Punk is Dead and I’m Telling Everyone: Birmingham Punx and Nephilim Tattoos

Something a little bit different today…
This is an excerpt from a piece I wrote for my MA. It’s going to be included in a much larger collection of personal essays that I’m working on, and this is the opening to one of them. Hope you enjoy!

“In a city that swells with so much hate, you seem to rise above and take its place, the heart pumps until it dies – drain the blood, the heart is wise!”

The Distillers – Drain The Blood

 

“Are you alright there, lovely?”

Glenn, my artist for the day, is a big guy. He’s over six foot, covered in ink from top to toe, with a good solid number of facial piercings. He’s also wearing a fluffy brown cardigan and has been wittering away about his new puppy for the past twenty minutes. I smile and nod and he continues with his work. My arms are stiff and I’ve had my shirt off for longer than I would usually consider acceptable in a public place, but that’s the only discomfort I’m really feeling. The needle going into my skin over a thousand times a minute isn’t as much of an issue as I’d first thought it would be. My housemate Kate, my partner in crime, lies in the booth opposite. She is yelping with pain at every invasion. Her artist is constantly shushing her, telling her to lie still as he inscribes the words ‘Wrap Me In Waves’ in beautiful cursive script on her ribs. The guy on reception peeks into my booth to take a look at the work in progress. “That’s fucking awesome,” he grins. “Hey, you part of the fanclub? Look me up on the website.” He holds up a piece of paper with his username on it. I usher him away, and say I’ll take it later, trying not to move.

After an hour and a half that feels a lot more like half a day, Glenn stops and puts the tattoo gun down. “I’ll just take a photo on me phone so you can see it properly, alright?” he drawls in a thick Birmingham accent. He takes a quick snapshot and dangles a phone in front of my face. It’s exactly what I want, so I thank him, I pay the rest of the balance, and go and wait for Kate while the receptionist makes not so subtle passes at me. She comes out twenty minutes later. “Let me see, let me see!” She lifts up my top and gasps. “Oh, I’d be so pleased to have that on me forever.” That happens to be the nephilim artwork from AFI’s album, The Art Of Drowning, released in 2000, their last on Nitro Records before they moved to a major label. The script on her ribs is taken a song by a British electropunk outfit called My Passion. When I tell my mother via a sheepish phone call in McDonalds later, she laughs and says that I couldn’t be president of the university’s punk society without a bit of ink. When she sees it in the flesh, she complains that it isn’t feminine enough and asks me to cover it up on my wedding day.

And it all began so fleetingly, back in the year 2001, where I am ten years old. In the summer holidays, we have real satellite installed, as opposed to the knackered old box and dish that we had acquired from my father’s friends by less than credible means. No longer am I forced to endure MTV Deutche and its strange take on rap music, its constant repetition of Nelly Furtado and that one industrial band that set fire to themselves. My sister would scream in terror whenever their video played, but she’d never have to suffer that trauma again. We had real Sky now. I tentatively pick up the remote control. Its buttons are alien, but I recognise a standby symbol when I see one. The TV turns on and the first thing that pops up is MTV 2. At first, I think it’s a woman with a fairly deep voice, spitting legend into the microphone, but I notice that the fishnet top the singer is wearing is fairly transparent and has a chest far too flat to be female. He wears an inordinate amount of makeup and his hair is longer than mine, drawn messily in front of his face in a long and imposing peak. A few moments in and I am in love. I stare, enraptured, as he sings and screams and writhes on stage. He sings a line, and then his bandmates follow with a “woah-oh-oh-oh”, thrashing wildly on their instruments. The song ends too quickly, far too quickly for me to figure out what’s happening. I am sitting on the floor, jaw wide open, until my little sister runs in through the front door and tells me to come outside because the Mills and the Venns are having a big fight in the middle of the street and I really shouldn’t miss it because we’ll have to take the side of the winner when it’s all done. I never see the video on the TV again. When I get the chance, I wait for the internet to log on, the modem beeping and hissing as it connects to the world, and type in the only lyrics I remember – “Once there was a boy who had a vybrent glow”- into the search. The answer is The Boy Who Destroyed The World by AFI.

That memory hits me vividly as a friend sits next to me on the bus and slaps me on the shoulder, unaware of the fresh mutilation upon it. The sting pulls me out of a stupor. I swear loudly, I take the headphones off and my eyes flicker down to my iPod. The AFI discography sits there patiently, waiting for me to choose a track. In between bouts of conversation, I filter by genre, and a stark realisation hits me. AFI haven’t played punk rock in ten years. They stopped being angry kids, found themselves in their thirties and cut their hair, traded in the fishnets for Gucci suits. Because punk is dead and it’s time to grow up.

Elizabeth – Insomnia [EP]

From the shadow of imposing snow-capped Alpine mountains emerges Elizabeth; kicking and screaming in a tumultuous flurry of grating hardcore. The Geneva band have only been in existence since 2009 but have already built an impressive reputation as stringent road warriors, hitting clubs across a wide diaspora – from the frozen steppes of St Petersburg to the Marxist tropical time warp of Havana. On their spanking new EP Insomnia, such unwavering dedication to touring is matched by some exceedingly tight musicianship not to mention an almost unfathomable amount of focussed aggression. Insomnia is four tracks of relentless aural barbarity, thundering drums and guitar work that’s alternately abrasive and crushing. It’s an unforgiving sound that finds natural allies in a number of fellow Euro bands and takes cues from Rise & Fall; it finds an affinity in those that are able to grasp ideas from outside of the usual banal hardcore repertoire, twisting their sound into untapped forms of musical savagery.

There’s an instant vocal resemblance to the inhuman guttural bark of Converge’s Jacob Bannon, who in turn form another tangible influence on these angry boys from Geneva. ‘Cemetery Feeling’ bristles which unorthodox guitar noise. After the intro riff of muddied bass, guitarist Charly scrapes and scratches across the strings with barely comprehensible speed as the rest of the band steam along at the outer limits of their beats-per-minute capabilities. ‘Created Enemies’ is equally relentless in its propulsive drive, vocalist Javier smattering the maelstrom with specks of lung as he proceeds to shred his vocal chords into tatters. ‘Danger’ continues the destruction, upping the intensity levels with a blizzard of almost melodic guitar but the best is saved for the EP’s death throws on the sublime dynamism of ‘Ravens’. Here, clean guitar lines dance along in a way unseen since the idiosyncratic yet underachieving weird-core of the sadly defunct Crocus. A round of barbed blast-beats brings the record to a premature conclusion after a breath-taking eight minutes of precision brutality.

Elizabeth’s brand of chaotic hardcore, delivered with an inch-thick crust, may be derivative in many respects. The band however, deserve the upmost credit for their impeccable musicianship and the sheer ferocity of the unrelenting terror conjured with such finesse. Elizabeth can sit proudly amongst the ever brilliant roster of bands on Throatruiner, for Insomnia is an exemplary artefact of twisted hardcore.

4 out of 5 high fives!

So, we got hacked yesterday.

Yep. As it turns out, some bot that’s been hijacking various WordPress blogs managed to get in. Thankfully, nothing was damaged or deleted, there’s no malicious script running behind the scenes and we’re all good to continue now.

However, I will be stepping up the development of the new theme from here, as I think that’s where the vulnerability is. So, fingers crossed, we’ll have a new look and new stuff up and running soon!

xoxo – Robyn

Artist Spotlight: Milk Teeth

Milk Teeth hail from Bristol. Possibly. At least, according to the tags on their Bandcamp releases. The truth is, Milk Teeth are pretty hard to nail down. I stumbled upon them at a standard hardcore gig at the 2 Pigs in Cheltenham. You know the type – couple of okay bands, couple of absolutely dire bands but they’re all local so you play nice and pretend you like everyone. But these guys were not your standard hardcore band. Instead, four kids who looked like they’d just stepped out of the 90s slung their instruments on and started to play post-hardcore inflected grunge that ripped the whole room a new one.

Undeterred by the terrible breakdowns and dirge-like vocals of their peers, Milk Teeth came out swinging with something completely different. Keen to make sure that I wasn’t just overawed simply because of that difference, I went onto the internet, found a handful of songs and ended up spending my afternoon with them on repeat.

So, as it turns out, Milk Teeth are Olly (drums), Becky (bass/vocals), Chris (guitar) and Josh (guitar/vocals). They started out in the summer as just Josh and Olly before they recruited the others and found the perfect mix. “Milk Teeth comes from a Japanese Voyeurs song… maybe,” they say, and it’s hard not to hear a hint of influence from the neo-grunge revival that Japanese Voyeurs brought about, something the band admit themselves – “As you would expect, you’ve got Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, Japanese Voyeurs, Daylight, Title Fight… but at a band, we listen to a wide range of music so the sound we get is an amalgamation of all the bands we listen to.” When asked if they’d side with punk or grunge, they said “It’s pretty hard to say for us as we do encompass both styles heavily in our sound, but as we have to choose, I’d say grunge because none of us have a mohawk!” Basically, Milk Teeth are the band I wanted to be in when I was 14. Hell, they’re the band I want to be in now.

Take ‘Vanilla’, for example. Three minutes of hyper-distorted grunge, with vocals that sound more like Touché Amore than Nirvana, which has an atmospheric approach to melody that’s unrivalled by any other band in their field at the moment. It’s visceral, haunting and engaging, an effect that’s achieved through a fairly tight-knit approach – “Songwriting-wise, one of us will usually come to practice with a riff or a full song and we’ll jam it out between us. Changing parts, adding sections and so on until we have a full song. It’s a very shared affair.”

On the EP Smiling Politely, you can see this organic approach really come into fruition. It’s a fully accomplished record, full of serious riffs, punk attitude and extremely 90s guitar effects. It’s a far more balanced record than their earlier material and Becky’s vocals are featured more on ‘Forty Six’ and ‘Swear Jar’, her sweet verses countering Josh’s angst-ridden screams perfectly. It’s refreshing to see a band as raw as Milk Teeth, but with the musical know-how to back it up. Smiling Politely is simple, but accomplished, and the crowning example of that is ‘Wizard Battle’. These guys know how to throw down, but also how to craft a tune.

The 90s aesthetic that’s present in the songs spreads into their stripped-down live appearances too, although the band haven’t modelled themselves on anything in particular – “We’re all kids of the 90s and that decade spawned some of our favourite TV shows, movies and music, stuff we still love today. Consciously, we haven’t set out to recreate anything, but there are definite influences and similarities to bands of that era. It’s music we grew up with, and there’s definitely a resurgence of 90s influence currently; we just lucked out with it coinciding.”

That resurgence might well be to their advantage, as big things are on the way for Milk Teeth. Recently starting to work with Ian Dickinson of Sink Or Swim Management has been a particular highlight – “Yeah, we are fucking stoked on that! Ian is a hell of a dude and completely understands how we want to grow as a band! We already have things we are working on with him – I ain’t gonna tell you what – but it’s good, so keep an eye on us!”

However, they can reveal that they’re working on new material and playing shows in-between – “We are currently writing new material and are already playing a new song in our live set. Hoping to get in the studio around Christmas time if it all pans out and yes, lots of gigging! Come check us out; we promise a good time!”

Milk Teeth are Olly (drums), Becky (bass/vocals), Chris (guitar) and Josh (guitar/vocals). Their EP, Smiling Through, is currently available on cassette and MP3 from their Bandcamp page.

Review: We Are Fiction – One For Sorrow

Where to start? We Are Fiction have an album out, and you need it.

I must begin by saying that, although I try to be objective when reviewing new music, this may be the most horrifically biased review you read all year. I love We Are Fiction. Their 2009 EP was fun and filled with a kind of youthful rage and snarkiness that can’t be mimicked with age. Then came the obligatory big clean vocalist change; lineup changes are inevitable in young bands, and it’s no wonder so many musicians derail their creation before tapping into its real potential. But thankfully this was not the case for WAF. Cue a more streamlined sound, considered lyrics and a far more complimentary vocal blend. The We Are Fiction on ‘One For Sorrow’ is older, more polished and with a clear direction. That isn’t to say that the album is over-polished and dull (like some of their peers’ recent efforts), rather the energy, boundless optimism and infectious hooks have increased tenfold. This is powerful, home-grown music as it should be. Not a string of watery riffs and lyrics based on their tattoo potential. You need this album.

While some tracks such as the anthemic ‘Sail On’, soundtrack to a thousand break-ups ‘My Dreams Are Haunted’ and too-perky-for-words ‘The Worst Of It’ have been released prior to the album launch, this doesn’t alter the fresh enjoyment of the album. ‘A Thousand Places to Sleep’ kicks off proceedings with a deliciously old school (if you’re my age, at least) riff that compels you to move from the first lick. But a catchy hook isn’t enough; we get our first masterclass in blending harmonies in melodic post-hardcore. This is Alexisonfire with a library card; rage swaddled in poetic sincerity. ‘Bright Lights’ is fun; designed for crowd interaction and ridiculous dancing. Come tour season, venues will fold to this song. ‘Mansion House’ (presumably named after the cheap-yet-delicious alcoholic drink, rather than the tube station) is very much in the same vain- a fun, party-ready song filled with opportunities to headbutt your mate and throw some terrifying shapes. ‘Forget About Me’ is a delightfully unexpected musical interlude that proves We Are Fiction don’t only write songs to hurl yourself across the room to.  A gentle piano-led introduction builds to a frankly beautiful denouement; a sound so full and rich that you’d fight the compulsion to bathe in it. ‘Old Wounds’ is a blend of We Are Fiction’s trademarks; familiar guitar tones blend with mellow harmonies, all layered over impressively controlled rougher vocals (calling them ‘shouts’ or ‘screams’ hardly does it justice) to ensure a firm fan favourite.

‘Tilt’ shows off vocalist Phil Barker’s rougher range amazingly; his natural tone would be envied by many large hardcore bands, and when layered over Marc Kucharski’s ethereal vocal melodies, the whole sound becomes far greater than the sum of its parts. Slap bang in the middle of ‘Tilt’ is a guest vocalist, and the start of your new favourite collaboration.  Xidus Pain, a Peterborough-based hip hop artist, stomps in with a rap that you’ll rewind the track to learn. They don’t slip into TRC territory, but the blending of three vocal stylings is so pleasing that you’ll be hard pushed to do anything but grin from ear to ear. But one of the true highlights on One For Sorrow is the bafflingly titled ‘Wladyslaw’. For the most part; it’s a stripped down track; Kucharski croons over gentle instrumentals. That is until the heart-shattering chorus of ‘I never got the chance to tell you how much I love you’ blasts through the comfortable simplicity of the track and even the most casual listener hangs on every last word they sing.

One For Sorrow shows a phenomenal range of songwriting talents and musicianship. We Are Fiction have created a beautiful monster, ready to be adored by fans and envied by peers. Regardless of age, gender or musical taste, this album will provide the soundtrack to part of your life, and you’ll enjoy every minute of it.

5 out of 5 high fives!