Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Vans/Journeys Warped Tour
Saturday July 1st, 2017
Vinoy Park, St. Petersburg, FL 

It would always have taken something extraordinary for me to even consider letting the Warped Tour into my peripheral vision.  Describing it as a money-gathering experiment donning a cloak stitched together with the skin of a thousand shit, generic punk bands -- well, you might as well call U.S. policy “imperialist,” or discuss the triangularity of triangles (as Chomsky once put it).  But, though little more than a happy accident, this year they crept in, by including my old genre-ruffing Manchester buddies Sonic Boom Six on the lineup.  Following this thread of youth I find some half-a-dozen acts that might be worth watching, actually, and before I know it I’m trapped, without re-entry benefits, facing eight hours of blazing sun and twelve-dollar gnatspiss beers and wondering what the holy fuck I’ve stepped into.

It’s almost that quick at least.  Some organisational incompetence leads to a single person directing the incredibly long entry line to move to the other side of the street, which needless to say, they interpret by moving themselves from the back half to the front.  In more raucous times it might have led to a riot. The line is only so long because the sweatshop-utilising shoe companies that purport to run this circus (with their ridiculous names that are supposed to imply soul-fulfilling motion) don’t release schedules before it begins, forcing everyone to show up to the cage early lest they miss who they bought tickets for.  

Then once you get in there is a big balloon wall indicating that they do in fact have a schedule, but the bastards expect you to fork over two dollars for a paper timetable.  I’m reminded of the mighty video critic Jim Sterling, railing against triple-A game developers who continue to increase the presence of microtransactions in full-priced games.  I have already paid for the full experience, which should include an easy way of knowing what is going on and when. Most people take pictures of the wall, but that they would even try and charge for something so traditionally considered integral starts the day off on a pessimistic note. *

My predictions of who might be playing at what times turn out to be suspiciously and totally wrong, with an established band like Strung Out getting things rolling.  I’d accuse them of stringing out the big names, but since there are so many younger bands whose popularity levels I know nothing about it’s hard to spot a pattern.  In any case, Strung Out skate-spawns one of the first pits of the day, lasting about half the length of the song ‘Velvet Alley’ before retreating.  As people still pile through the entrance gates the crowd grows from a few dozen to about a hundred by the end of their set.

Strung Out are a good start, but for sweaty cobweb blowing of the serious measures kind, my next act of interest is Sick Of It All.  As punk continues to age, it becomes ever more important to distinguish your fast music credentials through the litmus test that is when you chose to start existing.  Frontman Lou Koller does it in a friendly way, introducing 1994’s ‘Scratch the Surface’ as the “hit that came out before you were born,” and wondering where all the first-time viewers have been.  (For my part in keeping punk crotchety, I last saw SOIA at Reading Festival 2004. Also Goldfinger, who are on this year's Warped Tour, but sadly didn’t come to St. Pete.) Koller has always sounded like he was on the bigger and older side.  Back when the internet was practically empty and all we had to go on was sleevenote thumbnails, I had pictured him (and similar hardcore singers) as something of a broad-shouldered, post-human giant, in fact. Yet here he is, muscley and gruff-voiced perhaps, but handsome, all in black and barely breaking a sweat as the band makes as much satisfying ragey noise as ever.  Any superhumanoid or youth tonic theories are sadly squashed though when Koller brags about getting back to his air-conditioned room. And organic fruit slices and skin-toning massages (my brain made those up because AC sounds that good right now).

Contemporary hardcore in a revisionist old style is how you might convolutedly describe Baltimore’s War On Women, performing at the Skullcandy stage.  Skullcandy not eyecandy!  May we all be judged by the sugary sweetness of our brains, rather than bodies.  That’s a thought I take away from War On Women’s style and their accompanying Safer Scenes tent, travelling with the tour and providing useful intervention advice for everyone looking to make music welcoming to all regardless of gender.  Y’know, unity and shit. Like the traditional TV news model, the constricting festival slot isn’t really structured to allow for in-depth discussion, so to spread their views WOW need some punchy thrash bangers, which they happen to have brought with them.  There’s the catchy and trans-inclusive ‘Second Wave Goodbye,’ and ‘Roe V. World’ with its repetitive All-O-Gistics-style wind-up riff and laundry list of points (and hey, Descendents, maybe break your own rules and do some laundry -- it’s been getting done, and not by magic pixies).  (Curiously, I gave some mild Descendents criticism last time I reviewed these lot.)  On the subject of safer scenes, how about demands for women only portable toilets, or just more hygienic ones in general?  I’m not one for hoping to solve problems through theoretical future technology, but I refuse to believe that travelling shitholes have not made advancements beyond the horrendous receptacles that we continue to see at festivals.

Speaking of the throughput footprint of urban debris, immediately next-door and next is former WOW tourmates Municipal Waste.  While exactly half the age of SOIA in band years, Municipal Waste are determined to show that they are as punk and authentic as anyone birthed in the dark fires of the (Iron) Reagan years.  They tell us, surprisingly, that there’s no autotune in their thrash, oh NO! “I don’t even know what a computer is!” proclaims Tony Foresta. Their performance is as audibly violent and entertaining as you’d expect from a band whose principal imagery of late is of Donald Trump shooting himself in the head.  How’s that for skullcandy?  The partially local band even came to the aid of Kathy Griffin recently when every mainstream pundit failed to give them credit for the idea of depicting violence against stupid White House occupants.  So obviously they perform their Dubya-Bush-era ‘I Want to Kill the President.’ Another appropriate cut is ‘The Thrashin’ Of The Christ’ as Foresta pays homage, not for the first time today, to a sweaty Jesus slamming in front of the Hard Rock stage.

When there’s plenty of Trump hate to go around because it’s so easy, bands with more overt politics should step up and provide something deeper.  Anti-Flag -- on this tour at least -- fall short of this.  Acknowledging again the limits of festival slots, we get a well rehearsed display of anger, complete with an upside-down flag, ‘Turncoat,’ ‘Die for the Government,’ and ‘Fuck Police Brutality.’  We get ‘This Is The End (For You My Friend)’ with the hook that sounds just like ‘We Can’t Rewind’ by Feeder.  During all this, any semblance of overcasting goes away, allowing our brains to be fried fully so that we might absorb the one-dimensional radicalism on offer.  It’s frustrating because Anti-Flag cover topics that are broad rather than simplistic, not often sexy enough to be featured in music or even the news, and that contain explanations for how in the hell things ended up here (free trade and consolidated media, for example).  I have to imagine that the way Anti-Flag view their on-stage persona is how most respectable bands view an event like Warped. Sure, it's obviously clownish bollocks, yet it at least provides something of a way to give kids insight to progressive thinking. Guitarist Chris Head is wearing a War On Women shirt, and that band has made no secret of the fact that this is basically why they joined the tour.  But is it really all that helpful, working long term as we must, to simplify so much, when fans will likely discard the band and possibly their faux-radical bathwater a few years later?   I know that I’m hoping for too much from an older act like Anti-Flag, and probably punk music in general. With the current state of things I’d love to be proved wrong though.

Speaking of window dressing-politics, it’s great that there are so many animal rights tables here.  But for god's sake, what is the use of having three vegan literature pushers and not a single remotely veggie-friendly food stand?  I settle for a Greek place that doesn’t have any falafel, but does have amazing sweat-absorbing napkins.  The first indication that the heat might have peaked comes with the surprising appearance of Save Ferris, touring off the back of their first release since the 90’s, Checkered Past.  Maybe the mental-sensation of cooling comes from seeing all their breezy wind instruments or Monique Powell's air-filtration fishnets, or maybe, like she says, it’s nice to see something different to most of the other acts.  Powell lightly makes fun of the screamy-feeling bands, and SF show that they too can do emotionally-charged hardcore, with a welcome rendition of ‘Too Drunk to Fuck.’

I nip back into the norm though to see part of Hatebreed’s set.  Vocalist Jamey Jasta asks us to respect the security guards and their important jobs, urges all to remember Chris Cornell, and then waxes romantically about punk and hardcore becoming a family-friendly affair now spanning three generations.  Hateful! Maybe being nice soothes his throat (when he’s not soothing it with new MUTANT DRINK of course, occasional sponsor of Jasta’s podcast and this occasional stage). Right after Hatebreed come some group called Hundredth, but I’m just disappointed when I realise it’s obviously not Hundred Reasons.  I wander past some funnyheads singing songs about Mexico in the style of a celtic chiptune and about force feeding hot dogs to other dogs. This is not the only backlash to all the animal rights booths that I will hear today.

Attempting to be open minded, I watch a band that a younger friend recommended to me, Neck Deep.  No, not Mobb Deep (R.I.P. Prodigy), although the crowd for these Welsh pop-punkers does have the potential to become a mob, being one of the largest I would see throughout the day.  If they had all been as clueless as me, they might have descended into violence demanding to know the whereabouts of singer Ben Barlow, and who the old man dressed like a NASCAR driver is onstage.  I’m half expecting a Cobain at Reading ‘92 type stunt where Barlow rips off the costume to reveal that he’s actually okay (because apparently, “it’s okay not to be okay”).  Nice as it is to see a home-nation band doing well, I’d prefer it if the kids here weren’t going nuts for an act that sounds like they’re from American suburbia circa 2003, even going so far as to use what seem like forced mid-atlantic accents.  It’s not bad but for me they need to go deeper than neck deep in the history of the genre, being very much in the New Found Glory vein. The neck vein.

Wanting to hear slightly earlier and genuinely American pop-punk is an easy stroll away, with The Ataris playing to a rather smaller crowd.  Kristopher Roe is here presumably with a touring band as he’s currently the only member of the Ataris proper.  All seems well and mellow though as he tells us his grandparents were from Largo, they do great favourites like ‘Boys of Summer’ and the epic ‘Your Boyfriend Sucks,’ and White Jesus continues to hard rock within the confines of this particular corporate corner.  I missed the very start of their set but I could’ve done with a few tracks from End is Forever, and an old song called ‘Peel Session’ that appears on their newest releases would have been great (even though John has nothing to do with it and it’s actually about, yes, a girl).  Roe’s final words to the crowd are that he doesn’t “know who’s playing [immediately after us] but they’re probably awesome.”

Yes they are, Kristopher.  If I had to pick a single band to come to Florida as a UK punk scene care package for myself, it would be Sonic Boom Six.  In the time that I’ve lived in this godforsaken former swamp the band has continued to evolve, with a setlist of songs that adequately spans their varied incarnations despite long track times, short slot space and Laila K charm offences. I will now list them all because it gives me pleasure: ‘Meanwhile Back in the Real World,’ ‘Sound of a Revolution,’ ‘No Man, No Right,’ ‘The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Inventions’ (Tampa Bay needs to heed this one), ‘For the Kids of the Multiculture’ and ‘Piggy in the Middle.’  To fund this tour SB6 put out a brilliant EP (review forthcoming), but the machinations of the ultimate city of thieves still prevented BarneyBoom from attending most of it, which makes me sad.  Despite her best efforts, English Laila cannot help but comment on the “fuck me it’s hot” weather and pregnant potential for thunderstorms pissing on their meet-and-greets. While the crowd is on the small side today there’s photo evidence of huge audiences on other dates, and it seems safe to say that the Boomers are having a blast.

By now the jokes and paradoxical observations of a genre that was never intended to grow up having done so have been well and truly made.  But I genuinely admire all the youthfully-monikered bands such as Adolescents for their perseverance, as well as their music.  Like so many “Lil” hip-hoppers, Tony Reflex and co carry the collective glory days in their hearts even as their collective ages round 250.  And hooray for that, because ‘Who is Who’ and ‘Amoeba’ sound as top as ever, and unlike the semi-unfortunate souls who seem condemned to merely tour until they die onstage, Adolescents are still putting out cool new material.  Also unlike some of their peers, they’re capable of distinguishing actual rebelliousness from keyboard warrior-pleasing vitriol.  Reflex speaks little, except to slow clap The Dickies’ Leonard Graves Phillips for his “well spoken and thoughtful” views on women at a Warped date a few weeks prior.  (Noodles, the thick arsehole that he is, can also fuck off back to the punk old boys club.)  The ‘ardcore assembly here again seems disappointingly minimal, but I would learn in short order that it wasn’t exactly a snub towards the Adolescents.

Depending on your musical preferences I suppose.  A huge and exhausted crowd is waiting for the light relief of GWAR, sunbeaten into a desire for the weird and in an eerie silence till ‘War Pigs’ introduces the band to cheers.  One suspects that an additional reason for Gwar playing so late in the day is that, like the handful of UK artists who all performed post-afternoon, an attempt is being made to preserve the lives of these foam-cladded space mutants (we’re back at the Monster Energy zone, fittingly).  Between things resembling songs, the luckier residents of “St. Peepeesburg” are coated with fake blood spraying from neck stumps and jokes about fucking dolphins. Then, to the sound of AC/DC’s ‘If You Want Blood (You’ve obviously Got It),’ a walking Donald Trump effigy is ripped to shredded pieces. (Gwar have invited Kathy Griffin to join them onstage for this ritual, with no known response from her lawyer.)  As dumb as it all is, it’s an appropriate illustration on the curious filth and madness of both this festival and Trump's America. President Fart doesn’t observe any respectable interpretation of reality, and frankly doesn’t deserve to be treated in the context of it.  Because this reality TV character being where he is still doesn’t seem real. It seems kind of, well... warped.

------

* Sterling also finds himself being pitifully grateful when a company acts in a manner that would have been considered the norm a few years prior, essentially praising them for not moving completely in lockstep with the latest creeping corporate pushes against human dignity.  So thank you, shoe-shovellers of car country, for allowing us to bring in a single, sealed plastic water bottle, and then providing a tiny area where we can get them freely refilled during this scorcher, rather than charging for every sip of the human lifeforce. And some misting tents.  Some basics for patrons to not die. Truly, you are forward thinking.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Internal Borders
Thoughts on the Cross-Bay Ferry, Tampa Bay Buses and the Movement of People

Originally published at Ybor City Stogie
 
Saturday, February 18th, 2017. 5:30pm.

Two days before our voyage, in an admirably fierce display of people's journalism, the Tampa Bay Times laid waste to bus networks in both Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties.  Caitlin Johnston and Eli Zhang detail their sad track records when it comes to investing in mass transit and in making any real efforts to improve it over the course of decades.  The most astonishing finding might be that Tampa Bay is the only top-20 metro region by population in the country to spend less than $213 million per year on its systems, trailing pathetically down at $141 million.  This fact puts the drawn-out debate over whether PSTA should invest in two measly electric buses into perspective: the real question is why there is not more money in the pot in the first place.  Johnston and Zhang also tell the stories of the people affected by this state of affairs, who often spend dozens more hours a week traveling than their motorist peers, and the vicious circle straitjacket of poverty that it keeps many stuck in.  It's made clear in the article that both counties are terrible separately, but the argument that the watery bay itself is to blame continues to persist.  Can this Cross-Bay Ferry pilot project traversing the area offer any kind of public transport redemption?

We pick up our humble paper tickets and proceed past a continuation of friendly crew members.  You can see some lovely footage of the boat here from a guy with a suspiciously similar identity to me.  It's pleasant without being garish, as you would hope with tickets ranging from $10 to free.  You can explore relatively openly, and experience the elements if you choose.  There's some food, but more interestingly there are Florida craft beers from the likes of 3 Daughters and Funky Buddha.  The local angle continues with coupons in the on-board newspaper for Florida Cane Distillery, St. Petersburg Museum of History, Daddy Kool Records and Mother Kombucha, among others.  If you ask nicely, there is even the opportunity for free pain relievers.  The bus network suddenly seems very distant.

While the staff here are likable, the land use is ugly.  Notable views include Big Bend coal power station, outmatched in terms of visible pollution only by a cruise liner farting into the evening air.  Which brings up the question of the sustainability of such journeys compared to the alternatives.  Air and carbon emissions from flying and luxury cruise liners have been woefully neglected by the majority of American environmental groups. The available fuel economy information on smaller passenger ferries such as the Cross-Bay Ferry catamaran is even harder to find, so maybe we shouldn't be too harsh on the operators for their silence on the issue thus far.  Considering that they don't need to temporarily house, feed and entertain hundreds or thousands of people over long periods, whilst burning fuel that would never be allowed on dry land, we might hope that the emissions from such vessels are considerably less than those of the ship we saw passing in the opposite direction.  How Cross-Bay compares to equivalent car and bus journeys however, needs to be addressed sooner or later if Florida is to make any attempt to save itself from sea-level rise that will render whatever infrastructure we choose moot.

Supporting nearby economies is also important for the environment, and an ideal that often makes for strange bedfellows.  The past year has seen a narrow form of "buy local" nationalism take hold in many countries.  You realise the complications and somewhat arbitrary nature of it all when you visit the bathroom of Provincetown IV -- purportedly manufactured in Massachusetts -- and see sign wordage that includes "royal flush," "rubbish" and "quali-T".   In other words, trying to pick apart and identify local, national and global supply chains, keeping just the bits you want, isn't particularly simple.  The aforementioned Big Bend, the only coal power station in the Bay, gets its fuel from Kentucky, and doesn't even serve Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties.  Coal from Appalachia undermines the development of clean Florida resources and economics as well as anything brought in from overseas.  Every effort has been made to allow for the free movement of business products.  The same cannot be said for the free movement of human beings.
 
These issues only continue to play on my mind as we arrive at the historic Tampa Theatre, a brief walk away from the dock (Tampa Bay is one of the top ten most deadly places in the country to be a pedestrian, by the way).  There's a marathon showing of live action, Oscar-nominated shorts, and the five films have a strong thread of themes running through them about transport, movement and migration. Silent Nights is a Christmas love story complicated by the fact that one of the participants migrated to Denmark from Ghana, without papers.  In Timecode, we see that a car park can be just as underutilized and isolating as the car itself -- but the bored Spanish guards make hilarious use of the wasted space.  Enemies Within demonstrates how categorizations of people can shift around them.  A French-Algerian Muslim man who has lived in France most of his life goes through the formality of interviewing for citizenship, only for tense accusations and the threat of deportation to surface.  In Switzerland's The Railroad Lady, a car-hating woman waves a flag at the high-speed train that passes her home twice a day.  Despite the amazing speed of the tech which allows certain people to cross multiple borders a day, the driver and the woman manage to build an unusual and sweet connection.  Sing is the cute tale of a group of kids trying to get from Hungary to Sweden for a competition, and standing up to abusive teacher authority on the way.  Sing went on to win the Oscar for live-action short.  I don't know why exactly all of the nominations came from continental Europe, but it's appropriate when that is a place where both Britons and Americans might soon find travel somewhat more restricted.

Movement and who gets to partake in it have become hot topics lately.  Conversations about migration and transport are not that different, in that they involve allowing people different degrees of freedom to get around based on their backgrounds.  Just as national borders and countries of origin are used to determine who gets access to what rights and what resources, access to varying types of transport serve the same ends.  For most people regularly taking public transport in Tampa Bay, it's because they are poorer than average (PSTA's own research shows that about half of their riders earn less than $15K a year).  If you are not perceived to contribute enough to the economy, your options for transport are reduced to slow, often inconvenient and minimally maintained ones.  If you care about the detrimental impacts of private cars, are physically unable to drive or just dislike using them, your choices are similarly grim.  Your right to freedom of movement then is theoretical, and thus largely useless.  It is severely restrained because of who you are, much like the migrants who must face barriers and harassment at every turn because of the particular places they were born on their own planet.  If you are of one of the correct nationalities and have access to a car, you are permitted to enjoy a greater degree of freedom of movement.  Until you get stuck in a traffic jam, at least.  Being white also helps.

For this area and its working poor, the Cross-Bay Ferry could go some way to rectifying the situation, even as a small part of a decent transport network.  The service is reporting month-on-month ridership records as the end of the pilot phase approaches in April.  Perhaps even more encouragingly, operators state that over 90% of customers are locals, not the wealthy tourists that local government is so often criticized for focusing on.  Given that the website at the time of our ticket purchase that afternoon said there were 108 left for the journey (out of 149), it remains to be seen whether this is enough interest to get the project off the dock for real.  What is known is that the ferry is comfortable and fast; faster than the multi-hour odyssey that is a bus over the bay, and maybe, by some metrics, faster than driving.  Going to Tampa Theatre would have been unthinkable and beyond suggestion with the bus as the only option.  In other words, for those marooned on the Pinellas peninsula or spaceship Hillsborough, it's a game changer.  What would be really great would be if the people holding the purse strings - whatever level of government they are at - valued our freedom of movement as equally as that of other residents, and funded transport choices sufficiently.  Considering that the "America First" draft budget eliminates all future federal spending on transit expansions entirely (forget about PSTA's Central Avenue rapid bus project), this might be a challenge.  In the meantime, the best we can do is what we did during the Greenlight Pinellas referendum, and hope for at least some scraps of a scheme.  Just don't let the foreigners know how good we've got it.

NB: As of December 2017, local dithering over funding (Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn) and politics (the St. Pete Mayoral election) mean that the ferry is not likely to return until at least the 2018-2019 fall season.  Thanks once again to Caitlin Johnston. 

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Shadcore
Oh My Shad!
Self-released, 2015

Originally published at Suburban Apologist 

“What is a rapper without no beef?” -- Shadcore, ‘What!?!’

Rashad Harrell AKA Shadcore seems to have more interest in seafood than in beef.  ‘What!?!,’ the track the above lyric is taken from, finalises it's pure fun colours by heading into a bizarre passage about fish grease in the third act.  It’s enough sealife love to make Mr Scruff politely clap or give Leftfield a natural follow-up club banger to ‘Little Fish’.

Regardless, I have to disagree with the artist here.  Shadcore -- born and bred in St. Pete -- is very much a real rapper, but who could possibly have beef with him?  His warmth and friendliness is undeniable, from his stint as the bubble-bath romance master at Myra Radio (“this is Russel Stover, your late night chauffeur”), to his refusal to use profanity in his music and just generally have a positive outlook on life.  As one fraction of The Real Clash Harrell has fought for unarguably noble causes ranging from typhoon victims long since forgotten in the public eye, to speaking out against domestic violence.

On Oh My Shad! Shadcore takes the diversity of musical influences that we’ve heard from TRC in the last four years and crystalises them.  Beginning with 14 tracks, they were refined into 10 and split into pretty rigid categories. There are three slow songs, three that are mid-tempo and three scorchers (plus an instrumental ‘Segue’).  Shad delves into hip hop soul, hard rock and Fleshtone house without ever sounding like parody or lazy experimentation.  I would have liked hearing more (even the intermission could have been expanded), but there’s no denying the care that’s gone into making this a quality, tight release.

Despite this mixture of styles the album has a great flow to it that compliments the man's smooth delivery.  One binding element is an emphasis on original beats and collaboration (largely with fellow veterans of the MIRA program at SPC).  Beautifully sung choruses hover over firmly planted guitars, drums, keyboards and saxophones. The power-of-music themed ‘One Song’ has a fantastic guest verse from TRC co-conspirator Jay Acolyte.  Shadcore knows he can get your attention right back whenever necessary, so he’s not afraid to let the album breathe. On the specifically breathy and New Amerykah Part Two style ‘Magnets’ (with Cynthia Sao), it’s three minutes before he even makes his entrance.

If this all showcases his love for musical family, his commitment to immediate blood is shown in the lyrics and artwork.  It’s clear that Shadcore is comfortable in the role of a hip hop family-man. Compassion and hope for the next generation is everywhere from the subtle and understanding uplift of ‘PSTA to Escalades,’ to praise for Christina Aguilera’s ‘Beautiful’.  The cover image of Shad as a kid and the opening track ‘Peggy Sue’ both communicate a modesty and rare honesty about the archetypal braggadocio rapper who was once a child himself. At the same time, Rashad’s late dad, who took the cover photo, is dedicated on the label and featured in the family tree collage on the back.  Life has challenges at any age. “Everything comes full circle,” as our protagonist says.

Don’t let any of this fool you into thinking this is a purely mild listening experience though.  While Harrell is shown as a child on the cover he also happens to be holding a toy uzi in New York, à la By All Means Necessary.  His delivery speed and tone fall somewhere between Charlie 2na (fish?) and Killer Mike (a comparison courtesy of Mr. Chuck D).  The trio of apocalypse-sized huge hitters, made up of the title track, ‘Shadzilla’ and ‘What!?!’ will shake you out of any slumber.  Shadcore keeps it on the local street corner with references to the Skyway bridge and the embattled bus system (PSTA), and as I’ve said before, I just love bus references.  And there’s little nods to Dr. Dre, Cypress Hill, A Tribe Called Quest, and uh, George Michael.

I haven’t heard a lot of Shadcore’s older material, but purely going by gut Oh My Shad! has the feel of a magnum opus.  The effort and time that went into it is evident, the scope large, and it’s much preferable to the kind of over bloated rap LP that goes on for way too long.  It’s one of those albums where a different track grabs your attention on each listen, until you get the picture: this is really good. Oh My Shad! won’t make you think of Shadcore as a deity -- but he would probably laugh the idea off if you suggested that it did. 

You can purchase Oh My Shad! here.  Shadcore’s band The Real Clash released their debut album Clash Wednesdays in January.

2018 note: the new album Aux Tales was released in April 2018. Review coming soon!

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Upcoming: Johnny Mile and the Kilometers/Selectric with Natural Child/Faux Ferocious
The Local 662, St. Petersburg, FL
Wednesday, January 27th 2016

Nashville bands Natural Child and Faux Ferocious will be slamming into St. Pete this Wednesday courtesy of Don’t Stop and Blind Not Deaf.  The prolific local label with a penchant for bats has picked out two well-suited supports from its own roster for what is sure to be a night of smouldering igneous rock depravity.

You’ll get Johnny Mile and the Kilometers for 75¢, and every band that comes subsequently. Yes -- previously listed at $12, it’s now only 3!  How much is that in metric? Their name might be lengthy in any system of measurements, but the songs are so short and rocking you’ll want to feed their killer meter!  Listen to ‘Rock and Roll is Dead’ and try to decide if it’s more Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, or Super Furry Animals circa ‘Do or Die.’  Not Deaf? You’re not yet.

Then also with a member nicked from Sonic Graffiti will be Selectric.  You could put all the people on this label in a bag, shake it viciously, pick 3 out and they’d already have an EP in the mix.  Selectric are not Scalextric but they will give you a psychedelic blues electrification. Their song ‘727272727272727’ solidifies them as the most local and keepin-it-real band in the area.  They can be seen practicing at 2am in the picture below because they are that dedicated to blowing your mind. Don’t Stop? Don’t miss it!

 
Photo by Danton Ruegger