Aural Sculptors - The Stranglers Live 1976 to the Present
Welcome to Aural Sculptors, a blog aimed at bringing the music of The Stranglers to as wide an audience as possible. Whilst all of the various members of the band that have passed through the ranks since 1974 are accomplished studio musicians, it is on stage where the band have for me had their biggest impact.
As a collector of their live recordings for many years I want to share some of the better quality material with other fans. By selecting the higher quality recordings I hope to present The Stranglers in the best possible light for the benefit of those less familiar with their material than the hardcore fan.
Needless to say, this site will steer well clear of any officially released material. As well as live gigs, I will post demos, radio interviews and anything else that I feel may be of interest.
In addition, occasionally I will post material by other bands, related or otherwise, that mean a lot to me.
Your comments and/or contributions are most welcome. Please email me at adrianandrews@myyahoo.com.
Tuesday, 31 March 2020
Cobra Lounge Chicago 7th and 8th June 2013
Here's something from the Stateside leg of the 'Giants' tour. The band played two nights at Chicago's Cobra Lounge and here we have the full gig from the first night (7th June) and a handful of tracks, including a couple omitted from the previous night's set from the second night (8th June).
MP3 (as recieved):
7th June: https://we.tl/t-NNkOFeywUC
8th June: https://we.tl/t-xRGPUH6eFE
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-wfj6WaBZH9
7th June 2013
01. Toiler On The Sea
02. Goodbye Toulouse
03. (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)
04. Norfolk Coast
05. Nuclear Device (The Wizard Of Aus)
06. Freedom Is Insane
07. Mercury Rising
08. Peaches
09. Relentless
10. Golden Brown
11. Skin Deep
12. Always The Sun
13. Walk On By
14. Burning Up Time
15. Nice ‘N’ Sleazy
16. Hey! (Rise Of The Robots)
17. Who Wants The World?
18. Time Was Once On My Side
19. Duchess
20. No More Heroes (Intro)
21. No More Heroes
22. Hanging Around
8th June 2013
01. (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)
02. Golden Brown
03. A Soldier’s Diary
04. Unbroken
05. No More Heroes
Peter and the Test Tube Babies Butlins Skegness 10th October 2019
And here's another from the 'The Great British Alternative Music Festival', this time from Skegness. Peter and the Test Tube Babies, my local punk band. I was at the front for this with my daughter..... her choice! As the band came on I was hit on the back with a full pint (..... here I am certain that it was alcohol rather than piss because it was below room temperature!). It doesn't particularly bother me, but does make me wonder who in this day and age can afford to pay club prices for beer only to launch at the stage!
Good to see a couple more tracks from 'Soberphobia' in the set..... a great album from my teenage years!
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-AHyn9GuQSo
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-XL7s6boWdH
01. Moped Lads
02. Run Like Hell
03. The Jinx
04. Never Made It
05. My Unlucky Day
06. Every Second Counts
07. In Yer Face
08. Up Yer Bum
09. Spirit of Keith Moon
10. None of Your Fucking Business
11. Keys To The City
12. Keep Britain Untidy
13. You Shake My World
14. I'm A Maniac
15. Banned From the Pubs
16. Blown Out Again
Angelic Upstarts Butlins Minehead 9th March 2019
Here's a great recording from last year's 'Great British Alternative Music Festival' in Minehead. The Upstarts never fail to deliver a set full of passion and commitment to their message. Mensi is his usual shy and retiring self as he and the band run through some of the band's greatest songs beefed up with a couple of tracks from their recent album 'Bullingdon Bastards'. Many thanks to the original uploader to Dime.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-waPWWqzsrR
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-gcZvmeVG6a
01. Intro
02. Two Million Voices
03. Never 'ad Nothin'
04. Student Power
05. Mr Politician
06. Tories, Tories, Tories (Out, Out, Out)
07. Give The Fox A Gun
08. You're Nicked
09. Solidarity
10.Woman in Disguise
11. Last Night Another Soldier
12. Leave Me Alone
13. Machine Gun Kelly
14. Police Oppression
15. I'm An Upstart
16. The Murder of Liddle Towers
Monday, 30 March 2020
Hammersmith Odeon 30th March 1987
And here is the second night from the Odeon in what proved to be a great trio of London dates.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-AmVCTAROrW
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-pbIkz0vXOp
01. No More Heroes
02. Was it You?
03. Down In The Sewer
04. Nice In Nice
05. Punch And Judy
06. Souls
07. Always The Sun
08. Strange Little Girl
09. Golden Brown
10. Northwinds
11. Big In America
01. Nice ‘N’ Sleazy
02. Who Wants The World?
03. Bring On The Nubile
04. Shakin’ Like A Leaf
05. Uptown
06. (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)
07. Tank
08. Toiler On The Sea
09. Hanging Around
10. Nuclear Device
11. Spain
Sunday, 29 March 2020
Last Words on the Dead Kennedys (San Francisco Weekly 23rd - 29th June 1999)
Punks at War
Dead Kennedys, Alternative Tentacles, and the law suit that threatens punk's most enduring and provocative partnership
It was January 1978, and the Winterland was packed, and the
Sex Pistols had just played their last show anywhere, and it had ended with lead
singer Johnny Rotten cackling these choice parting words: "Ever get the
feeling you've been cheated?" Cheated wasn't the half of it. The Sex Pistols
were the most famous band to come out of a British punk scene that was just
beginning to find its footing in the U.S. The band's breakup wasn't just a musical
event; followers lost a cultural-political icon. Without the Sex Pistols - that
sneering bunch of self proclaimed anarchists who lived to challenge
conventional notions of what a rock band should be – American punks would have
to figure things out for themselves.
At North Beach's Mabuhay Gardens, the figuring had already
started. While radio stations were clogging themselves with ELO and the Eagles,
the Mabuhay was showcasing bands and music that were not just alternative, but
challenging. Many of the bands took stylistic cues from the Sex Pistols and Ramones,
but others, including Flipper and the Residents, experimented wildly, bent on
befuddling their audiences more than entertaining them.
It was a culture of self-determination, where "do it
yourself' was the operating credo. Who said you had to suck up to some big
label to get your records out? Who said that Rolling Stone was the only music
magazine on Earth? Fanzines such as Search and Destroy and Punk Globe sprang up
to document the scene, both within and outside the Bay Area. Mainstream media
outlets started to take a peek at what these strangely dressed folks were up
to. Record labels (like 415 Records) started putting out singles and
compilations.
And by 1978, a transplant to San Francisco from Boulder,
Colo., name of Jello Biafra, né Eric Boucher, had decided he wanted
to do more than just watch his favorite bands; he wanted to be up there on the
Mabuhay's stage too.
Biafra had saved some money, and so he gathered up three
musicians – guitarist East Bay Ray, bassist Klaus Flouride, and drummer D.H.
Peligro (who replaced early drummer Bruce Slesinger). Biafra, who wrote lyrics,
wanted to put forth a band that was political; San Francisco was providing
ample material. This was the time of the Jonestown massacre, and Dan White's
murder of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone (and that's not to
mention White's infamous and absurd "Twinkie defense").
And so the Dead Kennedys - and, simultaneously, Alternative
Tentacles Records - were formed. The
story of AT and DK is, to a remarkable extent, the story of punk rock in San
Francisco.
"[Alternative Tentacles] was a dream more than a
business plan," Biafra said in a telephone interview
in early June, speaking from a downtown San Francisco
office. "It was something I felt we had to do to document all the great music that was going on that wasn't
being recorded. I saw these amazing bands like the Avengers, Negative Trend, the Sleeperz, Dils, Offs,
Mutants, UXA, Crime, Nuns - all of 'em breaking up before they put out what would’ve
been some of the best albums any band's ever made.
"I knew that if I ever had any money, I wanted to do a
record label to correct the situation, to help fix that"
Alternative Tentacles wasn't envisioned as the relatively
wide-ranging label it is today. Back in 1979, it was just supposed to release a
single, "California Uber Alles." But on the strength of that single
and the Dead Kennedys' live shows, the group with one of the more politically
sacrilegious names in
America got a reputation as one of the most interesting
bands in San Francisco.
Even if the group didn't quite fit the clichéd definition of
punk rock. And it didn't.
The Dead Kennedys didn't spike their hair, and while most
punk bands of that era marched in a strict lock step - both in terms of sound
(three-chord, Ramones-y blasts) and politics (sobersided anti-Reaganism) – the Dead
Remiedys instead played rockabilly-on Benzedrine-fusillades and often spoofed
pop songs of the day. Singing in nasal, piercing tones, taking lyrical shots at
whomever struck his momentary fancy, Biafra gave punk something it thought it
wasn't supposed to have: a sense of humor.
"California Uber Alles," for example, posited a
"suede-denim secret police" state, controlled by then-California Gov.
Jerry Brown, where people would "jog for the master race ."
"Holiday in Cambodia"
Disemboweled snotty post-grads who pro-claimed their hipness
and whined about their bosses, suggesting that the whiners would "work
harder with a gun in your back/ For a bowl of rice a day."
Biafra was always the most visible and vocal member of the
band, quick with a snappy line and good
for a prank, the most famous being his 1979 run for mayor of San Francisco.
Though parts of his platform addressed what he considered legitimate, concerns
- he lobbied for, and still supports, legalizing squatters' rights - much of his
candidacy was decidedly goofball, calling for the public auction of city
positions, the establishment of a legal board of bribery, and the requirement that
Financial District workers wear clown suits. When Dianne Feinstein called for a
cleaner city, Biafra was vacuuming leaves off her front lawn the next day. In a
city that felt worn and cynical after the Jonestown and White incidents,
Biafra's campaign proved a tonic; he finished fourth out of 10 candidates, getting
approximately 4 percent of the vote.
Biafra, the Dead Kennedys, and Alternative thus earned
reputations as the leading provocateurs of punk rock. To this day the Dead
Kennedys account for more than half of Alternative Tentacles’ sales. Account. As
Biafra puts it, “Alternative Tentacles remains one giant prank against the mainstream
entertainment industry and the agendas of the corporations that own
it."
But this irony-filled approach to life in and around the
recording industry has led Biafra and his label into a series of legal
troubles.
In 1986, San Francisco and Los Angeles police raided Biafra's
home, and he was subsequently charged with distribution of harmful matter to minors
- that is, a poster of a sexually explicit painting by Swiss artist H.R Giger
titled Landscape #20: Where Are We Coming From, which was included in copies of
the Dead Kennedys' 1985 album Frankenchrist.
The Los Angeles District Attorney's Office prosecuted Biafra on obscenity
charges, which could have led to a one-year jail term and $2,000 fine. But the
trial of the criminal case, much of which focused on First Amendment arguments over
whether the painting was indeed obscene, resulted in a hung jury. Biafra had
won, but the emotional and financial stress of the case helped break up the
band that year, after it released a final album, Bedtime for Democracy.
Biafra now; Klaus and Biafra in DK days; Ray now.
Then in 1996 the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police and
Sgt. John Whalen sued Borders Books, Biafra, Alternative Tentacles, and one of
the label's bands, the Crucifucks, for defamation and copyright Infringement.
That band had used a photograph of a police officer lying dead next to a squad
car on the back of its 1992 album Our Will Be Done, which included anti-police
songs such as “Pigs in a Blanket” and “Cops for Fertilizer”. The photo was
posed, with Whalen playing the dead officer; it had originally been used by the
Philadelphia FOP as a part of a mid-‘80s promotional campaign for a police wage
hike. In April 1997, a federal judge ordered the band to pay the Philadelphia
FOP $2.2 million. Three months later, that judgment was overturned, and the case was
eventually dismissed.
So Biafra's label prepares to celebrate its 20th anniversary
this week as one of the luckier punk ventures in history. It has done what few
punk rock labels ever do - survive - and has remained, by virtually all
accounts, supportive of punk rock (as loosely defined) locally, nationally, and
globally.
But Saturday's celebration might be a more inclusive and
happier affair if not for yet another lawsuit, one that challenges the credibility
and integrity of the Alternative Tentacles label, and that, regardless of the outcome,
will leave noone who was once a Dead Kennedy unwounded.
On Sept. 30 of last year, former Dead Kennedys members East
Bay Ray, Klaus Flouride, and D.H. Peligro (born Ray Pepperell, Geoffrey Lyall,
and Darren Henley, respectively) sat down and voted to terminate their relationship with Alternative Te ntacles. Ray, who has
acted as the official spokesperson for the three rebelling band members, says he discovered in 1996
that Alternative Tentacles had raised the wholesale price of its CDs without informing
the band. Ray and the two other former Dead Kennedys argue that the increase in
wholesale prices should have resulted in higher royalties on Dead Kennedys
sales. In their suit, they claim Biafra took profits from the wholesale price
increase for himself.
Greg Werckman, who was working as Alternative Tentacles'
label manager at the time (and is now
Biafra's manager), says the label wasn't obliged to increase
the band's royalty rate. Proceeds from the increase in the wholesale price were
fed into overhead for the label, a financial move that, he contends, does not
violate the Alternative Tentacles’ agreement with the Dead Kennedys. Werckman
does acknowledge that in 1997 he and Ray sat down to go over the accounting of
the band’s royalties (as well as those for the solo albums that Fluoride
recorded for AT), and found that the royalties had been calculated from a
formula that left the Dead Kennedys underpaid on record sales.
It was, in Werckman’s view, an honest mistake, and he
informed Biafra of the discrepancy. “Ray does have a case, not for a higher
royalty rate, but for back payment.” Werckman says. The royalty shortage amounted
to about $75,000, which Biafra placed into a trust account, to be released to the
band either with his permission or through a court order.
But the argument isn't entirely about royalties. It's also
about loyalty.
Ray, Flouride, and Peligro say that Alternative Tentacles
was originally formed, owned, and controlled by the entire Dead Kennedys band.
When the group broke up in 1986, they say, the other members ceded
ownership of the label to Biafra alone in an oral agreement
that required him to not only properly administer royalties to the Dead
Kenneds, but also promote and grant "most favored nation” status to the
group. That status required Biafra to ensure that the Dead Kennedys' royalty
rate would be as highly paid as any other band on the label. (Werckman contends that
no such royalty arrangement ever existed.)
The Dead Kennedys band was, itself, a partnership, formed in
1981 and known as Decay Music. The three dissenting former members of the band
felt they could therefore vote to sever the Dead Kennedys' connection to
Alternative Tentacles. And they did so at a meeting last September. (Biafra did
not vote; in a court filing, he claims that he was out of town at the time, and
that his offer to send a proxy to cast his vote was refused. Even if Biafra had
been there, say Ray's lawyers, his vote would have been moot because, they say,
he has a conflict of interest as a partner in Decay Music and owner of Alternative Tentacles.)
Ray says that he never wanted to get involved in a lawsuit
In fact, he says, early in 1998, he, Flouride, and Peligro hired an attorney, Michael
Ashburne, who told them that he didn't do litigation. "We said, 'Well, we won't
need to go that far. We've known each other for 20 years, we're partners
together,' “ says Ray.
But when Biafra continued to argue that the three former
members were not owed anything, they sued Biafra both individually and as owner
of Alternative Tentacles, as well as Mordam Records, which distributes
Alternative Tentacles’ records. The suit, files on Oct. 29, 1998, seeks the
right to control the Dead Kennedys’ catalog, as least $50,000 in damages, and
an injunction preventing both Biafra and Mordam from selling or distributing
Dead Kennedys recordings.
Biafra countersued in November and attempted to move the
case to federal court, claiming that it was an issue of copyright law properly
decided in a federal venue. Senior District Judge D. Lowell Jensen disagreed, ruling
it was a simple contract dispute; he remanded the case to San Francisco
Superior Court and ordered Biafra to pay $12,160.50 in legal fees for, essentially,
wasting everyone's time trying to make a routine state contract suit into a
federal case.
At first, Biafra doesn't want to discuss any of the legal
problems. He's feeling harried, having spent most of the day talking to
reporters about Alternative Tentacles, and sounds tired. "I don't
know," he sighs. "It's all a pretty concocted attempt at fraud on their
side. That's all I'm going to say right now."
But that's not really all. "Everything they've said is
completely untrue," he claims. "It's an attempt to take something
that doesn't belong to them, and try and shake somebody down for money, all
because I wouldn't sell out 'Holiday in Cambodia' and Dead Kennedys and
everything we represented to a Levi's commercial. The ad agency representing Levi's wanted to put
'Holiday in Cambodia' in a Dockers commercial, no less."
And this claim illustrates the central paradox of the
Alternative Tentacles/Dead Kennedys lawsuit: Members of a band that poked holes
in the craven, commercial, lying facade of modern life are accusing one another
of being craven commercial liars.
For example, David M. Given, a San Francisco lawyer
representing Ray, Peligro, and Flouride, uses this calm legal language to characterize
Biafra's assertion about the Levi's ad: "A bunch of horseshit"
All sides agree that the band was approached with some sort
of offer to use a song in a commercial. Given says Ray told other band members
of the offer, as he would with any DK-related business offer, but they “weren’t
down with it, and it never happened.”
Werckman holds a sort of middle ground in the Levi’s
argument, saying that “Holiday in Cambodia” was just one of about 30 songs the
ad agency was considering for the commercial, and in the end the agency decided
to use a different song.
Still, Biafra argues that the Levi’s situation cuts to the
heart of the issue in dispute: preserving the integrity of his old band and of
his record label. “The reputation of Dead Kennedys and my own reputation are cemented
and linked," he says. "If I screw up, it screws up the legacy of Dead
Kennedys. If the other guys go and screw up, it screws up my personal reputation.
If 'Holiday in Cambodia' wound up in a Levi's commercial, everybody would blame
me. I might even get beat up again." (The beating Biafra references
happened in 1994 at Berkeley's 924 Gilman club, where he was attacked by people
shouting he was a "rock star" and "sellout.") '''That's not
fair. To put it mildly, that's not fair."
As both sides claim the moral high ground, the ground
gradually seems to transform itself into empty or unprovable rhetoric. Biafra
says the consequence of this war of words is "a frivolous, mean-spirited
lawsuit, where the only people who win in a situation like that are lawyers
laughing all the way to the bank."
But don't his former bandmates have the right to separate
themselves from Alternative Tentacles?
''Whether they have the right to do it or not, is it morally
right to do it in the first place? That speaks volumes about where their heads are
at, as far as I'm concerned. They don't give a damn about anything but quick
free money. And that's not what Dead Kennedys or Alternative Tentacles has ever
been about"
"Biafra was obviously the media person," Ray
retorts, "but a media person is not the whole thing that makes a band ....
I set up the label and ran it for the first three years, and I'm given no
credit for it right now. Keeping the Dead Kennedys independent, and the fact
that Biafra has a nice big mansion on Diamond Heights, is a direct result of my
efforts."
"If Biafra weren't the label, he would be carrying the
fucking flag up the hill," Given says, "screaming about corporate
greed."
Werckman calls the dispute "pathetic on both
sides."
There is plenty of time for additional recrimination and response.
The case is scheduled to go to trial on Sept. 27.
In punk rock, as in most genres of pop music, scenes come
and go. And if punk in San Francisco has never died off, it has never again approached
the fertility that it enjoyed in the late '70s and the early ‘80’s.
In 1982, around the time that Alternative Tentacles stopped
being the Dead Kennedys’ vanity label and began releasing other records in
earnest, the late Tim Yohannon and a group of others founded the fanzine MaximumRockandRoll in San Francisco, one
of the leading arbiters of punk ideology (even though many feel that its view
of punk rock is strict, misguided, and, at this point, outdated) .
In 1994, the fanzine banned Alternative Tentacles from
advertising in its pages, and refused to review its record releases, claiming that
it was no longer punk. From its very beginning, the fanzine's letters page was
rife with complaints about the "true" definition of punk. Every month,
with each new issue, the complaints continue.
But there's another view: Ralph Spight, who sings and plays
guitar in San Francisco's Hellworms and has been part of the local punk scene
since the early '80s, credits Alternative Tentacles for being both loyal and daring.
"Some of them sold pretty well," Spight says of his AT recording
efforts with the bands Saturn's Flea Collar and Victim's Family. "Some of
them didn't. But on any other label in the world, doing the things I've done,
I'd be dropped."
And AT's openness to experimentation makes it more
"punk" than new bands aping the old look and sound.
"Sometimes I get really excited about the bands going
on around here, and then sometimes I get really bored," Spight says. He sees
a punk scene that threatens to go stagnant and become just another musical
style - which would leave it far, far away from its radical roots. "I'm
pretty jaded about it all," he says.
Although it has released records from local groups such as
Neurosis and Zen Guerrilla, Alternative Tentacles has increasingly focused on
aggressive and noisy bands outside the confines of the Bay Area, and new labels
have stepped in to cover local punk music. The most famous, Berkeley's Lookout,
has functioned for 11 years, supporting bands like Green Day and.Operation Ivy
(members of which would later form Rancid). Molly Neuman, Lookout's general
manager, praises Alternative Tentacles for proving that the do-it- yourself
ethic can work. "[Alternative Tentacles] demonstrated that independent
music can survive without tons of media support and attention, without radio,
without MTV, and can still survive outside of the mainstream music industry's
standards," says Neuman.
Neuman says she hasn't kept up on details of the Alternative
Tentacles/Dead Kennedys case. But when asked about it, she makes the same
comment, three times.
"It's a shame."
Neuman is right in saying that Alternative Tentacles helped
establish the model for how an independent rock and punk label might operate
successfully. To perhaps oversimplify, that model is analogous to a shopping mall:
If you have one or more successful and familiar "anchor" bands,
people buy the smaller acts, too. The label's name and logo become a brand and
a signifier of quality. That's part of what differentiates the independent record
label from a major: Nobody buys a Ricky Martin album because he's on Sony, just
like Miles Davis; but Alternative Tentacles record buyers, knowing the Dead Kennedys'
history, might be more likely to buy a record by, say, the Causey Way.
The Causey Way, one of AT's recent signings, is an upstart,
Devo-esque band from Gainesville, Fla. Says singer Causey, somewhat waggishly,
"We were approached' courted,' as they say - by some of the majors, but no
one understood the integrity of our mission like our brothers and sisters at AT.
I have only wonderful things to say about Jello Biafra."
This "shopping mall" system of independent marketing
has worked for Washington D.C.'s Dischord, home to Fugazi and Minor Threat; Chicago's
Touch and Go, for which famed producer Steve Albini records and performs; Southern
California's SST, which mainly sustains itself on '80s albums by Black Flag and Husker Du; and, of course, Alternative Tentacles,
home to the Dead Kennedys - at least for now.
As the former members of the Dead Kennedys prepare for the
trial that would resolve their dispute (at least in a legal sense), Jello Biafra
continues to oversee new Alternative Tentacles releases, which have recently included
spoken-word albums by leftist cause célebrès such as the late
environmental activist Judi Bari, A People's
History of the United States author Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, and alleged
cop murderer Mumia Abu-Jamal, as well as musical offerings from bands at
various positions on the punk spectrum.
Though he rarely publicly performs music - partially because
of knee damage he sustained in the 1994 beating - Biafra occasionally sings or
writes for musical projects, including Lard, a collaboration with members of
the Chicago industrial band Ministry. The bulk of his post-Dead Kennedys
recordings, however, are his own politically themed spoken-word albums, and he
continues to speak around the country, mainly on college campuses.
Ray and Flouride have been playing together locally in Jumbo
Shrimp, a surf rock trio. Peligro now lives in Los Angeles, where he continues to
play music. Ray also has his hand in a number of recording projects, an says
he's started getting involved in the rave scene, which attracts him because
"you don't have to deal with lead singers."
Ray catches himself and laughs. '''That's a joke. Kind
of." .
Alternative Tentacles Records' 20th Anniversary Party,
featuring the Causey Way, Wesley Willis, Hellworms, Creeps on Candy, Crucifucks,
DJ Whats His Fuck, and host Jello Biafra, happens Saturday, June 26, at 9 p.m.
at the Great American Music Hall, 859 O'Farrell (at Polk), S.F. Tickets are
$10: call 885-0750.
Hammersmith Odeon 29th March 1987
A great recording, great set etc etc from the second leg of the 'Dreamtour' in this day in 1987. So successful was the tour that the original two nights at the Hammersmith Odeon were extended to three.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-VVcVf1roFR
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-LuemN4vYfg
01. Intro
02. No More Heroes
03. Was It You?
04. Down In The Sewer
05. Nice In Nice
06. Punch & Judy
07. Souls
08. Always The Sun
09. Strange Little Girl
10. Golden Brown
11. North Winds
12. Big In America
01. Nice ‘N’ Sleazy
02. Who Wants The World?
03. Bring On The Nubiles
04. Shakin’ Like A Leaf
05. Uptown
06. (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)
07. Tank
08. Toiler On The Sea
09. Spain
10. Nuclear Device
11. 5 Minutes
12. Duchess
13. London Lady
Friday, 27 March 2020
Jello Biafra Interview Sounds 19th July 1986
INDECENT EXPOSURE
As JELLO BIAFRA becomes engulfed by a wave of allegations that threatens to swamp his liberty, he chats to JACK BARRON about censorship, apocalyspe and the day he ran for mayor. Holiday snap: EYE AND EYE.
"WHY DO I think I am right!?!" echoes Jello Biafra,
surprise momentarily road-blocking his busy freeway of words.
The Walter Mitty of politi-punk casts his anthracite eyes
around the spartan warehouse which serves as the headquarters of Alternative Tentacles,
a downbeat building that the police department of San Francisco recently raided
in search of subversive material.
Yes, I continue, resuming my line of questioning. The Dead
Kennedys have always used their music as a vehicle for social commentary and
political criticism. So why do you think your perspective on life is any more
valid than the perspective of those you criticise?
" I think, because of my deep sense of being threatened
by those in authority," laughs Jello uneasily, his chest recoiling with an
almost paranoid tautness beneath a T-shirt which bears the motto Ugly American.
Maybe this man, who seems to have had his handsome features stretched to
cracking point on the rack of desperation, is still rattled by the events of
the past few days.
See, what had been brought to the police department's notice
was the posters of H R Geiger's Penis Landscape, given with the Kennedys' album
'Frankenchrist'. Biafra now faces up to a year in prison and a $2,000 fine to
go with the allegations that he and the rest of the band are guilty of "distributing
harmful material to minors"
So, if Jello's rattled, who could blame him?
"As I said to you a bit earlier on when we were talking
about censorship," explains Biafra, a lyricist never starved of polemic,
"if the authorities had their way I - or anybody like me --would probably
be dead. The American government want a Christian-style Islamic republic and I
don't think executions would bother them a bit.
"The right-wing Christians who run this country go on
about how the life of an unborn foetus is sacred, how we shouldn't allow
abortions. But once the foetuses are 18, who are the first people who want to
execute them in gas chambers or want to send them to die in
Nicaragua and EI Salvador? It's the right-wing Christians.
"So what makes me feel that I am right and other people
are wrong is when I feel that my dignity and survival, and the dignity and
survival of other people, is being threatened by a few greedy Nazis."
This might sound extreme but it rings true in the context of
the moral waywardness of the USA. In the kingdom of the insane, the paranoid
becomes sane because he has every reason to worry, his fears are real. How can
they be otherwise when he watches the police raid his office?
Dissent, artistic or otherwise, is not in fashion in America
in the late '80s. Everybody - from individuals to nations – is expected to toe
the line of conformity, and that line says you are either a God fearing capitalist,
or you're a stinking pinko communist atheist pervert who does it in the streets
with dogs and Lord help you if you're in a band with the name of The Dead Kennedys.
OK, I know that's a little simplified, but the whole point
about the upsurge of patriotism which Reagan symbolises is that it does present
the public with clear cut black and white' choices which save people from making
the effort to think or question.
Anything which doesn't fit into this monocular vision - an
example being the Vietnam veterans poisoned by Agent Orange who've subsequently
had deformed children and yet don't qualify for war injury benefits - is quietly
swept under the carpet.
THE DEAD Kennedys - Jello, bassist Klaus Flouride, guitarist
East Bay Ray and drummer D H Peligro – are interested in lifting up that carpet
of self imposed ignorance and spotlighting the dirt. But it's getting more
difficult day by day.
"Let's just say that the ghost of Joe McCarthy is back
in action now," comments Biafra. "So far as music is concerned the PMRC,
the Parents Music Resource Centre, which is staffed by wives of right-wing senators
and a member or two of Reagan's cabinet, acts as a kind of thought police.
"As you know, they're making moves to get records graded
according to their content, but that is only the tip. Their attempt to decide
what people hear, see, taste and think goes deeper than that.
"For instance, they're now working with local Parent
Teacher Associations and police departments to snuff out rock music which they
deem not wholesome. We've had several gigs cancelled under mysterious circumstances
and then, of course, there was the raid here."
I tell him the offending Geiger poster - Geiger was a set
designer on Alien, by the way - which depicts a field of erect penises entering
vaginas is so abstract it reminds me of a vegetable stall specialising in leeks
and onions.
"Uh-haw, I've heard lots of interpretations of it but
nothing like that," grins Biafra . "It has been called sexist by some
people but I don't think it is. My reason for using it was that as soon as I
saw the thing I thought, 'Yeah! That's what's inside the heads of Americans:
this is a nation out to screw each other in every way. That painting is consumer
culture on parade. "
Penis Landscape has, in fact, been seen by a lot of
Americans. Long before it became a Kennedys poster it was featured in a Geiger
showcase in Penthouse. Still , the poster gave the police an excuse to search
Alternative Tentacles thoroughly.
In a country which is headed by a staunch Chri stian ex-actor
President who presents and presides over the political process as if he were
still in some Hollywood film, it seems somehow apt that the Kennedys' last
album was called 'Frankenchri st'.
Run to the hills, a monster cometh!
" If you want to understand something about the nature
of Americans it's that we're taught in school that this country is in the frontline
with regards to free speech and the rights of the individual," says
Biafra. "What is conveniently forgotten is that the founding fathers of
America were slave owners.
Thomas Jefferson had seven kids by one of his."
J ELLO BIAFRA, eight years on from the inception of The Dead
Kennedys, speaks like some bizarre hybrid of musician, politician and Mr Memory
Man. It is easy to see why he garnered 6,OOO-odd votes and came sixth when he
stood for the post of Mayor of San Francisco a while back on an absurdist
platform.
Ask him a question and out will pop some ghoulish story or
three, many of which have been sent in by outsiders to the Kennedys or the
hardcore politi-punk fanzine Maximum Rock And Roll which shares the warehouse with
Alternative Tentacles.
"No, we haven't split the band! Who told you that?
We've never been a group of people who eat, work and play together from the
beginning. We don't even agree with each other on every issue, that has
always been the w ay in this band. We often argue but hopefully
that friction gets channelled into the music.
"The po int is, though, that we get together to record
and tour only if everyone agrees to what is involved . At the moment we're doing
another album called 'Bedtime For Democracy' which will hopefully be out in the
autumn.
'" I know that, because of the gap between 'Plastic
Surgery Disasters' (the DKs' last album) and 'Frankenchrist', people have thought
that we've sat on our backsides for three years and retracted our claws, but
it's not true!
"We've also been savouring some of the weird information
from around the world which we got in response to our request for miscellaneous
data on the inner sleeve of 'Frankenchrist'. We'd like Alternative Tentacles to
act as a conduit for this info because some of it is mindblasting.
"The scariest story was in fact mailed to me from somebody
in San Francisco. It was a little report out of a science magazine that said
the next scheduled space shuttle, in other words the one after the one that
blew up, was going to be loaded with 46 pounds of plutonium!
"If that shuttle had blown up instead, imagine what
would have happened! There would have been enough plutonium in the air to give
cancer to as many as five billion people. That's virtually the whole of the world!
So that would have been it – all because of a few military assholes manipulating
to get the Star Wars Defence System off the ground without telling anybody. This
is the most reckless act I've heard of yet!"
THE SON of a librarian mother and a psychiatric social
worker father who quit his job to write poetry and books around the same time
Jello ran for Mayor of 'Frisco, the 27-year-old singer was brought up in
Boulder, Colorado.
Nestling against the Rockies, the "sleepy" university
town became a "counter-culture Mecca" in the late '60s and early '70s
when it was invaded by hippies.
"At one point there were 15,000 of them . Naturally the
other 40,000 citizens of Boulder freaked out, but for me that made it a great
place to grow up.
"A lot of thought was provoked in me and the anti-war
movement was strong.
"But the hippy people would use a lot of drug-dealing
lingo to justfy ripping people off, saying, like, Hey man, that candle costs 50
dollars because it's all natural ingredients! You know the sort of thing: hand
made by an authentic crook."
While the music world turned from Dayglo to the mouldy
mellow feathers of The Eagles, Biafra took advantage of the transition by
hoarding forgotten gems of garage psychedelia, such as The Thirteenth
Floor Elevators.
" Really though there wasn't much happening musically
and I was more interested in the news on TV."
A fleeting visit to pogoing England in 1977changed his life.
"All that energy and hate of smug apathy really excited
me. When I got back I went off to university in Santa Cruz to take classes in
drama and the history of Paraguay but I didn't last long.
"I noticed the punk thing was happening in San
Francisco although on a much smaller scale, and, against the wishes of myfather,
I dropped out ... "
And The Dead Kennedys were given a breech birth .
"Once The Kennedys were going I soon realised it was
possible to concoct something beyond being this week's Sex Pistols. I wanted to
fuse the political anger of a virtually unknown British band called Third World
War with the gut-rage of Iggy Pop and, say, the fascination with horror and
gore of Alice Cooper.
"The thing was I knew that the atrocities of real life
were far more frightening than fiction . That has always been the motivating force
in this band."
CALIFORNIA UBER Alles', 'Too Drunk To F***' , 'Fresh Fruit
For Rotting Vegetables' - the DKs' record titles
alone made the burghers choke, never mind the gallows humour
of the band's name. And, allied to the group's violent live velocity and
Biafra's cracked actor presentation, come 1983 the Kennedys were on the cusp of
greatness. They were the premier hardcore corps poised to take a flamethrower
to the charts.
It never happened, and I don't think it ever will. The
Kennedys' belief in the punk ethic of independence from the straight music biz
scams ensured they'd never become pop stars like The Clash. Their ideals
wouldn't allow the necessary compromises and, when Faulty Products (the
American distributor) folded, the moment was gone forever.
This isn't to put down their achievements. The Kennedys
still make fierce records and Biafra is in demand as a spoken word artist. His
mixture of poetry, lyrics and news is, I'm told, inflammatory .
But don't you ever feel that you' re just hitting your head
against a brick wall?
Biafra's anthracite eyes glow with amusement as he finishes
his beer.
“ Oh sure, I get frustrated most of every day. But I figure
that I’d much rather do this than put a little leash round my neck in the form
of a necktie and knuckle under . At least I feel alive.
After all, things are never dull when the police are trying
to tear your house apart.”
Dead Kennedys - Tales from the Trial (as reported in the UK music press)
As mentioned in the article above, to raise money for the legal costs of defending the case, the Alternative Tentacles manager in the UK booked a tour by the Canadian hardcore band, Toxic Reasons. I was fortunate to see them twice on this tour, at the 100 Club (I watched the gig standing side by side to the late, great John Peel) and a little later in The Ship in Brighton. On this occasion at the end some scruffy bloke got on stage with Toxic Reasons when they played 'New Rose'. 'Hey', I said to my mate, 'That bloke looks a bit like Captain Sensible in a wig'. It was of course, the Sensible one!
Thursday, 26 March 2020
Circus Royal Brussels Belgium 26th March 1985
35 years ago in Brussels!
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-iMdJUVonxG
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-UDARef0YEc
01. Something Better Change
02. Nuclear Device
03. Uptown
04. Dead Ringer
05. No Mercy
06. Souls
07. Nice ‘N’ Sleazy
08. Midnight Summer Dream/European Female
09. Golden Brown
10. Strange Little Girl
11. Peaches
12. Death & Night & Blood
13. Threatened
14. Punch & Judy
15. Down In The Sewer
16. Nubiles (Cocktail Version)/The Raven
Wednesday, 25 March 2020
Rough Justice at the Hands of the PMRC
As mentioned in the previous post, the DK's fourth album 'Frankenchrist' was a gloomy take on American society as viewed through lyricist-in-chief, Jello Biafra. As an artistic accompaniment, the album was packaged with a fold-out poster featuring a painting by noted Swiss artist H.R. Giger. Entitled 'Work 219: Landscape XX', otherwise known as 'Penis Landscape'. Depicting a series of penises and vaginas doing what penises and vaginas do, the piece was intended to depict (perhaps in a rather obvious manner) the idea of members of Jello's broken society screwing each other in the non-sexual manner.
Unfortunately, for the fortunes of Dead Kennedy's and those with close associations to them, one day a 13 year old girl purchased the record in the Wherehouse Records in Los Angeles County. The poster came to the attention of the girl's mother and after calls to the California Attorney General and the Los Angeles Prosecutors, band members and distributors found themselves on a criminal charge of 'distribution of harmful matter to minors', a charge which if successfully prosecuted carried a maximum custodial sentence of one year and a $2,000 fine. Pretty heavy stuff.
Unfortunately, for the fortunes of Dead Kennedy's and those with close associations to them, one day a 13 year old girl purchased the record in the Wherehouse Records in Los Angeles County. The poster came to the attention of the girl's mother and after calls to the California Attorney General and the Los Angeles Prosecutors, band members and distributors found themselves on a criminal charge of 'distribution of harmful matter to minors', a charge which if successfully prosecuted carried a maximum custodial sentence of one year and a $2,000 fine. Pretty heavy stuff.
'Work 219: Landscape XX' by H.R. Giger
The recently formed Parents Music Resource Centre (PMRC), a lobbying group of influential 'Washington Wives' (most notable of which were Tipper Gore, wife of Clinton Vice-President Al Gore and Susan Baker, wife of James baker, Treasury Secretary under George Bush Snr). The PMRC raison d'etre was to clamp down on what they saw as the degenerate elements in rock music and in this pursuit they had the ear of their power broking husbands in the capital. Incidently, it is was the PMRC who were responsible for that record shop phenomena of the 1980's, the 'Parental Advisory Explicit Content' stickers, otherwise known as 'Tipper Stickers'. I find it highly amusing that these days you are more likely to see that particular logo on T-shirts sported by the same breed of 'degenerate' musicians that the PMRC were attempting to censor! Or even more bizarrely sold to the parents of young children. Didn't see that one coming did ya Tipper!
Anyway, back to Dead Kennedy's plight. The PMRC were not slow to get in on the act. Whether or not the Dead Kennedys were on the 'Wives' radar prior to the 'Frankenchrist' furore I do not know. Primarily, the PMRC targeted their 'Filthy 15' which featured candidates that you could conceive would be in there (Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, WASP) and a couple that you wouldn't (Cyndi Lauper and Sheena Easton..... '9 to 5'?..... pure smut!). However, these were high targets, big guns in the industry with accordingly large legal teams.... but hey what about a DIY punk band on their own independent label?
Jello Biafra's attic apartment was raided by representatives of both the Los Angeles and San Francisco Police Departments in the early hours of 15th April 1986. They were in search of 'harmful material' in the form of the Giger album poster insert.
The raid lead to the pressing of the charge of 'distribution of harmful matter to minors'. It was brought by Los Angeles City Attorney, Michale Guarino against five defendants, Jello Biafra and Michael Bonanno (former Alternative Tentacles label manager), Ruth Schwartz (owner of Mordam Records), Steve Boudreau (a distributor involved in supplying Frankenchrist to the Los Angeles Wherehouse store), and Salvatore Alberti (owner of the factory where the record was pressed).
In the initial hearing, Judge Susan Isacoff, overruled the prosecutions demands that the poster be considered in isolation of the album as a piece of pornographic obscenity. She determined that the poster must be considered in the context of the album and its material and as such it was possible to defend inclusion of the poster as art reflecting the themes expressed in the album. The case against Schwartz, Boudreau and Alberti was dropped due to a lack of evidence but Biafra and Bonanno were not off the hook.
The trial became very high profile and sparked deep debate on the subject of censorship in music championed by big guns such as Frank Zappa and .... John Denver! The band's label Alternative Tentacles established the 'No More Censorship Fund' that saw donations rolling in from across the globe, funds that would go towards the rising legal costs involved in fighting the case, an estimated $20,000.... a huge sum for the band and label in 1986!
In August 1987, the case against Jello Biafra and Michael Bonanno came before a jury who returned a verdict split 7 to 5 in favor of acquittal. Guarino efforts to force a retrial were denied by Judge Isacoff.
Here's Jello's take in his own words as he challenges Tipper Gore on the Oprah Winfrey Show:
It was a pyrrhic victory if ever there was one. The strains over the legal action that dragged on for nearly two years contributed to the band splitting..... but the censorship debate continued apace for several years afterwards.
There May Be Trouble Ahead - Frankenchrist and the PMRC Monster
In October 1985, Dead Kennedys released their fourth studio album, the provocatively titled 'Frankenchrist'. The album represents a significant departure from the trademark DKs sound. True, East Bay Ray's surf guitar remains prominent but the material is much darker than what preceded it. With 'Frankenchrist' the band deliberately slowed the tempo down, producing a dark and sinister soundscape that encroaches on progressive rock. The album offers the listener a stifling, claustrophobic vision of the 'American Dream' in the ultraconservative mid-'80's.
The America of 'Frankenchrist' is peopled with desperate souls in soup kitchen queue and dead souls trapped in dead jobs, whilst on the other side of the street, redneck vigilantes cleanse the neighbourhood of 'undesireables' free from repercussions whilst sporting jocks uphold the honour of their high schools. Over this dystopian nightmare, a corporate rock soundtrack comes courtesy of MTV!
Within weeks of the album's release the band were to clash with the Moral Majority that they had railed against for the past seven years! Initial copies of the album were issued with the inclusion of a poster featuring a sexually graphic work by renowned Swiss artist, H.R. Giger. But more of that later.
Things were about to get interesting.
The lawsuits came in thick and fast, including one from the unwilling (and clearly disgruntled) cover stars of the album.
These are The Shriners, or Shriners International.... previously, the 'Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine'. Yep, you guessed it, The Shriners are a fraternity organised on Masonic principles. In the US they are perhaps best known for their patronage and funding of The Shriners Hospitals for Children. Shriner Temples have associated parade units charged with the responsibility of presenting a positive image of the Shriner organisation to the public at large. This they do by participating in parades, driving characteristic lawnmower engine powered miniature vehicles whilst sporting the red fezzes for which they are also known.
'Wacky' Nashville Shiners on parade
(in no way sinister....)
I know, I know, I don't get it either, Freemasons, Water Buffalos and now Shriners. I thought the Scouts were bad enough!
Anyway, here's what 'Sounds' in the UK had to say about it in early 1986:
'The Dead Kennedys, currently facing three separate lawsuits in California, are now reportedly being sued by an American organisation called The Shriners over the cover of their "Frankenchrist" album last year.
The Kennedys spokesman here said that no notification of any charge has been received by Jello Biafra, Alternative Tentacles, or their lawyer, although reports in the American press have suggested that The Shriners, from Detroit, plan to sue for $45 million dollars over a photograph on the album sleeve, which shows some of their members on parade.
The offending photo, and the rights to use it were, The Kennedys state purchased from Newsweek magazine.
"According to newspapers in the US, we were accused of holding The Shriners in a bad light," comments Biafra. "This stinks of petty harassment. America is the only country in the entire Western world where the laws are rigged in such a way that anyone would even THINK of filing a lawsuit as ridiculous as this."'
Shriners International logo
Dead Kennedys Pine Street Theatre Portland Oregon 16th October 1984
So now we arrive at 1984, the year forever associated with Big Brother, the systematic destruction of free will all of that uplifting Orwellian stuff.... right up the Dead Kennedys street!Long-standing art collaborator, Winston Smith, even took his name from the book's anti-hero.
Quite some time had passed since the band's last album, 'Plastic Surgery Disaters' so throughout 1984 they were in a position to showcase new, as yet unrecorded, material at their gigs. In the gig that follows, they are playing six songs from the album that would be 'Frankenchrist' a full year before the album was released.
I note that this gig I have posted before, some years ago, but this could be an upgrade, I dunno. But it is of excellent quality and well worth a listen. For me this is the epitome of a Kennedys gig, with Jello in full-flow between numbers. The man can talk, it's no wonder that after the bands demise he found a welcoming home on the spoken word circuit.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-Q5KGn4MueA
01. Intro
02. Soup Is Good Food
03. Hellnation
04. Chat
05. This Could Be Anywhere (This Could Be Everywhere)
06. Chat
07. When You Get Drafted
08. Terminal Preppie
09. MTV Get Off the Air
10. A Child and His Lawnmower
11. Chat
12. Jock-o-Rama
13. Moral Majority
14. Chat
15. Kill the Poor
16. Chat
17. Macho Insecurity
18. Chat
19. Police Truck
20. Chat
21. Goons of Hazard
22. California Uber Alles
23. Break
01. Chat
02. Government Flu
03. Bleed for Me
04. Chat
05. Short Songs
06. Nazi Punks Fuck Off
Tuesday, 24 March 2020
Dead Kennedys/Peter And The Test Tube Babies/Millions of Dead Cops The Warehouse Liverpool 17th November 1982 Live Review (Melody Maker)
Here's a live review of the bands gig in Liverpool, two weeks or so before the Brixton finale, with the Test Tubes and MDC. Sorry for the state of the cutting. It spent many years on my wall..... many years ago!
Dead Kennedys The Ace Brixton London 2nd December 1982
Something of a classic this one. In 1983 Channel 4 (the new kid on the block as far as TV channels in the UK were concerned) aired a programme entitled 'Whatever You Didn't Get', a youth magazine programme that featured live music from the Ace in Brixton. The name was a reference to the previous year's series 'Whatever You Want'. Makes sense really.
One of the bands to appear on the series were Dead Kennedys. As I recall four songs from the gig were aired although the full film of the show is in circulation (and can also be found on YouTube).
Here's a better quality clip from the broadcast.
'Bleed For Me'/'Holiday In Cambodia'
The Ace, Brixton 2nd December 1982
Footnote: The video notes suggest that this was actually broadcast as part of the earlier 'Whatever You Want' series on 6th December 1982.
The audio is something rather special. The second album 'Plastic Surgery Disasters' was in the can and due for imminent release at the time of The Ace gig. As such the set is heavy on the new material, but given the quality of that album, who's to moan about that.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-B52kvMbgIh
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-YrKs2VCEqr
01. Saturday Night Holocaust
02. Kepone Factory
03. Insight
04. Life Sentence
05. Trust Your Mechanic
06. Moral Majority
07. I Am the Owl
08. Halloween
09. Police Truck
10. Riot
11. Bleed for Me
12.Holiday in Cambodia
13. Nazi Punks Fuck Off
14. Chemical Warfare
15. Stealing People's Mail
16. We've Got a Bigger Problem Now
17. Let's Lynch the Landlord
18. Kill the Poor
Dead Kennedys - New Musical Express Interview 17th October 1981
Here's an NME interview with the band who were over on their second UK tour shortly prior to the release of the 'In God We Trust, Inc.' EP. Here the band talk of their game plan of cultural terrorism, the Moral majority and the influence of the New Right on successive US Governments.
'Films like Swedish Virgins and Diary Of A Nymphomaniac take a backseat tonight as Birmingham's Imperial cinema plays host to what the gutter press, city fathers and the Mecca Organisation would have you believe is a whole lot more harmful and perverted than fifth rate skin flicks.
Laydeez and Gentlemen, your attention please - they've been
scorned in San Francisco, treated like lepers in LA, dreaded in Dundee. Let me
hear it for the loudest, the brashest, the cleverest and the funniest punk band
in captivity. I give you The Dead Kennedys! ! An onslaught of potent cackles,
ripfire threats and pure horror dedicated to the fading memory of the American
dream, the sound of a hollow culture crashing to the ground.
In the dressing room, polite fun loving drummer Darren is
sharing urinal intimacy with small studious bass player Klaus. As they hover
precariously over a gradually filling paint pot the group's main madman Jello
Biafra paces the dressing room in a doctor's coat and tie-dye T shirt. There's
a marked exasperation about Biafra, who's determined the Kennedys should be
cranked up to full malevolent intensity and slam straight through five new
songs so that the audience has no time to let their attention stray or to start
barking for old favourites. But he seems a little peeved, unsure if his urgency
is getting through to his four partners.
For the first few songs any such fears are dispelled,
Biafra's mighty voice carries the group and their absurdly knucklebound sound -
mesmeric gutsy guitar, punched bass rivets and crude slamming drums - right
into the heart of the crowd. Then, just when it seemed like nothing could stop
The Dead Kennedys' crazy pyscho-drama from reaching its high pressure peak they
hit overload and, bang, East Bay Ray's guitar amp gives up for the fifth and
last time on their whist le stop British tour.
The next fifteen minutes see the stage filled with squatters
rather than invaders, mostly drunken berks and publicity seekers with nothing
to offer except apathy, indolence and ignorance. Biafra handles the hecklers
with tact and a brave cutting edge.
" Look at this lazy sod," he says, indicating a
rotund idiot who's deposited himself at his feet, " he sits on the middle
of the stage and passes out as if he was at a Pink Floyd concert."
There's a lot of idiots trying to grab his microphone. One
guy wants everyone to remember his friend, allegedly killed by 'the pigs' in
Birmingham recently, but mostly they just want to sing a chorus of 'Anarchy' or
shout obscenities at anyone who cares to listen. Jello gives as good as he gets : "It's
funny how everybody wants anarchy but they also want to rule
at the same time," he smirks
meaningfully. " Well it's good to see the
intelligentsia have come along tonight.”
Eventually the amp is replaced and the stage cleared as the
group has treated the audience to a minimalist (bass, drums and vovals) version
of the epileptically named narcotic satire ‘Drug Me’. The songs are half old
and half new, not the sort of thing that I’d want to listen to every but ‘Landlord’,
‘Too Drunk To Fuck' and 'Holiday In Cambodia' are classics of their kind, and
new songs like the commendably straightforward 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off' and 'I Am
The Owl' are right up there with them.
What sets the Kennedys apart from other punk bands is the
intelligence of their songs which, while never losing sight of a basic punk
motto - think fast, react - are crafted to go beyond the obvious, gobbling up
facts and attitudes to see things through to their logical, often macabre
conclusion. Onstage this can take the form of an improvised pre-amble before
the songs, the brushed denim secret police of 'California Uber Alles' and
Governor Jerry 'Linda' Brown are forgotten as the group's debut single is
preceded by an imaginary dialogue between Margaret Thatcher,
Alexander Haig and Ronald Reagan. The song itself now goes: "I am emperor
Ronald Reagan born again with fascist cravings ... "
"In the States there's a lot more of what is called
slam, dance and crash from stage invaders. They get up on stage and quickly
dive off, rather than just sitting there like a bunch of bozos. You do get a
bunch who try to jump on other people when they aren't looking, but generally
it's a lot of fun."
Biafra is togged out in his winter wear happily exchanging
news and views with it collection of fans, some of who have been following the
group for the past three evenings, sleeping in the bus stations and eating very
little to keep expenses low. Everyone is on their way to the second gig of the
evening, across to the city centre Cedar Club where Discharge are playing.
Biafra is an avid record collector and right now he's overawed by the
outpourings of numerous US and British third wave punk bands. On the one hand
he's just released 'Let them Eat Jellybeans', a compilation of groups that
would otherwise never be heard of outside their home town, on The Dead Kennedys
own Alternative Tentacles label, and on the other ... well, there he is right
at the front of the stage for the Discharge performance, pushing, pogoing and
grappling with the best of them as the angry cleansing spirit of Discharge
fires through their mini meisterwerk 'Does The System Work'.
Jello Biafra - no one could ever pronounce his real name so
he changed it - moved to San Francisco from Colorado about five years ago.
Before forming The Dead Kennedys he'd been an insurance salesman, an actor and
a journalist. The latter he did for enjoyment, and I imagine he was very good
at it. He gave it up because "it became a bit too much like school, I
ended up doing all my copy the night before the deadline." Since joining
The Dead Kennedys he has made a marked impression in an election for the mayor
of San Francisco, part of his manifesto being that all businessmen would be
made to wear clown
suits. He's also had his group banned from all the
predictable places. That's undoubtedly because in the great big world of
American rock 'n' youth culture (not so much of the great) the crazy jabbering
mad eyed anger of Jello Biafra is something to be thankful for amid the witless
bluster of The Ramones, Springsteen, Blondie et al. The Dead Kennedys are one
of the few American groups that give any clue towards the mass disaffection
which the young people of the country must be feeling in the wake of Reagan's
war-mongering.
In-Sight: D.H., Klaus, Jello and Ray (Birmingham 1981)
The group aren't afraid to attack idiocy in their own ranks
either; with the superb, subtle as a
flying mallet rant 'Nazi Punks' they
shame many of their English counterparts. In view of recent events aren't they
wary about playing the song in Britain?
"No, not at all if something needs to be said we're not
going to shirk from it."
Do you get Nazi rabble in your gigs in the USA?
"Many of them don't know what it means. They just think
swastikas shock their parents. They're not even shocking their parents because
they've been brought up by a bunch of right wing assholes who've told them that
it’s cool to be a racist. We figure that if they're going to be punks and
listen to punk music
Then they might as well really listen to it and understand
it and realise that it's not just a bunch of racist crap."
"What about Oi though? That's racist isn't it?"
asks a fan from London.
"Some of it is and some of it isn't. I haven't seen an
Oi gig over here and I haven’t met any of the bands. On the Oi album I liked
Peter And The Test Tube Babies and Garry Johnson because they seemed to be
bringing other influences into play besides HM punk.
"I think we're probably closer in our thinking and
where we're coming from to Crass, and maybe even Discharge, than we are to the so-called
Oi bands. We are not afraid nor are we ashamed of being political. Even 'Too Drunk
To' Fuck' turns into a political song because of all the self proclaimed
moralists and church groups who tried to get the song banned over here.
Incidentally they gave us free publicity and our first hit single, which I thought
was funnier than hell."
'Too Drunk To Fuck' is The Dead Kennedys' only single release
this year, along with 'Bleed For Me' on 'Urghh - A Music War' and 'Nazi Punks'
their contribution to the 'Jellybeans' compilation, the only new music from
them this year. It's perhaps the most powerful record they've made, a special
mix of molotov guitar cocktail and sterling production which certainly sees off
the most celebrated moments of the Stooges. It is also a very funny record.
Biafra smiles slyly from behind the brim of his pint glass.
"Far from being offensive I think it was an educational
song. It's exactly the sort of thing that your mammy or Sunday School won't
tell you about. I think the people banning the record are the people that it's
happened to.
"What I find really funny is how we can distress people
who haven't even met us. One of the things that keeps us going is that we're
really anti-social people, and though we do have big audiences here and we’re
considered mainstream we do enjoy annoying people, getting under their skin and
forcing them to think."
The next Dead Kennedys release is an eight track
'anti-church' EP (as yet untitled) which will provide the link between their
rushed and misproduced first album and their second album which will continue
the psycho-delic strain of 'Holidays In Cambodia'.
" America has all these right wing church groups at the
minute that put Reagan in office. They're called the Moral Majority and they're
run by Gerry Falwell who's a television evangelist who rakes in 50 million
dollars a year. He's going political at the same time and he's got his hooks
into Reagan and all these conservative money organizations who run ads against
liberal politicians all over the country. When George McGovern was running against
Nixon they put posters saying George McGovern is a babykiller because he was
for legalised abortion.
"This is the way the MM thinks. They aren't nearly a majority
nor are they in any way moral but they are a force that must be crushed.
"They're as
scary in our country as the NF is in yours, probably more so because it is all
older people who have put their money behind it. Insurance companies have put money
into it because if women don't get equal rights then they don't have to pay
them full premiums. This is what has helped create what is known as The New
Right.
" The Moral Majority want to force Christian prayer in
school, bring a police state into play, with unlimited surveillance by the FBI
and the re-introduction of the treason laws, meaning guess who'd be the first
to go? They want to make abortions illegal so that you'd have to go to Mexico
with rusty knives in the basement to get rid of unwanted children.
"We have a song on our EP called 'Moral Majority' but
we played in Glasgow and no-one understood it. It's something that people have
to watch because I've never seen a 'Christian' bible toting religious cult turn
so blatantly fascist in America. They don't use swastikas, they use crosses and
bibles so that a lot of people haven't caught on to them yet."
Just like the 'Reverend' Ian Paisley, Jello and guitar
player East Bay Ray were recently ordained at a college in America where they
more or less sell the certificates over a counter. The good thing about this is
that as men of the cloth they can't be considered for drafting. While Biafra's
interest in politics far outweighs his interest in religion, the former
stretching to back to when he was about 5 years old and began passing up on the
cartoons so he could watch the news, he has flirted with certain spiritual
phenomena.
"When I was in drama school I had some really good
instructors' and directors who thought nothing of giving kids parts that were
difficult for Broadway adults. I had mostly 'method' directors, where you build
the character from within and find out what makes them tick, rather than a
'technique' director who makes you take so many steps breath, step back and
speak etc. I don't relate to that 'at all.
"Method acting comes into play with our performance and
sometimes it really sinks in and we're totally demonic and possessed, like our
Liverpool show this time. In the ha ha to Adam Ant department I went to a-Sioux
wardance where there are definite forces
going on that are not scientifically explained. I couldn't put my finger on
what it was exactly, but it was definitely a very uplifting experience for me.
" I also do relaxations that I learned in theatre
classes and try to apply them to medicine and to get rid of colds. I got rid of
a knee injury that way which I got diving offstage and going kneecap first into
a monitor. It's something I've barely touched on but I'm keen to explore when
time permits."
Being on the road with The Dead Kennedys is an amicable
enough proposition. The other members might not say much but they are
accomodating and keen-eyed observers. Three of the group wear Clarke Kent
glasses offstage - guitar players East Bay Ray and Micro Wave along with Klaus
Floride, who looks like a younger, healthier Elvis Costello. The band's
latestrecruit is drummer Darren who comes from Chicago and previously played
with The Aliens, backing band to famous acid casualty Roky Erikson, and Darren
still keeps his 'arm in' playing with The Speedboys, a local San Francisco
group, when The Dead Kennedys aren't in action. The group emphasise the fact
that they are all reclusive and separate
characters and it's a fusion of all their outside interests
which brings about The Dead Kennedys' ravaged vision of America.
In addition to Darren's drumming outside the band, East Bay
Ray produces a couple of local bands and experiments with synthesisers. He's a
big fan of various German electronic musicians and is on the look-out for a
suitable synth player for the Kennedys. Biafra runs the American end of
Alternative Tentacles' operations and a local radio show, while coy Klaus (he
won't tell his age) keeps a travelogue of tapes from each town the group visit
for an as yet unrevealed purpose. He has his own very strong views on The Dead
Kennedys as I found out when I asked if they were out to shock their listeners.
Klaus: "We don't want to shock people for the sake of
shocking people. We're not like The Plasmatics; we want to shock people into
thinking. The Dead Kennedys are not here to ' cash in on the Kennedys' name or
to cause them more grief - they've had enough grief already. What the name
represents is the
downfall of the idea that everything is getting bigger and
better. You just have to look at the difference between people like Eisenhower
and Haig; Eisenhower was genuinely elected president and his last statement to
the public was 'beware, of the military industrial complex', Haig will ask
people to embrace it."
The last time an American musician was asked for a reaction
to the shooting of President Reagan in these pages he claims to I have been in
tears upon hearing the news. So was Jello Biafra, though for different reasons.
"I was staying with friends in Orange County and I'd
just fallen asleep when there was a banging on the door and someone was
shouting 'Biafra, Biafra get up, Reagan has just got shot.' My initial reaction
was 'Let me sleep', but eventually I got up and we sat in front of the TV and
laughed like it was a Marx Brothers movie!'
Do you support terrorism?
"People who don't want to obey an army sergeant and just
want to have fun with guns are no better than anyone else, much worse probably.
But I'm all for cultural terrorism, trying to create change through art rather
than physical violence."
This 'art' you talk of, is it misunderstood?
"People who don't want to use art as a weapon aren't
artists at all. You've got to want to inflict somethiing on someone, be it
positive or negative. Rather than just trying to entertain, to please and to
sell. In no way is that art."
Biafra eschews all forms of drugs, mainly because he's seen
so many musicians throw away their talent on stimulants.
"As a music fan that bugs me a lot. Coincidentally or
not, one thing I've noticed since Reagan came to power is that there's a lot
more speed and a lot more heroin and a lot more of everything dangerous available
and being fed to the punks. In the suburbs there's suddenly all these people,
taking acid. I think it is totally planned in order to torpedo another youth
cult before it starts, just like acid and pot torpedoed the hippies before they
could overthrow Nixon."
Of course there are far more subtle and widespread ways of
controlling and influencing youth so that they become fodder for the state's
insatiable cravings.
"It only dawned on me about a year ago that everyone I
know had a real bitch for a second grade teacher. I think that's the year they
try and break your spirit and make you conform and learn the rules to obey
rather than ways to create. I think the fact that they emphasise planning and de-emphasise
creativity explains not only why idiots who go through art school adding
crudeness to childishness get labeled as geniuses, but also why they've managed
to produce a race of idiots. The American school system is a very vicious
instrument of corporate control."
Jello Biafra may sound like one of life's great paranoids -
maybe he just sees things as they are and ploughs on regardless. There can be
no doubting the validity and good sense of The Dead Kennedys as a subversive
thorn in the flesh to both American society and its behemoth-fuelled rock
industry. They aren't strangled by guilt complexes, but their accomplished
comic stripped razor edged dynamics make no secret of past crimes.
Above all else they say: GET UP, DON'T BE STUPID AND THINK
FOR YOURSELF.
" ‘I Am The Owl' is about Watergate criminals who come
out of retirement. It's sort of a composite of several dirty tricks that have
gone on over the years by the FBI and the CIA. There's a line about LSD, it's
about this guy who was the leader of a gang of semi-thugs. They fed him full of
acid and let him loose on a freeway where he just wandered around ‘til he was
knocked down. They tried to hush up and pretend it was a great mystery, but a
friend of mine has a father in the police and we got to hear about how they sat
around drinking after hours congratulating each other on getting rid of this
local annoyance."
'Keypone Factory' is about-this chemical factory owned by
Allied Chemicals in Virginia and how they've manufactured toxic chemical spray
and dumped the waste in Chesapeake Bay which is now closed to fishing. The
people who worked there were given no masks so they breathed all this shit into
their lungs and started to get double vision, become impotent and get all
gnarled and spastic. The company offered
them all spectacular Hot Rod cars if they didn't say anything but by that time
everyone was too gnarled and spastic to even drive. "
Aren't there lobbies and outrages about this sort of thing?
"There are lobbies against it, but the lobbies of the
chemical industries are much stronger because they have much more money. The US
government is pushed around by lobbying groups on the far right."
In the Weimar Republic a lot of big companies financed
Hitler's rise to power and a lot of them are still very successful today.
"Something that's very scary is that General Motors
sued the American government after World War 2 for bombing some of their factories
in Nazi Germany which had been kept open during the war. And they won."
Don't you think it's ultimately futile straining against the
power and cut throat tactics of these bodies?
"It takes time. I just hope, unlike the '60’s where people
made a definite dent and then gave up, turning out to be almost as conservative
as their parents - that everyone keeps pushing this time."'
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