I haven't written much about the Hard-Ons from Stockholm on this
page until now, there was just this short and super enthusiast
post in October 2019
about the release of the
Shrimp Sessions videos, and then nothing.
There are several reasons to that, the first one is that the idea of this
blog is to write about very recent releases and the VBs have not delivered
much since late 2019, the second one is that what they did deliver was
quite a disappointment... to me at least.
my Viagra Boys vinyl collection
But let's take a step back:
When Consistency of Energy and Call of The Wild were
released in 2016 and 2017 it was a total shock to me, where the hell was that super
catchy kinda weird post-punk coming from ?
And I know I was not the only one to be totally blown away by the dark
and slow build up ofBaby Teethor by the catchy as fuck, satirical and stupid
Research Chemicals which perfect bass line made their waters break to many...
Welcomed as the Messiah: a new band with a satirical but fun super rock'n roll attitude and a
killer sound... finally!
(and some killer artwork, by Sebastian, on top of that!)
Ok I was a bit disappointed by the price of the records, the "let's keep
it rare and expensive" marketing strategy... but well... I was just too
enthusiast to really care. These records are gems period!
Of course it was the perfect recipe for success: a
semi-charismatic/semi-self-destructive leader full of rock'n roll tattoos,
stories about drugs and stupid semi-provocative/semi-stupid stuff, some
super catchy and easy-to-dance-on-even-when-wasted-AF riffs... how could first
world hipsters not be seduced by the romanticism of the great rock'n roll
swindle?...
I mean good for the VBs! If the morons are buying, let's go full way and take
all we can as long as it works, right ? and if the music is good, well
it's even better! They're not the first and won't be the last, everybody has
bills to pay!
These guys are not teenage hipsters, some of them were in proper metal
and punk bands, I mean there are two ex-Nitad
in there, nobody's against a bit of success here and there, right?
Well there was this sentence from Sebastian: "But after I wrote the EP I didn’t have anything left to write about so
I just winged it, and then I realised months afterwards that it had a
deeper meaning." in the above mentioned interview.
So I thought: humm these guys know they got something super valuable and
they will keep going as much as possible even if they're totally out of
ideas and inspirations. That's what most bands which got a big success at
the beginning actually do, and don't get me wrong: it's completely
understandable... even The Clash in their time you know (hallowed
be their names).
So I got a bit worried about what was going to come
next.
And then Street Worms was released... At first I was not
completely convinced, Ok there were some good tracks and they tried a
couple of different things, why not, it's good to keep moving, but overall
you could smell a discreet and diffuse perfume... the smell of "ok we're
not sure what we're doing but let's hope it will keep the hype high" you
know.
And the marketing strategy? god they went full way into digital marketing, super expensive stupid merchandise, a deal with
Rough Trade, no bandcamp, only digital streaming on mainstream
platforms and all that bullshit...
And obviously these things... well these things tend to annoy me...
But ok I am a bit demanding maybe, it's a good album, I enjoy it.
Really, I do.
I'm not stupid, I had understood for a while already what kind of
money machine the VBs had become but as I was still reasonably enjoying
their music I was still interested you know... (after all I don't
exclusively
enjoy underground bands, who am I to judge?).
And then came Common Sense... and the
"What the fuck is this shit ???" reaction.
Ok the running joke about the Shrimp industry was quite funny, the
mini youtube series was kinda fun but waaaay too much (in my humble
opinion)... so I gave up!
It was a bit like when The Clash dropped Sandinista, you
had to make a decision (and if you were still there when they released
Combat Rock... well regrets were all you had left)!
Soooo.... now let's talk about Welfare Jazz!
Seriously Sebastian....? That's all you could draw this time ??
It starts with the catchy I ain't Nice which haunting bass
line recalls the hits from the VB previous releases, it's (nicely)
provocative, fun and kinda "wobbly" (in a good way). Indeed it's to
Jazz Welfare what Down In The Basement was to
Street Worms... so it starts tasting like reheated can food... but ok let's cheer up.
And then it starts falling apart...
In the middle of a succession of really average songs (the new wave~ish
Creatures, the instrumental 6-shooter, Secret Canine Agent...), Sebastian's crew drops a bunch of wannabe sarcastic
tracks (the bluesy Toad, the terrible indie/folk ballads
Into The Sun and I feel Alive), which, at best, will put a
little amused smile on your face for a second.
Ok there is Girls & Boys in the end which got a cool "crazy saxophone" vibe on a vintage disco background but.... hum no...
And the worst comes at the very end as the awful country song parody To The Country is followed by In Spite of Ourselves which features Amy (from Amy And The Sniffers) for something I can only describe as a pathetic and painful song... it's just a disaster (even for a parody)!
And OK I see the point of Amy's featuring (her band has been quite successful in the past years as well and everybody wants here, even Sleaford Mods) but seriously there wasn't anything better you could have done with her? really?
What's next? A Kiss parody with Idles and The Chats ?? Come on!
Ok ok that's enough! I stop here.
I usually don't write anything about bands or albums I don't like (I find it way more interesting to write about stuff I like) but I felt like sharing here (it's cheaper than a shrink after all) a bit of my passionate (one-way) relationship history with the swedes on pills...
And it's done!
I give way to hipsters and snobs of all stripes...
Ok ok I know I'm super late with this one, the tape was released last
August for Christ's sake! Yeah but for some reasons I cannot really
explain I missed it and only discovered
Krigshoder a couple of weeks ago... and damn... I had to write a little
something about this absolute killer!
So Krigshoder (to not be mistaken with the furious Japanese of
Kriegshög
or the, not less furious, swedes of
Krigshot) is an international collaboration between Daniel aka
Skunk from Oslo, Norway, who screams in
Negativ, used to scream in
Internt Oppgjø
(Internal Settlement) and Jenkem Warriors
and runs
Byllepest Distro
(there is a good interview of
Daniel on NoEcho
if you want to know more about all that), and a few guys from the L.A.
label
Suck Blood. Guys that I suspect to be behind a few bands like
Hate Preachers
and
Cruelty Bomb,
which tapes were recently released on the same Suck Blood, but
also behind numerous hardcore punk / D-beat / Raw Punk bands from the L.A
area over the past 10 years, including
Blazing Eye. But information about all this being quite difficult to find on
the World Wide Web, let's say it's mainly deduction.
Ok so whereas I'm not a big fan of all the bands mentioned above for
personal taste reasons, with
Krigshoder'sKrig I Hodet it's another story, it's pure love at first sight!
This tape is pure super fast, super furious hardcore punk at its
best!
I don't know if I can really say that but Youth Regiment seems to
be a side project for the "gang" who brought us some of the best bands
from the area like
Beta Boys
and
Electric Chair
(David actually plays the drums in these three bands as states a tape
relevantly called
Davey Plays The Drums) but also great bands from Kansas City, where the
Beta Boys guys are originally from, like
Nuke Cult,
Cryogenics,
Dirty Work,
The Deacons
and probably many more...
The band's first release is the super low-fi tape from 2017 where
the following track is taking from. That's all I could find from the eight
songs released by
Chapel Of Crimes.
The recording is so bad it's not a big deal anyway!
The only other thing I could find from this era is this sick live video
footage from a 2018 show (unfortunately the quality is terrible as
well but the energy from the images is impressive).
So yes I think you got it now, Youth Regiment is playing some very
80s US hardcore punk.
But more than just being inspired by the 80s classics, it
looks like the main goal of this new tape is to sound like it was actually
recorded between 81 and 83.
Ok ok let's stop playing the hardcore nerds, this tape is fun to listen
to a few times, it's a successful Exercice de Style (Style
Exercise), it's good hardcore punk all right!
Now let's get back to listen and play punk from our times!
After
Moron
and
Liiek
here is another band from the
Allee Der Kosmonauten (ADK)
Berlin scene where can be found a couple of familiar faces.
There is the singer, Lisa, who has been involved in numerous
projects during the past decade including
Aus
and the new
Die Letzten Ecken
(The Last Corners) but also the more indie-rock
I Might Be Wrong
and
Zelfand then there are Anne Sophie who plays the drums in
Liiek
and Benzin (and plays bass here) and Jana behind the drums.
So where are these experienced musicians taking us now ?
DieSchiefe Bahn's (the slippery slope or the crooked track) 6-track tape was released on
Billo
(as many ADK bands) in late November 2020. If you are a bit
familiar with this page you may know that I am not really into dark and
cold music and that's why I was not seduced at all by
Die Letzten Ecken (way too "cold" for me). Well
Die Schiefe Bahn are clearly splashing around in the post-punk pool
as well but have managed to save just enough "heat" to keep me
interested, and so to be featured on this page.
Heavy bass lines, minimal drumming, clear but discreet guitar parts,
distant-quite-cold vocals and absolutely NO synth... here is the recipe of
the "coldest" kind of post-punk I can enjoy... And yes in the end I have to say that I
find it quite enjoyable.
It's probably going to sound weird to the German speakers who are reading
me right now (if any) but there is something perfect in their language for this kind
of music. I don't know, it's just the way the harsh consonants and "cold" accent sound to my ear...
As I was saying I am not an expert in German new-wave/post-punk, but to me
Die Schiefe Bahn really sounds as if they had just landed from a
time warp from an 80s Berlin club show to the present day (and
the weird, but discreet, old school sound effects on Flammen and
Pflanze make the comparison even more vivid).
In an nutshell it's a short and enjoyable
German post-punk tape that even a guy like me can listen to from time to time
so... give it a try!
Ditz is a British band from Brighton which has been around since
2016.
I discovered them in 2018 and remember being immediately hooked
up by their catchy noise rock tinged with post hardcore. I even included
their hit song I am Chris Martin in my 2018 compilation
Oktober Fist.
But let's go back to 2016 first:
EP1
may be a 3-track release only but damn what a killer!
Ditz is clearly influenced by the 80s/90s noise rock scene and
can be put on a shelf along bands like
Metz,
Girl Band,
USA Nails
or
Buildings
which have clearly chosen to bring back that sound in the modern world.
And that sound is definitely heavy, loud and grungy!
But Ditz do more than just paying a tribute to the 90s
Sub Pop and Amphetamine Reptile catalogues, they got
a modern je-ne-sais-quoi thatbrings their music into our
decade.
It may be the short clear guitar riffs and the electronic samples on
Two, or the numerous breaks and energy "rodeos" on
No Thanks, I'm Full...
But whatever it is, it makes this (too) short release an exceptional
one, each track being different, powerful, beautifully built, but fitting
perfectly in the whole thing...
Yes you understand that I was really waiting for more and have been checking,
from time to time, for the past two years if something new would pop up from their drab bandcamp page...
well it took a
while...
Between July 2018 and July 2020, Ditz released five
digital singles, the first two on
Permanent Creeps Records
and the other three on
Alcopop! Records
which finally compiled all of them on the band's first physical release,
the 5 songs 12" EP.
Let's have a quick tour...
Seeking Arrangement got a simple but efficient structure,
playing with the ups and downs between the chorus and verses, both of
which are based on a
particularly snappy
snare drum. It sounds very 90s (in a good way) in my opinion.
Gayboy continues in the contained anger range, where palpable
tension is spread up all over the place, sparkling and smoking but
without reaching the melting point. A taut bass line, a dry and high-pitched
guitar, Cal's voice oscillating between dark complaints and
desperate cries... this song confirms the genius of the Brighton guys
for apparently-simple song structures and great control of "emotions".
Same formula here for Total 90 and the beginning of this weird "tribute" video to
90's British football, but this time Cal and the others let themselves
explode into a almost-hardcore chorus which finally frees us from all
this tension accumulated since two and a half tunes...
I really like the heavy drums and the slow build-up at the beginning of
the song. It'll take more than two minutes to finally break and damn! It
feels fucking good!
Role Model:hehe the recipe seems to be working well, a slow start, some
"tiktiktiktik" rim shots and bim! an explosion of heavy
guitars accompanied by plaintive and powerful vocals, yes yes that does
work!
Ah Fuck The Pain Away is probably my favourite song of the record (because of its name for a start), everything is there: noisy guitar riffs, heavy "noise-rock" bass lines, silly and serious lyrics (from what I think I understand), slow build up of the song turning into a noisy explosion... that's good!
I feel that this EP keeps Ditz as one of the most interesting band from the new UK scene, somewhere between the trendiness of the Idles (not for me!) and a quite active noise-rock scene. Less striking than their first 3-track release (probably because these songs were composed over a fairly long period of time as singles) I nevertheless appreciate the rising build-up of the tracks, the skilful mastery of the energy delivery and the construction of an atmosphere at once dark, unhealthy and explosive.
I would be interested to see what that would give on a proper LP.
Not much information about these guys except what the label page is
saying:
"Tetanus came together when two other Charlotte area bands,
Patho-gen
and
7 Minutes in a Microwave, broke up just as the COVID-19 pandemic started to hit in the US."
Go check these two bands if you're not familiar with them, it's super
good hardcore punk.
But let's get back to the bacterial infection: with six tracks all under
the two minute mark these guys didn't drop by to linger around. However,
you can't put everything in the hardcore punk drawer right away. Let's say
it's fast noisy punk with some (a lot actually) hardcore parts.
The vocals and the guitars sound "fuzzy" and distant enough to imagine
oneself at the other end of a last century's handset, reminding me of that
crazy story of HR recording the vocals of I agaisnt I over the
phone from prison!
But I'm rambling and Tetanus is not: with six straight forward in-your-face tracks, this tape could have been just another loud and noisy release but it's a little bit more than that...
*** (great song name by the way) for example manages to go back and forth between fast hardcore parts and slower and heavier, keeping us alert all the way while the noisy guitar start of Life Is Pain is a beautiful invitation to hear more... and that's the small details which make a huge difference!
And the cover of Chicago punk legend Mentally Ill's song Gacy's Place is a very enjoyable bonus, Tetanus turning the already-quite-fuzzy track into a proper super noisy hardcore punk song! Good job on this one guys!
In a nutshell Sorry State releases another good hardcore punk tape for a band that is far from revolutionizing a genre where the competition is more than fierce these days (the average quality of the hardcore punk tapes I have been listening to for the past years is extremely high in my opinion) but that masters the subject well enough to bring some subtle touches of originality which delight my tired hardcore kid ears...
Ok I'm going to write about something a bit different today, a band I
discovered recently and have been listening to a lot lately, which means
I find their music more than enjoyable, I find it almost
fascinating.
Come Holy Spirit has nothing to do with your local religious
choirs, being a trio for a start and being also quite far from the
religious crowd as you can imagine.
Hailing from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the band manages to bring up the
very classic set up of drums, guitar and bass for a not classic at all
result.
All these different bands are not all exactly my cup of tea, so what
makes Come Holy Spirit so good to my punk ears ?
Before going any further let me say that I will skip some of the band's
first releases and focus only on their last three. But don't hesitate to
have at look at
Weather, CHS's very first tape back in 2016, which is a bit too soft and
"aerial" for me or
Grand Island, CHS's first LP.
Come Holy Spirit is not an easy band to define, yes the trio
overall delivers a quiet and relaxing kind of music (compared to the
usual level of angriness and loudness featured on this page) but is also
subtle enough to play with a very broad range of emotions and feelings
through a purified and mastered musical construction.
Since their beginning CHS are compared to The Ex and
Dog Faced Hermans which could be put together as the most
experimental and daring bands to come out of the anarcho punk wave of
the beginning of the 80's (and one of the best band at all for
The Ex in my humble opinion). But not The Ex from
Disturbing Domestic Peace no, I'm talking here about
The Ex from Scrabbling At The Lock and later with
absolutely stunning songs like
Hidegen Fujnak A Szelek, Stupid Competitions orHuriyet whereKatherina Bornefeld demonstrated that in addition to being an exceptional drummer, she is
also an exceptional singer (and Gina is doing more than really well
too!).
Released in April 2018 on
Water Wing Records
from Portland,Asters And Disasters
comes after enough time for the band to have digested their influences and
mastered their sound.
Yes there is a lot of The Ex in this third release (I mean: the
vocals on Wandering Womb!) and
G.W. Sok guest vocals on two tracks only confirm the
comparison but the anarcho punk roots can also be more lively than on the
recent releases of the Dutch band; Prescribed Burn or some parts of
Human Animal for example take us back to the golden days of
Eve Libertine and Joy De Vivre on Penis Envy (which
is another not-too-bad comparison!).
So yes CHS is a looot more than a copy cat, these guys have brought folk
music into mutated anarcho punk, building a bridge between the protest
tradition of a part of American folk music and the punks wearing black of
Essex...
And the result is more than good, it's hypnotising and fascinating!
So make yourself a favour and take some time off to calmly enjoy the 6
minutes long bewitching tribal rhythm of Essayons (with some parts
in French S'il vous plait), the Nick Cave-influenced
Elephantine or the surprising S.O.L Song which vocals and
horns evoke Patti Smith and early PJ Harvey...
It's the kind of album I will always come back to, like a
warm seat near a fireplace, one curls up there with the simple pleasure of
comfort and regained security, and that's all we need during these cold
and dark winter days...
It's in November 2019
that
landed
this self-released 6-track split
with
Gnarrenschiff
from Milwaukee, Wisconsin; a quite unusual band composed of one bass, two
electric
sazs
(a
plucked string instruments of Turkish origin) and one
bodhran
(a frame drum of Irish origin) which plays instrumental songs
only.
The two bands played a show together in 2016 and the outstanding
Gnarrenschiffset up could only seduce our trio from Pittsburgh, a few beers and years later the
split was born.
To be honest I find the Milwaukee side interesting but not really thrilling so I
will not spend much time writing about it.
Let's focus on the CHS side three tracks.
The two longest songs first appeared on
Weather
(the band's seminal tape) but were rerecorded, so it's not-really-new
stuff here but it doesn't matter because it does sound new.
It starts with Panacea which got something of oriental in its
guitar part, something ethereal in its carried away singing despite an overall quite
tensed atmosphere made of ups and downs skillfully following one another, taking us along an eventful but pleasant ride. This is not the
anarcho punk à la The Ex of Asters And Disasters but I can
still feel this little "punky spikey" something underneath...
Panacea is a 6 minute long tune and actually sounds like several songs one after another, it almost "dies" around 4:30 before coming back to life
slowly to finally explode into a dry and nervous rhythm.
Cormorant Song is super short (1:43) compared to the two others
but offers a nice jumpy bells interlude before taking us back to the main path with
the 06 Femalefinal ride (the longest song).
This final piece is an incantation, a eight minute long shamanic chant
recalling the Indian invocations of the hidden ancestral gods, the powerful
masters of nature. And the chant and the tension rise slowly, like a
lament around a campfire in a faraway desert, before culminating in a high
plateau inhabited by spirits and ancient forces, leaving us there... in the middle of a black sabbath dance... our exhausted limbs finally
falling on the ground before a final outburst of our souls, possessed by
invoked demons.... at last...
Ok ok I'm carried away a little bit here, sorry! But man, what a track!
CHS takes us really far with these three songs and believe me,
it's a beautiful journey...
Mid 2020, CHS is back with eight new tracks written and recorded
in 2019 and a cover artwork made by Gina herself.
Undiscovered Land
(released by Water Wing records) takes it right where Asters And Disasters left it (and that's for
the best)... but unfortunately the state of the world, and the USA, in particular has not
gotten any better since 2018 and Gina is clearly pissed off!
But it starts easy first with the dreamlike Easement which lays
the, now famous, bases of the lively rhythm and bewitching singing of
the group, introduction to an album that is much more punk than its
predecessors.
Yes CHS are back to their anarcho punk roots with the punk
Working Women Are Pissed (Believe Her), the very punk
A.W.O.L, the beautiful and very The Ex-influenced
Gracias A la Vida (inspired by the
Violetta Para's song) and the overwhelming First World Blues, which is clearly
influenced by the best anarcho "ballads" (always edging with repressed
angriness) of the golden era of the British movement and makes a bitter
assessment of the first world glaring inequalities and obscene richness.
But once again CHS manages to be more than that and to take us by
surprise very far from our musical comfort zone (from mine at least). For
example the bells of Immortal Home (despite the lyrics coming from
the gospel song
Angel Band by William Bradbury) got a strong
Gaman
vibe which fits surprisingly well with Gina's voice whereas the (too?)
short Sky is Falling can be considered as a deep and moving folk
song.
And what to say about Tedious and Brief whose galloping rhythmic
sections and powerful singing make it perhaps the perfect example of
what this outstanding group is capable of embodying?
Come Holy Spirit deliver another outstanding release which finds
the perfect balance between their different influences, bringing back a
"punker" side which can only seduce me.
As somebody wrote it somewhere, CHS defines the "post-everything"
genre.
I would add that saying that the band from Pittsburgh
is to anarcho punk what The Evens are to Minor Threatwould probably be too much but (and I think you get
the idea), it's a band which goes forward, straight to the future without
rejecting the roots of the past... And that's what real good bands of their times do!
Post-anarcho-punk? post-american-folk?
Who cares?
CHS is CHS and I really wish it will stay this way for ever...