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Mostrando postagens com marcador Punk Rock. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Punk Rock. Mostrar todas as postagens

quinta-feira, 14 de janeiro de 2010

The 3-D Invisibles


Não achei muitas informações sobre a banda. Só sei que esse disco é de 1989, que eles vêm de Detroit e que eles estão na ativa até hoje. O som é excelente, fãs de Cramps, Meteors e Misfits vão achar doses iguais dessas três maravilhas na terra. Pelo jeito os caras nunca conseguiram muito sucesso e eu simplesmente não consigo pensar numa possível razão pra isso. Faixas como They Won't Stay Dead, Creature from the Outer Space (Cramps puro) ou I Married a Monster from Outer Space mereciam ser clássicos do psychobilly. Destaque pra essas já citadas, Blood Feast e Mail-Order Monster.

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I couldn't find bigger info on the band, besides that this record is from 1989, that they hail from Detroit and they still play. The sound is amazing, and any Cramps, Meteors or Misfits fan will find equal amounts of these three man-made wonders in their sound. For some reason, the guys never achieved a lot of success and I simply can't think of a plausible reason for it. Tracks like They Won't Stay Dead, Creature from Outer Space (pure Cramps) or I Married a Monster from Outer Space deserve to be hailed as psychobilly classics. Highlights go to the mentioned tracks plus Blood Feast and Mail-Order Monster.

1. They Won't Stay Dead
2. Creature From Outer Space
3. Down In The Dungeon
4. Frankenstein Stomp
5. Surpise For Teacher
6. I Walked With A Zombie
7. Mars Needs Women
8. Mail-Order Monster
9. Creepy Fella
1. Graveyard Rockin'
2. I Married A Monster From Outer Space
3. Skeleton Rock & Roll
4. Christopher Lee
5. Beach Party Massacre
6. The Mad Doctor's Unsuccessful Experiments
7. My Babys Gone To Pieces
8. Blood Feast
9. Nosferatu


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sexta-feira, 16 de outubro de 2009

Crime - Cadillac Faggot & Hate us Or Love us, we Don't Give a Fuck




Tô morrendo de preguiça de traduzi a biografia dos caras, então aí vai uma que eu achei pela internerd :

MURDER BY GUITAR
Riding the Crime Wave with San Francisco’s First and Only Rock & Roll Band
By Fred Beldin -- from Resonance 49

While America celebrated the bicentennial and punk primped for its big media moment as the latest youth scare, a baleful force gathered on the streets of San Francisco. A quartet of leather-clad misanthropes, gaunt from pharmaceutical exploration and buzzing with sickly energy, assembled a band so uncompromising even the underground would turn away offended. Their recklessly confrontational music and message rendered them outcasts among outcasts, the memory of their deeds repressed by witnesses as soon as the band safely imploded. This was Crime.

Self-taught guitarists/vocalists Johnny Strike and Frankie Fix formed the nucleus of Crime, and their stark vision dominated the band through its lifespan. In the summer of 1976, with bassist Ron Ripper and drummer Ricky Tractor on board and a few hasty rehearsals under their belts, Crime recorded and self-released their debut single, “Hot Wire My Heart” b/w “Baby You’re So Repulsive.” The record is a damaged masterpiece of atonal riffs, agitated rhythm and the lowest fidelity allowed by law, but within the murk of black static and needle dust lays a seductive ectomorphic power, an intellectual aggression shot through with delinquent spirit and antisocial urges. Defiantly chaotic, their buzzsaw sound drips with the grease of hard R&B, like a stumbling drunk Chuck Berry fronting the Velvet Underground after an all-night binge.

Crime’s first public appearance (a Halloween fundraising party for gay activists) lasted only five songs before the plug was pulled, but bigger outrages were yet to come. “We pretty much sealed our fate early on and became the most offensive band in town when we put Hitler on a flyer,” said Strike, now a Bay Area novelist. “Of course, we knew that the flyer would cause a stir, but we had no idea how much of one. Our records were yanked from the one store in town that sold punk, given no airplay, crossed off lists all over town. Crime was really born then.”

Like all great rock & roll bands, Crime meticulously cultivated their image and photo shoots came long before live shows. Four cold, cadaverous men clad in regulation police uniforms wearing dead, drugged sneers on their faces, or perhaps dressed as gangsters, posed around sacks of money and guns. Publicity materials featured images of police brutality, sadomasochism and war criminals. Every dark fantasy conjured by Lou Reed, William Burroughs and film noir, every secret desire for bondage and fascism was reflected there in the mirrored shades of these vampires in cop costumes. Punk by any definition, but Crime shunned the label with open hostility, and their rejection of countercultural groupthink was possibly their most grievous offense.

Tractor’s rhythmic (and personal) inconsistencies led to a succession of drummers. Brittley Black took over next, playing on the band’s second single, “Frustration” b/w “Murder by Guitar,” followed by Hank Rank, who had never hit the skins before but learned on the job and became the band’s manager as well. Self-billed as “San Francisco’s First and Only Rock & Roll Band,” Crime’s sonic assault drew unruly crowds who loved the raunchy, revved-up sound, fetishistic police uniforms and brittle arrogance. But Crime’s insistence on headlining every show and undisguised disdain for the bands they gigged with earned them more enemies than fans.

“At first it was with the people who were running things,” said Strike, “a close-knit group left over from the hippie days that included club bookers, journalists, record shop owners, deejays, etc. They definitely weren't up for us. When we saw how things were, instead of playing nice with them like most bands, we drew our swords and made the gap as wide as it would go.” Despite the band’s bad reputation among San Francisco’s rock elite, Crime secured regular appearances at the Mabuhay Gardens and even booked a notorious gig at nearby San Quentin Penitentiary, which they played in full police regalia to the puzzled inmates. Aside from rare shows in Seattle and Los Angeles, Crime remained a local phenomenon, stubbornly staying in the face of a scene that considered them rude and primitive even by punk standards.

Of course, the enmity Crime courted wasn’t good for business. Bookings became difficult, audiences shrank, an attempt at a more streamlined, funk-based sound confused their remaining fans and a combination of drugs, apathy and artistic differences ultimately closed the coffin lid on Crime. The band fell apart in 1982 when Strike quit Crime and focused his efforts on writing (his novel *Ports of Hell was published in 2004 by Headpress).

Fix made an abortive attempt to resurrect Crime in the early 90s, recruiting Ripper and Black for the gig, but Strike didn’t participate. "Hank and I went to the first show and it was pretty dreadful,” he said. “I heard they played a couple more before dissolving. It was all druggy posturing." Fix’s years following the ersatz reunion were troubled. “I used to run into him on the street now and again and we'd chat a bit,” said Strike. “I had finally found my way out of the dope scene but he never had, so it was a little awkward, but we'd known each other since high school so we still had a bond no matter what.” In 1996, Fix died during surgery, his body weakened by abuse.

Crime’s limited-press singles became impossible to find after the breakup, their music available only on expensive bootlegs. Sonic Youth cut a suitably shambolic cover of “Hot Wire My Heart” for their *Sister LP, but it was a weak substitute. Crime was so mysterious and unobtainable that their legend proved irresistible to second and third generation punks with only speculation, rumor and some outrageous promo photos to go by. But conduits opened. In 1995, primitive rock fanzine *Ugly Things printed the first in-depth oral history of Crime, telling the story in the band’s own words. Official pressings of frequently-bootlegged live shows got wider release on LPs like *Cadillac Faggot and *Hate Us or Love Us, We Don’t Give a Fuck. Swami Records released the excellent *San Francisco’s Still Doomed in 2004, a collection of studio demos previously available only as a rare import, and a long-discussed deluxe set of Crime recordings and on stage video footage is still in development.

The biggest news is that Strike and Rank are taking a second stab at reforming Crime. With shows in Frisco and a punk festival in Italy under their belt, the band currently works on an album with bassist Michael Lucas (Phantom Surfers). Whether or not this version of Crime has legs, the vintage noise of the 1976 model retains its revolting energy.

FOR MORE ON CRIME:
Crime Official Website: http://www.crimesf.com
*Ugly Things Magazine #14, 1995: http://www.ugly-things.com




Hate us or Love us, We Don't Give a Fuck
  1. Raw Rumble
  2. Hot Wire My Heart
  3. Oh Yeah B-B-Baby
  4. Dillinger's Brain
  5. Terminal Boredom
  6. Stuck On You
  7. Frankie And Amber
  8. Rock 'n' Roll Enemy Number One
  9. Baby You're So Repulsive
  10. Frustration
  11. Murder By Guitar
  12. The Crime Manifesto
  13. Pregnant And Punished

sábado, 22 de agosto de 2009

EP Extravaganza!

Thee Stash - Suave as old Arseholes

What's my name b/w 48 Thrills
Download

Thee Stash - Should I Suck or Should I Blow


Should I Suck or Should I Blow b/w We're Selling Jeans for the USA

Johnny Thunders - Que Sera Sera


Whatever Will be, Will be (Que Sera Sera) b/w Short Lives, I only Wrote this Song For You
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Johnny Thunders with the Chesterfield Kings

Critic's Choice b/w I'd much Rather be With the Boys, London Boys
Download

The Kravin' "A"s - Pushin' and a Shovin' EP
Born Yesterday, You're Lookin' Fine b/w Right Now, Don't Gimm no Lip
Download

Ronnie Spector - She Talks to Rainbows

She Talks to Rainbows [ft. Joey Ramone], Don't Worry Baby, You Can't Put your Arms Around a Memory, I Wish I never Saw the Sunshine
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sábado, 22 de novembro de 2008

Johnny Thunders & the Heartbreakers - L.A.M.F.


A equipe do nosso blog entrou em contato com a equipe do Blank Generation, e Johnny Thunders concordou em gravar um disco fazendo referência ao nome do blog, disco esse bom pra caralho por sinal.

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Our blog staff got in touch with Blank Generation's staff and Johnny Thunders agreed to make an album that makes a refference to our blog name. The album is wonderful, by the way.


Tracklist

01 - Born to Lose
02 - Baby Talk
03 - All by Myself
04 - I Wanna be Loved
05 - It's not Enough
06 - Chinese Rocks
07 - Get off the Phone
08 - Pirate Love
09 - One Track Mind
10 - I Love You
11 - Going Steady
12 - Let Go
13 - Can't keep my Eyes on You

Tamanho : 56 mbs

Post em homenagem ao Gringo. GATÃO! Gringo é mara.


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