Showing posts with label Monsterland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monsterland. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2013

I Drank A Pot Of Coffee And Then I Took Some Of These



Monsterland are my all-time favorite CT band, and this single's one of their high notes, since it has my favorite song off "Destroy What You Love" (their one full-length) plus a wrecking-crew styled walk-through of The Fall's "Totally Wired", and what could be bad about that? (your face)*

*Pee-Wee's Playhouse reference, don't worry about it#

#what's your problem?





Monsterland -

"Insulation"

"Totally Wired"


Saturday, July 2, 2011

Everyone's Got Something They Do Badly



Monsterland's "Peanut Butter Karma" single was released in two different versions; the more common version seems to be the one that came out on SpinART in the U.S. with "Why Did I Fall For You?" as the b-side, but there was also a numbered edition released on Serial Killer in the U.K with "Sunburn" as the b-side. I think either b-side is actually better than the a-side (I'm that way sometimes), and "Sunburn" is probably one of my top 3 or 4 favorite Monsterland songs-- I'm just really into the way that the verse starts to take off towards the end, and the start/stop riff that tears apart the little mini-chorus. "Sunburn" also showed up later on the Pop Narcotic "Why Do You Think They Call It Pop?" double-10" compilation, which I have a copy of (a little birdie sent it to me) though I haven't opened it yet.




Monsterland -
















Sunday, December 27, 2009

I Wanna Do My Hair In More Of A '90s Fashion

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There were a bunch of CT indie compilations that came out in the early to mid '90s, all of them featuring mainly Danbury area bands, and all of them worth hunting down: the "Chop Whip Grate Liquefy" LP/CD on MUDD, the "One" EP that Capsule put out, "Destroy All Mediocrity" on TPOS (Malcolm Tent's label), and the Frozen Monkey CD. Out of all of them, "Destroy All Mediocrity" was the most ambitious-- a three-record set (12", 10", and 7"), all on colored vinyl, plus a cassette and a zine. A CD was also included with each set, but that was only so that Malcolm could take a bunch of dollar-bin CDs (one of mine was the New Jack City soundtrack) and write nasty things on them; "Total scam", "Cheap crap", "Boycott the CD format" and so forth.

Around 500 sets of "Destroy All Mediocrity" were made, with about 4 to 6 different cover variations, depending upon who you talk to. The covers were actual carnival posters, printed at the Triangle Poster Co. in Pittsburgh, and then folded in two or three places to hold all of the records in place before being sealed inside a huge poly bag. All of this assembling was done by hand, I'm sure, and so along with the cassette and the records, a whole stack of leftover goodies from the TPOS back catalog were also tossed inside each bag-- unused 7" picture sleeves, LP center labels, J-cards from cassette demos, zines, and whatever else.


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Some of the leftover sleeves, labels, and crap that were in my copies

One result of all of these extra goodies-- most likely unforseen at the time-- was that, after spending years in a crate stacked upright with all of my other records leaning on it, the cassette (along with everything else) would press against the vinyl records and cause all kinds of bending and scuffing, to the point where none of the three "Destroy All Mediocrity" LPs that I own are anywhere near flat, with a good amount of surface noise also involved. But, you know, D.I.Y. and all that, is still a beautiful thing.

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Another one of the front cover variations

There's almost an hour and 40 minutes' worth of music included in this whole set, including the "Mop Tape" which is actually its own separate release (TPOS-50, as opposed to TPOS-100), but since the Mop Tape and the vinyl were released together on the same day, I've given all the mp3's the same tags. I ripped every damn song on the compilation except for two (sorry, no Chicken Doody Faget for you), and all of the leftover songs that I'm not posting individually, including every song on the Mop Tape, will be available for a little while as their own "Mop Files" .zip file towards the bottom of this post.

The overview that "Destroy All Mediocrity" gives of the Danbury, CT scene at the time is fairly mind-boggling; by my interpretation, a full 16 of the bands here are all from one town, which is truly impressive. Malcolm, of course, was good enough to see that a whole variety of styles and bands were included on the compilation, not just Danbury bands; for instance, there are a bunch of "Confederacy of Scum" bands on here (Anti-Seen, Cocknoose, Mad Brother Ward, and the like), as well as some crazy electronic stuff (Punch Drunk, from Philadelphia) and even a black metal side project (!!), Havohej. I'm going to focus mainly on the Danbury bands, so this is what you're getting:


Stubb - I think I gave their 7-inch a bad review, but Stubb were actually really good the one time I saw them live, and their song here might be my favorite one on the whole compilation... besides referencing A Tribe Called Quest.
Her Tears - Her Tears are almost definitely the most criminally forgotten of all the '90s Danbury bands; they released a bunch of great singles and compilation tracks, and their shoegaze-y pop sound seemed almost perfect for the SpinArt/Slumberland/Parasol type sound that was pretty big at the time, but they never really took off. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart fans, take note (actually, please go away now).
Freakbaby - Four-and-a-half-minute guitar jams aren't necessarily my idea of fun, but still, it's Freakbaby. You'll get over it, like I did.
Creature Did - I think Kevin always felt burdened by the "Nirvana" tag, not that this song helps matters much. Still, "Come In" is most definitely rocking, and would've deserved a better re-recording, though I don't think that ever happened.
HED - Most HED songs are too over-the-top for me to even keep up with-- this song sounds like what would happen if you took the first Phantom Tollbooth and Dinosaur LPs and melted them together-- but you can tell that they must've been a monster band to see live. Jim Roberto is now in Creepdust, a great '79 S.F. style p-rock outfit (à la Negative Trend), that is if they're still around.
G'nu Fuz - Folk/blues-type rock with some really inventive playing-- most of the time when I listen to their records I go, "There's no other band I like that can pull this off." The entire G'nu Fuz discography is downloadable at their web site-- www.gnufuz.com-- and there's some really awesome stuff there.
Shyster, Shyster, and Flywheel - NOTE: This track skips! This woulda been one of my most-listened-to songs on the comp, except that NOTE (anal retentives and other uptight aitch-moes): This track skips! I've collected three sets of this compilation over the years, and the Shyster Shyster and Flywheel track skips in the same place on all three copies. I'm including it anyway, because the song is great, and the band featured Bruce Wingate and Bill Knapp and is otherwise an adjunct to my coffee table book, "Please Kill Punk Rock Before Bill Knapp Joins Another Band", which I never got to finish back in the '90s. P.S. Maybe if you ask nicely I'll e-mail you an mp3 of "Greek Diner Morning", which totally kills.
Malcolm Tent - It's his comp, so I gotta include his song. It's a pretty little instrumental, actually-- almost like that one Big Star outtake-- and somewhat different from Malcolm's "agressive acoustic punk stylings" that I'm more used to.
Leadfoot - I think they're a Danbury band, since they were also on Malcolm's "Songs To Make You Shiver" Halloween compilation. Grungy hair-wag, way more rhythmically competent than a lot of the stuff on here, I guess.
China Pig - Not their usual atmospheric post-rock output; this one has a really strong Breadwinner/Honor Role-like guitar riff.
Allawiscious Pole -A freak-folk track riddled with shards of noise and feedback, completely predicts the '00s if you know what I mean. One of my favorite tracks on the compilation. Don't bother asking me who this is, though, I really have no friggin' clue.
Bunnybrains - Legendary kitchen-sink-rock outfit, their song here sounds like it could be a Crystalized Movements track left over from "Mind Disaster" (go listen to "Communal Storybook" and see if I'm not right).
Monsterland - A really blown-out version of "Chris' Clone", and nothing like the version that's on "Loser Friendly". I've never seen this listed on the track listing for any of their demos, so I have no idea where this is from... mostly because it's not "Chris' Clone" at all, but a song called "Flesh Machine (Fuddhoney)" (dig the reference). Thanks to Greg Vegas for clearing that up.
Closet Full of Fear - Noise project from the '80s featuring some guys who would go on to be in HED and Monsterland. Pretty fun, when you think of it that way.



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The 12":

Stubb -

"El Segundo"

Her Tears -

"Spin"

Shyster, Shyster, and Flywheel -

"Joan, The Monkey Loves You"
(fucker skips, just so you know)

Freakbaby -

"Freak Baby vs. The Dead C"

Creature Did -

"Come In"

Bunnybrains -

"Creepin' Round Yer Winder"

Leadfoot -

"Angel Dust"

Malcolm Tent -

"Gladly, The Cross-Eyed Bear"


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The 10":

Monsterland -

"Flesh Machine (Fuddhoney)"

G'nu Fuz -

"Bunkhouse Tales"

Closet Full of Fear -

"4:52"

China Pig -

"Merkel Gortex"


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The 7":

HED -

"Magic Monkey"

Allawiscious Pole -

"Crawlin' Blues"


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Here's the file with the rest of the tracks, including the Mop Tape:

Destroy All Mediocrity mop files.zip


Also included with the compilation was a 16-page zine listing the entire TPOS discography (of which "Destroy All Mediocrity" was release #100) in pretty good detail, plus accounts of Malcolm's misadventures that came with releasing GG Allin and Anti-Seen records that the pressing plant was constantly rejecting and so forth. It makes for a nice brisk read (and you'll need to read it to find clues as to who Drakarr and The Warr really was), so I've made a .zip file of the scans of all 16 pages, which you can grab here:

TPOS 100 zine images.zip


There's two sample pages from the zine at the very bottom of this post, if you want to check those out first (as always, clicking on the images will give you a larger copy).




M.U.D.D.-issued poetry zine that was in one of my copies


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I also got a couple of old The Piece of Shit one-sheets;
here's one side of one of them



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Two sample pages from the zine that came with the compilation

Saturday, October 24, 2009

This Says The Same Thing Backwards As It Does When It's Forwards

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I left off "At One With Time" when I posted "Destroy What You Love" because I knew I was getting to this EP next, if only to complete the circle. Even though I think "Destroy What You Love" is the best Monsterland CD out of the three, I'll bet that I've played this EP even more because it's just chock-full 'o hits; every song on here has some kind of indelible hook, especially "Girlfriend On Drugs"... which I'm leaving off because, along with "Blank", I've already posted it here as a vinyl rip. (Hit the "Monsterland" tag at the bottom of the post, and you'll see.)

You can still get those two songs now, though, because for a little while I'll also put up the entire EP as a .zip file, which I don't try very often because it doesn't always work (at least, it didn't when I tried it with Penfold). If it doesn't work then you can head on over to Wilfully Obscure, I think he still has it available over there.


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Monsterland -

(these files are now listen-only)

"At One With Time"

"Jane Wiedlin Used To Be a Go-Go As Far As We Know"

"Your Touch Is Uncomfortable To Me"

"Chewbacca"

and then...

Monsterland - "At One with Time" EP


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Friday, October 23, 2009

I Really Wouldn't Want To Be What You Are

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When someone asked me to post Monsterland's "Destroy What You Love" the other week I could've sworn it had been posted by Wilfully Obscure already, but that turned out not to be the case. So, I'll take honors, seeing as there aren't very many bands eating up more space in my record collection than Monsterland, anyway.

I could name any number of bands that started out with a string of great singles only to take a wicked nosedive on their first full-length, which isn't the case with Monsterland. Not only would I offer that "Destroy What You Love" is their best recording, it also has a lot of their best songs, even if about a third of them can also be found (in various forms) on some of their other EPs and 7"-ers. All of Monsterland's strong points are here, meaning heavy indie rock mixed with fuzzy shoegaze pop stuff (as a side note, you almost can't believe how much Sleepwall's "Tennessee Sun" sounds like something Monsterland would've done)... they even show off their metal moves with "Crashing Teenage Crush".

I'd always figured that the belch at the end of "Car on Fire" rightfully belonged to, you know, "Car on Fire"; it wasn't until I ripped the CD that I found out that the way the tracks were separated put it at the beginning of the next track, "Twice at the End". So, I did a bit of editing to restore it to its rightful place for the mp3 that I've posted below.

Of only minor personal interest: about a month ago I was in a hurry to get to JFK Airport and I had to take a bunch of side roads through the center of Danbury because of an hour-long backup caused by, ready for this, a car on fire by "Exit 7, 84", just like the song says. Even less interesting, a few years ago some idiot started a blog called Car on Fire, though I have no idea why anyone would do that.


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Monsterland -

(these files are now listen-only)

"Insulation"

"Nobody Loves You"

"Car On Fire"

"Angel Scraper"

"Crashing Teenage Crush"





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Thursday, September 11, 2008

It's Too Easy To Tear Everything Down

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Another quality piece of rock featuring two of Danbury's finest, on blood-red vinyl even. China Pig, the kings of pre-post-rock (okay, I'll stop saying that now-- it doesn't make sense and it's not even true!), bring their usual crescendo excellence (they're doom metal), plus Fudd was an ex-hardcore which is the only type of person I like. It seems there's a different photo glued to the China Pig side of each sleeve (click on the one above if you want to see what the other copy I have looks like), which makes up for the artwork on the Monsterland side which is kind of dorky. I mean, I'm sure people would've still gotten it if they had just left their side of the sleeve blank, instead of writing "blank" there. Another ironic humor opportunity, wasted!

Other than that, the Monsterland song is great-- possibly the most frantic song they've ever put on a single-- but you probably could've guessed that already. I don't own any Monsterland singles that aren't really good, because I don't think they made any.




China Pig -

"Maggie"

Monsterland -

"Blank"

(these files are now listen-only)








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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Fifty Years Is Enough For Those Fuckers

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If I haven't already said this before, I'll stack the 90's Danbury scene up against any other similarly-sized scene in country and come out a winner every single time. "Chop Whip Grate Liquefy" (mudd 1) is one of the earliest documents of that Danbury scene, and was bread-and-butter listening for me back then along with all of the other great records that M.U.D.D. Industries put out throughout the decade (including the awesome Geezer Lake record, which, while they weren't a Ct. band, is still the best Geezer Lake album ever).

I've owned three different versions of this comp-- on LP, CD, and cassette-- although my CD copy has gone missing, and since the CD now lists for $40 - $50 on places like Amazon and GEMM, I don't plan on buying a replacement anytime soon. I've never even opened the wrapper on the cassette; I just like having it around, since it's cute to look at. Each of the three formats have a slightly different pictures on the front or back, and the CD includes four extra tracks not on the cassette or LP, athough they're singles tracks (from Monsterland, HED, Onion, and G'nu Fuz) that I already own on the original 7"-ers anyway.

One song doesn't do enough to show how great all of these bands really were, but I own multiple other records for every band on this compilation (save for Bad Dreamhouse), all of which will get posted eventually, if I haven't already started.

Since I'm feeling especially helpful today, I'll give a quick recap of each of the tracks I've posted here (skip over any of them at your own peril):


Monsterland - Yet another insanely catchy Monsterland song, besides being hilarious, too. Later re-released on an EP once Monsterland got screwed signed to a semi-major label.
G'nu Fuz - The most "trad rock" of any these bands; smoother than a shamrock shake, with hellacious chops to boot.
China Pig - Fudd was in No Milk On Tuesday, of course; China Pig (along with Slint, Dis-, and some other bands) were post-rock before post-rock was even invented, but the local papers never knew what to do with them so they just called them grunge.
Freakbaby - Kind of Antietam/Helium-like, kinda.
Bunnybrains - Legendary noise rockers. They were on Matador. That's gotta make them legendary, right?
HED - Ungodly rock. There's a part in this song after the second chorus (or whatever you want to call it) which is so freaking heavy that it makes Cream sound like, well, Cream. Cream suck.

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Monsterland -

"Girlfriend On Drugs"

G'nu Fuz -

"Warm Feeling"

China Pig -

"Old Man"

Freakbaby -

"Retroactive Karma"

Bunnybrains -

"Whipping Through"

HED -

"The Horror"

(these files are now listen-only)





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