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Send submissions (music, visuals, text, whatever) to anuncontrollableurge [at] gmail [dot] com. Some day, I will look at it. Address things to "David" because that's what my name is.

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22nd September 2010

Video with 3 notes

X-Ray Spex, “Art-I-Ficial”

First X-Ray Spex song I ever heard. I still think they don’t get the credit they deserve - definitely one of the best bands of the era.

Tagged: x-ray spexart-i-ficial!nazi punks fuck offall you men are slime

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13th April 2010

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Interview with Dan Friel from Parts and Labor

Sunday afternoon I was lucky enough to talk to Dan Friel on the phone about Part and Labor, Omar Souleyman, Cardboard Records, a new record, and the Flywheel Grand Re-Opening (that’s this Thursday-Sunday!), among other things.

The interview was broadcast last night on WMUA, but you can find it in its entirety right on this here blog. Check it! Stream the thang here:

 

Download it here.

Tagged: beardoesall you men are slime

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24th February 2010

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Gospel, Blues, & Punk

While reading Albert Murray’s Stomping the Blues, I couldn’t help but think about how his idea of blues music as a sort of fight against the blues relates to punk music’s similar purpose.  Many see punk as meaningless or even nihilist, but this is not the case.  Punk is a struggle against not just the blues, but against what seems to some to be an ever more likely truth of nihilism.

The idea that there might be no meaning to life is what punk music tries to fight against.  We’ve been brought up to believe that there is a right and a wrong, but so much of the world around us seems unconcerned with morality.  Those same authority figures that told us what is right and wrong are the ones breaking those rules.  Punk always comes from a feeling that one is in a place where things are not the way they ought to be.

The Clash sang about career opportunities (or rather, a lack of them).  Joe Strummer was anything but lazy, and yet he was not able to find a job.  There’s something wrong with that, and yet we’ve been living in a world where unemployment is a structural necessity.  Jello Biafra sings about the injustice of the Dan White trial; apparently, the law only applies when certain people want it to.  The blues of punk music is the recognition of immorality at the very core of our society.  But it is most definitely the blues.

When Iggy sings “Search & Destroy,” he’s singin’ the blues.

Honey gotta help me please / Somebody gotta save my soul

Sound familiar?  The difference seems to me, however, that whereas the originators of blues used blues music as a sort of healing salve for the blues, punks seem to almost revel in the blues.  It may not be the case that, through punk music, one instantly chases the blues away.  But the goal is still the same. It’s through the magnification of the blues that, hopefully, change comes about.  When it’s made so plain that things aren’t the way they should be, how can it be ignored?  Eventually, we hope, the blues shall be taken out right at the core of the issue.

Tagged: all you men are slime

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18th February 2010

Audio with 1 note

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1986 - Aunts Marching
Everybody is Whatever I Think They Are (Palentine Records)

I shouldn’t have to tell you that sounding like Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. is not a bad thing.  Their influence is easily detected in 1986’s latest record, Everybody is Whatever I Think They Are.  In fact, I think vocalist Giorgio Angelini actually sounds a lot like Lee Ranaldo, particularly during the first half of the record.  But as far as overall sound, I think just a slightly toned-down Dinosaur Jr. would be the easiest way to imagine what 1986 sounds like.  That, or listening to “Aunts Marching,” found at the top of this page.

The record drops March 2, and it’s on Palentine Records, which I thought was something Airheads made up.

Tagged: all you men are slimeur indies

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