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Toys That Kill / Future Virgins, Split 7"
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Record Reviews

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Below are some recently posted reviews.

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LILITH VELKOR:
Kalisti: CD
Once you get past the hideous cover art (two things: 1. If you’re drawing a picture that’s going to be Xeroxed, don’t use a pencil or a ballpoint, and 2. A naked lady’s milk duds only point toward her feet if she’s standing up. If she’s being crucified upside down, they’ll point toward her head. They’re filled with bird seed and silicone, not helium. Most times, anyway.) you get something roundabout old U.K. Subhumans or Disorder, bristling with trebly monotony and razory guitars and stuff, though, weirdly, one song sounds like Marginal Man. Lyrics are largely misspelled, which is just as well since the handwriting is largely illegible. Seeing as they live about a mile from my usual grocery store, I intended to write this review in my car in front of their house, but there wasn’t any parking so I went and bought bagels instead. –Cuss Baxter (Self-released)


LIGHT YOURSELF ON FIRE:
Self-titled: CD
This Tampa, FL band features the singer for Reversal Of Man and the bassist for Scrog and Omega Man. Apparently; these guys are playing shows with death metal bands like Deicide and Darkest Hour. Musically, that tonal whine the metal guitar player does irritates the piss out of me. The bass is in drop D throughout and the vocals sound like the cookie monster. –Buttertooth (Kiss of Death)


LARKIN:
Alexandra: CDEP
Celtic or Irish music is not a particular genre that I follow closely. But their debut release, The Curse of Our Fathers, was something that I took notice of and found it to be a good alternative to what I normally listen to. I see they released a second full length titled Reckoning. So this is their third release, which features six original songs in the style of traditional Irish folk. There’s something about songs like these that seem, to me, to be a combination of fun and depression. It’s like a drunken stupor: being in another state of mind with a bit of escapism. For fans of the Pogues or Flogging Molly who want to find something a little below the radar. –Donofthedead (Know)


KILLERS AND CLOWNS:
Radio Dead Ones: 12” 45
Frickin’ ROARING Berlin street punk featuring a vocalist who must almost surely leave post-performance microphones dauntingly covered in meaty chunks of lung. I mean, this makes something like “Out of Control” by the Angelic Upstarts sound like the Dead Milkmen by comparison. Even the acoustic number has got the guy raging his fricking esophagus out, the dude is doing to his throat what those guys from Jackass do to their bodies. Frickin’ enervating. ENERVATING, I SAY!!! BEST SONG: “Eastside of the City” BEST SONG TITLE: “Hate to Go out (Acoustic Version)” FANTASTIC AMAZING TRIVIA FACT: Album artwork is a swipe of the ‘90s “Black Market Clash” cover art—oddly, not the original 1980 version. –Rev. Norb (Wanda)


KA-NIVES, THE:
Get Duped: LP
Me like oog music. Me no like think rock. Me no like Volvo commercial rock. Me like Fred Flinstone’s car. Me like furry underwear on go go dancers and ribs so big they tip over the car at the drive-in. Me like Supercharger, Gories, King Kahn and BBQ. Me like music that when it’s swiped with something sharp, it bleeds instead of asks for a credit card number. Me like music that’s raw and booger-eatin’ and has an exhaust leak that gives me a carbon monoxide high. (Me too dumb to die.) Do The Mummies have boogers? If they did, the Ka-Nives would eat those Mummie boogers from all of their noses and steal the Mummies songs in the process, using the uneaten boogers as sheet music. This album’s all covers, and I won’t lie; if they would have said, “All originals, chump,” I’d of believed ‘em, except for “Nervous Breakdown”—no, not that Rise Against song from Lords of Dogtown… or Black Flag… before that—which is great oog music, too. LP limited to 300. Comes with booklet with nice pictures, so no have to read much. –Todd Taylor (Lance Rock)


JOLTS, THE:
Jinx: CDEP
Total garage punk, as evidenced by singing, “I got stabbed in the eye to-n-eyeaaaght,” instead of “tonight!” Yes, it IS a difference, and a significant one appreciated only by the kind of people who spend time trying to figure out whether 20/20 or The Beat could be considered the epitome of power pop. (Jury’s still out on that one, as I continue to lose brain cells thinking about it.) If this were a local band, I’d buy them beer and candy...and even go to their shows! This is Fruit Loops! Yum! –Maddy (self-released)


JERK ALERT:
Self-titled: CD
To say Jerk Alert sounds like a musical bowel movement would be unfair, since bowel movements can be pretty darn enjoyable. You’re sitting there on your porcelain throne, maybe reading Razorcake, if you will, and you’re eradicating waste in a bliss-like state. Jerk Alert is more like the waste that’s left ever at the end of your doo doo symphony. It’s the part you don’t want to savor. You might take a peek to see what’s there but, inevitably, you just want to flush that load of stink as fast as possible. –Dave Disorder (Eradicator)


INTELLECTUALS, THE:
Invisible Is the Best: CD
Trying to intellectualize what the Intellectuals do would be insulting to the intellect. It ain’t chaos theory, though it is splendidly chaotic; it ain’t quantum physics, though listening to ‘em will make you want to get physical with the opposite sex. What it IS is a stroll through the rock’n’roll section of the id, beer-drenched, wild-eyed, libidinous, making out with the gorgeous girl next to you while checking out the other gorgeous girl standing behind her. Great guy/ girl vocal exchanges, a la the Lids, pluckily sinister organ sounds like Cococoma and the Juvinals, and a fuzzed-out guitar that sounds like the amp is seconds away from blowing up. I gotta find me a shirt that says “Italians do it better!” –Josh Benke (Dead Beat)


HICKOIDS:
Corn Demon: CD
Texas has always been one of the hotspots for punk’s most eccentric bands, including the Big Boys, Dicks, Kamikaze Refrigerators, DRI, MDC, Poison 13, and the Hickoids, an ‘80s “cowpunk” band that managed to embody both those terms without sacrificing anything from either genre. The first fifteen tracks here, from their We’re in It for the Corn album, sounds like the twangy cousin of Texas’ most extreme musical proponents it is—Scratch Acid set loose on the Sons of the Pioneers’ repertoire, or the Butthole Surfers up to their eyeballs in psychedelic slide guitar ’n’ chicken-pickin’. The remainder of the disc, the tracks from their Hard Corn EP, is a wee bit more subdued sonically, but their lyrical subject matter and cover song selection remained just as off-kilter. Were they the greatest punk band ever? Maybe, maybe not. They were, however, a pretty fun listen, and sometimes that’s more important. –Jimmy Alvarado (Saustex)


HIBACHI STRANGLERS, THE:
Our City Doesn’t Stink All the Time: 7”
Yeah, yeah, give the record titled Our City Doesn’t Stink All The Time to the guy from New Jersey. Don’t think I don’t see the joke here. Anyway, loud, fuzzed-out psyche/ garage rock. I want to say reminds me a little of The Carbonas (or at least makes them come to mind for some reason), but not nearly as straight forward, and a lot noisier most of the time. I like this. Good stuff. –Joe Evans III (Self-released)


HEROES & VILLIANS:
Play Themes from the Dark Pink Circus: CD
I think they shortened their name from The Heroes and Villains Chain. –Cuss Baxter (X!)


HERO DISHONEST:
When the Shit Hits the Man: CD
Totally raging fast hardcore punk from this Finnish band. Any fan of Dead Nation, Tear It Up, Deadstop, or D.S.-13 is going to want to be all over this. Actually, the more I listen to this, it really reminds me of that great second Paint It Black record. Doesn’t get much better than this for hardcore. –Mike Frame (Acme)


HEAD:
No Hugging! No Learning!: LP
Pretty much any Ramoneage Cloneage bands from the last fifteen years or so owe a debt of some sort to one of two parties: Head, from Seattle, to whom “I Don’t Wanna Be Learned/ I Don’t Wanna Be Tamed” was just about right, “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue” was evolved and brilliant, and “Loudmouth” was just too friggin’ fancy—and the Richies, from Germany. And, as big a fan as i was of the early singles like “Magic 8-Ball” and the early 12” “Street Level Assault,” i thought their first true full-length, “The Monkeys,” fell flat, largely owing to the band’s inability to charm in songs with more than, say, four lines of lyrics. And, while it’s good to hear the band again in any way/ shape/ form, i think that’s still somewhat the case—Head seem to be angling for position as sort of a retarded version of M.O.T.O. (“I’m 35 Years Older Than You”); a task which i remain unconvinced they are able to successfully undertake. Includes a neat and unexpected cover of the Turtles’ “Outside Chance.” BEST SONG: I dunno, i suppose “Outside Chance” BEST SONG TITLE: “Girl-Girl Action” FANTASTIC AMAZING TRIVIA FACT: Comes with a large poster of the band. Unfortunately, the band ain’t exactly much to look at these days… –Rev. Norb (Evil Clown)


HAUNTED GEORGE:
Bone Hauler: CD
The more I listen to Haunted George, the alter ego of S. George Pallow from the defunct Necessary Evils, the more inclined I am to call the man a genius. He takes the one man band format to bizarre, uncharted territory that the great Hasil Adkins would have been proud to tread. The songs on Bone Hauler hang heavily in the air like apparitions: lost souls searching for a desert resting place. Pallow’s voice, limbs, and instruments work together to create a harrowing, hypnotic mental landscape of isolation and desolation. “Depraved,” with the line “I’m not depraved. What’s that mean, anyway? They’ll learn the truth about me…someday,” will simultaneously make you laugh out loud and your hair stand on end. Other standouts are “Graves in the Desert,” “Howlin’,” and “What Kinda Tracks Are Those?” Highly recommended. –Josh Benke (Dead Beat)


HATEPINKS, THE:
Teste Malade/ Sick in the Head: 10” EP
Have to hand it to The Hatepinks. They could have easily slid into Briefs clone territory, and instead are ending up sounding like the radioactive house band to Repo Man, if Repo Man was set in France… and the Adverts sung about cheese or were a Do Wop band that played their instruments with stilettos instead of fingers… and there was a nearby beach that had a radioactive spill and when the barrels broke open, it was bubblegum… and everyone—even librarians—did a bunch of drugs, every second they were alive… and… well, you get the point. Bouncy ’77-friendly French weirdness that advocates animals sexual liberation while really just hoping that you’ll have a good time. –Todd Taylor (TKO)


HALLELUJAH!:
Dirty Revival: CD
More gloriously honked smoot from the smoots at C.N.P., and more wacky than brutal, occasionally ponderous and bulky, like a heavy-gauge punching balloon and with a primo rock: noise ratio. Plus: “I Faked My Own Birth,” “Mysterious Finger,” “She Blinded Me with Intelligent Design,” and “Ass Disease Messages.” Smoot! –Cuss Baxter (C.N.P.)


GOVERNMENT WARNING:
No Moderation: LP
Perhaps I’m retarded. I’m willing to accept that. But I just don’t get how, twenty-plus years into listening to punk rock, and especially hardcore, it still catches me a little unawares how much I like short, fast songs. It’s supposed to be diminishing returns, right? You can only go so fast, and then it’s a blur. All the fast points have been covered, and better, by the biggies, right? But once or twice a year, a band that’d definitely be aware of hardcore’s legacy tears right back into it, ripping pages right out of that history book. Government Warning’s not only fully loaded with razor-sharp playing and insightful lyrics, they’ve got so much controlled speed in one song alone, that if hooked up to a hamster wheel, would power a suburban home for a day. This makes me feel thirteen again, in all the cool ways (without the short shorts and such), and I’m hoping some kid just loses their shit to Government Warning just like I did when I first heard JFA, learning to ollie on my Variflex in my garage. Crazy good and I’m super glad this is coming out now, today. –Todd Taylor (Feral Ward)


GIGLINGER:
Distortion +: CDEP
Giglinger is a four piece from Finland that seems slightly mysterious (no shows, no albums) but also produce fairly capable industrial punk. Think along the lines of Ministry, but a little different. While the mysterious mannerisms want me to think this is some sort of supergroup, the fact that they’re all from Finland made me realize that even if they were, no one would give a shit. The four songs on this EP aren’t a bad start but there’s not a lot to go on here to really say for sure. It’s all put together well, but nothing really jumps out and does a whole lot for me. –Kurt Morris (King Penguin)


GG ALLIN AND ANTISEEN:
Murder Junkies: CD
As my somewhat warm Pabst and I sit down to begin a review of this re-release of GG and Antiseen’s Murder Junkies CD (originally available, I believe, on the immortal Baloney Shrapnel label), TV sets across America are buzzing with masturbatory coverage of the fresh death of the celebrity train wreck known as Anna Nicole Smith. A fitting background, I suppose, to ruminate about one of the most garish train wrecks of the modern era; scumfuc sex symbol, Mr. GG “Jesus” Allin. It may well be true to say that the only thing that we, as a narcissistic, reality-TV-addicted society, are more fascinated with than our own selves, is celebrity train wrecks. GG’s Q-Score, of course, never got close to that of Anna Nicole, because, for one thing, we seem to prefer our train wrecks, like our rebels, to look like movie stars. Whether you’re crashing and burning or raging against the system, you’d better damn well look good doing it. If not, the sleepy gaze of the ovine populace will wander elsewhere. And let’s be honest: it didn’t help GG’s Q-Score to have a pink Mike-N-Ike between his legs. Can you imagine what a folk hero he’d be if he’d been proudly brandishing a giant trouser pike like that of adored metal dunce, Tommy Lee? I’ll even go so far as to say that Tommy Lee is a celebrity now because of his abundant schwanz. He’s literally riding the coattails of his own penis. Yes, he’s a decent, if unimaginative, heavy metal drummer in a popular ‘80s hair metal band, and he’s an apparently sweet, dumb guy—when he’s not practicing rock star-style domestic abuse. But would he really have ascended to the heights of fame that he has if he hadn’t done so by scaling his own dick ladder? I doubt it. He’d be just another also-ran, half-baked celebrity, starring on B-celebrity reality TV shows like his compadre Vince Neal. No big whoop. And then that begs the question: if GG didn’t have his famously toddler-sized dink, would he have had the seething rage and all-encompassing loathing that inspired him to make a name for himself by spazzing out naked in public and re-eating the digested dinner he had the night before? And that makes me wonder what would GG have been like if he were around now to take advantage of all the wonderful penis enlargement technologies that I keep hearing about through constant and daily email ad campaigns. I’m sure GG was much more complex than a mere penis envy case and I don’t doubt that, for whatever reasons, he felt real pain in his short, tattered life. But as it is with all celebrity train wrecks, be it Anna Nicole or GG Allin, it’s hard not to wonder what inspired them to do what they did while they were alive. And it’s especially difficult to try to unknot the truths and the lies of their lives from one another. That’s because the truth of their perceived fakeness or genuineness probably lies most closely to the realm of paradox; the Twilight Zone-ish area where the lines we’ve all drawn between our either-or’s disappear like Britney Spears underpants. As a matter of fact, it is out of a healthy respect for the gooey reality of paradox in our everyday lives that I try to make a point of drinking my beer out of a Klein bottle (a sort of Mobius Strip version of a bottle that has no actual inside or outside) just to remind myself how our rational mind forever falls short of explaining away the weird, weird universe in which we live. But I seem to have wandered far afield here, as I so oftentimes do. On with the review: This re-release captures the euphonious sounds of GG Allin teamed up with the Boys from Brutalsville and if you’ve ever heard GG or Antiseen before, you know just what to expect. Glowering scum dirges of hate with guitars that sound like lawnmowers running in a tin shed. This CD also includes a few tracks of GG’s tender “unplugged” side, crooning “I wanna fuck the shit out of you” in his best David Allan Coe impersonation. The thing about GG, though, was that he always sang—or hollered—like he had a couple shoehorns lodged in his mouth. But maybe that’s a good thing, because no one wants a self-proclaimed “outlaw scumfuc” to have the clean virginal pipes of someone like Josh Groban. Sounding like you might be sucking on some turdballs the way other people suck on hard candies can only lend to your verisimilitude when you’re someone in GG’s line of business. The only problem with having a mouthful of dung Mentos is that sometimes GG’s “sinister” lyrics lose some of their scariness to the mush-mouth syndrome. For example, on “I Hate People” it sounds like he might actually be singing “I hate cream corn”—which would be a funny thing for GG Allin to be singing, considering that the foul glop that used to drop from his backside babyfood dispenser looked a lot like cream corn much of the time. And no one in their right mind would ever slather their bloodied, naked body with something they hate, right? That just wouldn’t make sense. But maybe this has less to do with GG and more to do with the wax build up in my ears. Then again, it never really was about the lyrics. GG was a lot of things, but he was no poet. He wasn’t even all that original. Some of his most infamous trademark moves had already been done by others: most notably, Sid, Iggy, and Stiv. Each of those gentlemen had experimented with onstage scarification rituals before GG did. Even his never-made-good threat to kill himself onstage wasn’t all that original; Nazi Dog, of Canada’s Viletones, had made similar threats years before the gimmick even flickered in GG’s dented head. And as far as jerking his pud and shitting himself in public goes, Diogenes the Cynic secured that act as his “intellectual property” way back in ancient Greece, several hundred years before the birth of that other famous “Jesus.” But GG was certainly an original synthesis of all those people and all their various vile acts. And he took that whole burning shit heap of reckless endangerment and rage and he pushed it further and more demonically than anyone has, before or since. And in some weird way, in doing so, he provided us a vital service much like Diogenes did way back when. That’s something that I don’t think can be said of a train wreck like Anna Nicole. “All retch and no vomit” is a tag you can never pin on GG Allin. –aphid (TKO)


GENTLEMAN JESSE & HIS MEN:
Self-titled: 7”
You may know “Gentleman” Jesse Smith as the bass player for Atlanta’s devastating punk juggernaut, the Carbonas. What you may not know is that this kid can also play guitar and has written two as close to perfect power pop songs as you’re bound to hear this year. “I Don’t Wanna Know (Where You Been Tonight)” will lodge itself in your head indefinitely with its catchier than Chlamydia at a ‘Frisco bathhouse chorus, while “Going Out of My Mind” will make you forget all about those bouncy Pointed Sticks songs you like so much. Your friends will compare them to the mighty Firestarter, perhaps even the Exploding Hearts. And, you won’t be surprised in the least next January when you see Gentleman Jesse’s Douchemaster 7” appear on multiple Top Ten of 2007 lists. Fan-fucking-tastic. –Josh Benke (Douchemaster)


GBH:
A Fridge Too Far, From Here to Reality, Church of the Truly Warped: CDs
By the time this trio of albums saw the light of day, I had pretty much written GBH off as another casualty to the dreaded “crossover” trend of punk, so listening to the Captain Oi’s recent spate of reissues from their back catalogue has been an interesting crash course in what I missed the first time ’round. While the two albums that followed City Baby’s Revenge were serviceable compared to the band’s “classic” period, the first of the three albums being discussed here, A Fridge Too Far, is actually quite solid, recalling earlier efforts by delivering solid punk tunes with a surprising level of aggression, given they’d been slogging it out for nigh on eight years by the time it was recorded. There was also at this point precious little of the “metal” that portended so many of their peers’ descent into the maelstrom of utter suckdom during the same time period. Sadly, the same cannot be said about their next release, From Here to Reality. Although their lyrical content remained firmly rooted in both the topical and the absurd rather than the obtusely satanic, musically they finally embraced the metal influence with open arms, a move which by some would be argued as “progression,” but by others would be viewed as a complete reversion to the very tenets punk rock was reacting against. While their efforts in the world of metal weren’t abysmal, per se, it just wasn’t GBH any more than glam metal was Discharge. By the time of the last of these releases, Church of the Truly Warped, they were a totally different kinda band, one that these ears find considerably less interesting, and though they’ve recently reverted to a more “punk” sound, they just ain’t been the same since. All is not lost, however, for although they did, indeed, slide down the slippery metal slope, they apparently did manage to crank out three more albums of note between City Baby’s Revenge and From Here to Reality than previously thought, upping the ante to five albums upon which they can hang their legacy. –Jimmy Alvarado (Captain Oi)


FUTURE VIRGINS:
Self-titled: 7”
From the first five notes, I knew this was gonna be awesome. This is a southern “supergroup” consisting of two guys from Sexy and two guys from the Jack Palance Band, and it’s every bit as good as those two bands in their finest moments. It’s especially nice to hear Ashley return to the blown-out hollering we all fell in love with on the first Sexy LP. I’m sure that, just like me, you were worried after the polished, squeaky clean singing on Boma Ye that he wouldn’t be able to bounce back, but these expertly written songs of love and life and heartbreak are exactly what I was hoping for. This record is absolutely wonderful and I sure hope an LP is in the foreseeable future. –ben (Plan-It-X South)


FUTURE VIRGINS, THE:
Self-titled: 7”
Ho-ly god-damn sh-it. So much for attending the wake due to the loss of Sexy and here’s a high five to Chattanooga for being so shitty and rat infested, but cheap, that music like The Future Virgins just rolls out of there easy. If you listen close, the Sexy riffs are fungusing all through this. If you listen to this cranked, the fractured-but-whole, smashed-but-clear strike force of The Jack Palance Band (and Horrible Odds) rings real loud. If you take a step back and soak in it, it has the feeling of an unreleased Carrie Nations 7”. A bite of desperation. An ugly cyst that, when it pops, it’s cheap beer. That “Bwwaaaahhh! This is so good I don’t want to explain it” feeling pervades through all five songs on this 7”. Take all those compass coordinates together and they point to one direction: awesome city. –Todd Taylor (Plan-It-X South)


FUN 100/ PAPER LANTERNS:
Pull the Goalie: Split 7” EP
My lame record player couldn’t play this loud enough! Fun 100 are full of power pop goodness, although maybe a little too indie rock for me. But the Paper Lanterns (I’m guessing it’s a Green Day reference) are completely and totally amazing! An awesome throwback to early Lookout Records, especially MTX. I heard they broke up, but I need to track down everything they ever released. If this were a cereal, Fun 100 would be Apple Jacks (pretty good), but Paper Lanterns would be Cinnamon Toast Crunch! Yum! –Maddy (Hockey Dad)


FUCKED UP:
Triumph of Life: 7”
I’m not one of those people who are on a mission to collect every Fucked Up 7”. For sure, it’s a noble effort and in the end it will have been well worth it. But I just don’t have the funds or dedication for that conquest. And while this 7” is cool, the only reason I can see why someone should buy it is if they are trying to accumulate every Fucked Up 7”. If someone is thinking that this 7” would be a good introduction to the band, they might as well just save the money and by the double LP. If you’re disappointed with that…kill yourself. –Daryl Gussin (Jade Tree)


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the City of Los Angeles, Department
of Cultural Affairs and is supported
by the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors through the Los Angeles
Arts Commission.
Department of Cultural AffairsLos Angeles County Arts Commission


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