fanzine

Levande Begravd fanzine

LEVANDE BEGRAVD fanzine is a new one to me that I was fortunate enough to get a copy of recently, courtesy of one Marko Gillingsmark (the fella who puts it out).

Mr. Gillingsmark’s a Swede from Gothenburg, and it looks like this is the first one he’s attempted in English. Exceptionally well-done small-format mag that’s laser-targeted to those of us who prefer slopped-up, sub-underground DIY punk in many flavors – the stranger and more off-centered, the better. You can learn more about it and perhaps order up a copy yourself at their Facebook page.

interviews

An Interview with Thistle Group’s Claire Mahoney

An Interview with Thistle Group, a.k.a. Claire Mahoney


THISTLE GROUP is comprised of Claire Mahoney, an Auckland, New Zealand-based musical unit of one. I heard her amazing two-song demo on the Stabbies Bandcamp page, and was immediately zonked out to this crude, experimental, multi-dimensional musical lunarscape that’s alternately lulling, jarring and transfixing. Or at least her music inspired me to imagine I was.

Granted, her output to date is the equivalent of one (long) 45rpm single, yet both tracks have been favorites on Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio, and enough of a mystery wrapped in the proverbial riddle that it made sense to go directly to the source to try and piece it all out. I sent Ms. Mahoney a set of questions this month, and she was kind enough to let us all in on how she creates her music.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: On the Thistle Group tape there’s some very pleasant, lo-fidelity layering that connects different parts of the songs/pieces together, which is then interrupted by jarring guitar and vocals. How did you put all of it together, and what can you say about the overall sound & feel you were looking to put out there?

Claire Mahoney: The tape was recorded live from one of the first gigs I played solo. I started making up vague songs from tape loops that a friend and I had made for another project and then playing around with them, often slowing them down and layering guitar and vocals over the top.

I enjoy the wonkiness of overlapping the same loops to create texture and working with everything
falling in and out of time. I see the vocals as adding another texture and use them as an instrument for layering. I try to create movement and contrast by using the warmth of tape loops and fragile vocals with a harsher guitar butting in and breaking it all up. The use of repetition is also an important element for creating an overall sound. Music that I respond to and influences me often
uses repetition and is very simple/primitive in its form.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: When you play live as Thistle Group, what are you packing – simply tapes and a guitar, or is there more that you’re able to do as a solo performer?

Claire Mahoney: I primarily use a reel to reel with tape loops which forms the structure that I build upon. Sometimes I’ll just use that with some vocals over the top, or play the same songs with a guitar or keyboard and some walkmans. I’m used to working with limitations and I don’t like to
over complicating things. It’s also important that it’s able to be adaptable as I hardly own any of my own gear so I’m constantly trying to put something together with what I can find at the time.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: What’s the response been to you as a solo live performer to date?

Claire Mahoney: A friend described the last set I played as feeling like trying to get out of a deep medieval well. I think that’s the best response and most accurate description so far. It always feels like it’s on the verge of falling apart at any moment and sometimes it does. I’m interested in
playing with the notion of failure and navigating a space between something working or not and being okay with it.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: Does Thistle Group/Claire Mahoney collaborate with anyone else under that name, or plan to?

Claire Mahoney: I’ve always seen Thistle Group as a primarily solo project but not exclusively. My sister Louise and I played a very off the cuff show together a few months back under Thistle Group. I was tired of playing the same set and I hadn’t had any time to practice so we quickly threw something together using the same songs but really fucking with them. Lou’s got incredible stage presence and one that I find quite unpredictable in a really great way.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: Tell us a bit about the groups you’re in and/or have been in previously; which are still active, and which have been documented with vinyl, tapes, online downloads etc.

Claire Mahoney: I moved back to Auckland at the end of 2011 and soon after started It Hurts with
Angeline Chirnside and Beth Ducklingmonster. We were active 2012-2014 and put out a couple of tapes, one on Angeline’s labe Clean Teeth and the other on Albert’s Basement. There’s also a 7” on Soft Abuse. Before that I hadn’t really played or anything apart from having a few jams with friends.

The last few years (until recently) I played drums in Olympus with my pals Pat Kraus and Stefan Neville. Those two had been doing Olympus for years and had put out a record  but it really only became a live band when I joined. It was very casual, we played live maybe a handful of times and often did weirdo covers of our own solo stuff.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: Your music’s ended up on Stabbies, who chronicle some pretty intense and interesting juxtapositions of New Zealand experimental and rock-based music. Would love your thoughts on their role in your “scene” and for musicians like yourself.

Claire Mahoney: Stefan has been on board since I started playing with It Hurts. He recorded us numerous times and was always very supportive of what we were doing. When I decided to release the Thistle Group tape he offered to put it on the stabbies bandcamp.

Stabbies has become active again recently with heaps of great stuff going up on the bandcamp page. Lots of it is old material/ friends but he’s just put out a new 7” by Ben Holmes which I highly recommend.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: How much of an ongoing concern is Thistle Group? Are you planning on making music under that name repeatedly, from here on, or was this year’s tape a one-shot deal? If it’s not, where are you taking Thistle Group in the months to come?

Claire Mahoney: I’m slow and do things in my own time when they fit in. I’ve got a bunch of songs that are piling up that I’m going to record over the NZ summer when I get some time off. I’m also planning to do some touring in Japan and maybe Europe in the first half of 2017.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: It’s always a bit of a stretch to ask someone how much their art is “informed” by their surroundings, but I guess some people are and some aren’t. How does Auckland and its environs come into play for you – and/or how does greater New Zealand?

Claire Mahoney: I’m lucky to have some supportive friends here in Auckland. It’s a small scene but most of the time I don’t feel like that’s a problem as we have a larger community all over the world that we’re in touch with. Auckland is where I grew up, it’s my Tūrangawaewae. I can see two volcanoes from my bedroom window and the sea is close by, those things are important to me.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: Why “Thistle Group”?

Claire Mahoney: The name Thistle Group came from something I reading about a group of female artists who had gone under the name Thistle. The writer referred to them as the ‘thistle group’ and for some reason that name stuck with me and felt right for a solo project.

Dynamite Hemorrhage: What does Claire Mahoney do in her non-musical life?

Claire Mahoney: I’m terrible with a routine so I can only think of what’s been happening today. That’s involved changing my car tyre with my elderly neighbour giving instructions, going to work for a few hours and finishing some plan drawings, coming home and having a nap, then spending some time in the garden this evening.

Listen to Thistle Group’s music here.

Music Reviews

Growth / Mr. Science / Palberta reviews

Some record reviews I’ve recently written:

GROWTH – Colour, Cut and Clarity 7”EP

An icy dip into Stockholm’s Growth’s sorrow and pity parade, and a righteously good one at that. I’d thought they’d broken up, as things were pretty quiet out Västertorp way since that “Turn/The Flood” single in 2013. This female trio’s transitioning a bit from messy, dark, soul-eating garage blues into a formidable practitioner of soundtrack-like goth eeriness, with a raw keyboard-driven punk edge and some seriously desperate vocals. Only “Amanda”, known previously as “Blind Voice” on an old tape, retains the same whole-cut vibe as the old stuff, but I’m finding myself melting into their new dark sound pretty willingly. Anyone w/ a Joy Division, Come or Little Claw patch on their jean jackets oughta check it out. (Lazy Octopus; lazyoctopusrecords.se)

MR. SCIENCE – 1978-1979 7”EP

The oddball part of “Mr. Science”, a brainiac, synth-obsessed weirdo in a white lab coat, was played in 1978-79 by one Brad Garton, who was soon to be part of Indiana’s Dow Jones & The Industrials. His goofy analog-era bleeping and blurping never made it to vinyl until this five-song archival bit came out as a bonus mail item to go w/ Family Vineyard’s very nice Dow Jones package. I thought the A-Frames ultimately did a better job cramming funny, five-dollar futuristic words into jerky meter & verse than Garton does here, but this is still a pretty solid & altogether brief gallop nonetheless. “The Number Song” is a nearly dub-like, echoed instrumental incantation of a phone number that I’m tempted to call myself (right after I finish rotary-dialing 867-5309). “Mutant Humans” sounds in 2016 like a SNL parody of late-70s Devo worship, but was probably the cat’s meow on the Indiana plains in its time. “Sociobiology” is the set’s robotic standout, and it laid a nice foundation for his later band’s outstanding “Ladies With Appliances”. I’m quite glad I got to hear it now, and your duty now for the future is to try and hear it yourself. (Family Vineyard; family-vineyard.com)

PALBERTA – Hot On The Beach 12”EP and DL

Apparently Palberta are scene dreamboats across small, leafy,
Eastern liberal arts college towns. They’ve got a willing patron in
Feeding Tube, who took this 2015 tape and gave it the vinyl treatment a
year later. I’ve generally liked bits and pieces of everything they’ve
done, especially when those pieces are unpredictably disjointed &
wild sub-1 minute no-wave skronking, like this thing’s excellently bent
“Thumb War” and “Fuck You”. But they’re trying too hard elsewhere to be
those “Ohmygod you guys I’m so weird” girls found tripping &
fluttering on campuses everywhere. “Prolly For The Best”, which chews up
most of the real estate here, is a fairly unlistenable thirteen minutes
of young women giggling over robotic dance music and/or doing that
“spoiled brat” nyanh-nyanh vocal thing that Kathleen Hanna so annoyingly
“perfected” twenty years ago. Pluck the good songs, discard the rest,
and remember why it is you scrape the web for mp3s and not vinyl.
(Feeding Tube; feedingtuberecords.com)

Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio

Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #85

It’s one big Q4 Scene Report this time on DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO as we travel the world and elsewhere with a huge stack of new material from the likes of THE STACHES, CARLA DAL FORNO, TYVEK, THE TRENDEES, ATATAKAKATTA, SOPHIE COOPER, HONEY RADAR, SUBURBAN HOMES and so many more. Sub-underground weirdos of many stripes, most of them very young and very accomplished at such a young age. We’re so proud!

Download or stream Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #85 on Soundcloud.

Stream Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #85 on Mixcloud.

Download this show, plus dozens of older ones, on iTunes.

Here’s what we played this time:

Track listing:

SCHOOL DAMAGE – Phone Drone
THE STACHES – I Don’t Bother
TYVEK – Girl on a Bicycle
THE TRENDEES – Abandoned Hospital
HONEY RADAR – Color The Bank
THE LAYTCOMERS – Her Eyeless Face
SUBURBAN HOMES – Cul de Sac
THE STICKS – No Sustain
AMATEUR HOUR – Jenny’s Place
FABULOUS DIAMONDS – A2
CARLA DAL FORNO – What You Gonna Do Now?
SOPHIE COOPER – Hi From The Skyline Swim
THISTLE GROUP – I Don’t Wanna/Ships No Islands
ATATAKAKATTA – Hallway Station
THE INTENDED – Huguenot
JASON HENN – Delta Pisces
GIBSON BROS – Bo Diddley Pulled a Boner
FLYING CALVITTOS – Squeal Like a Pig

fanzine

Fordamning #10

FÖRDÄMNING fanzine #10, published by one M. Andersson out of Göteborg, Sweden, is now out and available for order here.

It’s one of my favorite modern ‘zines, partially because it mines such  deep-underground noise, experimental & abstract rock that I’ve truly never heard, nor heard of, 70+% of what’s covered here. And I like that – lots of limited-edition esoteric weirdness to contemplate trying to find, or at least try & stream somewhere online.

I’m not even much of a noise or soundscape listener – and yet Andersson’s a truly ear-to-the-ground chronicler of the cassette and CD-R underground, and makes me seek out the previously ignored. He throws it all together in a slapdash but eminently readable cut-n-paste style that really makes me want to ditch my own high-process fanzine style and go back to simple 6-page foldovers.

The new issue has a 1982 pic of The Fall on the cover; a waltz through the corners of the Betley Welcomes Careful Drivers catalog; an interview with a fella from the Pheromoans, reviews and more. Grab it here.

Hemorrhage in Dub

Hemorrhage in Dub #3

Here’s the next of an occasional step sideways into the heavy, reverbed-out triposphere of 1970s Jamaican dub. HEMORRHAGE IN DUB #3 even contains a 2016 recording this time around, in addition to some new reissues and other deep cuts from the land and time of dub plenty.

Stream or download HEMORRHAGE IN DUB #3 on Soundcloud.

Stream HEMORRHAGE IN DUB #3 on Mixcloud.

Subscribe to DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO, and get this show + our normal hour-long blasts of sub-underground rocknroll, at iTunes.

Track listing:

YABBY YOU & THE PROPHETS – Beware Dub
TIPPA LEE – Original Cassette
KING TUBBY & THE AGGROVATORS – Higher Ranking
POET & THE ROOTS – Defense Dub
TWINKLE BROTHERS – Free Africa Dub
SCIENTIST – Time Warp
THE GREEN STARS – Effortless Dub
KING TUBBY’S – King at the Controls
BUNNY “STRIKER” LEE – Dub Magnificent
LEE “UPSETTER” PERRY – Cloak & Dagger
CHANNEL ONE – School Days Version
GLENMORE BROWN – Assack Lawn No. 1 Dub
THE AGGROVATORS – Step It Up In Dub
WINSTON EDWARDS – Ronald Biggs The Great Train Robber

Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio

Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #84

Just over an hour of panicked and jittery sub-underground rock music this time around on DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO, recorded direct-to-laptop on an otherwise uneventful Wednesday evening in San Francisco, CA.

I am pleased as punch to bring you a slew of new material from the likes of TYVEK, MIA LOUCKS, AQUARIAN BLOOD, SEX TIDE, THE INTENDED, PALBERTA, LOS CRIPIS, GHOSTWRITER and more. I am nearly as pleased to offer up selections from the ages as well, featuring SALLY SKULL (pictured), CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & HIS MAGIC BAND, LITTLE CLAW, THE MINUTEMEN and other stars of the DIY artastic underground.

Download or stream it, and see if it meets what by now must be some pretty high expectations.

Stream or download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #84 on Soundcloud.

Stream Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #84 on Mixcloud.

Get this show, and dozens of older ones, on iTunes.

Track listing:

TYVEK – Can’t Exist
GHOSTWRITER – Ghost Towns
PONY TIME – Stop Talking
WOODBOOT – Bad News
PALBERTA – Thumb War
THE MINUTEMEN – 9:30 May 2nd
ERASE ERRATA – Harvester
THE PORTAGE – Sin
MIA LOUCKS – Drying Out
THE INTENDED – The Ineffable
PSYCHEDELIC HORSESHIT – These Days
TIMES NEW VIKING – Allegory Gets Me Hot
SALLY SKULL – Tear Out
LITTLE CLAW – Movies For You
AQUARIAN BLOOD – Freak
PLEASURE GALLOWS – Beer
GIORGIO MURDERER – Iron Age
TAR BABIES – Be Humble
NAKED SPOTS DANCE – Banana Baby
LOS CRIPIS – Restaurant
THE CYCLONES – I’m in Heaven
CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & HIS MAGIC BAND – Here I Am I Always Am (1966 demo)
RACHEL SWEET – Cuckoo Clock
KENT III – The Changeling
SEX TIDE – Prick of Liquid