Monday, January 27, 2020

RIP, Reed Mullin of Corrosion of Conformity

Andy with Woody, left, and Reed, right, of Corrosion of Conformity in 2012 in Seattle. (Cat Rose photo)


By Andy

RIP old friend, Reed Mullin. You called me on the phone out of the blue in 1983 to discuss COC and No Labels, then stayed at my house in Redondo Beach with COC numerous times, and we shared many good conversations and laughs over the years. I could always count on an "Ange!!!" when I arrived or pointing me out in the crowd and announcing that I was there during shows. I'm so glad we had dinner together a few years ago in Seattle and caught up with each other's lives. I miss you :(

Here's an excerpt from my interview with Reed in 2012 --- kinda sums him up.

--Just seeing you guys doing this, and watching you guys all these years, you guys make me happy.

It's funny you say that-- the last couple batch of shows we did with Clutch, it was almost every night I had somebody, some kid, some person who maybe hadn't seen us before, say 'You are the happiest drummer I've ever seen... I mean, you're intense, you're playing hard, but you seem so happy, what's going on up there?'

Reed's masterful musicianship, vivacious personality and friendship elevated us all. He made you feel like you were part of something special. A piece of him will live on with us, always.




Cat Rose photo, 2012 in Seattle.



Andy photo, 1984 in Hollywood.



Cat Rose photo, 2011 at the Maryland Deathfest.











Saturday, January 25, 2020

Hot Water Music unleashes 'No Division' in Seattle

Hot Water Music in Seattle. (All Cat Rose photos)



A palpable fervor filled the air, even before the first chord rang out.

People were eager to let their voices roar in tandem with the guys in Hot Water Music, who were celebrating their 25th anniversary by ripping through "No Division" in full on Jan. 17 at the Crocodile in Seattle. (They played "Caution" in its entirety the night before.)

When the floodgates were blasted open and the prodigious musicianship and meaningful songs were unleashed on the crowd, there was no going back.

"Live your heart and never follow!"

As the crowd settled in tight, the intensity heightened as each song sprung forth and people could be seen nodding their heads and lightly pounding their chests while singing along. If you knew the songs by heart, you were right at home and surely exited the venue even more enlightened to the core than ever.

"We'll find our own way home. And sing out every song we know. No one can keep us down."

Broadway Calls and the always reliable Heiress kicked things off and set the stage perfectly for Hot Water Music's engaging set, which also featured 10 additional songs from their vast catalogue.

Here's Cat Rose's photos from the night:




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Sunday, January 12, 2020

Archers of Loaf emerges for 2020 action / Interview

Matt Gentling at the Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin in 2015. (Andy photo)


By Andy

When you settle in for an Archers of Loaf listening session, be prepared for the push and pull in myriad directions. You gotta work for it, stick with it, hang in there. Parts will come from out of nowhere, leaving your head shaking. In the end, you might be a bit overwhelmed, but you'll be stoked that you conquered the challenges that the band splayed forth. Consider yourself a part of Loaf nation.

"There's a lot going on," bassist Matt Gentling told me on a Sunday afternoon in mid-December 2019 over the phone from his home in Asheville, NC. "There's a good bit of dissonance in there and stuff. Structurally, I guess, it's pop music, but it's pretty obscured by all kinds of stuff going on and intentionally weird... We weren't trying to be pretentious or anything, it was just sort of, you get engaged and you wanna throw the kitchen sink at every idea."

In the live setting, well, they might as well haul out the refrigerator and stove to join the fray. It's an intense, uplifting and cathartic experience, for sure.

Loaf will rip open its vast catalogue of tunes for some live dates, beginning on Feb. 21 at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, NC, and Feb. 22 at the Terminal West in Atlanta, GA. Seven more dates are set to follow in March and April, including a hometown gig for Gentling and guitarist Eric Johnson on April 10 at The Grey Eagle in Asheville. Check www.archersofloaf.net for a complete set of dates.

The band, which began its attack on the music world in 1991 and served up its last studio album ("White Trash Heroes") in 1998, recently planted a video teaser on the Web announcing upcoming Loaf action in 2020.

Loaf's last gig was at the Hot Luck Fest in Austin, Texas, in 2019, and we here at There's Something Hard in There central last caught them live at the Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin in 2015. Our initial Loaf live experience took place at the Cactus Club in San Jose, CA, in 1994 and we were on board with them live a bunch more times in the '90s and at a reunion gig in 2011 in Seattle. Gentling sold us the band's 10-inch EP, "Archers of Loaf vs. The Greatest of All Time," at the Cactus gig and we still get a thrill out of listening to that gem.

Presently, Gentling lives in a house he built near a plant nursery on his folks' land in Asheville, the city where Johnson also resides. Guitarist/vocalist Eric Bachmann lives in Athens, GA, and drummer Mark Price calls Carrboro home.

"I jokingly call anything we've done after 1998, Rock n' Roll Fantasy Camp, where rich dudes will pay obscene amounts of money to go to a camp and pretend they play in rock bands or whatever," Gentling laughed. "Some of us are recirculating around the music world, like me and Eric (Bachmann). Eric Johnson, he's a lawyer now, and Mark's working at a bike company. We're trying to work the schedules around all that."

New songs have been recorded as well in Durham, NC, the band announced on its Web site early this month, and they'll hit the scene on Merge Records this year.

At the time of this interview, Gentling said they were discussing possible new tunes, noting that Bachmann and Johnson are always writing and the bassist occasionally works on song parts.

"We were a little cagey about it at first, 'cause we all wanted to be on the same page, first off, and second off, we didn't wanna try and emulate what we had before. We just wanted to write music without any expectations or anything. A lot of it will hinge on that," said Gentling, who also plays bass in Band of Horses and The Poles nowadays.


Eric Bachmann in Austin in 2015. (Andy photo)


Things went swimmingly when the band gathered in Asheville last month for a band meeting, dinner and then a rehearsal in a little studio in a couple's basement. 

"We found that the songs are coming together a little faster than we thought, so hopefully we can pull 'em off live. So far, so good. We've all been really happy and we're having a lot of fun being together," said Gentling, adding that it was a plus to meet face to face and get back in Loaf form. "Man, we always got along well and we like hanging around with each other, and that hasn't changed, which is really nice."

Gentling said that once he digs down and the muscle memory kicks in, the fun begins with the Loaf songs. When it comes to the setlist, they're carving an extra road into the journey by giving one song a full-on rearrangement treatment and snagging two songs from their catalogue that have never seen the light of day live and concocting new versions of those tunes.

"I don't wanna give (anything) away ... I'm not sure if I'm supposed to tell, trying to be mysterious about that," Gentling said about the trio of tunes.

And when the chords hit on stage, it's all systems go. Gentling especially lets loose with hair flying and body pulsating like a beast unleashed from its cage.

"A lot of it's just sort of nervous energy or just general pent-up energy and it's fun to expend it. It's a fun way to play for us. Part of it also is we have good chemistry between us, the four of us get along real well, we've  known each other for a long time and we all kind of originate from the same town, and so it's exciting to play together," he said.


Michael Lavine photo (From the There's Something Hard in There archive)


When Loaf began crafting its songs in the early days, Gentling admits that he couldn't wrap his head around just what they were hammering out in the practice room until a friend from another band he was in said that he dug the Loaf sound. It turns out that within those crappy amps being pushed to their limits housed a unique addition to the musical landscape. After Loaf recorded a demo to get some shows, Gentling got excited about what was blasting back at him from the tape machine. Loaf was now fully streaming through his blood. 

One of Gentling's favorite things about the early days of writing Loaf songs was discovering their flow. The two Erics offered the skeletons to the songs and everyone would chip in some parts to form the whole. It wasn't easy, and arguments over the song structures would arise, but everything eventually came to fruition.

Gentling offered an example of what would sometimes happen during songwriting sessions. One time when a song began to take shape, Johnson became frustrated while trying to come up with a part, and after fighting it for about an hour, they took a break and Gentling, Bachmann and Price walked to the convenience store to grab beer and snacks. When the trio returned, Johnson informed them that he thought he had devised a suitable part.

"He would play it, and my ears just could not make sense of it. I'd be like, 'I don't even know what song this is going to,'" Gentling said.

Bachmann latched onto the part and ran with it. "We would all play it together and it would completely transform the song. It would turn into something, to my ears, totally unique and really really neat. It was fun hearing it come together," Gentling added.

With an arsenal of songs on tap and records released, the Loaf crew hit the open road to blow us away.

Off stage on those trips, there was heaps of fun to be had. Once, while taking a break on a marathon drive with fellow Chapel Hill unit Capsize 7, the tired and hungover crew was mistaken for a popular metal band while dining at a Cracker Barrel in Amarillo, Texas. 

"The staff thought we were Pantera for some reason, and they refused to believe that we weren't Pantera after a while. I blame Eric Johnson for this, 'cause I think he was the one who finally gave up and said, 'OK, you got us, we're Pantera.' We signed autographs. We didn't even know the names of the guys in the band. Mark Price signed an autograph, 'The Razor,' that's what he called himself. They paid for our meal, and off we went in our shitty little van," Gentling chuckled.

Thinking back about that tour and others with Butthole Surfers, Flaming Lips, Lemonheads and Plexi, Gentling feels fortunate to have Loaf in his life.

"The fact that we can still play shows now blows my mind and makes me really happy. Whether I'm any good or not, I wanna keep playing rock music, and it's nice that you can make a little cash while you're doing it," he said.

When the band breaks into Gentling's favorite "Audiowhore," watch out. He'll no doubt be going off like a man possessed. Do your part and join him, please.


Gentling in Seattle in 2011. (Cat Rose photo)

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Redshift tears it up at Darrell's Tavern




It was a raucous way to ring in the new roaring '20s.

Redshift with Vic Bondi, whose latest group channels Dick Dale and Link Wray in an anarchy surf n' roll rumble along with Articles of Faith/Alloy/Jones Very, etc., blasted and grooved away at Darrell's Tavern in Shoreline, WA, on Jan. 3. Awesome.

The band features Bondi on guitar/vocals, along with stellar partners in crime, bassist Michael Catts and drummer Adam Gross.

Here's some further evidence of the evening. Cheers!



Wednesday, January 1, 2020

It's Sunday matinee time in LA with Rikk Agnew and friends

Rikk Agnew and partner Gitane DeMone. (All Cat Rose photos)


What do you shoot for when you're on Christmas vacation in Southern California? You hit up a Sunday punk-rock matinee in downtown Los Angeles, of course.

With a Lakers game on tap nearby, our choice of entertainment was as distant as could be from the glitz of the basketball arena. The Rikk Agnew Band, Order Disorder, LA's Forgotten and Revolting Sounds drew us into The Redwood Bar, a cool, dark and gritty spot that matched perfectly with the tunes of the day.

Agnew went acoustic with his trio and belted out "OC Life" and two other numbers to close out the gig, which found the place packed from 4-7 before everyone disappeared into the night.

December birthday shoutouts went to Agnew, promoter Candy Graham, Howard O'Kelly, Keith Fay and Israel Villar.

Here's Cat Rose's photos from the gig:



RIKK AGNEW BAND













ORDER DISORDER

































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REVOLTING SOUNDS