two days.

I can’t even imagine what that looks like.

T: It was fucked. Super small town.
S: It was like Fort Langley.
T: Just crowds of people walking through, the hotel we stayed at was right next to the show, we couldn’t shut it out. We woke up to a French version of ‘Oh Canada’ on the p.a. and then some death metal sounding vocals for sound check.

 Who did the artwork for your new album?

S: His name is Jeff Lee, he plays in JIFFY MARKER. They’re playing our CD release show with us on the 22nd of August. Jeff, Mike and Dave Patterson are our old friends. Me and Tom have always liked Jeff’s artwork.

Speaking of Fort Langley, what were shows like back in the day in Langley? What bands did you play with?

T: We did the Punk Strikes Back shows in the suburbs, we also did shows in North Delta, with SPARKMARKER, SMUGGLERS.
S: Those shows were great, we’d go because there would be like 6 bands in the suburbs, always all ages, which is important when you’re a kid and you first start going to shows.
T: Yeah, Tom and I’d organize with a couple friends, make handbills and go to the schools. We looked really young at the time so they thought we went to the school. We’d just walk around put posters up, even if they lasted for a day, the shows were always packed. You remember CUB and MEOW?
S: BLACK HALOS, BOTCH, BY A THREAD.

I have a BY A THREAD tape somewhere.

S: I played in that band!
T: Yeah, I had that tape, it was 3 or 4 songs. There were other bands like WISECRACK, and SEMEN from Surrey. How Punk Strikes Back got started was me and Tom would talk about doing our own shows, and there’s a lot of work involved, but we could do it right. We had our parents selling pop & chips. It wasn’t about making money it was just about having our own fucking identity. Shows that kids could go and have fun at. It was about showcasing new local bands. We did 5 or 6 of those shows, every year we’d do one, and then it just stopped because Gob got bigger and it was too hard. If we ever did one again…

You should do one again.

T: In the suburbs? I don’t know if it would be the same, I don’t know if kids would come out.
S: We should do it and make a video out of it.
T: There’s kids now who are 13 or 14 and haven’t even heard of us. There are people who heard of us when they were 19 or now they’re like 30.

I think locally you have a connection for sure.

T: We’ll definitely try doing one of those shows again. As long as there is some interest.
S: We were thinking about doing like a little tour of Western Canada, like do a showcase of rad younger bands, take Punk Strikes Back on the road.
T: Then maybe we could do 100 bands in 2 days.

The ultimate goal. 200 bands in 4 hours.

T: Our first tour was down the West Coast from Seattle to LA, then we starting doing our own shows, getting on to other shows. We made our own CDs at the time. It was a different time. There wasn’t the internet. We were booking shows by just calling people. Then labels starting finally noticing us and Mint Records got in contact with us, and wanted to do a record, then it just built up from there.




Do you think that hardcopy promotion and making posters still has a place in doing shows now?

T: To me, promotion is like, Twitter or Facebook, just getting stuff out to your friends, or the masses. I think both are still beneficial to the event, because certain people stay in their cliques of friends and will only know about certain shows. But if you’re out and someone hands you a handbill, that works too. I think they work together. They must. I’m no marketing genius, I just play music.

There’s something about having that piece of paper in your hand. Having that introduction to the show from someone in person.

S: It’s way cooler.
T: I like it, I keep them. I keep the little posters, I think we have all our old posters stored away. We took digital pictures of them.
S: We should put an album of them up on Facebook.
T: I remember finding the reels of the old Gob record we did in 1984. I found the Too Late No Friends stuff. We were moving stuff out of storage and it felt pretty cool to feel that nostalgia, and see that that stuff still exists. We’re thinking of doing a 20th year anniversary album on vinyl and recording it all analog. So we’re thinking of doing that. So you’re the first person to hear about that.

And now it’s going to the world. I think it’s really cool. Analog all the way.

T: Digital is just easier to work with, but analog has that nice warm sound.

How was the border on your first tour? How is it now?

T: We had to pretend we weren’t a band, we didn’t know any of the logistics of crossing the border at the time. We were just sort of winging it.
S: Nowadays we always have our papers and it’s completely legit.

Do you remember your first tour van? What kind of van was it?

T: Oh yeah. I bought it. It was a brown Chevy van. A propane van. A propane in the ass van. It was the newest thing coming out at the time, it was cheaper, and it was cleaner.
S: But it was a Canadian thing.
T: We would have to go to places to fill up, and they would think we were filling up a stove, and they were like, it sure takes a lot of propane this stove. And I'd say, well no, it’s for our van. And they’d stop filling it up and say oh we don’t have a license for that. So we just said we had a stove from then on. It was a pain in the ass, but we made it to all the shows. I remember we played in like, Tacoma, Oregon a couple places, Sunnydale, we played Gilman. I remember  playing there two or three times but I can’t remember the bands we played with.

Tell me about Positive Records.

T: The only band we put out was Another Joe and that was it and we were starting to do something like our own label, but as we were doing that and doing Gob, it was too much to run. Even though we were trying to do whatever it took, drive for 56 hours for one show, from Ottawa to Oregon, we were doing crazy shit, we didn’t care, we were like “We gotta make the punk show!”, nothing was the smartest. It was too much shit to do, so it was hard to focus and do it right. We’d have girlfriends that would help us out [with the label] and then shit would go sour in the relationship and that would affect them wanting to help us.

Did you ever play shows at A & B Sound?

T: Yeah, a long time ago. Tom and Kelly (bass player on Gob’s first EP) used to work there but it was long after that. I think we played A & B Sound in Vancouver, and one in Surrey. That was a long time ago, I haven’t thought about that in a long time.
S: Remember Trax records? That was the place, that’s where you go to get like, anything from Misfits to Dead Can Dance or Christian Deth. No one’s buying CDs anymore though. It’s a dead format. And we’re giving them out for free at our show in Vancouver.
T: It comes with the ticket. And if you pre-order the vinyl you can get a colour vinyl, a shirt and stuff, there is a cool little package that you get. Our release show is also gonna be with LIVING WITH LIONS, who are our label mates.

So someone I know bought your old tour van, he played in this band Paper Lanterns, and somehow the bench from that van ended up in this punk house I used to live at, and we call it the Gob Couch, it’s been around for years. I referenced in a song I wrote with my old band.

S: You still have the seat?!
T: That thing went around the United States, for three months, on the Eat Shit and Die tour, we’d have five dollars a day for tour. We were doing alright in Canada because people knew us, but in the States it was three months straight. I was really trim on that tour. Tom looked like, you know when the persons been on a desert island too long and the other guy turns into a chicken wing, Tom looked like that to me. That song ‘Beauville’ is about that van.

So Tom and you (Steve) live in New York?

S: Yeah, actually Tom just got his citizenship, him and his partner got married, and the New York Times did an article on them, they submitted their story and got picked for this write up. Tom’s wife grew up with really strict parents and wasn’t allowed to go to shows, so she created this Interview Club at school, and would be like, I have to go to this show, it’s for Interview Club, so that’s how she got to go to shows. Her and Tom met at a Mr. T Experience show at this old venue called the Gate on Granville Street.

Do you tour in a tour bus now?

T: No, it’s too much money. We’ll do like a van and a trailer, a mini-van and a cargo van. We gotta be sensible y’know, we’re not living at our parents place anymore. We’re trying to make a living playing music but have fun. Sometimes it’s sensible to use a tour bus if it’s the right time of year, and if you’re on a tour where you would be buying hotel rooms anyway. You can have your own food. We’re considering a tour bus for the October tour. Stuff gets expensive on tour, like having a crew, something we have to have. Either that or we have to do everything and then you only have enough time to maybe eat and play the show. So having a tour manager and a crew is really helpful, so we can focus on playing. Stuff piles up quickly, especially on a five week tour.

How many shows do you play in five weeks?

S: We try to have one day off a week.
T: Probably around 27 shows, in 35 days. Just Canada. We wanna do Victoria to Halifax. I don’t know if we’ll make it to St. Johns. We’ve played in Cornerbrook before. It’s a long ferry ride, it can be nine or ten hours depending on the weather.

Favourite local bands?

S: Lightning Dust, Highway Kind, War Baby, Jiffy Marker, A Rock Band Called Time, and Castle Project.
T: Deny Your Maker.


GOB is playing a CD release show  for their new album APT 13 on August 22nd at the IMPERIAL ROOM on Main Street, with JIFFY MARKER & LIVING WITH LIONS




Wednesday, April 23, 2014

stuff for sale!

So it's been almost a year since I said anything on this, not sure why, maybe other social media has taken over my life and I no longer feel it necessary to blog. Anyway, I'm trying to make rent and get rid of stuff, lemme know if you want any of it before it all goes to Audiopile in Vancouver.
All stuff is as priced or OBO, getting pretty desperate for monies so don't be afraid to lowball.

contact: legs5016@hotmail.com, or 604 251 4211 (landline)

7"s

THE ARRIVALS - MY GENERATION EP $5
BERGENFIELD FOUR - S/T (Damien of FUCKED UP side project from 2007) $5
BOATS! - SUMMER VACATION EP $5
THE CANNANES - NO-ONE EP (K RECORDS) $3
THE CEBE BARNS BAND - SHE'S A WINNER  $3
CONNIE DUNGS - NO CHANCE (Mutant Pop) $3
THE ESTRANGED - SACRED DECAY EP - $5
FORGETTERS - TOO SMALL TO FAIL (2X7") - $7
FUCK ME DEAD - MECHANIZE ME $5
PATTI SMITH GROUP - BECAUSE THE NIGHT / GODSPEED $5
PRETTY BULLSHIT / WARM NEEDLES SPLIT EP - $5
RON OF JAPAN (Rare experimental noise from the mid-90s, clear vinyl) -$7
RUBRICS/CRIMINAL CULTURE SPLIT EP $3
RUBRICS - SOW YOUR SEEDS EP $3
SHAM 69 - QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS $3
THE SMUGGLERS/ THE HI-FIVES SPLIT EP $5
VANCOUVERS - GOTTA SHAKE IT EP $2
VICIOUS CYCLE - I'M WATCHING YOU $5


CASSETTES

ASSHOLE ADULT (female fronted hxc from Newfoundland) - $3
CONSENTING ADULT (weird hardcore from Vancouver) - $3
CRIMINAL CODE - LIVE ON SONIC REDUCER $5
CETASCEAN - CROWS
DEAD HEAD (despondent stoner rock from Olympia, WA)
THE BELLICOSE MINDS - BUZZ OR HOWL SESSIONS $5
JEAN CLAUDE JAM BAND - DISCOGRAPHY $5
PISSING OFF THE NEIGHBORS (Long Island Compilation from Dig My Grave Records)
LOUD BAG (mtl) - DEMO $3
OBACHA / SLAVE SPLIT TAPE $3
OBACHA - DEMO '12 - $3
PROCESSION - FADE EP
PRETTY BULLSHIT / FUCK DETECTOR SPLIT
SICK FIX - TOUR DEMO '09 (ripping female fronted hxc from Boston)
WIRES - CROWN OF SCUM
WORK. SLEEP. DIE. (North American Grindcore Compliation)



Sunday, June 23, 2013

RAIN, DEATH & TAPES

Calling it rain in the Northwest feels somewhat redundant. It's never just raining. Maybe if we used synonyms or more descriptive nouns & verbs it would fit in my mind. Downpour, mist, spit, drench, sop, flood. Scatters, torrents, intervals. Soaked, itchy wet clothes, sticky, squelchy.

I haven't written anything in a while. Not for lack of things to write about, but for being too caught up in living those things, rather than documenting. However, my love of documentation and archiving of all things punk still burns pretty warm these days

Today, spending all day inside a warm comfort burrow of a house in eastside Olympia, with cigarettes and the internet at my disposal has made me nostalgic. I find my mind dwelling in the weird corners of loss and remembrance.

It's disarming when people you know, close or not so close, pass away, and you don't feel it. You know you should feel it. Feel something, right? But you don't and a couple days of pouring beers out go by, and friends are recounting tales, and still nothing. Then eventually it fades into the back of your mind.

Then a day comes when you're smoking on the front steps, all zoned out, or you walk past a piece of sidewalk, or see someone with the same hair from behind...and it just hits you. And you cry outwardly or internally and go through that stage of grief that took so long to get to you. So long, how come it takes so long? To go through these layers and these walls that we build up. If you're like me you built them up early on because it isn't cool to get emotional, and being tough is vital.

All my dead friends passed away from the same things. But we don't have to make synonyms for it, like the rain. That feeling doesn't need to be given different names. It's just kind of an empty spot. It's just that they aren't here anymore, and that's it.


______________________________________________________


 
I guess this post isn't in the usual Then The Cops style of "Come to this Show!" or "Hey these new bands are great and here's my top ten for the week!" but you can't be on all the time. Gotta be reflective too. It's a positive thing.

And now perhaps for something usual, a list of my drenched spit squelching Northwest vacation tape acquisitions, thus far.


KURRAKA demo :
Raw punk band I saw play in Seattle at the Highline. I believe they're from Austin, Texas. The vocals were super sick and reverb'd in just the right ways. The live energy was lacking but fuck it they were on tour and listening to the tape at home sounds awesome. At this point I would like to point out that the Highline's photobooth runs purely on credit card and boy did I max that shit out.

MURMURS Fly With The Unkindness:
Okay I had this tape already but this is the re-mastered version and it sounds great of course. If you don't have this tape already you should probably do your damnedest to get one. I'm really stoked to tour with them this summer down to Awesome Fest 7.

WET demo: Olympia band that sounds Nirvana as a fast punk band.

BROKEN WATER live: Remember up top when I was talking about all the different terms for rain in the Northwest? This band is kind of like one of those terms. Except made of people playing crushing tunes that make your insides choke and your skin feel warm at the same time.

FODDER Un Desplome: A band from Sacramento that played in Vancouver in maybe 2010, at the Alf House. I bought their tape then and mysteriously only ever owned the j-card & case. So I re-purchased it at Blackwater in Portland. I remember them being fast d-beat that I did some head mosh to.

DRAINBOW: From Phoenix, AZ. They recently played at Miami Beach, where I'm staying in Olympia. Noise-core grunge type tunes, dig it. I also was smoking for half their set so I'm kind of posing here.

BLANCHE BEACH: Also from Phoenix, AZ. A bit more on the poppy side, which I tend to like, melodic vocals, sporadic whoa-ohs. Kind of reminded me of MUHAMMAD ALI at times. The guitar player kind of looks like Morrissey. But he was a very nice person and I think we're friends now so I don't want him to take offense to that. If anything he is probably a lot nicer than Morrissey. If anything you should just listen to these bands and stop reading my lame reviews.

CRABAPPLE Softly: Very amazingly endearing pop punk band from California. Very a la SOURPATCH (members of in fact!), AYE NAKO, and for those of you who remember, CUB. This little blurb does not do justice to how much I enjoyed this band. Sorry.


 More tape updates to come. I've still gotta go to the Bay on Tuesday, so I'm sure I'll find tapes down there...somehow? Thanks for reading. Sorry it's been so long. Real life vs. internet, real life always wins.


xolegs

p.s. My band SIREN SONGS is going on tour at the end of August down the West Coast and through Texas and the mid-west and stuff. With Murmurs of aforementioned greatness! So please come hang out with me and give me tapes to listen to.















Wednesday, February 20, 2013

march 4th acoustic show














Been awhile eh? Too much working. Here's a show coming up at a new space I'm involved in, in Strathcona. Its gonna be a DIY, collective run, record store, show space, info shop. So basically punk utopia. I'm stoked. Come out to this show if you are in town.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

HxC

There is a local magazine in Vancouver called Discorder, which rarely produces anything of interest to me these days, but I found this little gem of an interview with local hardcore VACANT STATE and I figure I'd share it will y'all.

Maybe some peeps would be interested in starting a monthly rag? Does this query come up in minds every year and never follow through? Probably. But nevertheless, get at me, I'm mostly sober these days.


Thursday, January 24, 2013

DOWN TIME

I'm starting to accept the importance of down time. Doing nothing, eating ice cream, watching TV, listening to lots of cleanly produced pop punk, and early 90s northwest indie stuff. Down to one job from two, working five days a week; it's less work but my mind has been so frazzled when I'm off shift, stepping out from the shelter into the fresh air. I barely register the bike ride home. I'm on automatic until I reach the sanctity of my apartment, microwave some coffee (I'm using the microwave, signs of giving up) and put on some mixtape I'm stumped on. I play and rewind, play and rewind, fill up the coffee, dump the grinds, fill up the coffee.

A large part of my job requires listening to people, hearing what they're saying, and responding without accidentally inserting judgement, bias, or condescension. It should be as simple as thinking before I speak, right? But it's not. Being full time at the shelter this year I am starting to realize how I interact with my environment, and am more aware of myself in it, physically, if that makes sense.

All existentialism aside, here's some stuff:

     My friend Reece, whom I've long admired for his tireless productivity, among countless other qualities of person, and my shift partner Travis, whom I've known just as long but now spend 3 days a week processing feelings with and complaining to, have a piece of land out in P.E.I., which they are building small structures on, planning to reforest, and orchardize (new word!).  I've never been but it looks amazing and I'd love to visit. Anyway, this summer they canoed to ghost towns in the Yukon, and Reece wrote a zine about it. I have a mild obsession with ghost towns, so I was super stoked to read it.

       HARI LEGS will be playing a fundraiser show on the 2nd of February at the Chateau Ouesty (the new punk house west of the Chateau Noir, Vancouver, BC). And then Hari is going back to Montreal, which makes us all very sad. Other bands include the PRO-TEENS, and probably whoever else wants to jump on the bill, as long as its over by 11pm! There's an event on stupid whateverbook, but I just told you about it, so just go and fuck everything else. The show is a fundraiser is for a new DIY space that I'm hoping to help out with as much as possible. DIY or die!!



xolegs












Thursday, January 3, 2013

FOG 2013

It's been unusually foggy during the nights here, giving the city a hushed, eery feel. My old band HARI LEGS played a show on New Years Eve, which was super fun and sweaty and beer soaked like any good house show should be.

It was at the Mansion, a house that has been hosting benefits and feminist queer-core bands for the past couple years. They're being evicted soon enough, and the house demolished, and in its place, some kind of multi-story modernized hip building in its place, I'm sure. This kind of thing is happening everywhere, and it's too depressing for me to go into. The importance of old buildings is big in my heart, it's one of the reasons I love living in the city, and as more and more old structures are replaced with glass and concrete market rental flippers, the less I am inclined to stay.

But like I said, let's not get into THAT.

Let's instead focus on the good stuff, like DIY punk shows happening at places that aren't bars! Everytime this happens, it may be an insignificant event to some: another punk show where I have to go and hang out? Ugh, it's all so mundane, woe is my routine life of going to shows and going to work hungover. But it warms my cold little sardonic heart! And before I get too sentimental...a flyer that even appears handmade! Go punk!



























Also I made a top ten for 2012 and instead of copy and pasting I will link you to my friend Greg's awesome blog: Remote Outposts


xolegs














Wednesday, December 19, 2012

WINTER STUFF/ TTCSU DISTRO

So I've been working a lot and not drinking, which is a change from working a lot and drinking too much. It's been good for me. I feel more secure and confident in choices I'm making and life in general. Even if it's as basic as going to the grocery store and getting food to make dinner. Shit that I just don't do when I'm hungover and too lazy to do anything except sleep until work.

I've also had more space in my mind for projects that I want to do, like building a new wall in my place and expanding my distro, and jamming with HARI LEGS again. My friend Daniel and I have been working on distro'ing MRR and Razorcake to the unwashed masses of Vancouver. If you are in the city and looking to get your hands on some copies, they are now carried at Spartucus Books, Neptoon Records, Redcat Records and the Zoo Zhop. You can also get them off me or him directly.

ALSO, I just got a bunch of SCAM zines in the mail, which can be acquired through Spartucus & Zoo Zhop as well (and through me directly).

Soooooo thats cool. My tape deck is back in action so I've been making tapes more which rules. Any other sober winter activity suggestions, feel free to send em my way.

Just read a pretty awesome interview with ASILE from Ottawa. Check it out on this Ottawa hardcore blog that I just found out existed:





Also here's another good interview with my boyfriend Kendrick Lamar:






Thats all for now. Be good to yourselves, and stay punk.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

its the beginning of the end

Come check out these shows if you enjoy your ears spurting blood and your clothes soaking with beer (or if you, yknow, like the bands)















(couldn't find a bigger version, hence the pixelated)



Tuesday, November 13, 2012

WEEK

If anyone is wondering what's going on for the next four days,

WEDNESDAY

Capitalist Casualities
Endorphins Lost (Seattle)
Mass Grave
Haggatha
@ Zoo Zhop

THURSDAY

Serenghetto (mpls)
B Arthur (mpls)
Flagpolers
Pro-teens (ex Siren Songs, Hole in my Head)
@ Zoo Zhop

FRIDAY

Belgrado (spain)
Bellicose Minds (pdx)
Systematik
@ Moontower

SATURDAY

Belgrado (spain)
Bellicose Minds
Spectres
Rhythm of Cruelty (edmonton)
@ Zoo Zhop



Woooooo.