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DAILY RECORD: Punch

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Punch - Push Pull (Discos Huelga/625)

One extremely hungover summer morning a few years ago I was fighting the pounding in my head, struggling to keep my morning coffee from coming right back up, and trying in vain to figure out what had happened to me the previous evening. My heart sank into my turbulent stomach when I checked my e-mail. At the top of my inbox was an enthusiastic thanks from some band I had apparently offered to book a show for in my bourbon-induced stupor. I really hate booking shows. It’s a thankless pain in the ass that’s rarely worth the effort, at least in my own experience. What was worse was that this was apparently a hardcore band I had agreed to arrange a show for and I was right in the thick of one of my occasional periods of disinterest in such bands. Before trying to weasel out of the show, however, I figured I might as well at least check them out, since they’d obviously impressed me enough to extend the invitation. And I’m glad I did. I ended up booking the band – San Francisco’s Punch – in Richmond several times, and through their performances and their releases, they have proven themselves to be purveyors of some of the best hardcore of the past decade.

Push Pull, the band’s newest release, continues down the path established by their previous EP, Eyeless, and their self-titled debut full-length; short blasts of unbridled aggression, slower heavy parts, and hints of melody which make the songs memorable and nuanced without turning them poppy or corny. Each release has seen this sound evolve slightly, however, and this album is no exception. While the first record was striking for its balance of Infest-style speed and lumbering breakdowns that wouldn’t have been out of place on an Unbroken record, and the second album featured a heightened emphasis on melody, Push Pull takes a more measured songwriting approach. Which isn’t to suggest that the music is slower or less confrontational by any means, but there seems to be more importance placed on instrumental interplay and more complex arrangements than the band had demonstrated before. A band like Extortion comes to mind as a reference point, but while that band is beholden to a small circle of influences (though they reflect them extremely well), Punch seems simultaneously broader in what they draw from and more specific in the manner in which the music is applicable to the commonplace experience of the members.

As stated before, the music is not far removed from previous albums, but the interplay on songs like “No Remorse” or “Sour Grapes” goes a long way towards setting Punch apart from legions of other hardcore bands. The minimalism of the songwriting can be frustrating at times, though. There are parts – the end of “Realist,” for instance – which have a brevity that undermines some of the power. Normally it’s not much of a criticism to suggest that the listener is left wanting more, but in instances like these, it can be distracting how quickly great elements fly by. But for every truncated moment there are others, like the end of “Fixation,” that draw out a well-placed slower part; or songs like “Positively God Free” that juxtapose slow and fast, dissonance and melody, and really showcase one of Punch’s strong suits – the graceful balance of opposing elements.

Lyrically, not much is left to the imagination. There is a terse quality to the songs which, rather than undermining any of the ideas, allows the lyrics to sidestep both unnecessary verbosity and the sort of overly simplified “this is good / I hate this” style so many hardcore bands fall prey to. There is a tug-of-war going on in the lyrics between the sense of positivity necessary to confront everyday bullshit with a clear head, and the sort of everyday bullshit which can easily erode that same positivity. While a song like “Positively God Free” leaves little question as to where the band stands on religion, the song forsakes reactionary knee-jerk atheism in favor of lines like “Sometimes in life / when everything works out / I have to believe in something / I’ll believe in me.” The album excoriates bigotry, complacency, and conformity, and while many of the songs are written in the accusatory second person perspective (the “you” that’s been the target of hardcore’s lyrical ire since “I Don’t Wanna Hear It” and “My War”), the perspective never seems like it’s being handed down from a soapbox. Instead, the listener gets the impression that these are hardcore songs as exorcisms – daily frustrations, stripped of (some of) their power to destroy and degrade by the cathartic power of the music. A line like “Everything is shit because you make it so / You’re fucking up your life because you can’t let go” is not an unfamiliar sentiment in Punch’s genre, but it’s expressed concisely and passionately enough that it can transcend posi-core cliché and become something more meaningful, a common point of reference between musician and listener--that of an easy frustration to experience, a difficult one to overcome.

Punch’s attempt to reach the listener at that middle point is one of the most striking and compelling elements to their music. Theirs are songs imbued with personality and distinctiveness and informed by many of hardcore’s earlier pinnacles without falling victim to the posturing of insert-a-year rehashes. All the band comparisons and lyrical analysis in the world can’t adequately sum up the power of their music, and while Punch’s music might not win the war against the things their songs decry, they bravely fight the battle, not only confronting the world’s frustrations and injustices but managing to outdo themselves and just about every band in their genre with each successive release. It becomes rarer with each passing year that I find any bands like this, bands which reflect the spirit that attracted me to punk rock in the first place. However, Punch is without question one of those bands.


Deep China Demo Available For Free Download

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Rising from the ashes of short-lived Richmond hardcore band Brain Damage, Deep China make an excellent first impression on their four-song demo. Three-fourths of the band's lineup carries over from Brain Damage, but with bassist James Henderson now handling vocal duties, and the addition of second guitarist Reid Attaway, Deep China has a thicker, harsher attack. Much of the demo sounds like the harsh, downtuned hardcore produced by Southern bands like His Hero Is Gone and Coliseum, but there are some intriguing glimpses of melody. The clearest of these comes on the chorus of "Gun Line," on which Henderson forsakes his usual scream for a throaty croon that still projects plenty of menace. For a few seconds at a time, he vocally resembles Phil Anselmo, perhaps mixed with the sound of Entombed vocalist Lars-Goran Petrov circa Wolverine Blues. These vocals make clear that the influence of such swampy biker-metal bands is just as present in Deep China's music as is the influence of dark, heavy hardcore, but the moments of melancholy emotion that these influences usher in are brief, overwhelmed throughout this blazing nine-minute workout by speed and intensity--reflected in song titles like "Ornery Like A Wolf" and "Who The Fuck Are You?"

Deep China supplies a strong Richmond pedigree even beyond their connection to Brain Damage. Drummer Chris Brown is in Mouthbreather, both he and Henderson are in Race The Sun, and Attaway is in Murphy's Kids. Guitarist Ryan Pupa isn't in any other currently active bands, but previously played in The Human Timebomb and Vindication, among others. The wide variety of different sounds represented by this group of bands may seem strange in light of Deep China's devotion to all things heavy, but in truth, it is an asset. Bands whose members don't listen to any music outside the genres they play often grow stale and unoriginal, which is a fate Deep China shouldn't ever have to fear. Their demo is hopefully just a taste of all the excellent heavy music this band will have to offer in future. With almost all of the members in other currently active bands, they may not produce material at a very high rate; right now, they don't even have any upcoming shows. For now, I suppose we'll have to content ourselves with these four songs. As powerful as they are, though, they should be more than enough to sustain interest.

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Deep China's demo is currently available for download here. Check them out on Myspace here.

Resident Evil: Afterlife

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While the typical progression of films in a series sees each successive movie getting worse than the one that preceded it, the Resident Evil series has managed to buck that trend with its most recent installments. Resident Evil: Afterlife is the fourth chapter in the series, and it is also the best. Perhaps this can be attributed to the return of Paul WS Anderson to the director’s chair after he directed the first film in the series, but dropped back to producer for parts two and three. Though he is not usually counted among master filmmakers of today, the vast improvement of the latest installment over the previous entries must make us wonder if there was some aspect or vision that other directors were unable to translate from Anderson’s writing. It sounds unlikely, but Afterlife delivers a superior story and far exciting action sequences than any of its predecessors.

Chapter four sees Milla Jovovich returning as Alice, the former employee of the Umbrella Corporation, who now battles the zombie monsters the corporation is responsible for unleashing. She and her friend Claire take refuge with another group of survivors in a maximum security prison in Los Angeles, and learn of a possible haven from the undead. There is a cargo ship out at sea and within sight of the prison that is broadcasting an emergency message offering assistance to survivors. Only the entire zombie population of L.A. stand between Alice’s group and safety. It is up to Alice to find a way to beat the impossible odds and get her friends out of harms way, and in doing so, possibly get a chance at killing Albert Wesker, the chairman of Umbrella and the man responsible for the zombie apocalypse.

Yes, though the plot sounds like every other movie in the series (as well as most other zombie movies, for that matter), the increased role for Wesker dramatically enhances the experience by adding a central villain. Where the previous films relied on the faceless Umbrella Corporation and its various employees or biological weapons for villains, Wesker provides Alice with a suitable arch-nemesis to focus on. Imagine a Batman movie without the Joker or the Penguin or anyone else, with Batman just beating up on muggers and pickpockets for 90 minutes. That would be equivalent to the previous Resident Evil movies, and it is nice to see the filmmakers finally realize what was missing. With the goal of permanent safety and a chance to finally take out the head of the evil corporation, this is by far the most epic film in the series.

That epic feeling is helped at times by the 3D effects the film offers. Say what you will about Paul WS Anderson, but when he decided to make a 3D movie he did not go the cheap conversion route as so many other filmmakers do. This film was shot entirely with the 3D camera system that James Cameron developed for Avatar, and it provides the best live action 3D experience since that film was released. Unfortunately, though, Anderson did not take all his cues from Cameron’s Avatar, or he would have found a way to set his zombies in an environment as bright and vibrant as Pandora. Instead, we get a dim and bleak apocalyptic wasteland, made even darker by the fact that the viewer must wear the shaded glasses for the 3D. There are several times during the film where the image becomes so dark that it is difficult to tell what is happening onscreen. It never happens for an extended period of time, but ideally it would not occur at all.

It should go without saying, but just to be on the safe side, Resident Evil: Afterlife is still for fans only. It is the best film in the series, but it is still part four, so if you have not seen or have not liked any of the previous three movies, stay away from this one. That said, fans will be overjoyed with this movie. Paul WS Anderson returns as director and does a lot of things right for the series. Of course, there is always room for improvement, and he will have his chance. Remember, every film in the series ends with a cliffhanger.

By Gareth Mussen

RVA NO.2 : AN INTERVIEW WITH DIAMOND BLACK HEARTED BOY

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To describe Diamond Black Hearted Boy as simply wild and exciting would appear to be an understatement. These two aspects are certainly at play. Yet it is the variety of performances and reactions set in motion within that speak volumes. They are deliberate attempts at challenging any preconceived notions an audience or an artist has when it comes to what the limits truly are in any artistic expression.

Chino Amobi’s intentions at each show fluctuate and the end results are simply fascinating. Take for example, a performance at the Commercial Taphouse with Bermuda Triangles. For the entirety of his fifteen-minute set, Amobi remains hidden from the audience under a garb as he randomly pounces at a drum kit while a sample plays. All those in attendance cannot take their eyes away from what they are seeing even if they find it difficult to understand what they are witnessing. On another occasion, his performance at Club Down and Under would provide Amobi with the outlet to dish out an inspired set of dance numbers entitled “Fuck Yeah,” “Shut Up” and “Get Off My Dick” that come off surprisingly confident for the performer.

Amobi’s performances are spawned from whichever place he decides to pull inspiration from as well as the type of show. While still maintaining a level of self-awareness, there is nothing tired or exhausted when it comes to his approach. This isn’t simply music. This is an artistic expression being tossed on its head and seeing how much it cracks open for us to examine what spills out. This is Diamond Black Hearted Boy.

SHANNON: The name of this project is a reference that I’m aware of, but perhaps our readers wouldn’t be. Where did the name stem from and what drew you to it? Does its origin reflect in anyway your musical aspirations and inspiration?

DBHB: The name derives from the lyrics of a Fiery Furnaces song. I was drawn to the name because it relates to what I am expressing both visually and sonically. It basically has to do with the idea of candy-coating something seemingly awkward, ugly, and embarrassing with a thick layer of glimmer and gloss. It reflects the way in which my music and live performance can be simultaneously standoffish yet seductive.

SHANNON: I really respect your approach to live performance and songs in general. I wonder how does the thought process begin for both of these outlets respectively? I have seen several videos of past shows shot by Silver Persinger that show a range dynamically in your live performances. Does the venue play a big part in how you encounter a show? Houses against bars essentially?

DBHB: Thank you and Thank God for Silver Persinger. He should be the Mayor of this city, for real. Imagine that. Yeah but as for the live performances, it really depends on a number of factors. How I’m feeling that week, what type of music have I been listening to lately, who I am playing with, how loud the sound system is gonna be, what type of demographic is going to be there. I really just play it by ear and let the moment decide. I’ve been really interested in getting girls to shake their booties recently so that has been an incentive. If I know ahead of time that there aren’t gonna be some girls at the show ready to get buck then I'm not really that excited about it. I don’t mind playing bars, but if I know that I'm gonna be playing in front of a bunch of old white crusty geezers reminiscing on the good old days, well then my set’s gonna be pretty much inverted. I can be a lil’ bitch in that way.

SHANNON: I sense that the majority of your recorded output is all done at home. Does this make it easier for you to continue writing prolifically or is there a desire for you to enter a real deal studio and make something drastically different?

DBHB: Yeah, the whole home recording thing is basically born out of necessity because I’m flat broke and don’t have anywhere else to record. It’s fun though cause I can do whatever I want and do it at my own pace, and it’s free of course, but its limited. I have a lot of visions and ideas musically that I cannot fully realize by just recording out of my laptop. I would like to work with choirs and collaborate with producers in studios that actually know something about music and music technology, because I don’t. All I know is up-down, up-down. I know enough to get by. So yeah, if any producers, DJs, musicians, or anyone with a studio is reading this and would like to work with me lets do it. chinoamobi@gmail.com. We will make super saiyan suicidal slug jams together. I can guarantee you that.

SHANNON: You recently went on tour with Bermuda Triangles. Was this a first for you? I have seen you both on several bills together. What drew you to wanting to venture out on the road with them, and what other bands in Richmond do you feel inclined towards stylistically and musically?

DBHB: Unfortunately, I was unable to join Jason Hodges and the boys on the east coast tour. I had to handle some unforeseen business with my Nigerian connects overseas. Yeah, but that wouldn’t of been my first tour. Last summer I went on a tour with TMTMTMBOY from Chicago. It was so epic. Chicago is such an awesome city. The kids up there are doing some truly original and inspiring things with music and dance. LISTEN TO JUKE MUSIC. Kansas City is an awesome city as well. I love to be on the road. It is so unpredictable, especially when you are venturing to a place you have never been before. Stylistically and musically, I feel a connection to the bands in Richmond that really don’t give a damn. From The Darkest Part of The Woods, Head Molt, ChiChi The Kid, The Young Richmond Outkasts, Mike Ezie (RIP), Messi, MUTWAWA, The Amoeba Men, Leo Heinzel, and Dylan Languell to name a few.

SHANNON: I feel as if you break past just typical songwriting and incorporate multiple outlets of media in your creative output. What are your best experiences with that, and also what would you enjoy doing that could further this involvement with alternate sources?

DBHB: Well the breaking past typical song writing is mainly due to the fact that I don’t know anything about music. I mean, I understand rhythm and swing, I just don’t know anything about song structure or how to write a song. I can identify it when I am listening it, but to recreate it is a whole ‘nother rabbit hole. I love traditional popular songs, but I am also really into psychotically repetitive music as well. African chant and Nihilistic repetition is basically the skeleton of my musical palette. As for multimedia, I believe that all stimuli is democratic, so I have no problem augmenting my music with various visual and/or aural detritus of contemporary or past cultures. It’s the free play of signs and signifiers. In the future, I would like to collaborate with more people on multiple platforms to expand the vision exponentially.

SHANNON: What does the rest of the year contain for you?

DBHB: Well, nothing is really fixed. It’s pretty hazy right now. I got some music shows lined up through the summer, mostly local. I have a solo art show coming up this October in Brooklyn at Like The Spice Gallery. I’m also planning a European and Asian tour at the beginning of next year with a small French label Steak Au Zoo who I am releasing a cd-r with in September. Yeah, I’m basically just playing it by ear.

WWW.MYSPACE.COM/DIAMONDBLACKHEART

READ MORE FROM RVA NO.2 HERE

DAILY FIX: Nickelus F - Take You With Me

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The latest and greatest from local homie Nickelus F.

Here's the full length video for Nickelus F's "Take You With Me." This is the 3rd video from Nick's Season Premiere mixtape. Directed by Will Bryan & cinematography by Alex Hawthorne for Smooth Dirty Productions (http://www.vimeo.com/user2258328). Will Bryan will also be directing the Nickelus F's "Chocolate Milk" video (Coming soon).

http://www.youtube.com/user/nickelusf

CLUB LUV at NY DELI this Saturday

Rest In Peace Ross.

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On Tuesday, I found out my friend had died, his inner demons finally won. Ross was full of complications but he always had a warm smile when I saw him out. We would chat about stuff he was working on or thoughts he was having and I kept telling him we would get together sometime and have coffee... Now its too late for that but I would like to imagine he's okay with it, there was a lot of things he didn't get to. Maybe he will have coffee waiting for me when I see him again someday. Maybe I can tell him he was an asshole for leaving without saying goodbye. Maybes. I dont know what to say. I feel confused by it all. Goodbye Ross, you will be missed. - Anthony

--------- The note RVA received from Nate.

On Monday September 6th Ross Harman, formerly of the band the Gaskets took his own life. He will be missed so dearly by so many people.

Ross' band mate Teddy Blanks and I have decided to pay tribute to Ross by trying to get as many people as we can to hear Ross' solo music.

Over the last few years Ross was recording by himself under the name "Ballpoint Pens". Other than a Myspace page and burning CDs for friends he didn't really share any of his music with the world. A few years ago Teddy compiled some of the mp3s Ross had sent him to create and album called "Calcutta" which we posted on the Gaskets website. After Ross' death on Monday Teddy compiled a second album of Ross' solo work called Symphony.

Ross' music was very different than the Gaskets music and as if was recorded on his computer using Garage Band it is very low-fi. Despite this there is some clear brilliance here. There are songs that made me cry even before Ross' death. Ross was dealing with so much pain during the last few years of his life and that sadness and anger comes out in this music in amazing ways. As much as I loved the Gaskets, some of Ross' solo music speaks to me in a way the Gaskets never did and I want the world to hear what only Ross' friends have heard before now.

It would mean a great deal to Teddy and I, as well as Ross' family and friends if you could do a post about him and share some of his music with your fans.

Teddy completely redid the Gaskets website yesterday with downloads to pretty much every bit of music that Ross has ever put his name on so there is plenty of things for you to feature but the song we suggest is Ross' song Nine Times Out Of Ten. The song is both Teddy and my favorite Ballpoint Pens song and I think it really speaks to some of the things Ross was dealing with his relationships with girls, friends and his crippling alcohol problem.

It is available for download here:
http://www.drivenbyboredom.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/02-Nine-Times-...

Every Gaskets album and both Ballpoint Pens albums are available for download at htttp://www.thegaskets.com but here are specific links to Ross's albums. Both zips include album artwork designed by Teddy.
Calcutta - October 2007: http://thegaskets.com/assets/music/ballpoint-pens-calcutta.zip
Symphony - September 2010: http://thegaskets.com/assets/music/ballpoint-pens-symphony.zip

I also wanted to give you a few other links that might be of interest:
I wrote a eulogy to Ross on my website. It explains a bit more about what happened to Ross and things like that: http://www.drivenbyboredom.com/2010/09/08/ross-harman-rest-in-peace/

Ross was an amazing painter and directed a stop motion video for the Gaskets song Left Hand that Teddy wrote about him: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eh_QLJ_xCyY&feature=player_embedded

"Never Let You Go" was the only video made for a Ballpoint Pens song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItH8mJB_TRc&feature=player_embedded

One of the last photos I ever took of Ross: http://www.drivenbyboredom.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/ross_in_the_da...

One of Ross' friends Oura drew this as a tribute to him: http://oura.tumblr.com/post/1089845714/my-friend-ross-harman-may-he-rest...

Anyway, thanks for reading this. Anything you could post would mean a huge deal to us. We loved this kid so fucking much and we just want everyone to know how brilliant he was. Thank you so much.

Nate "Igor" Smith
Gaskets Manager 2003-2008

Dream Atlantic, The National, 9/3/10

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Southside’s Dream Atlantic tore the roof off The National last Friday night. The hardcore quintet’s double bass blasts and Southern-fried shredding brought out their fans in anticipation of getting an early copy of the band’s new EP, Gunslingers, which dropped for the masses four days later on the 7th of September.

The band hit the stage after a disappointing line up of sub-par and dated-sounding openers, making the reasons for their popularity immediately evident to all in attendance, as they broke into their set with a series of rapid fire drum fills and a towering wall of feedback. Front man Anthony Williams stalked the stage with confidence and aggression, evoking a young Henry Rollins as he leaned one leg up on the floor monitors, letting loose his guttural and menacing screams through The National’s top notch PA system. Williams’s voice is unique--he’s able to sound very primal and deep, but has the upper register to provide the edge of clarity that separates his voice from the group’s low end dirge. As fists swung and bodies flailed across the National’s floor, Dream Atlantic attacked, continually pushing forward with their technically masterful Southern hardcore. By the end of their set the audience was going wild. The following act had to deal with a half empty house, as most of the audience had already gotten what they came for and left.

To clearly hear the talents Of Dream Atlantic, one must listen to their newest studio release. Close on the heels of the band’s 2009 debut album, Losing the Floor, their latest project is especially astounding when one considers that the band, operating on their own, produced and mixed the new EP in its entirety. The level of production sounds absolutely top notch. Recorded in Dream Atlantic’s Southside studio, Full Circle Recording, which has of late become the go to location for the region’s hard rock faithful, the EP sounds miles ahead of the band’s previous efforts. The release starts off with a brazen blast of brutality in the opening track “No Hero.” The song begins with a lo-fi radio filtered array of vocals and drums that drops into a bass heavy assault. This assault doesn’t let up for the remainder of the recording, as even the clean vocal harmonies find a way to add to the song’s shredding metal drive. Before you can even catch your breath, “No Hero” is immediately followed up by the track the “The Quick and The Dead,” a pop-friendly metal blast of pseudo-Middle Eastern guitar gymnastics, which culminates in one of the most pyrotechnic metal guitar solos out of the river city since Lamb of God.

Above all, Dream Atlantic has technical talent. The group masterminds, drummer/producer Dan Uphoff and songwriter/lead guitarist Matt Seay, are the driving force behind the band. Each of the two musicians are virtuosos at their respective instruments, creating a nonstop churning of guitar squeals and syncopated drum fills that propel the band forward, through the heavy grind of bassist Brandon Willard and rhythm guitarist Jesse Huckins’s tightly wound riffs. Huckins’s high and clear harmonies consistently create a radio-friendly counterpoint to Williams’s aggressive and dominating growl. For this reason, Dream Atlantic inhabit a fantastic middle ground that is sure to appeal to fans of both heavier and more melodic rock varieties.

The band didn’t cut any corners on their latest effort, in terms of production or musicianship. “Vixens” references the notorious guitar descent into the Beatles classic “Helter Skelter” and quickly turns it into something entirely the band’s own. They move from classic rock guitar riffing into a blastbeat-driven wall of clean vocal hooks, then into a muddy blues-tinged breakdown that sparks off with a furious vocal from Williams, demanding the band “bring the fucking riot.” And indeed they do.

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Dream Atlantic’s new EP, Gunslingers, is available through the band’s website or through Amazon mp3.


DAILY RECORDS: Arson Anthem, Quest For Fire, Sufjan Stevens

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Arson Anthem - Insecurity Notoriety (Housecore)
Phil Anselmo equals Pantera in a lot of minds, but he's had plenty of other great bands, of which Arson Anthem is just the latest. Anselmo on guitar, plus Eyehategod's Mike Williams singing and Hank III drumming, crank out seventeen songs of dirty, ugly D-beat hardcore. Dark, swampy, and awesome.

Quest For Fire - Quest For Fire (HS!BF [Note: not to be a jerk, but... your label's entire internet presence is a message board post? What are you, allergic to selling records?])
Heavy, metallic hardcore that combines everything from D-beat crust to Dag Nasty-style melodic leads to psyched-out wah-wah solos into a fascinating sound that avoids easy comparison points in favor of invigorating freshness. Intricate, talented riffing and noisy feedback rounds out an excellent album you'd be foolish to miss.

Sufjan Stevens - All Delighted People EP (sufjanstevens.bandcamp.com)
This inconsistent hour-plus "EP" provides tantalizing glimpses of Sufjan at his emotionally transfixing best; the shorter mid-record tracks are quiet banjo/vocal folk tunes that strike at the heart. But the overstuffed orchestral pop of the opening and closing tracks (both over 10 minutes long) are just... too much.

We Have Lost Most Of the Hope We Had: An Interview with The Body

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Providence, Rhode Island’s The Body are a study in contrasts. The band began as a guitar/drums duo but has augmented their newest release All The Waters Of The Earth Turn To Blood with an additional thirty musicians. Known mostly for churning, down-tuned dirge, the band now incorporates quieter and more intricate passages which add nuance to their onslaught. The contrast is not specific to their newest release either - based on their choice of covers alone, the band has drawn from influences as disparate as Sinead O’Connor and Body Count.

But with the arrival of their newest album, the Body has demonstrated that they are one of the most interesting bands currently operating in the slower end of the heavy music spectrum. While many such bands are content to plod away with uninspired sludge and to measure their worth more by their collections of vintage Sunn amps than by their ability to write memorable music, The Body has demonstrated their ability to craft a sound that is no less vicious for its boundary-pushing. Though there are still a few months left until the final decision can be made, All The Waters Of The Earth Turn To Blood may well be the best album released all year.

I had a chance to get a few questions in with drummer Lee Buford about where the band has been and where they’re going.

RVA: Your newest album features a vast expansion on your instrumentation. What motivated the change?

Lee Buford: It's hard to capture the feeling of the live show on recordings since so much of it has to do with the volume and the physical aspect of it being so bass heavy. So we tried to make the recording as dense as the live show, but instead of volume, using a wide variety of instruments and musicians.

RVA: How much of the extended instrumentation will carry over into your live show?

Buford: When we're in Providence or around there, we try to incorporate extra drummers when we can, but besides that it's usually just us two on tour. We've talked about doing a short tour with the choir but we're still trying to figure out how to make it work.

RVA: Is this a musical direction you're going to further explore, or is future material going to see a return to the more straightforward lo-fi heavy approach?

Buford: We usually have two recording styles, one where we record at home--and that has a very lo-fi aesthetic--and the other at Machines With Magnets, where we try to utilize the studio as much as possible. We enjoy both of them in different ways, so I'm sure you'll see recordings in both styles in the future. We are going back to Machines With Magnets in November to record a new 7" with the choir, so that will be more like the new record.

RVA: Your choice of covers on previous releases has demonstrated a fairly disparate set of influences. What were you drawing from when it came time to orchestrate the new record? There seems to be a wide variety of source material at play.

Buford: Musically, I think we try not to limit ourselves as far as what we listen to and what we allow to influence us. On this recording we wanted to kind of recreate the sounds of Phil Spector, the Beach Boys, and ELO in the way that you can listen to those records a hundred times and still notice new things that are layered in there.

RVA: On a non-musical level, there also seems to be a wide variety of influences at play (Yeats, the Book of Revelations, Shoko Asahara, etc.). Was there a conscious attempt to synthesize those elements into a single philosophy or are they borrowed in bits and pieces as a means of commentary?

Buford: Thematically, we are influenced by anything that tries to distance itself from mankind since we believe mankind is inherently flawed and nothing good can come of it.

RVA: The album's art pairs eerie, yet aesthetically appealing, photographs of hooded soldiers and their weapons with the sense of menace implicit to the subject matter, in much the same way that the music pairs quieter choral moments with crashing heaviness. Was that intentional, and do you feel that's at all reflected in the lyrics which seem pretty uniformly grim?

Buford: We wanted to make something vague. The photography and the choir pieces are extremely beautiful and well thought out, but they represent and go along with an ugliness that makes a (hopefully) interesting end result.

RVA: It seems that a lot of the lyrics deal with striking back at a decaying, corrupt society in whatever means possible. Do you feel like that's a common thread among your influences, both musical (Body Count, MDC) and non-musical (Jim Jones, Charles Manson)?

Buford: Yes, there is a commonality between our musical and non-musical influences, in that they all represent a struggle. I think when we first started, we were more along the lines of people versus political factions, and [the songs] had kind of a hope to them, but over time I think we've become more nihilistic, in that we have lost most of the hope we had.

RVA: Your music relies on a more experimental musical approach and a more confrontational lyrical stance than many sludgier bands, but The Body often gets lumped into the doom/stoner metal category. Do you relate to a lot of that scene at all?

Buford: I feel like we don't really relate to a lot of it. There are some bands in that genre that we love, but as a whole I feel what we're trying to express is more along the lines of black metal, which is mostly about hate and frustration.

--

The Body plays Strange Matter on Monday, September 13th with Cough and Bad Dream. A review of All The Waters Of The Earth Turn To Blood can be found here.

Photo Review: Broken Social Scene 9.11.10 @ The National

Gods of the Bobbleheads 20 – Actor James Reese, Band Force of Habit & A Special 9/11 Tribute

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Gods of the Bobbleheads 20 – Actor James Reese, Band Force of Habit + a special 9/11 tribute intro to the 4th Brigade 1st Battalion, 101st Airborne, Kickass Teddy and all the troops fighting for the US.

First Hour: Actor James Reese
The show begins with a shout out to the troops followed by a remix of the 101st Airborne’s own, Jimi Hendrix’s version of the Star Spangled Banner. Laughs are had all around as the Gods clown with actor, James Reese, who is in a play called “The Foreigner”. Force of Habit is introduced and plays a song entitled “Spun”. Doctor Apocolypse takes some time off from destroying the world to help a confused man with his troubling dream. Then the gang gets a call from long lost Big Baby Huey who’s phone presence puts half our listeners to sleep. After a brief moment of crappy hiphop, it’s the RVA Trilogy, letting everyone know the three things you can’t miss this week in Richmond. H-Bomb or Dooshbomb, as Dan calls him, calls in asking for an apology over the recent hostilities between the two shows. For all of you who didn’t know, the Bobblegods have an ongoing radio battle with Werewolf Radio and have people calling DooshBomb’s cell phone trying to buy dollar giant dildos. More with James Reese then Force of Habit plays “Resigned”. Hour 1 finished with the NFL dating game.

Second Hour: Force of Habit
The Buzz with Chuzz opens the second hour with Vas aka Chuzz debating the first week of the NFL with Dan and JohnE. The cuz, Burke the Jurke, walks into Vas’s shop mid call and gives his NFL 2 cents. For all who don’t know, Burke is a Philadelphia rapper as is Vas. After the sports report the Bobblegods interview Richmond’s own Force of Habit who just released their first album two weeks ago. The band plays another song, “Suicidal Carnivores”. Mikey Bongwater tells a story about his army days before some funny ads air. Then it’s back to the band and another song, “Vol 1”. A couple more songs and the Bobblegods reveal their plans for giving Richmond a great time over the next few months. Fin…

CLICK HERE FOR GODS OF THE BOBBLEHEADS

DAILY RECORD: UV Race

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UV Race - I Hate You EP (Fashionable Idiots)

The UV Race are a 7-piece outfit hailing from Australia who fall on the weirder, dronier side of punk/hardcore. The first song on this self-titled EP, “Knife Fight,” is described by the band as a “snotty punk song with attitude,” and I’m inclined to agree. It’s steady, slow, and not particularly heavy, but the attitude in the vocal delivery make it easy to see how this band fits in with hardcore bands. Anyone who digs Bogus Machine could very easily get into this band.

The thing about the UV Race that particularly impresses me is the way they seem to capture the sarcastic, depressed attitudes of counterculture youth in Australia. It reminds me of the feeling I get from listening to The Streets, and of the way that music relates to British youth, though musically it’s hard to make that connection. Comparing a hip-hop artist to a punk band seems like a stretch, but I really think there is something there.

The EP contains explanations of what each song is about, but no actual lyrics, which I found a little disappointing. Personally, I prefer a band’s lyrics to be open to interpretation. If the band wants a stricter interpretation of their lyrical meaning, I believe it is possible to let the lyrics speak for themselves, but really, all this is just a personal opinion.

The insert says the band has a few other releases, which I’m eager to locate, as this release made a strong enough impression for me to want to hear more. Goodonya, mates!

--

You can see UV Race live on Tuesday, September 21st at Strange Matter with Wasted Time, Southside Stranglers, Total Control (also from Australia), and Slugz.

The Richmond Comedy Coalition Presents FUSTER CLUCK

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9/16: The Richmond Comedy Coalition Presents: FUSTER CLUCK. A show featuring live scripted and improvised comedy that’ll leave you dazed and amused. Visit www.rvacomedy.com for more info! Gallery 5, 8PM, $7 ($5 w/ valid student ID)

Thursday, September 16th
The Richmond Comedy Coalition presents: FUSTER CLUCK! Live improv & scripted comedy that will leave you dazed and amused.

HARVEY WALLBANGER- From the DSI Comedy Theater in Chapel Hill, NC, Molly Buckley presents her scripted one-woman show in which she plays every character, sings every song, and busts every move. Watch the unstoppably energetic Molly do the work of a gaggle of regulars at their favorite bar, all by her lonesome.

MARBLES- In this two-person long-form improv show, David Pijor and Katie Holcomb hit the stage with the uncanny ability to read each other’s minds, push each other’s buttons, and totally disregard reality and social graces. Their love for what they do makes watching this character-driven and organically-built show a ton of fun.

THE BAT- The RCC Ensemble members take you to a dark place- literally. A suggestion from the audience spawns a completely improvised show in pitch black! Close your eyes (and keep your hands to yourself), this is their off beat take on an old timey radio show.

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The RCC is a collective of young comedy veterans dedicated to mixing traditional and experimental forms of comedy into smart and hilarious shows. Be amused, Richmond. Be very amused.

Gallery 5 (200 W. Marshall St.)
8PM (Doors at 7:15)
$7 ($5 w/ valid student ID)
www.rvacomedy.com

Midnight Conspiracy 2nite at RVALUTION

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Tonight is RVALUTION 23: with MIDNIGHT CONSPIRACY. This will be a very special RVALUTION with touring guests that are going to bring you a raging dance party. Many special things planned - aerial silks, belly dancers, hoopers, Uncle Kurt the Ballon Guy, fire spinners, and more!

You can use our promo code "RVA" to get a discount on admission. See everyone there!!
Tickets: https://www.etix.com/ticket/servlet/onlineSale?action=selectPerformance&performance_id=1329292


Best Friends Day - The Movie - Part 2

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It's Richmond's favorite day of the year and now favorite weekend. It's Best Friend's Day 9!! Our coverage takes you from the opening concert to the lake where this video starts to take on a Girls Gone Wild at a Judas Priest concert parking lot kinda feel. Join our hosts Ashby and Jesse on this tour as they show how much our cameras love drunk people!

CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT BFD THE MOVIE PART 2

DAILY RECORD: Been Here All My Days

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Various Artists - Been Here All My Days: Selections From the George Mitchell Archive (Mississippi Records)

Portland, Oregon’s Mississippi Records (named for the street on which the label is headquartered rather than any particular geographical/cultural pattern in their releases) has again and again proven itself a godsend for music fans interested in recordings of forgotten and marginalized artists. Their releases, often hand-assembled and produced in relatively limited quantities, catalog field recordings, early folk music, obscure post-punk, free jazz, and music from around the world, but the area in which the label has been most consistent is in its reissues of early blues musicians. Been Here All My Days, a collection of highlights from the archives of amateur folklorist George Mitchell, is no exception.

Many albums released or re-released by Mississippi have an interesting back story, either regarding the musicians themselves or the reasons behind the music’s initial fade into obscurity. Therefore, to fully grasp the overarching concept of the album rather than just to view it as a collection of songs, one must first consult the extensive liner notes. George Mitchell was seventeen years old in 1961 when he and his friends drove from their Atlanta home to Memphis in order to track down any of the blues musicians they loved who might still be alive. Beginning the following year, Mitchell spent over two decades travelling through the South with a tape recorder and an overwhelming desire to document an era of American music which was rapidly drawing to a close.

The bulk of the recordings, especially those compiled on Been Here All My Days, reflect something of a transitional period in the music so beloved by Mitchell. While there is a strong inclination towards the rural country blues of the early 20th century, there are no efforts to constrain the music by placing it in a fixed frame of reference devoid of past or future--a common occurrence in retrospective efforts such as these. Almost all the musicians included possess some connection with early gospel music, and while some turned towards more secular pursuits, the connection with the past is inescapable. As singer Green Paschal puts it: “I don’t like these jumped up songs that people sing now… I believe in the old way. I just like the old songs.” Others saw more of a connection with more contemporary sounds--the energy of amplified Chicago blues, rhythm and blues, and early rock and roll. George Mitchell recalls Georgia bluesman John Lee Ziegler performing Sam Cooke songs accompanied by a spoon player.

The album loses some conceptual cohesion, however, when it attempts to find a historical place for the music. On the one hand, the music compiled by Mitchell is portrayed as a vibrant, vivacious enterprise, regardless of how far removed by time, culture, and geography a listener may be. While George Mitchell was likely just as much of an outsider to rural African-American communities in the deep South as other folklorists like Alan Lomax or Harry Smith (although the liner notes’ assertion that Lomax was a northerner are in fact mistaken), his approach is described as less stodgy and academic than that of the more rigorous ethnomusicologists. His Georgia accent was also more familiar and relatable to those whom he recorded, which by extension allowed him to document looser, more accurate portrayals of the blues, as it actually sounded as performed by little-known but greatly talented practitioners. The recordings are an incredible testament to the evolution of musical tradition in the hands of individuals who often possessed little more than their instrument and their voice. There is an easy-going, casual nature to the recordings which aids their quality. One gets the feeling of being present in the room with the musicians as they played, a feeling undoubtedly encouraged by the performers’ ease around the unassuming southern boy recording them.

In attempting to dismiss or diminish the aims of more traditional ethnomusicologists and music critics, the liner notes claim that such individuals strive for documents steeped in academic versions of authenticity, to the extent that the actual music is attached to a fixed place in history at best, and portrayed as a historical oddity at worst. Which is a fair criticism--just to pick out one example, for all the brilliant work Greil Marcus produced, his relegating of long-standing folk traditions like the fife-and-drum bands of North Mississippi to the category of “Old, Weird America” casts such music in the role of the empirical other. It becomes something to be gawked at and dissected rather than genuinely appreciated for its own aesthetic contributions to America’s cultural oeuvre. While the liner notes to Been Here All My Days seem to have no problem pointing out these attitudes, however, sometimes their tone becomes almost reactionary. Just because some “self-proclaimed blues ‘scholars’” hope to retrospectively categorize and isolate the music they love does not necessarily mean that hip hop is the only living form of blues in the South, as the liner notes claim. It is a strange argument, one at odds with both the praise lavished upon the individuals making and recording the music, and the fact that many musicians whose first recordings were made by George Mitchell--R.L. Burnside comes to mind--lived and performed well into the 21st century.

Arguments about consistency and authenticity aside, however, the music compiled on Been Here All My Days is an absolutely necessary addition to any collection of early blues, due to the circumstances of its creation. While the low-fidelity recordings from the 1920s-50s possess an evocative charm, sometimes the lack of sonic clarity can undermine the music’s power. And while many recordings made by the same artists later in life (especially those compiled by the aforementioned ethnomusicologists and a handful of labels attempting to capitalize on the popularity of otherwise-forgotten artists in the wake of the early 1960s folk revival) benefit from advances in recording technology, many of the performances lack the creative spark of older material. This may be due to the performers’ unease in front of strangers attempting to document their art as if it were some near-extinct flower to be catalogued for future generations of botany textbooks, or may be caused by the simple and inevitable ravages of age.

Been Here All My Days sidesteps all those potential pitfalls. While some of the artists might have been able to offer a more fiery performance in the decades prior to these recordings, there is a seasoned maturity present on these recordings. The performers display a facility with the songs which lends each more leeway when adding the sort of personalized touches that can only be acquired with decades of experience. Many of the artists have internalized their surroundings to such a degree that in songs like John Lee Ziegler’s “Who’s Gonna Be Your Man,” or Houston Stackhouse’s “Big Road,” weeping slide guitars hum like August cicada cries and loose-limbed drums thump like distant train rumbles. That said, this does not at all undermine the material’s sophistication. The call-and-response vocal harmonies of “Hold My Body Down” by Robert Johnson (whose obscurity may be related to his sharing a name with the most famous/infamous blues musician of all time) possess an eerie cadence, not dissimilar to the ensemble arrangements of Sacred Harp singing, as Johnson alternates lines with a choir of his eight gospel-singing children. Or for material more inclined towards a minimalist aesthetic, Jessie Mae Hemphill’s “Going Home” is a song stripped to its barest essence, an a capella rendition which might seem basic if not for the harmonic interplay with her backing vocalist.

The performances are as strong in lyrical realms as they are in the musical aspects. The aforementioned Robert Johnson song intimates apocalypse and resurrection, a Book Of Revelation crammed into a concise three-minute meditation on mortality and transcendence. Furry Lewis’s “Good Morning Judge” approaches the protagonist’s day in court with a smirking sense of humor that can’t quite cover up the song’s tragic core: the plight of the poor and uneducated who fall victim to the prejudiced machinations of the law. “They accused me of murder and I never even hurt a man / they accused me of forgery and I can’t even sign my name,” Lewis sings. In couplets like that, much of the approach of these musicians is epitomized: the ability to channel adversity into creativity; the knowledge that there are two types of experiences in the world – good experiences on one hand, and on the other, ones that can inspire songs.

The material presented on Been Here All My Days might represent variations on the blues which are too subtle for casual fans. There is none of the thundering darkness of (the other) Robert Johnson or the loping pathos of Skip James, but the artists compiled offer a great insight into the ways in which a variety of people could internalize an art form as a means of creating something intensely personal. Mississippi Records has a near-perfect track record in terms of uncovering such material, and this is no exception. Beginners might be well-advised to seek out some of the label’s other compilations such as I Woke Up One Morning In May or Last Kind Words, both better introductions to the breadth of early blues in general. However, Been Here All My Days is absolutely recommended for anybody interested in music, of historical importance, which refuses to sacrifice timeless qualities like individuality and heart.

SHOW REVIEW: Race The Sun, Broadside, Patent Pending

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Race The Sun, Broadside and Patent Pending
Friday, September 10 at the Canal Club

Though Richmond's own Race The Sun have been around in one form or another for most of the past eight years, their hometown has seemed largely ignorant of them during that time. Even at their most active, they always played to bigger crowds on tour than they ever drew here. They were the classic stereotype of "big in Japan" made real: their lone full-length, The Rest Of Our Lives Is Tonight, made the top 10 on the Japanese Billboard charts. They never quite broke through to that next level in America, though, and the life of a struggling touring band eventually took its toll--stressing them out, straining their finances, and leading to their breakup in 2006. Fortunately, after taking some time away from playing together, this group of longtime friends remembered how much fun it had been in the beginning, and reformed. It's an occasional thing for them now--band members have wives, children, and careers, and can't afford to tour or devote full-time energy to the band. But they've been practicing, working on new material, and now they've returned to the live arena, playing their first show in two years at the Canal Club last Friday night.

I'm used to being frustrated with bar shows and the late hour of their commencement. Therefore, the early hour at which this all-ages show got going took me by surprise. Six bands were playing, so I understand why things had to get underway as soon as possible, but by the time I got off work at 8, drove over to the Canal Club, and made my way to where the bands were playing, the show was half-over. My apologies to the bands I missed--In Courage, The Half Jeffersons, and Audio Strobelight--but I've always liked three-band shows a lot more than longer ones, so I suppose I shouldn't complain.

It is kind of a bummer that the first band I saw was Patent Pending, though. I've had a few experiences in my time where I've watched a band play music in a genre that I ostensibly liked and thought, "Wait, do I even like this style of music? Have I been kidding myself?" That was my reaction to Patent Pending. They were hitting all the right notes, doing a more than passable recreation of the pop-punk genre, and yet I was unmoved. After a while, I realized that the problem with their version of pop-punk, at least for me, was that it was so studied, so perfect, but still so lacking in passion and soul. The singer mentioned between songs at one point that, when not performing with Patent Pending, he worked as a songwriter for top-40 pop acts, and it seemed both appalling and completely appropriate to me. I know that making one's living in that way is not an intrinsically dishonorable thing to do, and hey, it sure beats working at the mall, but I can't imagine how anyone could do that job for very long without having its influence creep into their "real" music. I see a real attention to commercial appeal and "moving units" in certain areas of the pop-punk community circa 2010 (and really for most of the past decade, ever since Jimmy Eat World had a hit record), and maybe it's my stubbornly-held "punk" roots talking, but to me these kinds of concerns seem invalid. How far can you go in pursuit of the same sales numbers a top-40 act gets before your music is just as bad as theirs is? And what does any of this have to do with punk anyway? The kids stagediving and waving their arms in the air at the command of the singer (another tangent: what's up with all this arena-rock stage banter? There are 300 kids at the show, not 30,000. Engage with them instead of insulting their intelligence with meaningless chants and applause lines) didn't care about my problems with Patent Pending, and I don't want to rain on their good times, but I couldn't help but think that the day will come when they'll all look back at the bands they listen to now and cringe. Some of those bands won't deserve the cringe, but if you ask me, Patent Pending will.

After Patent Pending was finished playing, I was still a bit worried that I'd find the entire show a letdown, but I made my way to the front of the stage for Broadside anyway. As soon as they started playing, I felt a lot better. That was true even despite a roadie running onto the stage as they started their first song and throwing hundreds of promotional postcards into the crowd--which is the kind of promo move that I hate. The music more than made up for it, though, as Broadside departed from the traditional pop-punk sound to explore the more hardcore-influenced pop-punk sound originated by Lifetime and brought out of the underground by early Fall Out Boy. Some places on the internet call it easycore, a genre tag a lot less annoying than some others I've run into over the last couple of decades. Broadside doesn't make much use of the faster tempos a lot of easycore bands work with, but they do have the chunky palm-muted guitar riffing and the melody-infused mid-song breakdowns that are a big part of the genre's charm. I enjoyed their performance thoroughly, even despite the fact that the sound mix did them no favors. There were even small parts during the set where I'd lose track of the tempo of the song for a few seconds, which shouldn't happen with a band who writes such straightforward material. Regardless, I'd definitely go see these guys again, and I'm looking forward to them getting a better sound mix next time.

Back at the beginning of this article, when I said that most of the Richmond scene never paid Race The Sun much attention, I might have given the impression that they don't have that many local fans. Actually, nothing could be further from the truth--the downtown hipster types may not even notice Race The Sun's existence, but they do have a tight-knit community of fans who wouldn't miss one of their shows for the world. That crowd was out in force on Friday--as were a great many longtime fans and friends of the band from other cities on the east coast and beyond. Everyone in attendance was united by a love of Race The Sun, and they all went absolutely nuts the second the band hit the stage. As much as I loved their LP when it came out, my periods of active show-going had never matched up with a local Race The Sun show, so this was my first time seeing them. I was amazed and inspired by all of the energy the crowd was giving off. Kids were dancing, stagediving, and singing along like it was the last show they'd ever get to attend. I hadn't seen anything like it in years--I felt like I was back at Twisters in 1997, watching Inquisition or Avail tear the place up. Race The Sun might not have that iconic status in Richmond scene lore, but they sure have won the hearts of a great many local kids. I freely admit that I was swept right up in the energy, dancing and singing along right there with everybody else. It felt like I didn't catch my breath until they'd played at least three songs.

A lot of times, when a show has that kind of energy, the band's performance seems almost beside the point. They might be fucking up changes and missing notes, but as long as they keep the songs going the crowd will make up for any performance deficiencies. Race The Sun did not take advantage of this fact, though, instead rising to the occasion and playing at the top of their game. This was especially clear when they departed from the songs released on their LP to play newer material. Most of the crowd (myself included) was really only familiar with the LP, and therefore the reaction to less familiar songs, while still enthusiastic, was more muted. This gave everyone the opportunity to take a breather and really listen to the music. In terms of both songwriting and performance, these newer songs shone, bringing more complex melodies to the fore while still containing plenty of that punk-fueled energy that's always set Race The Sun apart from the commercial pop merchants that haunt the fringes of their chosen genre. It seems clear that the new EP the band have in the works, as mentioned by guitarist Jason Sowers on a recent absolutepunk thread, will be just as outstanding as previous releases.

Another thing that their performance of the newer songs made clear was just how much of an asset new bassist James Menefee is to this band. Joining with 4/5 of Race The Sun's original lineup at the time of their 2008 reunion, Menefee is better known around Richmond as the bassist and vocalist for past local pop-punk greats Funsize and River City High--though, at the Canal Club, surrounded by kids who were probably babes in arms the first time I saw Funsize, I found myself wondering how many of them even remembered those bands. Regardless, James is a secret weapon of sorts for Race The Sun. His harmonized backup vocals on the songs from the LP sounded even better than the original backing tracks on the album, and on a few of the newer songs, it was clear that the band had written parts specifically for James's voice. Vocalist Daniel Long has always had an unusually high voice, so it's easy for his parts to mix and harmonize with James's more standard tenor. I was really impressed with Daniel's live performance as well. High vocals have become somewhat of a popular thing in recent years, and it's rare that a band whose vocalist hits tons of high notes in the studio can pull it off live. Usually they either sing in a lower register live, or their voice just cracks all over the place and sounds bad. Neither of these things happened to Daniel; instead, even as he jumped and ran all over the stage, his voice stayed on key, and he hit all the notes with no problem. A lot of people try to pull off high-pitched vocals, but Daniel is the real deal.

I thought for sure that the band would end their set with "460 To Nowhere," the last song from their LP, which stakes a debatable claim on being "South Bound 95" for the under-23 set. However, even after building the atmosphere in the Canal Club up to a fever pitch, they still had one more song left. The set ending performance of "To Icarus With All Sincerity" nearly brought the place down, with the level of stagedivers rising to cartoonish proportions, and multiple members of opening bands climbing onstage to commandeer the backup vocal mics. By the end of the song, Daniel had been pulled from the stage and was singing from the front row, with guitarist James Henderson leaning over the edge of the stage and playing guitar above the heads of all the kids singing along. As soon as they finished, the place erupted with cries for an encore, only to have their hopes dashed as Jason grabbed a mic and said, "That's actually all the songs we know." It's always good to end on a high note and leave people wanting more, but if they'd had more songs to play, that crowd clearly would have loved to hear them.

Race The Sun will probably never be the sort of active touring band that they once were, and they'll probably never have another top 10 record in Japan. However, they are sticking around, and will be playing more local shows on at least an occasional basis. If they were finally to receive wider notice here in their hometown, it would definitely be deserved. Where exciting live acts are concerned, you won't find much better. Next time they play in Richmond, you better believe I'll be there.

DAILY RECORDS: Rehasher, Defiance Ohio, Angels Of Babylon

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Rehasher - High Speed Access To My Brain (Moathouse/Paper And Plastick)
Based on band name and cover art, I expected crossover/thrash-revival stuff. Instead, I got something like the third Down By Law album. Speedy, melodic tunes straddling the line between punk and hardcore, with a touch of emo in the Smalley-ish vocals. What's not to love? Nothing, that's what.

Defiance Ohio - Midwestern Minutes (No Idea)
Subtracting the shamanistic psychedelic weirdness from the acoustic sound of Neutral Milk Hotel and replacing it with songwriting descended from basic, three-chord punk also removes much of what makes Neutral Milk Hotel so interesting. Though their hearts are in the right place, Defiance Ohio just sound bland.

Angels Of Babylon - Kingdom Of Evil (Burnhill Union)
Former members of Megadeth and Manowar return with this power-metal combo. Angels Of Babylon should be awesome, as similar as they are to their previous bands. However, keyboards and overproduction suck much of the heaviness out of this album. Flashes of brilliance are vastly outnumbered by bland mediocrity. Avoid.

RIVER CITY ROLLERGIRLS: Attack of the 50 foot Skater

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The badass gals of Richmond Roller Derby are starting up their season this weekend with Attack of the 50ft. Skater at the Greater Richmond Convention Center (403 N. 3rd St). Roller Derby--a mix of skating, hockey, and racing, with a bit of pro wrestling theatre thrown in--is guaranteed as always to be entertaining and fun, and there is nothing more exciting than rooting for our gals here in Richmond. This Saturday at 6 PM, River City Rollergirls team Poe's Punishers will face off against Harrisonburg, VA's Rocktown Rollers. This event is family friendly and a children's area is available for fun activities. Tickets are $10 for adults, $6 for children 7-12, and children 6 and under will be admitted free.

*We here at RVA Magazine have 4 tickets to give away - 2 sets of two. Hit us up here or on twitter and tell us your favorite player name to win two tickets (see below).

Lets get to know our teams a little better (click on the pictures for larger images):

The largest team in Richmond, the only WFTDA (Women's Flat Track Derby Association) team, ranked 16th in the East, RCR is a 501c3 Federal Non Profit heavily involved in the community, and working to promote the sport of Women's Flat Track Roller Derby. We support the Virginia Sexual and Domestic Violence Action Alliance this season. We have supported Ring Dog Rescue, the MS WALK 2010, ASPCA Dog Jog, March 2010 through volunteerism or donations over the years. Recently Richmond magazine listed the River City Rollergirls in their Best Local Sports Team category. We're #3 after the Squirrels and the Kickers. And our own Paris Kills, #69 ( Damacia Johnson ) was listed 3rd in the Best Local Sports Figure category.

For more information & tickets:
www.rivercityrollergirls.org
www.facebook.com/rivercityrollergirls
www.twitter.com/RCRDerby

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