Sunday, September 27, 2015

Southern Lord's blistering Seattle invasion

Black Breath, top, and Goatsnake. (All Cat Rose photos)



No words can properly describe it.

Let's try: Four neck-breaking, head-exploding bands that should have left Seattle's Highline in ruins last night. (Maybe they did -- we haven't evaluated the venue today.)

Black Breath. Goatsnake. Battalion of Saints. Obliterations.

Fucking great.

Cat Rose photos:

BLACK BREATH











GOATSNAKE





















BATTALION OF SAINTS










OBLITERATIONS











UNTIL NEXT TIME ...


Sunday, September 20, 2015

The Tulips: rockin' at Barnstormers in Dublin, 1993

The Tulips in Dublin 1993. (Photos by Cat and Andy)




By Andy and Cat


Who are The Tulips and where have they gone?

We were in Dublin, a couple beers in on a Saturday night and we craved some more live tuneage.

It was May 15, 1993 and we had already spent the day bouncing around the Temple Bar area, met some people from the night before at the Rock Garden (indie pop band In Motion played) and then we watched the FA Cup final pitting Arsenal versus Sheffield Wednesday in a pub. (The match finished 1-1 and there was to be a replay five days later, which we attended at Wembley Stadium in London. Arsenal won that one, 2-1, in OT.)

So, on to The Tulips and the gritty biker bar where they played that night: Barnstormers.

We can't remember how we found out about the place, probably just from walking nonstop around the city and luckily spotting a venue that suited us. We passed by one bar along the way that sported a huge Thin Lizzy banner on the front and was to host a tribute band that night. We vowed to return later, but the action inside Barnstormers gripped us and we never made it back that way.

Funny thing first was strolling past a dude with dreadlocks on the street on the way to the bar -- and then he ended up sitting next to us at the bar later. His name was Steve-O, a DJ from London, and we chatted for a while about music. Cool guy.

Steve-O joined us in the Barnstormers gig room -- a dark, cavernish place -- and we settled in for The Tulips, Eerie and Into Paradise.

Eerie opened with their Siouxsie-style tunes and Into Paradise displayed their indie rock in the headline spot and covered Neil Young's "Like a Hurricane."

However, it was The Tulips in the middle slot that really took us by storm.

We recall some of their offerings being along the lines of 999 and a bit of the more rockin' DOA fare. In short, The Tulips ripped it up and their singer spouted lyrics like, "I have to get lost to find you" and "Show me a substance and I'll show you abuse." (Update: We've since heard from a friend of a friend that the band had a new wave edge, as well. It was probably a mixture of styles, and we definitely dug them whilst in our beery haze.)

We never interacted with The Tulips guys. We figured we'd chat after the gig and get the lowdown on them, but they vanished -- never to be seen by us again.

About 10 years ago, we tried to track them down on the web, but nobody in the Dublin area we emailed with seemed to know who The Tulips were. A mystery band, for sure, but what a great one!

Barnstormers is long gone, as well, but at least we experienced a first-rate night in good old Dublin town.

Cheers!

P.S. The night before, we checked out Bliss and The Sewing Room at The Attic. Both bands were great, with Bliss rolling in a poppy vein and The Sewing Room serving up haunting, jangly tunes. We met The Sewing Room guitarist's girlfriend, who told us about the Rock Garden and even asked us to stay with them. We already had a room, but what a nice gesture.



Friday, September 11, 2015

Teenage Time Killers pack an explosive punch, set for epic LA gig



By Andy

While standing in the kitchenette of the Corrosion of Conformity Blind RV in May following the band's gig at Studio 7 in Seattle, singer Karl Agell grinned and pushed play on the stereo.

His howling vocals were sent to bed for the evening in the live setting, but they threatened to tear a hole in the poor RV when the track "Devil in This House" from the Teenage Time Killers Greatest Hits Vol. 1 was unleashed on the half dozen people sitting 'round.

When the tune expired and we were left in a brief moment of silence, Agell humbly noted that he thought the song was a good one.

A member of opening band Lody Kong, glanced at Agell and uttered the only crucial word necessary: "Sick."

Agell's song and 19 others, featuring a stunning host of musicians on the blowtorch-in-your-face TTK release would not see the light of day for another three months, but he and Reed Mullin -- the Pied Piper behind the project -- were amped to get that mega-ton of tuneage into people's ears.

COC man Mullin poked at his phone before the gig, chuckled and beamed with pride while showing us a TTK collage photo of all the critical cogs in the massive metal/punk wheel that brought the project to life.

"Look, there's Dave (Grohl), there's Lee (Ving), there's Randy (Blythe)..." said Mullin while nudging his elbow into my ribs.


Mullin with COC's Woody Weatherman at the Maryland Deathfest in 2011. (Cat Rose photo)

The guy is damn proud of his accomplishment and he'll bring many of the TTK musicians on stage with him Saturday night at the Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles for the gig of a lifetime.

He'll be amongst good friends for this one, and I even saw a photo of his dad next to the Foo Fighters' wall of amps on Friday before the musicians rehearsed at Grohl's Studio 606 in Northridge.

Along with Mullin, the epic gig will feature Agell, Blythe, Ving, Mick Murphy, Corey Taylor, Neil Fallon, Tommy Victor, Vic Bondi, Phil Rind, Ron Beam, Tony Foresta, Clifford Dinsmore, Tairrie B. Murphy, Jonny Webber, Pat Hoed and Trenton Rogers.

So, what do ya get on the TTK release on Rise Records?

Well, simply put, the songs are explosive and thought provoking, and should be part of one's musical rotation post haste.

A taste of what's inside:

You've got the rage of singers Blythe ("Hung Out to Dry"), Dinsmore ("Power Outage"), Murphy ("Clawhoof"), Jello Biafra ("Ode to Sean Hannity"), Ving ("Big Money") and many others, along with the raw, melodic vocal offerings from Pete Stahl ("Plank Walk"), Matt Skiba ("Barrio") and Aaron Beam ("Your Empty Soul"). Mullin drums and also roars on a pair of stunners ("Exploder" and "The Dead Hand"), and he also enlisted folks like Brian Baker and Pat Smear on guitar along with Grohl on bass.

It's killer stuff. That is all.

P.S. Mullin gets punk points by pairing a Rudimentary Peni song with a Cockney Rejects album title.


Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Deafheaven: blowing minds since 2010

George Clarke of Deafheaven. (Cat Rose photo)

Here's a ripping photo of Deafheaven's George Clarke that Cat snapped during their skull-jarring opening set for Russian Circles and Helms Alee at the Doug Fir Lounge in Portland in November of 2011.

The photo has been circulating on Instagram and here's a few comments from fans who are no doubt at least partially deaf after experiencing the band's pummeling aural live assault:

• "They were mind blowing."

• "That was the show where I first heard Deafheaven, opened for Russian Circles. Have definitely never been the same since that show."

• "It's crazy that they are headlining the Fillmore. I remember them opening for Russian Circles just 3 years ago."

Friday, August 28, 2015

The Muffs' essential first record gets the Omnivore reissue treatment

Kim Shattuck with The Muffs at the Burger Boogaloo in Oakland in 2014. (Cat Rose photos)



All praise to Omnivore Recordings for reissuing, remastering and expanding the rip-roaring first record from The Muffs!

This was first released in 1993, and we've spun this crucial record mega times over the last 22 years. It's a classic.

The new version's been out for two weeks … so what are you waiting for? Snag it, post haste.


Track List:
1. LUCKY GUY
2. SAYING GOODBYE
3. EVERYWHERE I GO
4. BETTER THAN ME
5. FROM YOUR GIRL
6. NOT LIKE ME
7. BABY GO ROUND
8. NORTH POLE
9. BIG MOUTH
10. EVERY SINGLE THING
11. DON’T WASTE ANOTHER DAY
12. STUPID JERK
13. ANOTHER DAY
14. EYE TO EYE
15. I NEED YOU
16. ALL FOR NOTHING

Bonus Tracks:
17. LUCKY GUY (Radio Remix)
18. EVERYWHERE I GO (Cassette Version)

Even More Bonus Tracks
(4-Track Demos):
19. ALL FOR NOTHING*
20. DO YOU WANT HER*
21. I DON’T EXPECT IT*
22. MY FACE*
23. SOMETHING ON MY MIND*
24. ETHYL MY LOVE*
25. NOT LIKE ME*
26. SAYING GOODBYE TO PHIL*

* Previously unissued

Monday, August 24, 2015

Raw Power: Can you feeeeel it? Arm, McCready, McKagan and Barrett -- Seattle's roof-rockers

Raw Power. (TSHIT photos and video at bottom)

"What if they got Iggy to fly in?"

That's what someone in the massive crowd was overheard saying prior to Sunday night's Raw Power: A Tribute to the Stooges free gig at Seattle's Pike Place Market.

According to sarcastic singer Mark Arm, they were the "fake Stooges" for the evening. And there was unfortunately no Iggy, but Arm noted that Pop was the man responsible for the 45-minute set -- which saw the band rock out on the roof of the iconic market. The event was presented by KEXP radio and the Pike Place Market Foundation.








Along with Arm, Raw Power consisted of Mike McCready on guitar, Duff McKagan on bass and Barrett Martin on drums. All notable Seattle musicians from bands such as Mr. Epp and the Calculations, Shadow, the Fartz and Skin Yard. (As Mr. Arm quipped while introducing the band members... no need to mention the obvious bands here. Ha ha.)

Solid performances all around from the four men... and let's just say that Arm was in full Iggy mode, as always!

The setlist was:

 Little Doll (w/some 1969)
 T.V. Eye
 I Got A Right
 I Need Somebody
 Down on the Street
 Search & Destroy
 Loose



Saturday, August 22, 2015

An interview with Alice Bag | Los Angeles Beat

Alice Bag performs in Seattle in 2012. (Andy photo)

This article originally appeared in the Los Angeles Beat on June 23, 2015.

By Bob Lee

In the earliest years of LA’s punk scene, Alice Bag was one of its leading lights. The Bags – or Alice Bag Band, as we on the east coast whose only exposure came via the Decline Of Western Civilization on VHS knew them – was a groundbreaker, the first woman-fronted band to hit the Masque. During their brief existence, they rarely played outside LA and released only a single and some compilation tracks, but their reputation and influence persists.

On the day we spoke, she had just completed a musical project of a different sort – teaching at a week-long rock and roll summer camp for girls.

“I’m just finishing a week with Chicas Rocqueras, a week long program that helps young girls build their confidence and gain some useful skills. It’s just a week of camp, they choose an instrument, we have small groups where they focus on just that instrument, and then after lunch we go to a process to figure out what sort of music they want to play, and sort themselves into bands. And that first day they pick a name and start writing their first song. It’s so exciting, it goes so fast… There’s a concert tomorrow! Seven bands, seven songs.” Getting young people on stage a week after picking up an instrument? What could be more punk than that?

Recently, Bag has emerged as a talented writer, publishing the 2013 memoir "Violence Girl," which covers her youth and emergence into the punk scene, and more recently, "Pipe Bomb For The Soul." The latter is a collection of her 1986 diaries during a month-long trip to Nicaragua, where she taught in a local school and learned a completely new way of life. This was during the conflict between the ruling Sandinista party and the Reagan-backed Contras, and learning how to respond to the frantic uncertainty of life during wartime becomes a central theme of the book. While initially challenged by the living conditions, she managed to adapt quickly and find a lot to appreciate in her surroundings.

“It’s like rock and roll boot camp, an accelerated experience. So when you go live in a different country, I was living with a family there so I was forced to experience everything they experienced. At one point, maybe during the first week, we had been eating beans every day and there was nothing else on the menu. And I thought, I’m going to go the store and help us out and buy something, share it with the family. And the woman at the store basically told me, ‘Who do you think you are? That you can come here with your money and get anything you want? We’re not like that here. Here, if something is available, it’s cheap enough that everyone can buy it, so it’s not going to be on the shelves for long,’ So you have to learn very quickly to adapt, and not to insult people, and say, ‘Yes I can survive on beans, that long.’”


Alice Bag reads from her book in Seattle in 2012. (Andy photo)

She also makes some discoveries about the educational process in the country, which was based primarily on intuitive learning through questioning, as opposed to rote memorization. While taking classes on how to improve her own teaching skills, she became deeply affected by the book Pegadogy Of The Oppressed by Paulo Freire, and saw an opportunity to see his ideas play out.

“As I was talking to a fellow teacher, she told me that Freire had been invited to Nicaragua, to develop their literacy campaign. I thought, what a great opportunity to see what this looks like. This whole idea of challenging the banking, the process by which we become receptacles for information, which is what’s happening now. You see it as young as kindergarten, these kids come in, they’re just taught to learn these abstract symbols, memorize sounds that mean nothing that go with these abstract symbols, and string them together to make these sounds that in the end, will maybe mean some words that may or may not have anything to do with their reality. And it’s disappointing to me.

“What I experienced in Nicaragua was students, little kids as well as adults, would go into a literacy classroom, and they’d discuss something from their book. There would be a sentence, it might say something to do with the revolution or agrarian reform, some concept, and there would be this discussion. And you didn’t have to agree, you just had to know what the sentence meant and what it meant to you, and how it affected your life. And respect the other people’s opinions. So that whole process of dialogue, or critical thinking, is missing from our educational system.

“It makes me sad for our educational system, makes me sad for our children, and makes me sad for myself, because I was raised that way. But the whole reason I became interested in going to Nicaragua was because I had just started teaching, and most of the children I was teaching were from Central America.

“Unfortunately some of those gains have been lost over the years. I didn’t go back to Nicaragua, I stayed in touch with the family for a few years, and then I lost touch with them. There still is a literacy campaign, from what I’ve seen, it’s not done the same way… I’ve seen pictures of people looking at a TV during a lesson, and I can’t imagine what kind of dialogue would be facilitated through that sort of situation…

“Part of the beauty of the literacy campaign was you had people of all ages, especially the youth, going out into remote parts of the country, and interacting with people they wouldn’t normally interact with and learning. You know, like the city folks learn from the country people, and they learned about each other’s way of life, and they worked cooperatively to make this dream of literacy and empowerment for all, a reality.”

Don’t expect to see the Bags’ name come up at any of the occasional reunion shows held by her 1977-era companions; following the death of founding members Rob Ritter and Craig Lee, she’s claimed no interest in playing those songs with anyone else. But she’s remained active with several memorable projects in the years since: the Castration Squad with Phranc and Dinah Cancer, the beloved Cholita!, a collaboration with performance artist Vaginal Crème Davis, and most recently, Stay At Home Bomb. She’ll be making an appearance on the forthcoming solo album by Legal Weapon vocalist Kat Arthur, and recently played in the Bay Area with the backing of Frightwig. “I am primarily a musician, that’s always going to be my first love. I stopped playing in bands when I moved to Arizona (from 2007 to 2013)… I lived in a remote area, so I wasn’t surrounded by a group of friends that were musicians like I have in Los Angeles, so I had to find other ways to be creative.”

Now that she’s back at it, and living in LA, let’s hope there’s more to come in the near future.