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Neo Boys – Sooner Or Later (KLP242) Reviewed in Dynamite Hemorrhage Issue #1

K Records blogged Erika Elizabeth’s NEO BOYS review from the first issue of Dynamite Hemorrhage fanzine….

krecs:

Dynamite Hemorrhage #1The following review of the Neo Boys’ Sooner Or Later [KLP242] was found in the zine Dynamite Hemorrhage #1. 12663084084_0a726aa880_z

NEO BOYS – Sooner or Later 2xLP (KLP242)

“Nothing has changed/everything has changed since the brief five years that the Neo Boys existed from 1978 to 1983. Over two decades after four ladies in Portland, Oregon came together to make their own simultaneously uncertain & powerfully confident noise, women of the underground are still struggling to be recognized as equals with their male peers & the act of a girl picking up a guitar or a pair of drumsticks or a microphone is still a revolutionary act. Like their contemporaries the Wipers or the Rats (with the pre-Dead Moon Fred & Toody Cole), the Neo Boys’ approach to punk was one deeply rooted in the frustrations & nihilism bred in an era when Portland (and the Pacific Northwest in general) was still a fucked-up cultural backwoods; a place where it was up to the girls, queers, weirdos & freaks to channel their alienation into creating their own brand of smart & uncompromising musical rebellion as escape. In this LP’s linear notes, Neo Boys bassist KT Kincaid pays tribute to dozens of women who were crucial figures in the Northwest punk scene of the late ’70s/early ’80s, but in many ways, the list of their far-from-familiar names stands in contrast to some of the well-known men (the Dils, DOA, the Wipers, et al) billed on the show flyers & posters reproduced inside the gatefold sleeve, in case anyone needs more evidence that reissues like this one are vital, necessary corrections of past oversights that have denied so many brave women noisemakers their due.  
This anthology collects both of the Neo Boys’ proper releases (their self-titled 7” from 1980 & the Crumbling Myths EP from 1982) with a treasure trove of demo recordings, live tracks & other sonic ephemera previously at risk of being lost to the ages. You can literally hear their musical evolution, not just from the punk era, but also the transformation of their endearingly shaky & hesitant playing into boldly coloring outside of the lines, rejecting more rigid punk conformity in their creation of a blueprint for countless feminist punks of the future ( see: the before & after versions of stone-cold ’80s underground classic “Never Comes Down”). It’s no coincidence that modern torchbearers Grass Widow covered the Neo Boys “Time Keeps Time” side-by-side with Wire’s “Mannequin” on a recent single – hopefully this sprawling retrospective will make the Neo Boys an equally recognizable name in discriminating post-punk households, because it’s long overdue.”  
– Erika Elizabeth, Dynamite Hemorrhage #1, November 2013. Print.

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Right on. What do you think?

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Pardon me for wandering off the rock-n-roll reservation for this one, but I tend to do that sometimes. This scorching 60s “cumbia” from Columbia comes from a digital compilation of 45s that the ethnic music blog Shellachead put together in 2012 and posted a couple of months ago. Seriously, you can buy his entire comp for $1 here.

Shellachead then did the same thing for 2013 (“Recently Acquired 45s”) and posted it here – this one’s a “name your price” special!

David Murray is the guy behind this stuff, along with multiple excellent ethic 45rpm and 78rpm compilations on Dust-to-Digital. One of my favorites of his is the recent collection of 60s Yemenese singles, “Qat, Coffee and Qambus”, which you can stream here.

So when I’m not kicking out the jams with today’s young rockers, this is where I tend to spend my time. Other ethnic platters high in rotation of late include:

Back to our normal programming next time. Meanwhile, press the play button & unbuckle those pants for maximum movement.

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fuckinrecordreviews:

“…this sounds like it was recorded very far from where you live by people you will never meet.”

SUPERDOPE #5 1993 (no page #)

HYPHEN-SMYTHE review by JAY HINMAN, Editor

  • On 12/15/13 we added, “There was this point in 1992 where the incipient Forced Exposure catalogue tilted toward gonzo psych obscurities, about four years before the website and prior to Jimmy’s conversion to outré 808 digitalis. Jay references this early turn in the header above.” 
  • Can’t figure out why peoplez ain’t screaming about HYPHEN-SMYTHE and their precursor collective, SAY YES TO APES. More gone than some of the best of the New Zealand stuff from that era.
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Now available – Dynamite Hemorrhage #1 fanzine, a 68-page throwback to ye fanzines of olde.

This mammoth issue has the following to keep you occupied for hours:

  • A definitive interview with Chris D. (Flesh Eaters), focused solely on 1977-80 LA punk; Slash magazine; Upsetter Records and his band
  • Retrospective and interview with Sally Skull, 1994-97 all female, criminally forgotten low-fidelity Scottish garage/art/punk band
  • Interviews with Sex Tide and Household, two of today’s best bands working the raw minimalism circuit
  • Interview with the gentlemen from Bona Dish, an early 80s UK DIY band who’ve recently surfaced again thanks to a reissue of their cassette material
  • A comprehensive piece by the editor of Fuckin’ Record Reviews blog on various obscure 80s/90s fanzines
  • 56 record reviews, penned by Expressway To Yr Skull’s Erika Elizabeth and editor Jay Hinman
  • 17 (lengthy) book reviews

Order it via the Paypal links on the upper right-hand side of our home page. It’s $7 plus whatever ungodly amount the US postal service charges to ship it to your country.

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Normally I’ll wait a full two weeks before recording a new Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio for the people, but I had an overflowing digital crate of desirable mp3s that I couldn’t even lift anymore, so I’ve unburdened myself with this outstanding 25-song, hour-long podcast that’s arguably the best mixtape anyone’s made in 2014 so far. Modesty aside, I’m pretty sure it’s the best one I’ve heard. 

I mean yeah, you have to put up with the DJ and all his meaningless yarn-spinning yammering, but it’s a small price to pay when you can hear brand new music from BRIDGE COLLAPSE, POW!, ALLIGATOR, THE IN OUT, FRAU, GROWTH, TUNABUNNY and other heroes of the rock and roll form. And when you factor in older stuff from Kim Fowley, The Bags, Chain Gang, Division Four, Jefferson Airplane and Rutto, well, now you’re really cooking with gas.

Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #31
Subscribe to the show in iTunes 

Track listing:
BRIDGE COLLAPSE – Wilderness
POW! – Hope Dealers
DIVISION FOUR – Blank Prostitutes
BLACK BUG – Well Well
FRAU – Sherman’s Gone 
CHAIN GANG – Piss Your Pants
THE IN OUT – Poseur Alert
JEFFERSON AIRPLANE – Two Heads
ROYAL TRUX – The Spectre
SIC ALPS – Eat Happy
TUNABUNNY – Empire
GROWTH – The Flood
EDIBLE ARRANGEMENTS – Catholic Quilt
KIM FOWLEY – Motorboat
PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH – Flip Your Lid
THE SCIENTISTS – When Fate Deals Its Mortal Blow
RUTTO – Ma Vihaan
DWARVES – Fuck You Up and Get High
GERMS – Lexicon Devil
THE BAGS – We Will Bury You
THE USERS – Message
THE MAKERS – I’m Not a Social Kind of Guy
THE SHIRKERS – Drunk and Disorderly
ALLIGATOR – Sneakers

Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #29    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #28    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #27    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #26    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #25    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #24    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #23    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #22    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #21    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #20    (playlist)

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Polaroids of the MEAT PUPPETS, live in Phoenix 1980. This is when they were playing hardcore punk in such a wacked-out, wild fashion that it came across as pure mockery, and very often was. I heard them on the Maximum RocknRoll Radio show not long after this and thought it was the greatest band name I’d ever heard to date.

I promptly told my friends in middle school that I was “listenin’ to the Meat Puppets these days”, though the truth was I couldn’t handle them until at least 4 few years later.

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Hello, I’m Isabelle from Edible Arrangements and you might be interested to know that we’re not defunct, just on hiatus for the moment! we’re all very busy at the moment but we do have some other more experimental musical projects, I’m in Occult Hand and Rachael plays on her own as R Elizabeth. EA plan to record some new songs by the end of the year! x

Isabelle, that’s great to hear. I will make a correction on my post in which I gave that unfortunate misinformation. Your tape/download is absolutely one of the best things I’ve heard the past couple of years. Glad to know you’ll be coming back as EA; I’ll also keep an eye peeled for your other solo and experimental projects.

Best.

Jay

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I get the sense that London and Brighton in the UK are starting to burst with all manner of edgy, raw, female-fronted groups right now (Skinny Girl Diet, Frau, Good Throb, the on-hiatus Edible Arrangements) – at least in comparison w/ recent years.

SLUM OF LEGS, who have only a mere 3-song Bandcamp demo to their name, are one of the best I’ve heard and a contender for most-likely-to in the 2014 vinyl/mp3 prizewinning sweepstakes. The vocalist has a terrific cocky, confident swagger about her, and they throw together some great couplets that make a fella wanna sit down and have a good think about his place in the patriarchy. It doesn’t hurt that the ringing, repetitive and raw music trickles down from the great UK DIY-scrape lineage that started in the late 70s and took many detours to our present day without ever totally flickering.

And they have a phenomenal theme song, which you can listen to by pressing the sideways triangle above.

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This was a CD insert that was supposed to be on an aborted SALLY SKULL retrospective called “Skullduggery”. By aborted, I mean it never came out, and that 1994-97 Sally Skull stuff is still nearly impossible to find unless you drop a few bucks on one of their two 45s via Discogs.

Of course, you can get the entire backstory on this excellent raw garage/artpunk band via Dynamite Hemorrhage #1 fanzine, which has an interview w/ Claire & Saskia from the band.