Great opening track by this thing called Capture The Flag - feels
like I'm listening to early Cro-Mags, circa '83 or '84 with their addictive
blend of Metal shred and catchy top of the lungs verses. The Control's one of
the later model discoveries by the GK people and combine the exhilarating
thrills of high speed Prog-core tightly wound and emitted amongst a two minute
barrage of bottom-less dollar store style.
Daycare Swindlers is one of my latest faves from the guys; a definite cross
breed of early age H/C ala Crumbsuckers and Circle Jerks with little or no
production effects and plenty o' raw factor to recall the glory days of
non-for-profit Punk. Guff, not "Gutt" as I almost called them, and why
not anyway, the same fate befalls us all after forty… they're the early fave
for Pop crossover of the list on their charming "Making A Difference"
contribution.
Toxic Narcotic does a 180 and gives ya a little taste of venom with their
"We're Not Happy Till You're Not Happy" down for life style of
Hardcore/Noise in the finest English Dogs drunken fuck everything tradition. Go
Kart's been making their move in the last year and several months.
Not satisfied to stick solely in one end or another where Heavy Rock and Punk
is concerned, yes, the buzz cut factor is in full effect in most cases, but as
evidenced by the 18 or 20 contributors to this 30 track tirade, there's plenty
for everyone to groove to in their gathering place of choice. Seemed for a while
they'd been missing the boat or just MIA after some respectable but sporadic
releases - now we're hearing all kinds of cool stuff from newcomers like Pseudo
Heroes and Manda & The Marbles, to soon to be staples like Toxic Narcotic
and Two Man Advantage, and the ol' school powerhouses like GBH, who just did a
scathing new "Ha Ha" record a few months back - featured from it we
find "Punk Rock Ambulance," a throaty sounding contender for one of
the album's best; And then there's The Varukers, very much from that same class
of yesterday's aggressive Street Core activists who even in old age, could care
less about minimizing content or volume, and remain one of today's Hardcore
extremists even after all the mileage they've logged.
Hey let's face it, young or old, Punk music, at the core, will always have a
fight the power quality that lives on in any age, any state, and recognizes no
boundaries. INDK and Sick On The Bus are two more prime examples of yesterday's
stick swingers smashing through nu-school rules of conduct.
While many of these bands featured here, some twice over, are essential,
there are other new arrivals with only a web site to call home and are the real
sleeper hits - I mentioned Capture The Flag earlier, great band, given space for
two songs, "Fly Like The Wind" and "The Zero Effect," and
Guff, serving up a milder more melodic chunk of Punk and Power Pop; Revolution
Summer's got an early out of control Ramones' feel on their "Qualitative
Leap" tune before turning into a near dead ringer for AFI; definitely
something we need to hear more of. So yes, there's many a worthwhile upstart to
discover - and there's a few poorly placed copies scattered throughout, not so
much for the "I heard that one before" quality, I mean, of course, but
I don't go for this paint by numbers shit; if you want to be like Rancid, be
like Rancid, or sound like Green Day but at least give 'em credit!
Thankfully, the scales are tilted heavily towards world domination rather
than mild opposition and cut and run. These guys ain't here to make any friends,
they mean business and if you're expecting handshakes and well-intended niceties
in the lyrics, you'll wanna book a flight to the Southwest. Brothers of
Conquest, how could I forget them, probably the best heavy fuckin' Rock band no
one's ever heard of, with their Death Rock, Punk, Metal, and booze-soaked Blues
going on in one lethal dose of aural damnation that can't be fully appreciated
until you heard their "All The Colors Of Darkness" in its entirety
over and over again.
The 3rd in the NY-based label's fight against the oppressive corporate giant
reveals their deadliest offensive yet, with a varied assortment of Punk styles
united under the flag of freedom and forward progress.