lundi 30 mai 2022

Feral

 

A short one today about this new band hailing from Atlanta, Georgia, and called Feral.
Featuring the singer of Judy And The Jerks at the bass and the drummer of Nag and Western Civilization behind the drums, this group relies on a solid experience to deliver a very high quality demo beautifully illustrated by Ross Adams (a visual and tattoo artist originally from Oklahoma City who played in numerous bands including American Hate and Crush Crusher).



Released on Earth Girl Tapes (a label well known to this page you can read a bit about in my enthusiastic post about Fumes from last November and which focuses primarily on the Hattiesburg scene) this demo shows from the very first seconds that it fits perfectly on Hampton Martin's label: It's fast, there's that punk vibe that meets the speed and energy of hardcore, it's clearly well played and the live recording provides that sense of urgency so dear to our old punk ears that is also prevalent on most EGT releases. 
But Feral are not only good at playing ripping fast punk songs inspired by early 80s US hardcore, and that's when it becomes more interesting than you average next-door hardcore punk band, they're also able to build up dark but thrilling atmospheres around mid-tempo songs like in the moving Touching Tips and its driving guitar riff or in Cycle (my favourite track of the tape) and its heavily post-punk oriented chorus. 
 
Yes Feral demo is full of promise and I'm confident that these guys and gals will be able to deliver a top notch EP or album very soon if they really get on with it. Let's see if the other bands the members are in leave them enough time to make it possible.







You can listen to Feral on Rien à Faire #34.
 
  

 
 





 
 
 

mercredi 25 mai 2022

Die Verlierer

 

 
Die Verlierer (the Losers) is a new band from Berlin, Germany, made of three guys from Chuckamuck and two guys from Maske (I wrote a little something about their debut tape two years ago because I liked it and I didn't write anything about their second tape because I didn't like it). Some of them are also involved in some smaller projects like Balcony's Paradise and Kinder (Children).
 
 
So their debut album was recently released on tape by Mangel Records (a vinyl version would be nice though) and, despite its duration (way over 30 minutes which is really long to me), I've found myself coming back to it several times, struggling to build a proper opinion but nevertheless finding a certain kind of enjoyment in the very German sound of the young Berliners... So it's well worth a short write-up, right?!
 
 
Because for a guy like me Die Verlierer got something slightly elusive, something which doesn't fit well in any of small and well-defined genre boxes of loud guitar music. Their music sounds a bit low-fi, a bit like a long-forgotten tape from an obscure 80s Berlin band, their music sounds punk sometimes, because of the "relative rawness" and the energy not because of a fixation on sounding like this or that band, but their music also got something deeply sad and disillusioned, something very German, very Berlin I would even say.
So yes to be honest I don't really where I am with this tape, probably somewhere between the early 80s from the SO36 and Die Neue Deustche Welle, the new Hipster Berlin and a more accessible kind of German rock...
 
Between great bass lines (Die Zeit, Mann in Mond), a real kind of punk energy (Nichts Funktionniert, Dead Girl), unbearable repetitive choruses (Plastic Life would probably have a good chance to supplant Slayer as an official torture anthem in the CIA secret jails), a great sense of simple but effective and catchy melodies, straight forward sing-along choruses tailor-made to lead the crowd in a joyful alcoholic bellowing (X-Ray Vision) and endless psychedelic outros (Into A), Die Verlierer deliver a dense and diverse album that doesn't ring like an "all killer no filler" type of record to me but is more a "grower", a cool anomaly I like to come back to from time to time (on Sundays especially) when I feel like relaxing without a raging D-beat band tearing my eardrums.
But most of all Die Verlierer sound like nostalgia, nostalgia for the crazy Berlin from the 80s and early 90s, leader of the European art scene and all kind of deviant innovative kind of expressions, a Berlin that appears more and more faraway based on what I hear...... Well I haven't been there for very long to be honest and I'm sure it's still cool to hang out there, but it's not the same.
 
Let's see if Die Verlierer and others manage to avoid falling into the "hype trap" and become the "leaders" of a new momentum of the Berlin alternative scene.
 
 
Video by Ciaran
 
 
 
 
N,J'Oi! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Die Verlierer on Rien à Faire #32.
 
  

 
 





samedi 21 mai 2022

Primer Regimen

 

You have to know that Primer Regimen is probably my favourite Colombian band, so you can imagine how excited I was when I heard that a new record was on the way. Excited but surprised... after Ultimo Testamento in 2018 I thought that the band had split up, I mean, after all, anyone with a near-zero knowledge of Spanish as myself would have deducted from the record title that the Bogota band was done with making the world pogo... Well it looks like we were all wrong...
 
But let's take a step back and talk a bit about what happened before their come-back...
Primer Regimen is from Bogota, Colombia, and features members of bands like Secta Suicida, Final, Tumbas and, most of all, Dead Hero. Indeed, if I'm not mistaken, Dead Hero is (or was?) actually Primer Regimen with another singer (Dino having chosen rather to sing in Final). But I'm not going to spend much time on Dead Hero here, let's say that I'm not a fan at all of the kind of oi! they're playing.
In 2017 Primer Regimen released a 7" (on Byllepest Distro and prior to that on Ruidos Subterraneo as a tape) called No Futuro / No Solución, a great mix of UK82 / early oi! and Colombian punk made to make your first grade teacher pogo until the end of times.
 
picture by Rob Coons
 
But the real deal came up one year later in 2018 with the famous Ultimo Testamento, that I mentioned before, once again released on Byllepest Distro from Norway (managed by Daniel from Negativ, Krigshoder and many other ripping hardcore punk bands).
No Futuro / No Solución was good but a bit classic I could say, Ultimo Testamento is still "classic" but is most of all absolutely fantastic... every song is a pure anthem of Spanish street punk, this is what pogo punk is and should be, non-stop tupa-tupa drum beat, lyrics I don't understand at all but wanna scream from the top of my lungs and the energy of a hot summer uprising... what else can you ask for?
So you understand that to me Primer Regimen had reached the very top of my personal punk Pantheon and would forever remain in my heart like THE legendary Colombian band which ripped the shit out the world of punk from start to finish...
Just like they did at their incredible live show at Manic Relapse Fest in 2018 in Oakland:
 
 
  But anyway if you don't know all that already you just lived for nothing until now... so let's jump to their new 7".
 
 

 So this new EP (released mid april 2022) named 1983 (but the cover also states No Futuro / No Solucion like on their first 7") benefits of a great artwork by Carlos Velasquez who, on top of playing in Uzi and Muro, has done great artworks for several Bogota bands (Secta, Uzi etc...). In the end when I write something about current Colombian punk bands I always come back at some point to the super-active punk "crew" from the Rat Trap in Bogota that I talked about a bit in my post about Unidad Ideologica.
 
 
Only available on their bandcamp page at the moment (12 usd for the EP digital version?! seriously guys?), the 7" should be released soon by Discos Enfermos from Barcelona that I've mentioned a few times on this page (it looks like Byllepest Distro's been inactive for a while now for some reasons).
 
To be honest these songs surprised me at first, it's not really what I was expecting, maybe I listened too much to Primer Regimen's first releases and I had in mind that it was going to be exactly the same. Well it's not. Don't get me wrong it's not totally different either, Lideres and Culpables (great drum intro by the way) for example are two very good tracks which would have perfectly fit in Ultimo Testamento without any doubt. But the innovation lies mainly in Hegemonia and Plegaria, two tunes that grow a dark and heavy atmosphere built around some kind of "tribal drum beats" that take us far from the usual hardcore patterns... yes since 2018 the Singapore hardcore punk scene has beautifully developed that "haunting and shamanic" hardcore style (Sial with their latest EP of course, featured in my Best of 2021 list, but Xyresic as well with their strong Spanish influences) and it didn't get unnoticed in Bogota, leading Primer Regimen to give birth in the end to an EP which is even better, and more interesting, than what a good, but classic, follow up to Ultimo Testamento would have been...
This is a very good and enjoyable EP... hopefully it will be followed by a European tour at some point! 
 
 
 
  N,J'Oi!
 
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Primer Regimen on Rien à Faire #34.
 
  
 
 
 

mardi 17 mai 2022

Crisis Man

 

picture by Kyle Rios


Finally! Finally the time has come to talk about the almighty Crisis Man! 
If you've been around this page a little bit you may have found a Crisis Man track buried deep under mountains of dust in the Oktober Fist Compilation #2 from September 2019, yes I've been obsessed with this band for a while (and it's only recently that I finally managed to get my hands on a physical copy of their 7"!) and their first LP recent release gives me the perfect opportunity to take a look back at what I consider to be one of the most interesting punk bands of our troubled times...
 
Crisis Man hails from the sunny state of California and as everybody knows California is a territory full of experienced punk musicians, well Crisis Man is made of some of these people... yes since the band very first release there is no doubt that these guys know their shit...
So there is Ross on vocals who's known for screaming in Ceremony and Spice. There is Ben on guitar who played/plays in great bands like Acrylics (one of my favourite contemporary hardcore punk band), Rut and Smirk. There is Jess on bass who's got his own solo project called Marinero. And there is Nick, behind the drums, who's played in numerous greats bands like Smirk, Autistic Youth, Public Eye and others...
 
 
 

 
It all starts in 2017 with this 5-track cassette (demo?) released on Melters. To be honest this debut release went rather unnoticed at the time, yet these five tracks are far from being deprived of interest.
 
 
All the foundations of what will be Crisis Man for the next five years can be found here: Ross' barking snotty vocals who sound like pure rancid frustration, Ben's sharp guitar riffs that manage to be punk as fuck while sounding like they would not be totally irrelevant in a more garage-punk oriented kind of band and some great songs' structures full of weird out-of-place sounds popping out of nowhere. Yes there is a lot of Acrylics in Crisis Man's debut and nobody said it's a bad thing at all.
Crisis Man manage to sound extremely intense without having a crushing sound or an insanely fast tempo, it just sounds punk as fuck, period. The vocals add the extra layer of anger and snottiness that makes the whole thing so sweet to my old punk's eardrums.
  Yes it does sound like a demo tape so I knew that the real deal has yet to come...
 

  It's one year later, in 2018 on Digital Regress, that the Crisis Man nuclear nuke really exploded to my face. Immediately seduced by the deviant art of Riley Kerr (the band "official visual artist" who plays in Nasti, the amazing band of what I called Freak Punk or Freak Core, which dropped a killer of a first album before losing me with their second one), I also instantly fell in love with the deranged and dirty chaos that makes up the sound of The Myth Of Moderation...



Just take what we got on the debut release, make it faster, make it meaner, make it sound loud, dirty and nasty and you'll get close to what The Myth Of Moderation is throwing at you. From the opening eponymous track where Ross sounds like a mad dog surfing a tsunami of sharp hardcore punk guitar riffs to the dirty rock'n roll of Superlunary by way of the "à la" Lumpy And The Dumper (Huff My Sack era) vibes of Ego Death, this record is just non-stop killer in-your-face fucking FREAK punk!
But don't expect an unrelenting deluge of raging riffs and brutal drumbeats like what all the current Nordic-influenced D-beat bands offer, no here we're talking more about high frequency punk rock... and it bites, it rips, it screams, it twists your eardrums until your nose bleeds but above all, it pauses, it resumes, it bounces, it builds up freaky atmospheres and it grows in something which is, ultimately, extremely rock'n'roll (the guitar!), a bit like what Beta Boys or Lysol do in their own genre of hardcore.
I don't know how to say it otherwise, but this 7" is insanely good!
 
picture by FlashBang

 



I had to wait four bloody years before finally listening to new Crisis Man tracks and yes that's a tragedy but here it is... Out on Digital Regress and Erste Theke Tonträger (for Europe), Asleep in America is the first full length of the California band and... it fulfils all my craziest wishes! And yes this new Riley artwork is, once again, fantastic.
 
 
  Opening up with organ layers which, for some reasons, make images of Clockwork Orange and Terminator flash in my mind, the opening track opens fire with pummelling drums and bass beating the shit out of your silly face... things are made crystal clear from the start, both instruments are gonna sound like proper bass and proper drums this time! Oh yes that record sounds good! The perfect good for what Crisis Man got in the guts: Ross' barking vocals sound meaner than ever, the guitar's distortion is a bit more chubby today but fits well with the fatter version of the bass and drums... everything's set up for success.
 
And the songs are exactly what I was expecting: smartly built freak punk gems with just enough musicianship to make the whole thing fascinating but not pretentious or boring for a sec. There is Who? whose hardcore drumbeats and guitar riffs would make Mike Pence pogo at a Christmas mass, there is the sad and supplicant Blue & Red States that made my bedside lamp cry, there is the beautiful Police Injustice whose catchy rhythms would make Putin wear a BLM shirt and, at last, there is the closing eponymous track that draws as much from the hardcore songs of the A side as from something closer to 70s American rock or at least more mainstream popular rock music, and it works beautifully...
And that's exactly what Crisis Man are so good at, they're always where you don't expect them. Sure, the vocals are so specific to their identity that you couldn't go wrong with the merchandise, but as for the rest, Crisis Man is always out there somewhere, hiding in the corner, crawling underground or levitating deep in the storm, ready to take you by surprise with song structures that are never typically hardcore or typically punk or typically anything else really, they're just axe-molded spiky balls of energy that are mercilessly tossed into your fucking face...
I could go on and on for ever about this album, it's just beautiful from start to finish... that finish made of the last dying notes of organ layers fading into a void of distortion... until next time!
 
 
N,J'Oi!
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Crisis Man on Rien à Faire #33.
 
  


  
 

vendredi 13 mai 2022

Reflex

 

So Reflex (to not be mistaken with another hardcore band called Reflex, but from Germany) is a new band which seems to be based in Lille, France, but features four guys/girls coming from different parts of the country: David (formerly from Chicken's Call and Alarm and now in Maudit Dragon) is from Grenoble (close to the Alps), but the others hail from Lille, Brest and Lanvelec (north Brittany) and are/were parts of some loud punk acts you may have heard of like Litovsk, Kronstadt and Utopie.
Ok this being said let's jump to the music!
 
 
  If you're familiar with recent French hardcore punk you probably know that Lille got a great history of hardcore bands (with other French cities like Brest, Nantes, Paris and others...) and if you've heard of Gutter, Années Zéro, Don't Need You and Build Me A Bomb Records you know what I'm talking about.
Obviously Reflex is more influenced by the slightly melodic side (like on Red Sun for example) of the American Youth Crew scene than the previously mentioned bands, I'm thinking of Gorilla Biscuits (not the vocals though) but also of Uniform Choice and the early No For An Answer releases for example. But don't get me wrong Reflex (despite its artwork that can be misleading) is not really a Youth Crew band (no super loud gang vocals here for instance) even if the closest band I can think of comes from the REACT Records stable: Rearranged, from Moscow, whose 2011 EP was successfully mixing early DC influences with a Youth Crew attitude (I listen to a lot less of this kind of hardcore now than I did back in the days, so my references may seem a little out of date). So yes that the kind of mix between different hardcore scenes Reflex is doing (well).
 
Anyway, it's fast, it's full of energy, there're plenty of mosh parts that will delight all the hardcore maniacs in sweatpants who jump around like Russian gymnasts and the recording sounds pretty good so yes it's a "putain de" good demo! 
Can't wait to see them live ASAP!
 
 
N,J'Oi! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Reflex on Rien à Faire #34.
 
  

 
 

lundi 9 mai 2022

Split System

 


Split System (at last, a band that fully assumes its admiration for cooling technologies) hail from the great city of Melbourne, Australia, and sorry bu yes, if you're into catchy rock'n roll, here's another Aussie band you won't be able to resist!
This new five-piece is made of some of the usual suspects from the super active Melbourne/Geelong scene, they've been seen in various rock'n roll acts bearing names like Stiff Richards, Jackson Reid Briggs & The Heaters, Speed Week, The Black Heart Death Cult, No Zu and The Grand Rapids. According to the legend (and their bandcamp page) they "had only one jam together before lockdowns kicked in again in Melbourne in 2021. Five songs were written and with rehearsals and gigs on the back foot, once again, the only option was to record remotely via email. Everyone recorded their parts at home and Split System's self titled EP was recorded." 
Yes the music is still not done with lockdown stories!
 
 

 Released earlier this year on Legless Records, this four-track EP was made with one simple purpose only: give birth to catchy tunes and make your fat ass boogie boogie on the beach, honey!



Described as garage punk or punk'n roll, this EP is a perfect combination of the old school sound of the catchiest late 70s punk / KBD / power pop bands (The Buzzcocks?, The Heartbreakers?, The Lurkers?) and the sunny vibes of that good ol' australian rock'n roll/punk (shall I mention the almighty Psycho Surgeons?). Ok let's make it simple, take the Anxious Pleasers, Amyl And The Sniffers, Priors, Trash Ferraris and, of course, Stiff Richards, just blend the whole thing together, add a couple of Hawaiians shirts, a tablespoon of nostalgia for the 70s and a fat slice of Aussie laid-back attitude: that's it, bottoms up!
Mixed and mastered by Mikey Young from Total Control and Eddy Current Suppression Ring (like almost every rock'n roll record coming out the state of Victoria right?), this EP is going to hook you right away, don't fight it! Just enjoy that silly and easy rock'n roll fun, this is exactly what you need right now! Yes it does sound a lot like Stiff Richards and hundreds of "rock'n punk'n roll" bands you've heard before but who's complaining?




Frankly for a guy like me who tends to dive heart and soul into increasingly fast and aggressive types of music, coming back from time to time to a band like Split System is a real delight, and I can't encourage you enough to do the same.

 
 
N,J'Oi!
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Split System on Rien à Faire #33.
 
  
 
 

jeudi 5 mai 2022

Prowler

 

picture by Chon

A short one today about the demo of this new hardcore band hailing from Denver, Colorado.
It looks like the new Denver hardcore scene got something for the super brutal, heavy and extremely angry stomping kind of hardcore (something in the air maybe). If you've heard of James Trejo you may know he is behind some of the sickest releases on Youth Attack Record (Cadaver Dog, Life Support, Snarling Hate to name only a few) and he's from Denver so it didn't come as a surprise when I learned that a proper scene for that kind of sound was on the rise there.
 
 And Gordon, the singer of Prowler, is very much involved in this scene, he's the drummer for Direct Threat, P.S.Y.W.A.R and Raw Breed but also sings in The Consequence (in which James Trejo plays the bass by the way), so yes I think it's safe to say that Gordon is into brutal shit. To be honest, I don't listen to that kind of stuff too much but it reminds me of the energy and heavy anger of the first Boston Strangler LP (Gordon's T-shirt on the above photo!), of No Tolerance, of Violent Reaction from the UK, and of all those bands influenced by the heavy side of the Boston SxE hardcore scene (where at least one band member must have his head shaved!). Anyway I think you got the point now.
 
 
 

 Super rad cover artwork by Rory O'Neill right?
The demo was released on tape (and on bandcamp of course) by Iron Lung a few weeks ago and I was immediately hooked by the kind of furious noise these guys are making.



With five songs out six below the one minute mark, Prowler don't really slow down compared to the bands mentioned before so you got what you except: fast in-your-face hardcore punk, but with a slightly "less aggressive" vibe! Saying that they play a less brutal kind of hardcore than Direct Threat for example would probably be a lie even if it's clear that the influences are clearly different. Where Direct Threat is clearly showing an Oi!-influenced and heavy stomping side (like faster versions of Negative Approach, 86 Mentality or more recently Buggy and Heavy Discipline), Prowler got a slightly lighter (and faster) sound and, most of all, show clear influences of early and pre-Youth Crew hardcore bands from NYC.
 So yes, as mentioned on the bandcamp page, classic names immediately come to mind, names like Youth Of Today, Abused or Antidote (yeah, pretty flattering references), and I'm definitely more into that shit than into the stomping kind.

But here's the main news: this demo totally rips!
Whereas a band like Thought Control clearly takes from the Antidote side of New York Hardcore, Prowler mixes perfectly the early Youth Crew influences (the gang vocals etc...) with some very fast and pummelling drum beats (the drummer's a killer!), catchy bass lines, crushing mosh parts and sharp riffs. And most of all you don't feel like you're listening to the same old hardcore song over and over again, each track got its own distinctive structure and is a total killer!
As a debut release this tape's classified as a demo but, honestly, the whole thing sounds so good it deserves a vinyl release straight away.  
  A full length in a few months maybe?
 
 
 
 
N,J'Oi!
 



You can listen to Prowler on Rien à Faire #34.