'Ya know, I originally started PtMiiC up 'cos I wanted to write about music in a tangible form. As the swaths of you that actually give me money in exchange for paper with my scribblings on it may be aware of, there's typically a considerable lag between issues. It became apparent after doing the last one though, that the lag is gonna get even laggier. It's fun doing this thing and all, but I'm a one man operation here (shimmering insights of the "Journalist" notwithstanding) and I just don't have it in me to crank 'em out at even the irregular pace we're already working with. But fret not 'Coffin' enthusiast! In light of that dilemma this blog will be seeing a little more action. To start off we got a round of reviews that didn't make it to the last issue due to page and/or time constraints. Dig in muffin mouth!:
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Brown Sugar "Tropical Disease" 7" (Fashionable Idiots/Feral Kid)
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Cheater Slicks Guttural-Live 2010 (Columbus Discount)
While I'm aware not many people (at least anybody reading this pap) needs to be told so, the Cheater Slicks are a rare breed. Name one Rock band who continues to get better with age, over two decades into their career. Do it turkey breath, I dare 'ya! Since the late 80's the Slicks have been putting out great records. Not good records, not so-so records, great ones, damn near all of them (though my collection certainly has some holes to fill, particularly in the singles dept.). Their level of quality control is unprecedented, especially in the beyond-stale pastures of modern Garage Rock, and its 'cos over the years the Slicks have continuously refined their approach, while always staying true to the quest for pure of R 'n' R debasement. Whether it be flirtations with Psych-Pop (title track to Refried Dreams), white hot Noise (Don't Like You + too many others examples to list) or deconstructed Free Jazz (Bats in the Dead Trees) they've managed to mold everything into their own distinctly shit-caked renderings, and the older Dana Hatch, Dave and Tom Shannon get, the more dreary and primitive their music seems to become. It has often been noted that their brand of world-beaten Garage has possibly no better setting than right in front of your blurry line of sight at last call, making a planned suite of studio-less recordings, though I'm generally averse to live albums, a highly logical enterprise. Don't get the wrong idea, this thing doesn't like, project holograms of them playing; it's just the audio. But it's still a rather nice document for those of us who rarely get a chance to see them play. The first of a three part collection (don't, eh, get your hopes up about the other two coming out anytime soon though) Guttural features staples from the band's entire oeuvre recorded at various Columbus, OH locales, including favorites like "Feel Free," a cover of the Modds juvenile 60's punk classic "Leave My House," and an absolutely scorching rendition of "Ghost." What more's there to say? Yack, yack, yack, the Slicks are tits, you already know this, so buy (Or don't. Why the fuck would I care?).
Dark Day Exterminating Angel (Dark Entries)
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feedtime Today is Friday (SS)
Values, ethos and morals are important to consider in these dire times. As I grow older and the threat of a day when I can no longer see my own feet looms large, one select life philosophy that continues to increase in relevance exponentially is this: "You don't fuck with feedtime." And who would? It'd simply be a waste of your and everyone else's time. I can scarcely think of anything more honest, more pure, more true to the spirit of freak Rock music than the racket kicked up by Al, Rick & Tom in their prime. And as a recent "critical re-evaluation" (not gonna bother reviewing the Sub Pop box, but if you don't have those LP's then get on it, obviously) and tour have confirmed, they're still able to bring the heat. Reunions are typically beyond-pathetic, but when I made the trek up to NYC this past March to catch feedtime it was maybe the only instance where one of these soirees actually made me like a band more. Not knowing the members at all I have very little insight, and am aware I may be projecting here, but they seem so completely divorced from the deplorable indie industry tug-n-rug. After hearing far too many hacks strategize how to get signed to Drag City with their self-indulgent fake psych act or some such nonsense, it just makes a band as uncompromisingly smart and tough as feedtime appear that much better. And after spinning those first four LP's over and over (still haven't heard Billy) it's really nice to get this collection of outtakes. Calling these outtakes seems unfair though, 'cos many of the songs on here would put the top content of lesser bands to shame. Featuring material recorded mainly around the time of the S/T and Shovel, it has got everything a fan could want. Wire-styled Post Punk, if Colin, Bruce & Graham were heavy handed mechanics instead of nimble-fingered art students? Check out opener "Nice." Piss-raw version of "Shovel"? You got it horse face. Covers? How 'bout an even rougher, more deconstructed take on "Street Fighting Man" than was featured on Cooper-S, or a stab at Flipper's "Life" for fuck's sake?! The mid to late 80's tend to get a pretty bad rap from most Rockist points of view, but they birthed us feedtime, and that's enough to forgive a million Steve Albini/Thurston Moore-headed circle jerks in my book.
Mad Nanna "I Hit a Wall" b/w Untitled (Quemada)
Always a pleasure to see more 'Nanna in the pile, they being one of like five bands that're actually worth a toss at the moment. After picking through the wreckage (sans stick) of last calender cycle's trash heap their previous pair of singles came out pretty damn close to the top, so yeah, I was eager to "slip it in" this one. And as others have pointed out, it's another completely different, yet no less arresting, addition to the fine catalog of Rock dismemberment they've amassed thus far. "I Hit a Wall" might actually be the most together sounding tune we've heard from them to date, with legitimate structure, decipherable lyrics, and a chorus to boot. The music of Mad Nanna is maybe most akin to the act of eating an orange; it can be a pain to peel away the skin, but once the delicious juice found inside is dribblin' down your chin (gross) you know you made the right choice. Sure, some might say "why not just cut out the middle man and buy orange juice instead?" but it's clear they're missing the point entirely. The untitled B-side's a brief and thin strummer, working through a dingy riff while employing a bit of studio trickery to nice effect. If you've ever thought to yourself "a dryer Un" or "Jerry Solomon going right on 'Past the 21st Century'?" without cringing in terror, you really owe it to yourself to catch a grip of Nanna. And brush your teeth while your at it, you probably need to.
Mad Nanna I Made Blood Better (Negative Guest List)
At the risk of sounding like a giant windbag/asshole (too late, huh?), I’m gonna drone on about Mad Nanna’s debut long player in possibly inflated, largely non-musical terms: This record is getting stoned, driving to Taco Bell and hitting a deer on the way home. It’s agreeing to do something you know you’re not even going to make the slightest effort to do. It’s trying to wrap your tiny head around String Theory. It’s a lot of things that make life terrible and interesting and remind you that the universe really doesn’t care about anything you do at all. How any of that relates to this album, originally a cassette release that was re-sequenced for vinyl by the band and late Brendon Annesley, I’m not sure, but they’re the first few things I thought of when I eagerly threw it on my turntable (granted I was pretty high and had just gotten back from Taco Bell). There's really no sense in even writing about the songs themselves, all one needs to know is Mad Nanna seem to understand recorded sound’s ability to capture isolation and anxiety the way bands like the Godz, 49 Americans and Strangulated Beatoffs did before them. That’s not to say they sound much like any of the above, just a comparison to the overall claustrophobic feel. About half of this material is live, while the other is laid down in a studio of some sort, giving it a strangely urgent feel, like the band didn’t have time to record everything “properly”, or finish “writing” “songs,” or much of anything most bands feel the need to do. Nah, these guys were too busy plucking their hair out with tweezers and licking stamps (just a guess). I was originally unsure of how a whole LP’s worth of Mad Nanna, such a great singles band, would come off. Now I’m not sure if I could live with anything less. Before I run outta drool over here, it's suffice to say this is probably album of the year so far over at 'Coffin' HQ.
Noh Mercy S/T (Superior Viaduct)
Apparently to some people, Noh Mercy were a legendary band, possessing a mystique intensified by the fact that for decades their known repertoire consisted of merely two well-regarded contributions to the Earcom 3 comp. No boots, no rough demos, not even a goddamn live mp3 surfaced over the last 33 years. Now Superior Viaduct presents this tidy package, stuffed to the gills with not only the songs, but a nice eight page booklet including plenty of antecedents from people who were there, along with photos and related ephemera, that give an understandable context to this legitimately unique band. The label did a predictably bang-up job on their end, but when it comes down to it one cares about the songs, and they're really just not-that-good to these ears. If you're unfamiliar, then here's a brief description of the duo of Esmerelda (vocals) and Tony Hotel's (most other things) musical approach: no boys on guitars. Yeah, most of these tracks are just drums and and an angry woman yelling, which sounds like it could be great in theory, and was indeed a motivating factor in my purchase, but the majority of their output typically ends up feeling like its missing something...oh yeah, guitars! Eventually they do give in and fiddle around with Moogs, Farfisas and other instruments often associated with the making of conventional Rock music, and I like the whole performance art aspect the group took (except for their preoccupation with Japanese culture, that's pretty boring), but it comes off a little tiresome and self-serving much of the time. Esmerelda's attempts at rapping make Kevin Seconds look like Big L, songs like "Girl" and "Fashion Chant" come off like some B-Grade poetry written by the girl in a Skinny Puppy shirt you went to high school with, and one of the two previously released songs, "Revolutionary Spy" is pretty meh. Anticipated/informed Riot Grrrl, X-Ray Spex and the Raincoats? Cool, all those bands basically sucked though. Don't get me wrong, there are certainly redeeming aspects to this collection; "No Caucasian Guilt" really is pretty jarring, "Lines" is ahead of it's time primal Post-Punk backed by atonal guitar squeal and a repetitive synth pulse and "Play the Devil" manages to hold my attention with little more than tom fills and alternately spoken/shouted vocals, but overall this is something I could easily see making its way into the for sale pile next time I'm strapped for ca$h. Then again, I never cared much for the Avengers, who SV recently reissued a couple of singles for as well, so maybe I'm just a raging misogynist. Eh, so when is that long-overdue Church Police collection hitting the market?
Richard Papiercuts A Sudden Shift (Pena)
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Prisoners Go Go Band Live! At the Butchery (SS)
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Sedition Ensemble Regeneration Report (Sol Re Sol)
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V/A World’s Lousy with Ideas vol. 9 (Almost Ready)
After a three year absence the World's Lousy... series is "back with a bang, neowahhh" to deliver more top tier Garage-oriented excitement. I've long heard these are good comps. (sorry but I was never much of a "comp. guy" in general, so contemporary ones rarely pique my interest. Would love to own the vol. with Nothing People and Home Blitz though. Remember that shit selling out before I could cop), and the contents of this 7" certainly lead me to believe such a claim. Nothing on here sounds like a throwaway, outtake or re-hash, unlike many a compilation of yester-year, so that's always appreciated, and anybody bringing more Psandwich tracks to the world deserves a medal of some sort. A-side features a Hatch-penned slow burn delivered from depths murky enough to make Lee Hazlewood look like a member of the Compulsive Gamblers. Does that even make sense? Probably not, but once you hear the song maybe it will. B-side opens with a UK band called Thee (ugh) Spivs offering up a rollicking sorta tough Rockabilly number called "Men Don't Cry." It ain't so bad, but even though Billy Childish worship might not exactly be flooding the market at the current moment aren't there enough records actually featuring and/or produced by him to clog several land fills at this point? I just don't really see the point in looking anywhere but the source with a catalog that vast, but if you do then by all means, live your dreams guy. And the whole affair is rounded out by House and his crew of Columbus miscreants taking an auditory trip to the green pastures of Glasgow, Scotland for a tussle with Fun 4's gas chamber anthem "Singing in the Shower." I'd say they made the boys proud. Or at least made me feel alright about spending a couple bucks on this piece of circular vinyl. Either way, we all win for a change.
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