Showing posts with label Pop Punk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pop Punk. Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2017

Hüsker Dü: Candy Apple Grey (Warner Brothers/1986)



Hüsker Dü's fifth album Candy Apple Grey is their major-label debut for Warner Brothers. The band released three albums and an EP for legendary indie SST signing a lucrative deal with Warners in 1985. There isn't anything on the album that screams sell-out; it was produced by Grant Hart and Bob Mould, recorded in Minneapolis, and contains the same approach as Flip Your Wig does.

The album starts off with the Mould scream-fest of “Crystal” which clearly indicates the band isn't going soft just because their sudden major-label status. The albums two singles are both written by Hart and they are absolute classics; “Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely” is a perfect kiss-off pop song and even charted at number 96 on the UK singles chart. It was later covered by Green Day and is featured in the series Halt And Catch Fire and the film Adventureland. “Sorry Somehow” features mournful minor-key organ and a mid-tempo arrangement.



“I Don't Know For Sure” sounds like Mould was trying to rewrite “Makes No Sense At All” and Hart's “Dead Set On Destruction” doesn't really go anywhere memorable. “Eiffel Tower High” references getting high and going to the movies and “All This I've Done For You” is a perfect slice of Du PopPunk. The album features three acoustic classics;“Hardly Getting Over It” which deals with death in a mature, thoughtful way, “No Promise Have I Made” a stately piano piece that is a nice lyrical example of what makes Grant Hart such a special songwriter and “Too Far Down” is a Mould song that is almost a blueprint for his solo work. All three work well within the cold, Wintery-feel that pervades the album as a whole.

The album was well-recieved at the time by the mainstream music press but was generally snubbed by the bands hardcore following. It charted at a dismal 140 in the Billboard Top 200. It is generally overlooked after the acknowledged classic trilogy of Zen Arcade, New Day Rising and Flip Your Wig.
It certainly deserves wider-currency.

Here's the video review:

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Rancid, Dropkick Murphys, Bouncing Souls & Jake Burns (Stiff Little Fingers) at Coney Island Ford Ampitheater, Brooklyn, NY (9/6/2017)


Rancid are currently on their From Boston To Berkeley tour in support of their Trouble Maker album. Joining them on tour are the Dropkick Murphys, Bouncing Souls and Jake Burns of Stiff Little Fingers. I attended the New York show at Ford Amphitheater on Coney Island.

The venue was literally right alongside the boardwalk, which is a stones-throw from the ocean. It was a very nice location for such a place and the it was a beautiful day. The venue is basically a large, round tent. The acoustics of the show were completely abysmal. It was the wrong venue for a punk show in general; in my opinion punk rock shows need to be in small, acoustic-sympathetic bar/clubs. The show was still loud, it just sounded terrible.

I missed Jake Burns' set entirely, which is a shame seeing that he's something of a legend himself, having fronted the great Stiff Little Fingers. Perhaps Ireland's first proper punk band. We arrived about 30 minutes after showtime (which was 6 PM sharp, apparently) and the Bouncing Souls were halfway through their set. They were probably my favorite band of the evening. Such classics as "Gone", "Kids and Heroes" and "True Believers" were all performed with much youthful enthusiasm. I really wish I'd caught their entire set.

Dropkick Murphys were up next. Despite being a fine live act, their performance felt a bit hollow. I really didn't feel too much of a connection with their music at all. Maybe I've heard "I'm Shipping Up To Boston" in one too many commercials. Also, poor sound marred any potential chance of any true enjoyment.

Headliners Rancid took the stage with definite purpose. Their newest album Troublemaker is basically more of the same old Rancid, for better or worse. The band was tight with Tim Armstrong and Lars Frederiksen in fine form. Their twenty-song set included a whopping eight tracks from their platinum break-through album ...And Out Come The Wolves (including the classic singles  "Ruby Soho", "Time Bomb" and "Roots Radicals"). "Nihilism", "Radio" and "Salvation" from Let's Go also got proper airings. As did a few from their newest album, including the single "Ghost Of A Chance".

The absolute highlight of the evening was Rancid & Dropkick Murphys performing an encore four-song set of "Take 'Em All" by Cock Sparrer, "Cretin Hop" by The Ramones, "Folsom Prison Blues" by Johnny Cash and "If The Kids Are United" by Sham 69.


Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Redd Kross: Bowery Ballroom, New York, NY 5/4/2017: Beneath The Valley Of The Teen Babes From Monsanto Tour

Hawthorne California's Redd Kross have been on tour this Spring, celebrating the reissue of their classic Teen Babes From Monsanto album. The band is one of the key figures from the late 70's LA punk scene (their first show was opening up for a Keith Morris-fronted Black Flag) who later morphed into a trashy, glammy, power pop, alt-rock outfit. After returning after a nearly ten-year hiatus with their Researching The Blues album in 2012, Kross have been going strong ever since.


The band graced Bowery Ballroom last week and put on an enthusiastic, ninety-minute, twenty-song set. The band had a new drummer (Roy McDonald was unavailable for the tour) in the form of Melvins drummer Dale Crover and touring lead guitarist Jason Shapiro (Robert Hecker, is a teacher and can't just up and tour anymore). The McDonald brothers, Jeff and Steve had a great on-stage rapport, with Steve providing a lot of funny anecdotes. The band were very well-rehearsed (except for one song, "It Won't Be Long", where there was a discrepancy over key and necessitated a few false starts).



The band played plenty of their loved singles; "Switchblade Sister", "Annie's Gone", "Jimmy's Fantasy" and "Lady In The Front Row". Plus a few deeper cuts; "Annette's Got The Hits", "Peach Kelli Pop" and "Neurotica". But the real treat was the band performing the entire Teen Babes all-covers album (ahem, "Rock And Roll Retrospective") in its' seven-song entirety (it's a short album). Hearing them perform "Ann" by The Stooges, "Saviour Machine" by David Bowie and "Citadel" by The Rolling Stones was a very nice treat for hardcore-fans, of which I am one.

They put on a great show with a very-well considered setlist. If you have to opportunity to see the band, by all means do.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Buzzcocks: Irving Plaza, New York, NY (10/1/2016)



Manchester (Bolton), England's The Buzzcocks have been touring to celebrate the band's 40 anniversary. The band played Irving Plaza earlier this month, and by and large the show was a success. Given the longevity of the band (read: age) I wasn't expecting them to be so full of natural intensity. However the band gave credible, excellent readings of the majority of all the classics. The sound, as it generally always is at Irving Plaza was wonderful. It's still my favorite venue for rock shows in Manhattan.

Just a few songs in, it was crystal clear as to why they're the acknowledged pioneers of Pop Punk. The busy yet efficient drums parts, decidedly individual yet lovelorn lyrics, thoroughly melodic basslines, the crystalline crunch of the guitars and the harmony vocals of leaders Steve Diggle and Pete Shelley. Their brand of  Ramones wall of guitars with their own romantic concerns spawned the likes of The Descendants, Hüsker Dü, Green Day and Blink 182. 

The band performed a twenty-one song set in just over ninety-minutes. The classics "What Do I Get?", "I Don't Mind", "Ever Fallen In Love", "Promises", "Love You More", "Autonomy" and "Orgasm Addict" were all performed and sung-along-to-loudly by the crowd (whose ages seem to range from teenage to retiree). My favorite songs of the evening were "You Say You Don't Love Me", "Why She's A Girl From The Chainstore" and the sublime "Harmony In My Head". The best performance was the bands' trance-y "Moving Away From The Pulsebeat".

A great show from a legendary band. 


Wednesday, September 28, 2016

The Donnas: Spend The Night (Atlantic/2002)



Palo Alto, California's The Donnas started out as a fast pop punk outfit on Lookout! Records but transitioned into a Millennial female hard rock answer to Kiss, The Ramones and The Runaways. The bands'  fifth album Spend The Night, was also their most successful charting at # 62 on Billboards Top 200 chart. The Donnas delight in deliciously trashy fun with kick-filled songs about hooking-up with randos, getting high on the pot marijuana, drinking beer  - they actually reference Bud Dry on one song -  (FYI Bud Dry was the beer equivalent of Mötley Crüe) - and general rock and roll partying.

Guitarist Allison Robertson channels Ace Frehley, Keith Richards and Angus Young with relative ease and singer Brett Anderson is always convincing in her convictions.



Highlight include "Take Me To The Backseat", "It's On The Rocks", "Pass It Around" and "You Wanna Get Me High". Spend The Night also contains the bands two biggest hits; "Take It Off" which charted at # 17 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks and #31 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. "Who Invited You" charted on Billboards Hot Singles Sales chart. Both songs have been featured in a bunch of movies and television shows. "Too Bad About Your Girl" while never a commercially released single, had a promo video that received a ton of airplay on MTV at the time. The track "Big Rig" is a vinyl-only exclusive track.

The cover art features the girls ready to Spend The Night in a wood-paneled bedroom filled with all manner of 80's artifacts; Atari 2600 cartridges, a Colecovision game system, 8-Tracks cartridges on a CRT old-school monitor and Freddy Kruger are also present for the slumber party.

The album is unpretentious, trashy rock n roll fun.

Here's The Video Review:



Thursday, September 1, 2016

Redd Kross: Hot Issue (Redd Kross Fashion Records/2016)



Hawthorne, California's Redd Kross were inactive for inactive for nearly ten years. After the band's tour for 1997's Show World, they quietly went on hiatus. Lead guitarist Eddie Kurdziel passed away of a heroin overdose in 1999. Jeff McDonald formed Ze Malibu Kids and Steve McDonald for the Steve McDonald Group. In 2006 the band formally reunited with classic Neurotica-era members Roy McDonald (no relation) and Robert Hecker. This band went on to record the critically acclaimed Researching The Blues album on Merge Records in 2012.

Throughout all of this activity/inactivity the band recorded a wealth of material. Some of which have included on Hot Issue, which is a self-released album in a limited edition of 500 copies. It comes in magazine-styled artwork and includes a download code.

Taking tracks that have been both previously released elsewhere and unreleased from various time periods and compiling them. The results could have been pretty scatter-shot, however the results make for a surprisingly cohesive listen.




“Switchblade Sister” was a single released in the UK, Spain and Canada in the Summer of 1993. By all rights, it probably should have been included on the band's Phaseshifter album, released that September. Roger Joseph Manning of Jellyfish co-produces and appears on “Born To Love You” (which was a free MP3 download in the early 2000's) and “It's A Scream” which appeared in the horror-spoof Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday The Thirteenth. “Starlust” appeared on the Jabberjaw compilation album. “Puss N Boots”, the New York Dolls cover, is from the 1981 Hell Comes To Your House comp, when the band was still known as Red Cross. “That Girl” originally appeared as the B-Side to the “Mess Around” single. “Motorboat” is a Kim Fowley cover that was on the SMG This Is Not A Revolution...This Is A Mass Awakening! EP. “Don't Take Your Baby Downtown” is the original version of “Stay Away From Downtown”.


If you're a fan of the Kross and can find it, by all means pick it up.  

Here's The Video Review:



Thanks to: Roger Joseph Manning Jr. Atomic Pop Monkey and Redd Kross,

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Redd Kross: Three Ten-Inch EP's (1993, 1993, 1994).



2,500 Redd Kross Fans Can't Be Wrong (Sympathy For The Record Industry/1993)
Lady In The Front Row (This Way Up/1993)
Visionary (This Way Up/1994)

After the commercial failure of Third Eye to turn Redd Kross into a houshold name, the band left Atlantic Records and released a few UK-only indie singles. Super Sunny Christmas was released in late 1991 in Australia on Inspid Vinyl, Trance was released in the Spring of 1992 on Seminal Twang in the UK and Switchblade Sister was released in Summer of 1993 on This Way Up Records in the UK and in Canada. 

Sympathy For The Record Industry collected various tracks from those releases for the six-song ten-inch” vinyl release of 2,500 Redd Kross Fans Can’t Be Wrong (a spoof on Elvis Presley's 50 Million Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong). Highlights include the early 70's glammy “Switchblade Sister” (which should have appeared on their then-new album Phaseshifter), the glam/grunge rave-up“Trance” and its' B-Side “Byrds & Fleas” co-written bv Jeff McDonald and future-wife and Go-Go Charlotte Caffey.



Next we have the Lady In The Front Row ten-inch single from 1993 on This Way Up Records. The title track appeared on their Phaseshifter album and is a slice power pop perfection. A re-recording of “Standing In Front Of Poseur” from their self-titled 1980 debut EP. Also are a cover of The Kinks' “Fancy” and PJ Harvey's “Oh My Lover”.

Lastly we have the Visionary single from 1994 (also on This Way Up). The title track, again from Phaseshifter has a metaly riff and has big harmony vocals from the McDonald brothers. The B-sides are cover of The Beatles “It Won't Be Long” as performed by Queen and a live acoustic version of “Visionary”.




These are nice little unique starting places for the uninitiated, granted there are better places to investigate as to who Redd Kross are. However for the vinyl fanatic these three ten-inches (the only three released by the band) are fine additions to any power-pop, proto-grunge, glam pop fans collection. Or just check out Neurotica, Researching The Blues or Third Eye.

Here's The Video Review: