Showing posts with label The Hard-ons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Hard-ons. Show all posts

Monday, May 21, 2012

Sad Hard-ons News and more




I don't normally publish news but this is terrible news. Blackie from the Hard-ons was assaulted while working as a taxidriver and is currently in hospital.

From the band's site:

"None of it was his fault. The two assailants were arrested by police. Blackie has been in hospital since Thursday night with a skull fracture and 16 stitches, swelling on the brain. We will be there for a few days still, while the docs make sure all tests are done. Thankfully he has been moved from the critical room to where they keep stable patients. He does not remember all details but he is getting better every day. Not sure when he can play music again. We will know more in the coming days. He has already been told he cannot drive for 6 weeks due to his head trauma. Please send him a get-well message through facebook , he'll read it all when he gets out in a few days. I'm sure he'll get better soon. He is a pretty tough cookie. I've known him for many years and I know he wants to get back playing music again as soon as possible, but he will go with medical advice, it's gonna be best to give playing live for a while, so that he can fully recover and come back fitter than ever. Will keep everyone posted. By the way thanks for all those messages. I'll pass 'em on to Blackie and I'm sure he'll really appreciate them."

News story here


Much more up-to-date info is available from the Hard-ons facebook page




In other news, Chicago pop punkers The Projection have a free single and are giving away their album While You Were Out free to anyone in the military. You can grab their single, Florida here.


The small takeover on facebook

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Power trios ranked and filed

  Like a lot of the recent reviews this was written by me for the now defunct music webzine, Peacedogman, although it was part of a far greater list as all the writers had to choose five trios to write about.  In the original list the editor chose Motorhead as the number one band.  Here are my personal choices and rankings.

5) The Hard-ons









From the word go, Australian band The Hard-ons have been a throbbing pulse in Australia’s punk movement.  From the band moniker and their 1986 album entitled “Smell My Finger”, it was apparent that this was a band that would garner attention and get up the noses of various authority figures.   Major record company RCA released their debut but was less than impressed with the album’s name and dropped them and the band stayed with smaller independent record labels.  The band veer towards the bubblegum pop punk of The Ramones but with added slabs of hard rock and metal.   Up until leaving in 2000, the trio’s drummer, Keish de Silva also undertook the challenging feat of lead vocals.  The distorted yet melodic guitar of Blackie is another cornerstone of the band’s sound. With 12 albums under their belts the band have an extensive discography.   1988’s “Dickcheese” is a fine example of the band’s mashing different sounds together.  “Figaro” and “Yuppies Suck” are frantic thrashy punk.  “Something About You” is super-tight pop punk.  Two of the latest Hard-ons albums differ in style with  “Most People Are A Waste of Time” consisting of  Lemonheads style pop and “Most People Are Nicer than Us” is likely to confuse fans of the band’s pop approach with its heavier and hardcore oriented listeners.  Years since their formation The Hard-Ons are still a band making and releasing music strictly on their own terms.  The latest album, "Alfalafa Males Once Summer is Done Comform or Die" once again mixes punk rock with pop and metal.


4) Husker Du





The Minneapolis trio of Grant Hart, Bob Mould and Greg Norton are not easily pegged down into a single genre.  Unless of course, you call the music of Husker Du pop/punk/ melodic/alternative rock dabbed in hardcore.  The strong songwriting and lead singing was shared between guitar player Bob Mould and drummer, Grant Hart.  Mould’s voice warbles like a man baring his vulnerable soul for all to witness.  Grant Hart’s rock voice shoots straight for the hip.  The band was a tight unit and released a string of great albums with tuneful pop hooks and superb musicianship that were irregular for bands rooted in the punk and hardcore movement.  Greg Norton’s tightly executed bass lines flow through all the band’s song and further power the three piece’s distorted vibrancy.    The definitive and intense  “New Day Rising” should already be sitting comfortably in your music collection.  The fluid trio as always naturally combine pop and noisy punk.    “Flip Your Wig” contains the awesomely contagious “Makes No Sense At All” with its commanding melody riding along with vigorous instrumentation.    This song was equalled on “Candy Apple Grey" with “Don’t Want to Know If You Are Lonely”.  Few bands have released as many great albums in a row as Husker Du.


3) The Jam





Due to their timing of arrival, it’s all too easy to group The Jam in with the punk movement.  Separating the band was their rejection of safety pins, studs and dyed hair, in favor of tailored suits. Both fashion and music-wise The Jam was at the forefront of a mod revival.  A number of songs on The Jam’s first album “In The City” sound like sped up varations of tunes from the likes of The Kinks, Yardbirds or Small Faces as the trio incorporated mainstream sixties rock in their sound.  The band’s fifth album “Sound Affects” is a pinnacle album that can hardly be defined as punk although it first punches with the fast rocker “Pretty Green”. Throughout the album Bruce Foxton’s melodic bass is at the forefront of the band’s soundscape.  The mellow “Monday” has a very sixties sound and it’s incredibly clear throughout the entire album that guitarist/singer Paul Weller had been investing time listening to “Revolver”.   “That’s Entertainment” is an amazingly brilliant song that is mostly Weller’s vocals and an acoustic guitar.  It’s very English in lyrical sentiment and not entirely obvious whether the intent is celebratory or cynical.  “Set the House” ablaze rushes and rumbles along with Rick Buckler’s steady drumming.  “Dreamtime” has heavy pop hooks that place a listener into a hypnotic trance. The Jam was never a band afraid to experiment with horns and trumpets blow in the chirpy upbeat “Boy About Time”.  The reason that this album is now out of print in the US is a mystery.



2) fIREHOSE





After the untimely death of the Minutemen’s D.Boon, it would have been easy for Mike Watt and George Hurley to pull the plug on their musical careers.  However a phone call from a fan, who later became known as EdfROMOHIO spurred the other musicians on and resulted on the formation of fIREHOSE.  The band’s debut “Ragin’, Full On” is aptly titled whilst belying the band’s name, the trio scorches on this album.  Although Mike Watt’s thumping bass is the backbone of the band; the other two members are definitely not minor players. The mellow vocals and guitar of EdfROMOHIO and the steady timekeeping of drummer, George Hurley interfused with jazz and folk influenced post-punk sounds.  Each musician has a unique idividual sound, which interlocks to complete the jigsaw puzzle.  “Brave Captain” instantly drags the listener in with its melody and driving bass.  “Chemical Wire” blasts your face off with its funkish playing. Locked In” and “The Candle and The Flame” are the jazz influenced folk rock that was regularly charted territory for fIREHOSE.   “Perfect Pairs” showcases the genius of the band’s rhythm section as it veers several times from quiet folk to fast-paced rock.  The ninety seconds of “Relatin’ Dudes to Jazz” is blissed out punk energy, catchiness and bounciness with its rapid fretwork.  Success through musical chemistry cannot be denied on “Ragin’ Full On”.   The album is a treasure to be cherished by all discoverers.






1)   Nomeansno









This band may look like retirement home lodgers but Nomeansno still has a lot more energy in both their recorded output and onstage.  Rob Wright’s bass playing explodes through the speakers and his brother John is often seen carrying a hammer before the band play as he nails his kit to the stage floor to stop separate drums from hitting the ground and gouging body parts as he aggressively pummels the set.  Describing the band simply as a punk band would be a huge mistake easily made due to the bulk of their releases pressed on Jello Biafra’s Alternative Tentacles label. A heavy jazz-fusion element is placed in a concrete mixer along with jazz, fusion, blues, hardcore, rock, new wave and punk.  Nomeansno re-worked Miles Davis’ “Bitches Brew and The Ramones’ “Beat on the Brat” in their unique way on their often over-looked album “One”.  1989’s “Wrong” is still the seminal Nomeansno album that no self-respecting rock fan’s home should be without. The band’s essence of jerky punk played with a warped sense of humor is encapsulated in tracks like “The Tower” and “It’s Catching Up”,  While you’re out buying it, delve into any of their other albums as they’re all solid.  Then say hello one of your favorite bands.  Be strong. Be wrong.



Who would you choose if you were pick to five trios and how would you rank them?
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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

The Hard-Ons Live in Berlin

I moaned about The Hard-Ons sound in London.I tried video recording with my camera but the audio was appalling. Anyway a few days afterwards they played in a small club in Berlin anda live video with great audio that deserves posting has come up on youtube.



And here's another video of an even older punk band with a phallic moniker, this time from the UK. They take me back to my early record buying days and listening to Live At The Chelsea Nightclub in Solitary Confinement.



At the Chelsea Night Club [Bonus Tracks]

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Hard-OnsAt The Garage, London 25 June 2011

Peter and the Test Tube Babies

Above: Peter and the Test Tube Babies

Originally this show was to be The Hard-Ons with The Stupids but for whatever reason The Stupids were replaced with Peter and The Test Tube Babies. Thinking that there was no way that I was going to miss seeing two veteran punk bands play together, I arrived at this one half an hour after opening time because the Lydia Lunch show last week started exactly on time. Had a look at the times on the sound desk and Peter and The Test Tube Babies weren't due to start for an hour so downed a couple of beers. Looked around at the posters and noticed that A Simple Plan had sold out the 600 capacity venue a few days beforehand and that the Flogging Molly concert next week had also sold out.

Peter and The Test Tube Babies played to about fifty people and opened with "Moped Lads". I think I heard a couple of other songs I recognized but the sound at the garage isn't great.

The Australian trio The Hard-Ons took the stage and the crowd seemd to have tripled. The band played a high energy set blending punk, pop punk and metal which led to the boys all stripping their shirts off in synch. It was announced that this would be drummer Pete's last London show as feeding kids is now his priority. After their set the band left the stage for about a minute they came back and ripped through their encore set.

The reason for the low crowd numbers may have been due to the venue's acoustics or more likely because of the underground line being closed due to upgrading for the London Olympics next year. I talked to one of the guys from the band The Hip Priests, who gave me a badge as I'd heard and like his band. Had a bit of hassle with a bouncer as I'd put my backpack in the venues cloakroom and someone had moved it and lost the label which put a dampener on my night although it was eventually found.

The Hard-Ons

Best Of [Remaster]

Beastwars - IV

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