We're always talking though
But nothing changes
It's the end of a year...
There's another one coming...
Fresh Meat was a band. Fresh Meat are no more. Fresh Meat hated a lot of stuff. Fresh Meat flipped a merch table of a touring band one time when I saw them. Fresh Meat put GG Alin on one of their t-shirts. Fresh Meat toured. Fresh Meat destroyed. Fresh Meat were awesome.
It's been said on here before: Richard Kenvin's the man. This quote proves it and pretty much sums up my existence on the planet.
While Trading Places and Christmas Vacation are up at the top when it comes to favorite holiday movies, the number one spot belongs to this man. We are all George Bailey.
Since we got there a little after 9, we got there just in time to catch the second band, Serpent Throne. Being that it was only a 3 band bill, I felt like kind of a dick for missing Gods and Queens, but when has a show in the Valley ever started on time? I'm no student of Stoner Metal, but I have my basic favs like Sleep, Electric Wizard, etc. Serpent Throne reminded me of a lot of a Stoner Metal jam band. No vocals, but some really good groove parts that noodled their way in and out of some pretty good mid-tempoed songs. Not as fuzzed out and a lot cleaner sounding than I expected them to be. Some of their stage banter cracked me up ("This song is about dying alone in the Arizona desert" or "It's about an astronaut in space watching the world explode"), but overall, I really dug their set. Here's a shot of them, mid song:
Best part of the venue was this dude chilling above the stage. Part of me wanted him to hop down in the middle of Serpent Throne song, grab a mic and add some vocals to one of the songs.
Between bands there was a pretty long wait. Scoping out the room, there was a pretty good mix of people: Old, young, punks, hipsters, norms and everything in between. The lack of heat coupled with the fact I was wearing Vans slipons meant that my feet were nearly iceblocks before the final band took the stage; but if that was my biggest complaint on the night, I'd say it was a great show.
If somebody was particularly amped, they would do the even more enthusiastic head bob into a bow as if simultaneously digging the riff and paying tribute to the band at the same time.
P&B came back out to do one last song and then at the close of the night it was announced that "Pearls and Brass are back", so I guess you could assume that this was the first of more shows for them. It sounded to me like there was at least one track I hadn't heard before, so the thought of a new record seems like a possibility and not just wishful thinking. I've listened to both albums so many times, but seeing Pearls and Brass live is one thousand times better. The sound is just bigger, louder, heavier and more hypnotic. Once the set was done, we quickly ran to the car and blasted the heat in an attempt to thaw out after the frigid evening in Nazaria.
...in the snow like I did. Supposed to catch Stick Together's set tonight at the Barbary. Instead, thanks to the poor timing of the season's first snowfall in South Jersey, I ended up stuck at home. Completely bummed because I wanted to hear the new jams from Stick Together and see Madball. ST have got a new 7 inch coming out and are about to head out with DEP on a winter tour. I suggest you check this tour out if you get a chance. Both are two of the best new crop of bands out there right now and if you're somewhere along the East Coast, they should be within driving distance. I'll be waiting for the Winter Jam in January to catch both bands. Saturday's lineup is ridiculous.
Anxiety. Paranoia. Hate. Reclusion. Garbage. Asshole. If Josh's choice of words for some of the titles to Middle America's songs weren't a good enough indication of what you were getting yourself into with the band, give one song a listen and you'll figure it out pretty quickly. Harsh, negative and depressive hardcore with an early 80s vibe that left you feeling, surprisingly, a whole lot better after listening. Middle America sprang out of the LV scene putting on some killer live shows that were as short as they were intense. If my memory serves me, the one time I caught them, Josh ended up inside of a trashcan by the end of the set. They managed to pull off a demo, a seven inch on Home Invasion Records, a seven inch on Fashionable Idiots, and a tour with Fresh Meat before playing their final show in August of 2009.

tile is a sludgy, heavy, noise-y project that has released a bunch of seven inches and a pair of cassettes in the past couple years and they all rip. Most are limited runs of 100 or less and pretty hard to come by, but all are worth tracking down. The demo was reviewed on here in the past (although when I used the search function, it couldn't find it), but it is probably my favorite material from tile, besides the LP, which has been uploaded for your listening pleasure.Sacred Love YB Showcase 10/23/10 from truthtobetold on Vimeo.
Cobblestone Slipperies // Dane Peterson from Nathan Oldfield on Vimeo.
X/X/X-Noose from Chicago Straight Edge on Vimeo.
Call it nostalgia. I was supposed to drive back up to the Lehigh Valley tonight and catch Noose's set at the Secret Art Space tonight, but schedules, obligations, responsibilities and other adult bullshit kept me from going. I haven't made it to a show up there in months so to combat my LV withdrawl, I dug out some Ultimate Warriors vinyl to listen to. I don't want to hear about how they're pre-Pissed Jeans or anything lame like that, I just want you to listen to all 99 tracks and tell me how fucking brilliant this band was. That's right. 99 tracks.