samedi 13 février 2021

Punk Rock Jesus

 

You may be surprised but I am going to try something a bit different today and leave music for a sec to get into graphic novels. It's still punk rock related of course as it's the main topic of this page but I feel like starting to write about other punk related formats (like books, movies or whatever). A bit a diversity you know.
Anyway I'm the one in charge here so I can do whatever the FUCK I want!
 

 Punk Rock Jesus is not exactly a recently released graphic novel as it was first published in 2012. I read it a couple of times back then and enjoyed it but was not so enthusiast (frankly I don't understand why now), I just found it entertaining you know, nothing more. For some reasons I found myself in a comic book shop a few weeks ago and while I was cruising through piles of lame super hero stuff I noticed this new edition and decided to purchase it (also to prove to the super unpleasant geeky lady at the counter that I was actually going to buy something and not rob her). 
Anyway I was completely seduced this time... so here we go!
 

 Sean Murphy is a comic book / graphic novel artist which vivid, but old school, graphic style I find very appealing (I am extremely picky when it comes to illustration and tend to have "old school" graphic tastes). His drawings show a great sense for details, some masterful composition skills but also an impressive ability to construct fluid and complex movements in grandiose action scenes whose staging and violence owe much to action cinema. 
In a nutshell he is one of the best artist to "recently" come out from the comic book world in my opinion.
 

 Sean worked with some of the most famous writers in the business: Scott Snyder on the very enjoyable Abyss-inspired The Wake (which tends to lose itself a bit in the second part), Mark Millar on Chrononauts (an enjoyable but not really original story about a time travel agency) and Rick Remender on the mind-blowing Tokyo Ghost (maybe some of Sean's best work mixed with a great, but a bit too complicated, sci-fi story in some kind of dystopian / post-apocalyptic future).
 
But Sean also works alone and writes his own material. After his various successes he was finally entrusted with a work of very large audience with two Batman stories, the recent Batman: White Knight and Batman: Curse of The White Knight, which illustrations are once again breathtaking but the scenario, much too ambitious, goes unfortunately all over the place and makes the reading quite difficult. 


But let's come back to Punk Rock Jesus: so first of all this is not a story about punk rock at all, punk rock is here only to underline the rebellious character of the divine child, not as a wide and complex cultural and musical movement.
 
But rather have a look at the story pitch: 
In a dystopian 2019 a TV reality-show organizes the birth of a clone of Jesus Christ (from a virgin teenage mother and some DNA collected on the Holy Shroud). The clone then lives on an island specially designed for the show and his whole life is filmed as he grows ups. Of course it turns everybody crazy, especially the American Christians who see in his birth the second coming and try everything to "free the son of god". But things don't go exactly the way the show producer planned them and Chris (great name for a Jesus' clone), now a teenager, joins a punk rock band and starts a "war" against all the religions of the Book...

Pretty cool idea uh?


Yes it's the kind of crazy sci-fi idea Mr. Philip K.Dick could have had in a lucid moment.

But what's interesting here is that Sean Murphy comes from a religious family and was, as he explains himself really well at the end of the book, a devout Christian until recently. So this is not your usual left-wing anti-religion pamphlet, it's a bit more subtle and a lot of other topics are also addressed.
Let's go quickly through some of them one by one.


PUNK ROCK

As I was saying before, this is not a book about Punk Rock. Chris is introduced to punk rock by rummaging through Thomas' old records (Thomas is Chris' bodyguard), in which he finds his own counter-education and, in particular, information about all the pain and catastrophes triggered by religious beliefs.
He quickly sees in this outdated form of music (as described by the media in the book) the perfect answer to his anger against what the entertainment industry and religion have made of him (a money machine and an idolized god).
He then joins The Flak Jackets (an imaginary punk band) as soon he has the chance and uses all his time and energy to the fight against everything that made him what he is and represents now.
 
 
The energy and teenage rebellious side of the punk movement are all there all right and it's probably what matters the most, even if the "punk rock" side of the story only appears at the end (almost) of the book.
It's clear that Sean is not really familiar with Punk Rock, he proposes a soundtrack to the book which includes Marilyn Manson, The Bloody Hollies, Kavinsky, Groovie Ghoulies, Stiff Little Fingers and White Zombie... hum yes not so punk innit?
(good mark for SLF though!)

But it does not really matter anyway, the scenario is kind of punk, maybe the drawings are quite of punk sometimes as well and, most of all, Jesus is bloody punk!


RELIGION

As I wrote before, Sean Murphy has got a religious background and, even if the book is not accommodating to religion, it definitely played a role in the way the story was written.
I guess that his personal rejection of religion can be seen in the evolution of the Jesus's clone character, in his opening to more scientists arguments, to a, let's say, more rational point of view... but the character of Thomas is interesting as well because, as a devout Christian, he clings to his faith in a desperate way so that he can continue to live with his violent past, religion is salvation for him. 
But let's have a closer look!


On top of Chris' role in the story (after all he is supposed to be a " copy" of one of the most famous human being of all time), religion is seen from several different perspectives:
First through the role of extremists, fanatics, who are violently opposed to the use of the clone of the prophet for entertainment purposes and then, to the then "false" prophet himself in his "crusade" against religions. They are drawn as simple minded, diehards, violent and dangerous characters whose judgment is solely based on blind faith. It's the NAC (the New American Christians) lead by Daisy Nelson who, all along the story will put Chris, his family and his friends in danger with her regular attacks against the show. But fanatics are not only Christians here as it's a Muslim terrorist group which will lead the final and deadliest attack against the Flak Jackets.

Second through Thomas, Chris' bodyguard, who used to fight in the IRA and got a lot of blood on his hands, blood of innocent children in particular, and bears to live with it only thanks to a promise he made once, after his arrest, to an apparition of the virgin Mary: he will not kill anymore. Promise he tries to keep by all means even if his job puts him in difficult situations. He will finally have to break it to save his friend Chris, who he really believes to be Jesus.
For Thomas religion is a life jacket, a light in the night, the only way to salvation, a very different path from the one advocated by the NAC.

Third through weird mystic apparitions (the virgin Mary, an angel...) which are not shown as fully real, but real enough to the ones who saw them to have deep consequences on their behaviours. Like with Thomas' character it's a way for Sean to acknowledge the importance mysticism can have for some, including him probably.
 

 

THE ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY

The main (and only) goal of Jesus Christ's second birth is to turn his life into a giant reality show, which means money of course. The idea of a life-long TV show is actually not far from The Truman Show scenario, except that this time everybody knows what's happening.
OPHIS is the entertainment company behind it all and Slate (the boss) embodies the unscrupulous businessman, without morals or respect for anything, whose only goal is to enrich his shareholders thanks to the divine goose that lays the golden eggs.
 

 The entertainment age in which we are living is actually extremely close to the one described by Sean, which I find particularly accurate and amusing, but also extremely frightening. 
Everything is a show! Images and sound first! Let the camera roll!
It's easy to see here another pinnacle of The Society of The Spectacle, described by Guy Debord, which has become so real during the last few years :
"All that once was directly lived has become mere representation."
 
 
 

 ARMED POLITICAL ACTION

 All along the book the main story is interrupted with regular flashbacks from Thomas' childhood, teenage years and adult years in Northern Ireland. The very first pages are actually dedicated to the murder of his parents and his rescue by his uncle, who will take care of him but will also turn him into one of the most dangerous IRA fighter.
A few pages later we understand that Thomas now rejects completely his past political involvement and even worked with the British army against his former comrades, trying to fight an unbearable feeling of guiltiness after the death of children (among others) during one of the IRA operation he was taking part in.

Armed struggle dilemma is an old and complicated subject, frequently raised in various books and films (for example you should check out The Wind that Shakes the Barley or Night Moves or Army Of Shadows which describe three totally different contexts), which main question would be:
 How far are you willing to go for your cause?
 
 
I am not a naive, I understand very well that violence is one of the most basic mean of human interaction and therefore is, and will always be, everywhere, even if in our modern developed world actual violence has mostly be turned into "a possibility of violence". Politics (national and international), economy etc... are based on rapports de force (power relations = possibility of violence) and I think there isn't much that can be done about it.
Anyway we know that mainstream history has different ways of considering armed political struggle depending on which side the winner (or the more powerful) is and the notion of terrorism is therefore extremely subjective. The IRA was considered to be a terrorist group by the British, not by many Irish, same idea with the Palestinians, the resistance against the Nazis or the soviet union etc...
So in some cases killing people for a cause is ok and in other cases it is not?
Exactly because it all depends on the cause in the end.
Did the RAF's, Brigate Rosse's, Narodnaya Volya's or Action Directe's, causes make sense enough to justify murders? When did the IRA's cause stop making sense enough to stop justifying it ? The cause changed, evolved, the IRA as well, in several organizations actually which main goals seemed to drift further and further from reality.
 
But some may have the same cause/goal but different opinions about the means to be used, the main example would be Martin Luther King, Malcom X and the Black Panthers in the US in the 60s... (many books and movies about it as well).

So yes it's a very complicated matter and yes I am writing about a comic book here so it would be ridiculous to expect a deep and thorough study of the subject.


So not much is said about Thomas' actual cause here, just that after a downpour of violence and murders he finally decided to redeem his sins.
I can understand that but I also feel that, by fear of getting swallowed into a cyclone of complex political issues, an important part of the political involvement of Thomas is overlooked and the IRA is only presented as a violent group, period, which makes the story lose a bit of its depth.


CLIMATE CHANGE

 Punk Rock Jesus was created during a long period of time, probably more than ten years, before being finally published in 2012, so the dystopian 2019/2020 years looked like a fairly far deadline at the time and and Sean decided to underline the importance that the consequences of climate change would have then.
So it's not a real topic of the book, but it's there, everywhere, in the background (which is a smart way to softly include the matter in a "similar but worse" society description).
 

 First it's the main motivation behind the scientific involvement of the "mother" of the cloning technology which will make the second birth of the prophet possible: "make money to develop an algae which will eventually save humanity".
Which brings us to another classic dilemma that will torment Dr. Sarah Epstein all along:
Can a small bad action be justified by a resulting bigger good action ?  
What are we ready to sacrifice for the greater good ?
(questions that connect the characters of Thomas and of the doctor)  


And second the flooding of some parts of NYC (direct and very real consequence of global warming) where now lives the punk/misfits community which will become Chris' second family.



To conclude I would say that Punk Rock Jesus is a beautifully illustrated comic book, which smartly mastered multi-levels story doesn't however deprive itself of a few enjoyable "punk" overflows. 
It's the kind of book which makes you want to read more, to look for dystopian sci-fi stories, to understand what's behind the IRA struggle... in one word which makes you curious, and curiosity is vital to intelligence...
This book flies well above the average comic book in my opinion.  

I can nevertheless regret some shortcuts and lack of depth at times, which fortunately do not diminish the pleasure of reading. 
I have read most of Sean's comics and I can also regret a bit the way his characters look quite similar from one story to another, but I'm being picky.

No the main question is:
Why didn't anyone add some colour to it ???????
 
 

mercredi 10 février 2021

Headlice

 

picture by Finlay
 
 
Headlice is a very new band from Brisbane, Australia, that you're going to hear about more and more I'm sure!
They're friends with The Chats, they've just released a 7" on Bargain Bin Records (a sunshine coast label releasing, among others, The Chat's records), they are not without humour and well... that's roughly all I know! 


beautiful and disgusting art by Russell Taysom

Headlice play fast, simple, super energetic and straightforward punk with synth (more accurate in this case than synth-punk in my humble opinion) which I'm sure will delight both young and old lovers of thrills and itchy hair.
 The lyrics are fun and silly, they're young and full of energy, it all sounds like a party!
Think Ausmuteants on speed / Alien Nosejob on weed!
And yes... it's super good! 
  
  Headlice is one of these bands which take the Rock'n Roll game from the fun side, focusing on high energy live shows made of catchy sing-along chorus (H.E.A.D.L.I.C.E!!), a no-fucks-given attitude and (sometimes) costumed performances.
In the vein of The Spits (heir of a degenerate union between The Toy Dolls and the Ramones), or the recent Bipolar, this is all silliness and fun which only goal is to turn every concert place into a giant regressive rock'n roll party; putting musical "complexity" (whatever it could mean for a punk band) to one side and giving priority to explosive waves of energy.
These bands are usually brilliant stage performers (at least when stages were used for something else than storing dust) and from what I read here and there and fell in their tracks... there is no doubt Headlice is too! 
So let's pray and get drunk (or the other way for that matters) to see them on an European stage in the not-too-far future!  
 
  In a way it reminds me of The Rip-Offs (probably because of the masks/nylon) when they toured Europe after their 2007 reunion (even if I was disappointed with the show and still think their music is boring to be totally honest).

In a nutshell this EP is pure, highly enjoyable, silly punk rock at its best!
It's called Vol.1 so expect more very soon!

picture by Chloe Millroy
 
 
 
You can listen to Headlice on Rien à Faire #19.
 
 
 
 
 
  

dimanche 7 février 2021

Black Button

 

Shitty screenshot I took of the Kevin McCormick promo video for Black Button

  

Black Button is a quite new band from the very prolific Richmond, Virginia, a new band which has been around since 2019 or something. The band features members of, what some call, the "artier" bands of the Richmond punk scene: Slump, which I've always failed to properly describe (and to properly enjoy for that matters), and Teenage Cenobite which weird and trashy space-opera synth-punk definitely cruises outside the box.

 

 It all starts with this 2019 demo tape and its cool c
over art by Ricardo Vicente Jose Ruiz.
  I would describe this demo as a cool mix between the Soundgarden-influenced heavy punk (did I hear grunge?) of Slump and a more Richmond-made hardcore punk sound, the lot reminding me a bit of what Give was trying to do in DC a few years ago (without much success in my opinion though).
 
 
 
Recorded on a 8-track cassette recorder, it sounds like a demo all right but with a good enough quality to make it fairly enjoyable (which is far from being the case of every punk demos). The songs are mostly built as sequences of fast punk parts and some slower parts on which the guitarist(s) can indulge themselves to play with their fingers along the fretboard. I love the fast parts, I am a bit hesitant about the slow ones though (too much guitar solo is a crime!) but overall it's all quite good to be honest. 
 
 
The Untitled middle track gives a cool interlude in the vein of 70s psych rock with a long speech, before taking us back to business with the slow, but good, No One To Blame and the fast, and very punk (but too much guitar!), Bring The War Home.

So it's a pretty cool demo which, despite a too pronounced taste for annoying guitar parts, managed to draw my attention.
 


But let's get to what motivates this short post: the new I Want To Be In Control EP, out on 11pm Records (the worthy successor of Grave Mistake and No Way Records in Richmond), which was released on the very first day of this already "amazing" new year.

With only one song from the demo (Black Button, rerecorded as a shorter version), this 7-track EP is mostly new material, and there's no time for disappointment here. Starting with a Crass-inspired ironic speech about the American military industry (think Asylum), Black Button jumps back immediately after into the most hardcore part of their game with a powerful and uncluttered version of their eponymous song.
 


No time to rest as Star Spangled Tanner keeps hammering in our eardrums a mean and angry political hardcore punk, resting only for a few seconds with a spoken part recalling the first track, before finishing us off with a brutal thrill. And here comes the slower and heavier, but so angry, Casualties Of Progress, which develops some kind of enjoyable hatred groove before exploding in another nasty hardcore punk conclusion.
 


I want To Be In Control: Damn I love those song beginnings, when the angry singer harangues the captivated crowd to the background of a slow and heavy, but a bit weird, punk tune. Is there some late Black Flag around here ? And then comes Praying for Peace where the guitar manages to slowly build a jumpy tension around the vocals and stomping drums, taking us to the verge of a nervous breakdown, without falling into the "too much guitar" bias of the demo this time.
Joni Mitchell Birthday Song (is that really a tribute to Joni?) beautifully concludes this great EP with a mentally ill, super tensed, punk track which leaves all the needed space to the singer to "throw up" a whole bunch of screamed vocals.
 
To make it short: This EP is super good.
The band keeps the best of the demo, focussing more on their punk and hardcore influences (even anarcho-punk) and forgetting about the "I wanna play a lot of guitar" syndrome in order to deliver a balanced, diverse and super enjoyable hardcore punk EP which has already reached the very top of this beginning of the year releases.
Good job!
 
 
 
 
  You can listen to Black Button on Rien à Faire #19.
 
 

 

jeudi 4 février 2021

Thought Control

 

Thought Control started mid 2020 as the solo project of a punk / hardcore enthusiast from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, named John K who played in Bearings, plays in Dirt Queen and runs the new records label Electric Flesh with some of his bandmates. 
The project quickly turned into a proper band with members from the straight edge hardcore act The Diving Line and from the Revolution Summer-inspired melodic hardcore band Sunstroke (an exciting line-up which suggests the possibility of upcoming live shows). 
 
Shock to the System's ten tracks took shape in the physical world, late 2020, as a cassette out on Government Check Music and New Morality Zine.
All right, the boring introductions having been made, what do we have here finally?
 
 
Five tracks of fast, ripping, straight forward, super pissed-off hardcore punk! That's what we got here!
John didn't try to play it subtle or innovative, no no! pure ripping hardcore is purely and simply threw right in our faces: fast stomping drums, simple in-your-face guitar parts but most of all, super angry snarling vocals à la Ray Cappo! Yes indeed Youth Of Today, and many bands inspired by it (True Colors etc...), were the first things which came to my mind during the very first seconds of severe punching delivered by Thought Control. You know how important vocals are in punk and hardcore and John's managed to put soooo much intensity in it here, it's simply breathtaking! You remember the very first time you listened to Urban Waste's Police Brutality? I hope you do! Well there is a bit of that here! (wow that's a nice compliment ahah).
 
 
  Talking of classics maybe Antidote's Thou Shalt Not Kill EP is the best comparison for Thought Control, there is the same raw intensity, the same kind of rushed super-pissed off bursts of energy, the very same impression of witnessing a deluge of desperate violence from a man on the verge of sanity!
 
I really hope that the band that has come to life around this project will be able to keep ensuring such a deluge of unleashed savagery, actually I'm confident they will!
 
 A fantastic release!
 
 
And it looks like my wish is coming true, Not For The Weak Records has announced a 7" coming this spring! 
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Thought Control on Rien à Faire #19.
 
 

mardi 2 février 2021

CAMERA SILENS - PUNK The Story of Gilles Bertin (new documentary with english subtitles)

 


Gilles Bertin was the singer of CAMERA SILENS, probably the best band to come out of the French punk/oi! scene in the 80s.
In 1988, after one of the biggest armed robbery which ever took place in the south of France, he disappears.
28 years later, in 2016, he finally surrenders to the police.
 
This is his story related by French television in January 2021.


Pour la gloire!
RIP.
 
 
English subtitles by myself.
N,J'Oi! 
 
 
 
 
If you're old school and/or want to have the video with a better quality,
you can grab it HERE 
(French and English subtitles included).
 
 
 

lundi 1 février 2021

VA - Rien à Faire #19

 


First RAF compilation of 2021!
Still a lot of tracks from late 2020 releases but also the first 2021 killer punk tunes.
A lot of hardcore punk this time but not only, I try to keep it as good and diverse (in the limits of my very good taste of course) as possible.
 
 N,J'Oi!
 
 
  01 - Thought Control - Thought Control
02 - Hackjob - Friends
03 - Pensioner - I Don't Sweat
04 - Futurat - во сне (vo sne)
05 - Black Button - Casualties of Progress
06 - Hüstler - Who's Your God
07 - Headlice - Auto-Erotic Asphyxion
08 - Preening - You Gave It Away
09 - Yard Act - Dark Days
10 - Imposition Man - Resilience
11 - Select Sex - Signals Turning Sour
12 - Lumpen - Dominan Tu Futuro
13 - ISS - Spikes
14 - Ero Guro - High Life
15 - Wails - Among Dogs
16 - Klämp - An Orb
17 - MelmACHello - Je laisse surgir
 
 
And you can of course listen to all past shows on Mixcloud!
 
Download the full compilation HERE