cpt515 Black Music History
cpt515 Black Music History
cpt515 Black Music History
The fusion of ska and punk-rock, pioneered in Britain in the late 1970s,
became extremely popular everywhere in the USA during the 1990s.
The San Francisco Bay Area was one of the epicenters of the ska-punk
revolution. Operation Ivy were part of Berkeley's legendary "Gilman
Street" scene, but their album Energy (1989) stretched beyond punk-rock,
encompassing ska and surf. From their ashes, two groups were born. Their
guitarist, Tim "Lint" Armstrong, formed Rancid (1), and proceeded to sell
the idea to the masses. Rancid (1993) and especially Let's Go (1994)
disguised the rebellious spirit of hardcore under the appearance of
exuberant wit, irresistible rhythms and catchy refrains. It was Clash's
recipe for a new generation. The less threatening potion of And Out
Come The Wolves (1995) found an even bigger audience. The other
group, Dance Hall Crashers (1), boasted two female singers and favored
joyful fanfares played with a naive verve more akin to girl-groups of the
Sixties than hardcore of the Nineties, particularly on Lockjaw (1995).
Commercial success came with Boston's Mighty Mighty Bosstones, who
penned amusing collections such as Question The Answers (1994), and
Florida's Less Than Jake, who delivered the explosive Pezcore (1994).
Los Angeles became the capital of ska-core thanks to: Bradley Nowell's
Sublime (1), who coined one of the most anthemic styles on 40 Oz To
Freedom (1992); No Doubt, fronted by a female vocalist (Gwen Stefani),
who broke through with Tragic Kingdom (1995); Voodoo Glow Skulls,
with generic packages such as Band Geek Mafia (1998).
Best in England were probably Citizen Fish, born from the ashes of the
Subhumans, and best in the rest of Europe were probably Sweden's
Millencolin.
Punk-pop
Hardcore climbed the charts (twenty years after it was invented by the
Ramones) with "popcore", the new variation on Buzzcock's punk-pop. It
was, again, San Francisco that bridged the gap between the charts and the
punks.
By capitalizing on the style pioneered in the mid 1980s by Mr T
Experience, Green Day (1) became one of the money-making machines of
the decade, thanks to the infectious hooks and riffs of Dookie (1994) and
to the generic pop of Time Of Your Life (1997) and Minority (2000).
The Seattle scene, which had been primed by the Fastbacks, yielded
several of the best pop-core bands.
Rusty Willoughby's Pure Joy belonged to the generation of the Fastbacks,
but emerged only with Carnivore (1990). Willoughby and the Fastbacks's
drummer Nate Johnson formed Flop (1), who revisited the deceptive
simplicity of Cheap Trick and the Buzzcocks on impeccable packages such
as Flop & The Fall Of The Mopsqueezer (1992) and especially
Whenever You're Ready (1993).
Although its bands (Descendents, Bad Religion and the likes) had inspired
Green Day, in the 1990s Los Angeles was, de facto, a colony of San
Francisco, recycling whatever was successful up north. Pennywise (1) led
the charge with Pennywise (1991), and a sound that, while respectful of
the masters of "beach punk", was also more pensive and atmospheric,
eventually achieving the depth of Unknown Road (1993). Many of the
Los Angeles bands of this generation surfaced after Green Day's
breakthrough, but had been roaming the city's clubs for years. Most
successful of them all were Offspring, that competed with Green Day's
mass appeal on Smash (1994).
The Humpers sounded more sincere than the average of these clones of
Screeching Weasel, because their Positively Sick On 4th Street (1992)
harked back to the original style of the Ramones and the New York Dolls.
Chicago, the city where Screeching Weasel had preached the gospel of
punk-pop, boasted perhaps the greatest of punk-poppers, Pegboy (11).
Formed by Naked Raygun's guitarist John Haggerty and other hardcore
veterans, they crafted a sound that was frantic and barbaric, but that, at the
same time, carried hummable tunes. Every single beat of Strong Reaction
(1991) was "wrong" in a unique way that made it just about "perfect",
delivering a dynamite emotional punch straight to the core of Haggerty's
stories. Abandoning the excesses of that stormy and visceral style, Pegboy
penned Earwig (1994), hell's version of Green Day.
Rick Valentin's Poster Children started out with the brainy noise-rock of
Tool Of Man (1992), featuring drummer John Herndon, but converted to
a more accessible style on Junior Citizen (1995).
Another bastion of punk-pop was located in North Carolina: Mac
McCaughan's Superchunk (1) resurrected the original spirit of punk-rock,
but without the negative overtones (the Ramones rather than the Sex
Pistols). The exuberant mood of their second album, No Pocky For Kitty
(1991), was almost the anti-thesis of hardcore. Mac McCaughan's alterego, Portastatic, originally formed to vent the more introspective side of
his art, eventually merged with Superchunk's punk-pop, and possibly
obscured it, on The Summer of the Shark (2003) and Bright Ideas
(2005).
New Hampshire's Queers (1) delivered a barrage of catchy, pummeling
refrains on Love Songs For The Retarded (1993), coupled with
outrageously decadent sex/drugs lyrics, and eventually turned their career
into a tribute to the Ramones.
England's punk-pop elite basically comprised five bands: Leatherface,
whose Mush (1991) was perhaps the greatest album of this generation,
Senseless Things, Ned's Atomic Dustbin , Mega City Four and Seers.
While they probably did not deserve the notoriety granted to them by the
British press, their sound at least stood up to the avalanche of Brit-pop.
The sound of Green Day was exported to Canada by Cub, with Betti-Cola
(1993), and to Australia by The Living End, who found mainstream
success with The Living End (1998).
California garage-punk
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earlier EPs.
Jazzcore
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"Jazzcore" thrived in the background, but the idea (that had been
pioneered by the likes of the Minutemen, Universal Congress, Saccharine
Trust and others) fueled the creative work of numerous bands. The Los
Angeles school was continued by Bazooka (1), saxophonist Tony
Atherton's hardcore adaptation of the ideas of Frank Zappa, Albert Ayler
and Thelonious Monk, particularly on Perfectly Square (1993), and by
Trash Can School, whose Sick Jokes And Wet Dreams (1992) harked
back to the visceral blues-punk sound of Pop Group and Birthday Party.
Utah's Iceburn (2) fused the languages of progressive-rock, jazz, metal and
hardcore on Firon (1992) and on the monumental Hephaestus (1993). The
latter's brainy jams opened a number of stylistic avenues that would take
the band a decade to fully explore. Poetry Of Fire (1995) introduced
elements of classical music and atonal avantgarde, not to mention Indian
ragas, while veering towards the loose structures of free-jazz, a
metamorphosis that continued on Iceburn Collective's Meditavolutions
(1996), featuring the suite Sphinx, one of their most terrible and
accomplished works, and was completed with the three lengthy group
improvisations of Polar Bear Suite (1997).
San Diego's Creedle unleashed Silent Weapons For Quiet Wars (1994),
inspired by John Zorn's hyper-kinetic nonsense jazz.
Old school
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same time, sabotaged) angry young girl Lesley Rankine's roars and wails
with an anthemic and seismic mixture of unrefined adrenaline and
concentrate vitriol on Fat Axl (1991) and Organ Fan (1992).
Norway's glam-punks Turbonegro (1) eventually recorded one of the most
impressive hardcore works of the decade, their fourth album Apocalypse
Dudes (1998), that sounded like a hardcore version of Alice Cooper and
Kiss.
The atonal ferocity of Sweden's Brainbombs was devoted to the most
lascivious, sadistic and murderous instincts, like a seriously (not
comically) deranged version of the Cramps. The sound of Burning Hell
(1992) and Genius and Brutality Taste and Power (1994) was a sloppy
exaggeration of the Stooges with cameos from a jazz trumpet.
Post-hardcore
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