Saturday, 28 February 2015

Top 5 Songs As Chosen By Johnny Eggerman (Mystery Date)






























   Following on from yesterday's post featuring Mystery Date, today I'm bringing you some of vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Johnny Eggerman's favourite songs. Thank you for the list Johnny, I think the best way to do this is just post what you wrote.......


"Yeah, picking your top five is seemingly impossible, to call whatever

I pick my real top five would be arbitrarily assigning values within

the canon of my beloved songs, taste is subjective but it just hurts

to leave so many out. Here are five of them that I'm gonna throw out

there and just say that they are true greats


1) Excel - "What went wrong"

This group only ever released an EP and a Single, they recorded an LP

that wasn't released at the time was bootlegged in the nineties, how

it never came out is completely beyond me (maybe because they dressed so

goofy?). Ahhh, how can I put into words how great this song is? The riff is 

aggressive and catchy, the vocals go from wry to 

impassioned and back again, the whole thing just drives hooks into

your brain. All of their stuff is great, I can say without a doubt

that these guys are one of my all time favorite bands.

see below for the studio version but click here for the band performing it on tv : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MByQ5_eKUs


2) The Orbits -"Phenomenal World"

A bunch of Who fanatics in Milwaukee put this one together in the late

1970s, I'm a sucker for the harmonies and the huge ringing guitars.

Best lyric snippet: "Air Conditioning and Swimming Pools"



 3) The Cheese - "The Kids Don't Mind"

Don't let the terrible name and record sleeve fool you, within is

contained a fist pumping anthem of immense proportions. I dislike

most bands that make frequent reference to "the kids", it's a buzzword

much like millennial or tween except it's used to refer to the music

listening public and I find it really patronizing to be referred to as

such(you hear me Craig Finn?), however when it works it REALLY works and this

is a prime example.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NctsgXQ6XZc



 4) The Dogs - "Legendary Lovers"

A mess of seemingly conflicting factors comes together in a perfect

song. This song is in no way cheesy or overwrought yet it's

melancholy, it's melancholy yet it is still rocking, it is rocking yet

it is still cool and subdued, it's rocking yet so french in the

coolest way. Welcome it into your brain, it won't be leaving anytime

soon.



 5)  First Alert - "Shotgun Sister"
Ah, I'll bet you thought every song on here was going to be from the

seventies, not so! Seemingly from nowhere these Japanese dudes came together
 
sometime in the late nineties to make some of the best mod music which has ever

existed, you can hear the Times and the Jam in there but First Alert was very

much their own animal, one of my

regrets in life thus far is that I haven't spent enough time listening

to them. I'm not a number, I'm a free man!  



Can I also send a big thank you to Pinata Records' Damien Tank for making this possible. If you're looking for Mystery Date's new album you can find it here : https://pinatarecords.bandcamp.com/

Today's song of the day, Excel - What Went Wrong......  


Friday, 27 February 2015

Mystery Date - Foreign Affairs

 
  Today's song is by a band from St Paul, Minneapolis who have a real enthusiasm for the tuneful side of the punk genre. Most of their influences would be probably filed under new wave, powerpop and mod, for example they list as influences the likes of The Jam, The Buzzcocks, Protex, Excel and The Vapors. Most mentions of them you'll come across will tell you they have a British feel about them and I can't disagree with that. You aren't going to get 100mph, sweaty, aggressive punk rock from these guys but if it's expertly crafted and catchy as hell timeless songs that you're after, read on.

  Mystery Date are a trio comprising of Johnny Eggerman (vocals/guitar), Steve Splettstazer (bass/vocals) and Grady Appleton (drums). They first came to my attention last year with the release of their single, You And Your Sister, 2013's debut single, Dreaming In Black & White and their early demo, had flown under my radar.  

  My interest piqued I was looking forward to their debut album and happily it exceeded my expectations. Released last month on Pinata Records, New Noir is a treasure trove of gems that you can dig up here :  http://mysterydate1.bandcamp.com/album/new-noir

  Tomorrow I'll be posting Johnny Eggerman's favourite songs but in the meantime here's one that's becoming one of mine, this is Foreign Affairs.....


Thursday, 26 February 2015

Chicken Chain - Glug Glug Glug


  This is probably one of the coolest songs on here. Not that the "people" who's Sick Thoughts came up with such a feverish whirlwind of urgent, driving noise are aiming for cool. I think they just want to fuck shit up. If that's the case, job's a good 'un as they say in these parts.

  The lead off track from the debut album by Chicken Chain, (the album is entitled Birth Of The Googus),  reminds me somewhat of The Urinals' classic Ack, Ack, Ack, Ack and anything that does that must, by default, be a winner.

You can find the lp on randomly coloured vinyl (though as it's out on Snot Releases you really have to aim for the green!) by clicking here : http://www.snotreleases.com/home/?section=new-releases . They're not going to be sitting on the shelves for long so (with the band's permission) I'm adding all the tracks to Youtube so no one misses the party.

  They say that history is written by the victors. This is something along those lines, Baltimore evil genius, Drew Owen, who featured in another guise on this blog last year, was kind enough to write the following.......

  "On the verge of losing their jobs at the oh so popular fast food restaurant, Burger King, 4 16 year olds from Baltimore wrote a punk record in 45 minutes and recorded it on their 4 track. Drew Owen found them at his old high school and stole their demo tape so that he could put it out on his friend's new label, Snot Releases. No word has been given as to the whereabouts of the original Chicken Chain members.

  Drew Owen plans to run with the Chicken Chain torch by starting to play live shows eventually whilst he focuses on getting out of school alive."


  Track 1. Glug Glug Glug. Play Loud.........

 

Wednesday, 25 February 2015

An Interview With Johnny Grant (Vocalist With The Straps)



  Occasionally I'll pluck up the courage to conduct an interview, luckily all the subjects so far have been really good interviewees who've helped ensure that I don't look too far out of my depth. Straps vocalist, Johnny Grant (aka Jock Strap), certainly put in the time and effort to help produce what I think is a pretty decent effort (although one day I'll work out how to make it look more professional!) so my thanks go out to him......


The band formed in 1977. was this as a result of seeing punk bands suddenly
springing up on every street corner? did you think i can do that better and what sort of music
did you like before punk emerged?


The band formed in late 77 while I was still in Glasgow, they had a singer

called Howard Jackson, but they only done one gig

in a school hall i think it was. Then when I arrived from Glasgow he was

letting the band down by not turning up to

rehearsals etc so Dave sacked him and asked me if I would like to give it

a go on vocals. I had never sang before, but

thought to myself , how hard can it be to shout down a mic? I had

already been playing bass for about a year after hearing

the stranglers. And as you asked about who I listened to before punk, I

had a keen interest in music all though my childhood, bands like the

beatles etc as a kid, but just before punk I liked Thin Lizzy, Bowie, iggy

and the new york dolls.





you shared a stage with some top name bands who were enjoying chart success like the damned, sham 69, slf, adam and the ants, uk subs etc. was it all one big happy punk family with everyone helping and encouraging one another or was there a sense of us and them between the bands that were getting on top of the pops and those that weren't quite getting the break that catapulted them onto the nation's tv screens? did you want fame and fortune?


That's a very good question. I think for me personally when I first

became involved with music . I was just happy to be playing with some of

my heroes ,like The Damned , but as time went on and I found myself

recording with the likes of Jah Wobble,

Jimmy Pursey and Rat Scabies to name a few I realised I was missing

out on the things they were enjoying and couldn't

really figure out why. At first I thought I was maybe not that good a

vocalist,but was constantly told otherwise by respected

musicians. So I guess I was a bit bitter underneath as i think we were

under rated, but I'm not the type of person to moan

about poor me ,so I've just got on with it over the years . I would say

though that there's a lot of jealousy in punk rock and

not much help from fellow musicians. But of course no one would admit

to that, for instance I regularly post on my facebook

group, Punks Reunited, lots of artists' material usually via youtube or

sound cloud with praise of what a good track this might

be. But it seems when I post songs it's very rarely that a musician from

another band on the page will praise it. Yes there's

a lot of jealousy out there among bands. I think John Lydon has spoke

about this before regarding the big 4 bands at the

time. As for me wanting to be famous, no, but I feel the straps were

largely ignored outside London due to bad management

and us never having an agent. i see bands all the time flying off to

Europe or the USA , and I still wonder why we never got to

do that. I also find it disturbing how some so called punk bands can

command 10 grand per show and offer the support band a few hundred

quid. If the money was distributed a bit more fairly, then we as a 

bandwould have recorded a lot more. Unfortunately we have to fund our 

own recording, while trying to feed our families.






i'll admit to being a little embarrassed that even though i first discovered punk whilst at school in the late 70's and had heard of many of the people you played with or who appeared on your records i don't remember hearing of the straps till a year or two ago. did i miss all the peel show appearances and music press write ups or were you unfairly overlooked despite pulling in some decent crowds and releasing some really good songs?




Haha that's ok .. We never got to do a Peel Session which is dissapointing. I think the Straps were really the forgotten support band in punk, we seemed to get great gigs with huge bands , but I guess we were cheap to hire so maybe thats why we got so many great UK shows to do. Although having said that we did headline all the big clubs Like the Marquee selling it out both times, also the Music machine and 100 club were regular shows we headlined, always ramming them when we played. So I'd say London was our manor and we always done well there. When we ventured outside the capital it was usually as main support to one of the big bands like the Damned.We did have some great write ups in sounds and many fanzines




"life in Brixton, feel the heat,
Too much trouble on the street, 
But I'm not gonna leave"


were you getting hassle for being punks back then? what was it like moving into the 80's as more and more punks were raiding their mum's make up bags and coming over all new romantic, did it feel as though punk was indeed just about dead or were you always confident you'd still be rocking so many years later?


Brixton was ok for punks . We always had a mutual respect for

rastafarians and I would say Vice versa. Most punks were squatters 

there and we all seemed to mix ok. I can only recall one incident of race 

hate against a punk girl I knew well, but these things happen in life 

unfortunately. I would say most of the trouble we got was from the police

and the straight soul boy types . Yes the 80's arrived and some punks

who squatted just seemed to disappear, probably back home to mummy

and daddy in the suburbs. Then a few months later you would see them

with dresses on and wild makeup. I found it amusing . I remember I was

on the no 11 bus going to play a gig supporting the Damned at

Hammersmith Odeon and I got a tap on the shoulder from this person

with long blonde hair . I asked what I could do , she replied don't you

recognise me Jock? Im Shaggy, we squatted together in Newark house

Brixton.. I was baffled.. My name is now Geraldine lol... Each to their

own though. Shaggy was a good punk from Surrey, mad Crisis fan with

green hair. Good times.




why did the band split up?


why did the band split up... We never really split up ..I seem to remember

Jim Walker our drummer and Big John Werner our bassist having a

moment of handbags at dawn in the dressing room of the Lyceum when

we played with Stiv Bators and the Wanderers. It was a sunday night gig,

and the whole day was a bit of a disaster. When we were unloading our

equipment, Dave left Simon's Gibson les Paul guitar at the side of the

van, our roadie at the time was Dave Lloyd who later became the

guitarist of the UK subs , he went back out to get it and it was gone,

some fucker had stolen it . Simon as you can imagine was gutted, but

never blamed Dave or held it against him, it was a simple mistake, he

thought Dave our roadie had picked it up. So the dressing room was not

a happy place to be in. I fucked off to the bar as the 3 canadians were all

arguing, but they always were anyway, two brothers (and Jim was like a

third brother) and when they kicked off Dave and I would just let them get

on with it untill it blew over. The gig itself went great we played well and

got a great reception. But the next Day Jim announced his departure,

and John soon followed. Dave Simon and myself carried on with various

replacement drummers and bassists for a short while but it never was

the same. Pete Davies (ex uk subs) joined us to do the album. He knew

all the songs anyway as he had done some stand in shows with us

before. John Werner rejoined to play bass on the album called The

Straps. After the album release ,instead of touring it, we just drifted into

oblivion as we had no shows booked ,no agent or management at that

time.




you're back together, you're gigging with many of the bands that were round when you were first active. is the atmosphere between you all the same or is it just like a big party now, a case of this is all a bonus, let's have fun? unlike some of the
bands that have reformed, you've released a new album that is worthy of being mentioned in the same breath as your old stuff. are there any more releases in the pipeline?


We reformed, Dave and I, in 2005 with 3 new members and done some

London and Glasgow shows also rebellion punk festival in Blackpool a

few times,releasing a LtD addition cd called In Love with the new world

Order, we decided to call it a halt 2007 due to some health issues I was

experiencing. But Yeah we are back now with a bang. Me, Dave

Reeves, Pete Davies, Phil McDermott (former Eastend Baddo), Bill

Gaynor and Paul Rogers .. We released Brave new anger lst August on

Flicknife records and its getting some rave reviews, being hailed as a

new punk classic , which is nice. The album was written in the style of 77

punk, some have compared it to the Damned's Machinegun Ettiquette..

We are all just enjoying working together and I think for the first time in

my musician experience of being in a band there's no ego's no bullshit

we all just get on really well as mates, this in my opinion is the main

ingredient for a successful sound live and in the studio. If you get on well

as people, you will work well together . We are doing Rebellion fest in

August and will be performing Brave New Anger our latest release. I am

working on some new songs with Phil and hope to release another

album early next year.