GOODBYE, BLUE MONDAY – DEMO

I’ve been plagued by annoyance as of late. Google Sites, the upload tool I use for hosting the music found on this blog, hasn’t let me upload anything for a couple of weeks. Not sure what the problem might be, but it’s Google, who can I possibly ask about it? Mr. Google?

Thus, I’m switching over to Soundcloud for this next update. I hope it’s not too annoying. You’ll still be able to download the tracks, just click on the little black arrow in the right hand menu of the player to copy the song. But, if this change over does annoy you, know that I sympathize. My own obsessive need for structure makes variation in layout from post to post very, very troubling. I hope we can all get through it together.

So, the Goodbye, Blue Monday demo. What can possibly be said other than that I thought it lost forever. I had a copy of this cassette of course, but along with a few other gems, I seem to have misplaced it. However, a few weeks back Tim sent me a link to a Russian blog that seemed to have nothing but the nicest things to say about the boys and their music. I’m not clear on whether the writer of the blog was aware of Goodbye, Blue Monday prior to coming across them on GoKidGo.org, but nonetheless, they are clearly fans and that rools.

Listening to this demo once again after such a long time away from it, I am amazed that this is the same band that went on to record this 7″ and this one here. While they all share a similar style, the mood is so drastically different in the demo. There’s an urgency that seems lost in the official releases while the demo just attacks from the first note. That’s not to say the split 7″ and 7″ are bad. Not at all. Both have their own voice, but it’s a more relaxed feel. This demo is punk thru and thru.

Goodbye, Blue Monday were close friends whom I hung out with on a daily basis. From day one, they solidified into an incredible live band that sounded and played like a ton of bricks. I think I always envied their cohesion as a band. Sure, you might be able to form a band with some great ideas sonically, but trying to gather a band together that plays with real harmony, meaning, a natural tendency to step in time, and you’re talking a whole ‘nother beast. Goodbye, Blue Monday always blew Franklin out of the water whenever we played live together. They blew almost everyone out of the water when they played live.

I don’t remember why the guys broke up. They weren’t around all that long. But, I would have loved to see what they accomplished on a full length.

Here’s the boys demo in all its glory. Enjoy. Photos by the incomparable Shawn Scallen.

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01 Far From A Starched Heritage by GoKidGo

02 Hoe Down by GoKidGo

03 Saccharin by GoKidGo

04 Transister Traffic Jam by GoKidGo

05 The Work Of Fools by GoKidGo

06 The Man Who Only Lived Long Enoug by GoKidGo

DIZRYTHMIA/GUTTERSNIPES SPLIT 7″

Here we get into the dusty memory bins. Be warned.

While starting a band was always one of the most critical of goals, so was the attempt to create a music community or, if you will, a scene. You see, my friends and I were raised on the legendary towns of Washington, DC, New York, NY and San Francisco, CA. Each boasting their own undeniable stamp on the underground music community. For a city like Philadelphia, our home, to fantasize about creating our own music driven subculture where like minded people could entertain and realize their own creative fantasies was a nebulous yet incredibly important past-time. Sure, having a band was great but what good was it if all you could do was play your friends basements for only your friends?

To succeed, the scene had to grow. It had to absorb and then it had to expand.

For that to happen there were two very important components required outside the primary necessity which of course would be bands. The other two? A venue for those bands to play consistently where the bands could congregate and other individuals (curious about the congregation) could join and a way to then, once the seeds of creativity were sown, document the creations those bands spilled forth. In other words, a record label.

As suburbanite bands such as Random Children, Fracture, Public Descent and others migrated into the city, we were able to befriend urban oriented bands like Dyzrythmia, Invid, Prometheus Trashed, Mad Planets, and many, many more. Bands? We had that covered.

We had a venue. Besides the house shows that would happen, all ages shows were happening regularly at JC Dobbs. Venue for congregation? Check!

And lastly, we had a label. Sure, it wasn’t very impressive but Elbohead had proven that it could document and release recorded material of locally established bands.

As you can see, the pot was well seeded and germinated. While not as impressive as other community driven music scenes, we could have pride in our little sub-set here in Philadelphia. It was something to nurture and grow and more importantly, it was ours.

After the Random Children/Mad Planets split 7″, Elbohead decided to continue on in the realm of split 7″s. The reason? Financing mostly. Because we had no money, we had to rely on the bands themselves to somehow fund portions of the project. Two bands have more money than one and so split 7″s made a lot of sense. But, romantically looking back, one could also say that split 7″s helped cement an even closer notion of “community”. The bands shared the release so its success or failure was shared with a larger group. Everyone could participate.

For the second release, we knew that we wanted Dizrythmia involved. We had met Jamie Mahon through Ralph (I believe they might have gone to school together) and he was one of the first folks to be there at Dobbs during the shows. He was a fella who looked a little metal, a little punk and was all heart. Just a great, kind fella. He played bass for Dizrythmia and a more metal unit called Invid. Both bands quickly became regulars playing shows at Dobbs and so it was a logical decision to say, yep, they should be up next.

Here’s where it gets even more confusing. I don’t remember who was originally supposed to fill out the second side of the split 7″. Logically, I have to assume Invid. Or, perhaps it was supposed to be another band. I simply can’t recall. What I do remember is that ultimately I was told a band from New Jersey called The Guttersnipes would be filling out the second side. I was a bit upset when I was told that one of the bands that would appear on the release was not a band from Philly, nor a band I had ever seen play before, nor a band I had even met. It seemed wrong to me and contrary to the nature of the community goals of our new scene and the label in general. But of course, I was 16 and rather immature.

However, to avoid any sort of hassle, we said sure, let’s just get on with it and this 7″ was born. Once again, the cover was printed at the lovely little offset press shop at the top of my street in Oreland. The inserts were printed via High School lunch breaks with the library xerox machine and we decided to go with red vinyl for the release. Fancy, right?

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Punk was already old music by the time I started playing it. So, we werenā€™t doing anything really cutting edge musically, but we did step up, declared ourselves, and had fun doing it.

This time in my life was about finally getting out of my neighborhood. There were only about 10 punks in my part of town, so a bunch of us skated together and then eventually started playing music together. One of them was Jamie Mahon.

I was a homebody, and he was a man about town. When he went to art school, he seemed instantly plugged in to all these different weirdos who had bands. I got a big ass car, so we were able to start getting around town and playing at these peopleā€™s parties. We played basements, backyards, warehouses, brick playhouse theaters, abandoned houses & VFW halls. Dobbs on South st even put on some Sunday afternoon all ages shows that we stomped each other at. We played a New Years Eve Party at Julian Buchannanā€™s momā€™s house in Southwest Germantown with The Random Children. It was fun until the local thugs crashed through the front windows like SWAT and started kicking our asses.

Jamie said that The Random Children had a record label called ELBO HEAD, and wanted to put out a split 7ā€ with this band The Guttersnipes from Vineland. I said hell yeah! The label was even gonna spring for colored vinyl!

We had never recorded with anything other than a boom box and I wasnā€™t good with a 4 track yet, so we had to go to a ā€œreal studioā€ to record. We ended up at a place called The Sponge Factory. Now of course, itā€™s artist condos, but then, it was a shitty old warehouse in a scary neighborhood. We were multi tracked onto a Ā½ inch tape machine by Steely Dan/Deadheads who were inhaling ā€œsmart drugsā€ whatever they are.

The songs are ā€˜Togetherā€™ and ā€˜Lines of Greedā€™. Both tunes were ska/punk hybrids Influenced by some of the East Bay bands of the time, like Operation IVY and Crimpshrine & Plaid Retina, as well as more mainstream stuff like The Police, The Clash, and The Go-Gos. I wrote the music for Together and our drummer and singer Erik Gasiewski, and Lauren Perez, who were dating at the time, wrote the words. Itā€™s a sappy, needy teenage love song. Itā€™s cute! Jamie wrote the music for the other track, Lines Of Greed. I wrote the words. A band called Lines Of Oppression had allegedly ā€œstolenā€ a gig from us, so being petty like I was, I wrote this victim piece about it being all about money. So jive! I later became friends with all these dudes and they were really cool and nice. Live and Learn, I guess! I sang the number like New Values era Iggy, so I was well impressed with myself.

Well the record came out and The Guttersnipes side was about on par with ours in terms of quality, but the style was more in the Ramones, Misfits, Johnny Thunders neighborhood. I liked it quite a bit.

We played a bunch of shows together to promote it. This was fun time period. Very eye opening, and filled with new experiences and ideas about what was possible. And punk as fuck.

So there you have it. I don’t believe I ever did see The Guttersnipes play.

Enjoy!

DIZRYTHMIA
Together

Lines of Greed

GUTTERSNIPES
To Russia With Love

Brain Control Rock n’ Roll

FRANKLIN LIVE AT THE 508 HOUSE

Man, I had to jump all over this one.

Today, a nice fella named Ian sent me a message linking me to his YouTube page where he was posting a whole slew of videos. Turns out he was friends with the 508 House folks, played in a band with Deme who lived there and captured some great footage of Franklin playing a complete set in the 508 basement.

This footage is actually the same show that the image on the top of this blog is from and while there are some visual glitches, the sound is pretty solid. Ian has a bunch of other great videos on his page so get on over there!
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This show was from the summer of 1995 and, I believe, was the final show of our tour that summer. Fracture and True High Fidelity played and it sounds as if we played our entire Go Kid Go LP which had just come out that summer. Sick find!

The Science Of… – 7/12/99

Sometimes, you can ask a friend to do a thing and nothing under the sun will get that friend to do that thing. Of course, that’s not saying he’s a bad friend, it’s just stating a fact.

For example, The Science Of…

Mike passed me a plastic bag of cassette tapes he unearthed many months ago and in it, I discovered this wonder. I had asked Mike to give me a few thoughts about the The Science Of… as I prepared for this post. He agreed. But it’s been some time now and dammit, I’m getting impatient. Thus, I thought by posting this article, it might urge him to quicken the pace!

But, until then, all I can offer are my very brief two cents. The Science Of… featured Mike Parsell on the drums, Eric Wareheim on the electric piano, Carly Van Anglen on the bass and Dave Moylan on the guitar. They started in the late 90’s but I don’t know the how or the why. Eric, Dave and Mike had played together many, many times in many, many incarnations like I Am Heaven for instance, but I dunno how this got going. An instrumental group, they brought Carly in thanks to her totally amazing bass talents. I had the pleasure of playing with Carly in Astir-Few and know of what I speak.

The Science Of… would never officially release anything, but they did some touring and they would slowly evolve into a band called Sola in the coming years. This demo, however, definitely shows their wickedness with a funky ruckus.

Mike, your TURN!

Editor’s note – 7:54PM: Mike came through and sent the following!

Ok, fine. Here it goes.

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I kept telling Eric and Dave, “I know this girl Carly who fucking rips on bass.” You see, I had seen her with the band Astir-Few. It was around this time that I went to the Pennsauken Mart and bought a bubbler and a cozy (ed. note – Look it up. “nuff said.).

Eric tied a fireplace lighter to the ceiling of my living room on a string that was just long enough to reach all sitting stations in the room. We smoked a lot of bubbler and listened to a lot of Can, and the album Moon Safari by Air. We realized that a funky bass line and a Fender Rhodes with some reverb was a fucking sexy-ass combo. The bubbler was right about that. Then we started to jam it out with Carly. Dave and Eric were blown away by Carly’s ability to shred everything in sight and the band was born.

We had so much fun being in this band together. All the songs were formed by hours and hours of jam sessions where we would all get in the zone. Later we added Greg Giuliano on percussion, which was sick, a highlight for me was a song called “double drums song”. We did a bunch of Philly shows, a small tour, recorded a demo, and that was it.

And that’s that!

Demo 1

Demo 2

Demo 3

Demo 4

VILE

As I’ve said in numerous posts, I do so enjoy the submissions of other people to this blog. A different perspective is always appreciated. However, thanks to busy schedules it can be a while before anyone has a chance to contribute. Such is life. Surprisingly, Jeff Vaders popped up again the other day and sent in some very, very old gems from his very first band, Vile. Starring folks who would go on to be in Up In Arms, then Fracture and Public Descent and beyond, this is a very worthy contribution. Thanks Jeff!

Vile was born into existence when Jeb Bell and I became friends in middle school. Through the combination of Thrasher Magazine, skate videos and watching our friends AK-47 / The Tazmanians play, Jeb & I mustered up the courage to create our own band. After several terrible name nominations, one being Auto Erotica, we democratically decided upon Vile. And that is how our first band came to be; create the band name first, then get the instruments and people.

Jeb had recently purchased an Ibanez electric guitar and Peavy amplifier and was learning tunes from our favorite bands. Rob Bell was already a formidable drum master and had an extensive setup in his parents basement. We recruited our friend Dan Goldberg to play guitar as his chops in 8th grade wowed all of us. Finally, I purchased a microphone and yes, Peavy amplifier as our solution to a PA system and the band was officially formed.

We practiced in The Bellā€™s basement and my parents garage nonstop. We dedicated hours upon hours on both weekdays and weekends to practicing our favorite punk rock songs. Dan Goldberg was lucky enough to have a reel-to-reel recorder that we used at many of our practices to re-listen and perfect our sound. Like all bands, after a couple weeks we began writing our own songs. Below is a sampling of these prolific tunes that sadly up till now did not get further than a few peopleā€™s ears. Sadly, I do not have photo evidence of Vile and its 4 month existence. The original songs below were recorded in the summer of 1989 in my parents garage. Only a few tunes recorded on reel to reel in my parents garage in the summer of 1989. I donā€™t know which is funnier, the teenage suburban angst etched into each tune or our unique egalitarian approach to counting down the songs. Enjoy.

3RD WORLD WAR – In the midst of the Cold War, would a punk rock band from suburban Philadelphia would not be complete without a Cold War protest song.

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EVEN THEM OUT – Written right after Down To The Ground, another Bell/Vaders collaboration. Possibly the greatest lyrical writing ever, ā€œa shot in the knee, a shot in the heel, even them out, give them something to feelā€. This song is a gem and I am surprised it was never covered by anyone else.

PMRC – Penned by Dan Goldberg, this song was to change Vileā€™s direction from songs about burning and killing to something more intelligent.

SUBURBAN POLICE – If memory serves me correctly, this may have been the first real group collaboration. Music by Bell/Vaders, lyrics by Dan Goldberg. Our protest song against the local cops.

Sick.