Ripple News - A Band of Orcs on Mini-Tour Right Now!

A BAND OF ORCS is set to head off on a mini tour in which they’ll display their live, human killing domination.  Their show on Oct 29 in Simi Valley @ 118 West Live will also be professionally filmed and recorded.  If you want your chance to be on film with the orcs, make sure you head out to the event.

Oct 28 – Yuma, AZ @ Ron’s Place
Oct 29 – Simi Valley, CA @ 118 West Live
Oct 31 – San Diego, CA @ The Ruby Room

People have really been digging these orcs in a live presence.  A certain Metal Sanaz hosted two A BAND OF ORCS shows w/ Sothis earlier this month, and the band also impressed a certain Bruce Campbell to play the Weekend Of Horrors event: http://www.myspace.com/abandoforcs

Here’s what some have been saying so far…

SMNnews -
“A BAND OF ORCS play brutal chugging death metal with technical chops.”

PureGrainAudio -
“Truthfully, I found no filler on this disc, just pure raw metal that is sure to satisfy metal heads everywhere”.

Santa Cruz Metal Bay -
“No Headbanger, Metalhead, or Dungeons and Dragons nerd is safe at a Band Of Orcs performance, for the goal of the colossal green beasts is strictly domination and chaos.”

Metal Underground -
“A Band Of Orcs delivers an overwhelmingly destructive death metal experience, even if it is a little nerdy”

Ripple News - Five Exclusive Tracks from the Upcoming Orange Juice Box Set, Coals to Newcastle


Originally formed in Glasgow in 1976, Orange Juice were the recognized leaders of the Scottish neo-pop uprising in the early '80's. Originally dubbed the Nu-Sonics, the quartet renamed itself Orange Juice in 1979, adopting the new moniker as well as an aura of romantic innocence as a direct reaction to the increasingly macho aggression of punk. Releasing a dazzling array of new wave inspired pop, Orange Juice have been hailed as a huge inspiration by such bands as Franz Ferdinand and Belle and Sebastian, and have continued to gain legions of fan, both new and old.

Now all those fans, and us here at Ripple Central, have something to scream about.

Coming November 22nd, the release date has been set for the long anticipated for Orange Juice box set:  Coals to Newcastle.  In honor of this vey special release we're giving folks access to new and long lost songs, photos, and videos every week leading up to November 22nd. 

This week we'd like to share a sneak peak of five songs from Coals to Newcastle  for your listening pleasure. That's right 5 exclusive, Ripple tracks.  Dig in and enjoy to no end!

I know we are!

Buy here: Coals to Newcastle

Ripple Reggae Round-up; featuring Toussaint, J-San and the Analogue Sons, and Lee "Scratch" Perry

It’s all about the riddim.

It’s about the message.  It’s about the rebellion.  It’s about the groove, and the spirit, and at its best, it’s about the euphoria.

That pretty much sums up my love affair with Reggae.  Always casually aware of the Jamaican sounds, it wasn’t until after college that my mind and soul delved headlong into the reggae groove.  Bob Marley had been a constant in my consciousness, but it was really Black Uhuru that ushered me in through the Rastafarian doors.  Different than Marley, way different, Black Uhuru was heavy and mean.  With the bass heavy riddims of Sly and Robbie way upfront in the mix, Black Uhuru rocked like no other reggae I’d heard.  They were heavy and dark.  They were mean and subversive.  They were dangerous. Everything I loved about metal and punk was there, only different, transformed into a melody dense groove that could elevate me like nothing else I’d heard. 

And at its deepest level, that’s what reggae is.   Reggae was/is the music of rebellion.  A yearning love of Jah Rastafari layered against a rampant anger at the status quo.  It was the music of a people no longer willing to be repressed to the ghettos of Kingston or elsewhere.  The people searching for spiritual union and political overthrow. 

Reggae was punk in every sense of the word.  The Clash knew this, as did many other punk bands from the UK.  In the ‘80’s I did a reggae show at KSDT FM where I concentrated on the reggae in rock music.  Elvis Costello, The Tazmanian Devils, The Slits; the soul of reggae was everywhere.

For the longest time, I’ve wanted to start a reggae column here; an occasional buyers guide to true reggae classics and new releases you may enjoy.  I had a friend once who, like so many people outside of Jamaica, liked Bob Marley, but had no idea where to go after that.  My collection became his learning ground.

 Let me know if this works for y’all.



Toussaint – Black Gold


 Reggae, like rock, comes in many flavors and textures, and the genius of roots singer Toussaint is his ability to blend several of these styles into a truly rapturous release.  Possessing a voice that simply drips with soul, reminiscent of Greggory Issacs or Freddie McGregor, Toussaint is just as adept dropping a little lovers rock into the mix with his roots and rockers style.  And even though Black Gold is rooted firmly in the grand tradition of reggae, Toussaint isn’t afraid to mix things up, drop in some modern flavors, play with the instruments, all the while keeping a solid message.  And then again, there’s that voice.  Very few styles of reggae work successfully if the singer can’t pull it off, and Toussaint’s the real deal.  The former lead singer of the band Soulive, Toussaint’s voice is deeply soulful, his tenor lilts and drifts around the driving rhythms and scatting guitar.

“Nobody Knows,” starts things off with about as solid a rockers style hit as I’ve heard in a while.  Check out the trickling runs of fingers across the piano keys, adding a rare jazzy, neo-ambient texture.  Toussaint harmonizes with his voice perfectly on some vocal double tracking while he rants against technology and a return to a more spiritually grounded life.   Bass and drums, always so important in reggae bounce and dance across the track.  This isn’t casual, lay-in-a-tourist’s-hammock-and-soak-in-the-sun reggae, this is heavy rockers style and it packs a punch. Toussaint lightens it up a bit on the next song “This Song,” bringing a gentler Marley-esque rhythm to the game.  Some key horn and guitar fills, and some killer work on the drums lift this one to heady heights.

I’m more a fan of rockers style reggae, which is touch more aggressive in message and tom and high hat drumming, so it’s no surprise that I’m more enchanted by songs like “Roots in a Modern Time,” which follows a Black Uhuru template in its killer vocal style and chorus, than I am by songs like “Hello My Beautiful,” which is pure lovers rock in the Bob Andy vein.  But truth be told, Toussaint does lovers rock as well as the best of them, great harmonies, melodies, and that voice . . . always that voice.  In truth, with Toussaint at the helm, I don’t really care which path he takes me down.  I’m just enjoying the journey.

Toussaint doesn’t shy away from controversy, tackling topics like his own cocaine addiction, (“Conquering Cocaine”), racism; racial pride and racial harmony (“Black Gold” and “Changing”) to the ongoing Rastafarian struggle against repression (“Marching”) and tackles each subject with passion, power and authenticity.  Toss in some gentler numbers like the find-yourself message of “Be You,” the pure spartan joy of “Rain Again” with it’s string accompaniment, and the dignified searching for understanding of “Patient,” and Toussaint has created a true modern classic of reggae, bringing in enough variety and styles to please the casual reggae listener or even the hardest reggae fan.  Highly recommended.


J-San & the Analogue Sons – One Sound


With all respect to J-San and his boys, I gotta be honest, I approached this CD like a man being forced to handle nuclear waste.  Nothing personal, but I’ve been accosted with a seemingly endless stream of self-produced, American reggae (think Big Mountain) that the mere thought makes my skin blister.  I just can’t get into reggae that’s been filtered through two generations of American television and nothing more than the love a full bong.  Reggae is so much more than that.

But dropping this gem into the player, I quickly changed all my opinions.  J-San and the Analogue Sons are the real deal.  Fusing a rockers style with some of the melodica-heavy dub style of Augustus Pablo, J-San has put himself firmly onto my reggae map.  Perhaps one of the things that makes this stand out so much is the production, the entire album recorded on a borrowed analog reel-to-reel.  Man, does that give warmth to J-San’s voice and add just the right fullness to the occasional horns and melodica.  It’s like a warm blanket on a cold night, One Sound is an album you want to wrap yourself in and snuggle down for the night.

Then, of course, there’s the songs.  J-San has studied the traditions well and doesn’t push things too far.  Bringing in a touch of Ben Harper soulfulness, J-San’s music is totally organic..  In addition to the Augustus Pablo touches, there’s a Dennis Brown quality to J-San’s approach, a romantic pain to his voice, a yearning that just can’t be faked.  J-San lives the roots, that’s clear.  “One Sound,” is a horn-laden rocker with a solid riddim that just never lets up.  Harmony vocals are subtle but so effective.   The bass locks in with the rampant snare while the guitar drops in the perfect fills.  Maybe there’s a touch of Junior Reid in the dubness of the style and it’s message of music being the key to overcome one’s struggles.   I don’t know, but it rocks.  “Time Hard,” lightens the tone a bit with a gentle guitar intro over the constant beat, but maintains it’s focus on the hard times right now felt by so many who’ve lost their jobs.  A potent reggae style of bringing a jubilant air to a time of struggle.  Times may be hard, but we can still bond together under one groove and celebrate life.   Nicely done.

“Solid” is so well crafted, and J-San’s voice so laden with soul, I could’ve sworn I was listening to a lost Dennis Brown classic.  “Walk Alone,” drops down into a bass heavy rockers style, while “No Give Up,” finds fertile ground in a deeper dub-thick style.  “Yes We Can,” could be an unrecorded Augusts Pablo standard, with it’s horn/melodica intro and spartan beat.    A little bit of everything here, and it’s all good.


Lee “Scratch” Perry - Revelation

We’ll end this first reggae column with a contribution from a true reggae legend.  Other than Bob Marley himself, Lee “Scratch” Perry may just be the next most important figure in reggae music.  Some call him a genius, others call him a madman, certifiably insane.  Both are probably correct and there’s just no denying the importance Perry has had over Jamaican music for the last 40 years.  A producer, mixer, songwriter, performer, along with King Tubby, Perry created the genre of reggae we now know as dub.  Perry produced many of the seminal Bob Marley and the Wailers tracks like “Small Axe,” and “Duppy Conqueror,” and was single-handedly responsible for slowing down the hyperkinetic ska beat to create the looping bass-driven beat that has become known as the reggae “riddim.”

With a pedigree like that, any new release from Lee “Scratch” Perry is worthy of attention, and Revelation is a rock solid Perry release.  Featuring huge looping runs of bass in the typical Perry dub style, Revelation is just that, a Perry revelation.

The man has it.  Simply put.  Mad, crazy, insane, whatever you want to call him, no one else in reggae ever so successfully pushed the boundaries of the music away from the pop formula that drowned the genre in the ‘90’s towards something vibrant, unique and, simply wild.  “Fire Power,” with it’s “having a party” refrain is about as far away from “One Love” as reggae gets but it’s still totally recognizable with it’s defiant beat and looping bass.  Most importantly, it’s totally infectious.  “Used to Drive a Tractor in Negrille,” is classic Perry; the master delivering his left-field lyrics over a futuristic reggae beat. 

As always, in the eccentric world of Perry, no topic if off limits when it comes to lyrics.  While most of the songs parlay Perry’s devout Rastafarian views, with a strong preponderance of incorporating judeo-christian beliefs and bible mythology, Perry’s not adverse to tossing a song like “Freaky Michael” into the mix where he proclaims that he likes his big nose and decries black celebrities who alter themselves.  Over the years, Perry’s voice has become more weathered and definitely slightly weaker, but that’s not a distraction.  If anything, it adds that sense of grandfather wisdom to Perry’s tales of “Holy Angels” and “Revelation, Revolution and Evolution.”  I mean the man is 74 years old, and damn, if he doesn’t still sound magnetic.

Eccentric, totally original, bizarre at times, but never less than captivating, Perry is a true treasure.  52 albums into his career and he’s still as enticing as ever.


--Racer


Buy here: Revelation
buy mp3: Revelation

The Sword - Warp Riders


Album number three from Austin, TX band The Sword finds them downplaying the heavy Sabbath influence of their first two and adding a lot more classic rock to their sound. The new direction definitely works in their favor. Debut album Age of Winters was a very solid entry into the Sabbath worship sweepstakes but the follow up Gods Of The Earth seemed to stretch their creativity a bit thin. Despite accusations of “hipster metal,” The Sword is a good band it’s always worthwhile to check out what their up to.

First off, the production on Warp Riders is much improved. Producer Matt Bayles (Mastodon, Isis, Pearl Jam) gives their sound much more clarity. The guitars are still tuned low but the tones are never mushy or lack definition. The other big improvement is with the vocals. J.D. Croncise has never had a great voice and his vocals were always buried in the mix on previous albums. His voice is still not very strong but his singing has gotten better and it sounds like they worked really hard on getting him to sound good.

 “Acheron/Unearthing The Orb” follows in the tradition of Iron Maiden influenced instrumentals that open Sword albums. The single “Tres Brujas” follows and sets the tone for the rest of the album. With a nod to ZZ Top in the title and a riff pinching their classic “Precious and Grace,” The Sword have a chance to win over classic rock fans who aren’t really into metal. “Lawless Lands” and “The Chronomancer I: Hubris” are further Texas boogie stompers.

The other big discernable influence on Warp Riders is Thin Lizzy. “Night City” has some trademark Lizzy guitar harmonies and arrangement flourishes that would sound great on classic rock radio. Fans of the heavier side of Thin Lizzy like “Thunder and Lightning” and “Warriors” will love the songs “Arrows In The Dark” and the title song.

Warp Riders is some sort of sci-fi concept album involving a planet locked in perpetual darkness. Honestly, this type of thing is not my cup of tea, but the music and vocal melodies are strong enough to ignore the sword and sorcery role playing. Fans of ultra heavy doom should skip this one but those who aren’t afraid of a little Foghat boogie in their metal should definitely check this out. They’re touring the US with Karma To Burn and Mount Carmel in October.

--Woody

Buy here:  Warp Riders
mp3: Warp Riders
vinyl: Warp Riders

http://www.swordofdoom.com/

3 Blasts of Penfold - Featuring Red Hot Rebellion, Holding Sand, and Dan Miraldi

Red Hot Rebellion  -  Built to Rock/For the Benefit of Evil

I love it when a band has a simple purpose, something everyone can easily understand.  Red Hot Rebellion writes music with only one thing in mind, rocking your socks off!  Seriously, the band openly promotes the fact that they want their music to sound like “the soundtrack to a bar fight”.  They set about achieving this goal by utilizing tried and true methods pioneered in decades past.

“Built to Rock” starts off the two song sampler.  This song harkens back to the heyday of boogie rock with its ultra fuzzed out guitar, solid medium-tempo groove, and lyrics devoted to one very special lady.  While this track is solid, the real show begins with the second song, “For the Benefit of Evil”.  Pure rock righteousness bursts forth from this song in every imaginable way.  Once again the fuzzy/heavy guitar tone dominates the proceedings.  The verses are built around a series of choppy riffs, while the choruses revolve around a stop/start mechanic used to great effect.  Towards the end there is the mandatory breakdown leading into a lethal guitar solo to close out the song.  I love the Misfits-like gang vocals in the choruses, and with lyrics like “Devil called me up and said listen here, I got something to tell you son.  It’s better to die behind the guitar than die behind the gun” I get goose bumps!  Did I mention that these songs are obtained for free from the band’s website?  Why are you still reading this?  Get clicking!

 www.redhotrebellion.com

Song Download -  http://redhotrebellion.com/tmp/2songs.zip 


 

Holding Sand -  On Sleepless Nights EP

Alright, I will be the first to admit that melodic hardcore is not a genre of music in which I am very well versed.  Some of the bands that are name checked as important to this musical category don’t do anything for me personally.  That being said I am very enthusiastic about this new five song EP from French band Holding Sand.  From the moment I started listening to it, the music grabbed me with a vice-like grip and refused to let go.  It’s a good thing that the EP lasts for just under twenty minutes because when I listen to it, listening is all I am doing.  Nothing else gets accomplished in that span of time, and I can’t afford that on a larger scale.

What makes the music so endearing you ask?  Allow me to explain.  Each and every song here has an extremely satisfying musical crunch thanks to the distorted, downtuned guitars of Matthieu Jacquet and Franck Grison.  Anchoring the guitarists is the rock solid rhythm section of Coralie Fumard on Bass and Pierre Sionneau on drums.  Similar to most singers in this genre Clement Horvath switches from angry growls and anguish filled yelling to clean singing at the drop of a dime.  Unlike some other singers I have been subjected to over time however, I can derive no sense of false emotion or fakery in any of his vocals.  On the contrary they seem entirely genuine, and this adds quite a bit to the overall honesty beaming from the music.

“The Future Belongs to Heartless Whores” acts as a strong opening salvo for what is to come and “Shooting Stars” effectively concludes the EP, but my favorites are the three songs in between.  “On Sleepless Nights” brutalizes from start to finish with whiplash inducing guitar lines and vocal vitriol aplenty.  “Black is the new Black” substantially scales back the tempo for what I would deem more of an introspective number.  This song reminds me of an early composition of the band Cable from their Skyhorse Jams EP, except that “Black is the…” has greater focus and meanders far less.  Finally “What Eyes Betray” throws a curve ball at the listener by devoting the first twenty seconds of the song to a series of distorted sound crashes.  The band then stomps on the accelerator with insistent drumming coupled with an ascending guitar riff and only lets up at the end of the song.  Fantastic!


Dan Miraldi  -  Tease

You would be excused for thinking that the three songs on this EP were released years ago.  That isn’t to say that the songs sound dated.  They certainly do not.  Actually, the production on the album is crisp and crystal clear.  No, the songs just sound as if they were written by someone who has not been influenced by any artist or group after the era of The Rolling Stones and The Beatles.  And you know what?  That is a great thing!  All three songs greet the listener like a breath of fresh air with their utter lack of pretense and posturing.

“The Holy Roller Stone Revival” kicks the tires and lights the fires immediately with a strong driving beat and vocals reminiscent of a powerful preacher lecturing his flock.  Although I doubt that young Mr. Miraldi has in fact “…seen it all” as the lyrics suggest, he has certainly seen enough to create this rollicking song, with the call to join this particular revival too infectious to ignore.  “Lucinda” comes next and offers a very pretty folksy ballad for your listening pleasure.  The vocals are hauntingly clear and without any semblance of a whine.  Very endearing.  “Tease” brings the processional to an end with obvious nods to early upbeat Beatles material after a brief keyboard introduction.  The bottom line is that anyone looking for songs that will bring cheer and happiness to their day should check these out, post haste.  Just don’t blame me when all three come unbidden into your head and you’re forced to sing along.

 http://www.myspace.com/danmiraldi (all songs streaming there)


--Penfold







Trout Fishing In America - Lookin’ At Lucky

This summer was unusual.  The past fifteen or twenty Aprils through Octobers I have spent almost all of my leisure time pursuing trout.  I became addicted to fly fishing in the mid-1980’s.  Even prior to then, I would gather my spinning rod and gear and head to a river, stream, lake or pond to stalk Oncorhynchus mykiss, Salmo trutta, Salvelinus fontinalis and Oncorhynchus aguabonita - rainbow, brown, brook and golden trout.  I have pursued the fish from the Arizona desert through the Sierra Nevada, Rocky and Cascade Mountains onto the plains of Saskatchewan. 

This year, until last weekend, I had not gone fishing - not once. I did not even buy a California fishing license.  I had purchased a yearly California fishing license since I was 16 years old.  It was a hard year. I stuck close to home.  One of my best fishing buddies received a diagnosis of cancer and was now unable to camp or fish.  As the summer wore on he got worse. One of my daughters was having difficulty finding a job after college. The other one was subsidized by us at college out of state. I did not often get to see her. I lost interest in camping and fishing.

So, for the first time this year last weekend I went trout fishing. My wife and I arranged a camping trip with friends and I volunteered to teach them to fly fish.  We bought two-day fishing licenses and headed off for Mount Lassen. I waded into the creek, caught a few fish, sat around the fire and remembered why I had done this for the past 30 years.  I came home tired, dirty but refreshed.

On Monday I went outside to get the mail and there it was inside a small padded manila envelope - Lookin’ At Lucky by Trout Fishing In America. Coincidence?

Trout Fishing In America has been around since I tied my first fly to tippet. This release, on their own label called Trout Records, is their first album for grown-ups in eleven years.  The band is Keith Grimwood on bass and vocals and Ezra Idlet singing along and playing almost every folk instrument known to man - the guitar, ukelele, banjo and bouzouki, as well as percussion. From 1999 until this release Trout Fishing In America was for kids.  They received the children’s music industry’s highest awards - National Parent Publication and Parent’s Choice Awards. They have also garnered four Grammy nominations for “Best Musical Album for Children.” 

Long before Trout Fishing In America there was St. Elmo’s Fire, the adult folk rock band where Grimwood and Idlet met.  Soon they played side gigs together and, in the late 1970’s as St. Elmo’s Fire dissolved,  they played a side gig at a grade school that led to their dedication to kids.

Boy, have those kids been lucky.  Yet, I bet if you ask Trout Fishing In America they would tell you that you are “Lookin’ At Lucky.”  I have not heard original folk music that is as tight, well-written and beautifully performed since neoprene waders were popular.

The first song on the album is “Lookin’ At Lucky,” a country bluegrass march, with a great fiddle part, that tells the story of how a man feels when they’re with someone they love.  I fell for it hook, line and sinker.  It is followed by a country two-step square dance called “She’s The Only Smile,” a song about casting one’s eyes on the most interesting girl at the dance. The tune flows quickly as it dives below the surface.

A fantastic country blues called “Bettin’ That It Won’t” recounts those instances when one hopes for a certain good result but is almost positive it won’t end well - like casting after clumsily tripping over your felt-sole shoes in a quiet pool.  You might hook a fish, but I wouldn’t count on it.

The ballad “Home” is a well-performed melancholy country song about wandering and yearning for home.  I could hear echos of the early Band, the Flying Burrito Brothers and the Little River Band. The song is designed to make you sad - like when you hook a big fish but end up losing it before you even had a chance to see it.   One of the cutest songs on the album is a talking blues, called “Safer Haven,” where the singer goes from location to location and keeps being hit by natural disasters. The song owes a lot to Arlo Guthrie, John Denver and Harry Chapin.  It made me reflect back on those times on the river when a thunderstorm would come in and I’d be standing hip deep in water waving the equivalent of a carbon fibre lightning rod. The track “Drivin’ Rain” is a little country blues funk number. Idlet plays the banjo like it was a rhythm guitar. The lyrics and rhythm brought to mind the swish-swish of the wipers on an old Montana fishing guide’s truck during a mountain storm on the way back from a river fishing float trip.

An odd tune, “Who Knows What He Might Do,” is a driving rant about growing old and acting your age.  I could empathize.  Years ago I could climb over boulders, log jams, rapids and waterfalls in search of prey.  Now, find me a deep pool with easy access.  I still have that same desire to aggressively wade up stream, but at my age I learned that  I just don’t have the same ability. The song “Not Every Dream” is a slow ballad that reminds me of an old Celtic folk song and carries onabout still feeling the same way you did when you were younger.  Counterpoint is provided by violin and acoustic guitar.  It brought to mind all those nights with fishing buddies around the campfire passing the bottle of Maker’s Mark and reminiscing.

A wonderful blues-based number, “The Car’s Running,” recounts “senior moments” such as losing your glasses on your forehead, misplacing the keys, etc.  It made me recall when I hiked two miles upstream to a favorite pool and discovered I’d left my fly boxes back in the car.  “How Many Times A Fool,” a banjo folk tune, explores all the stupid things we do that hurt the ones we love. Sparsely produced and performed, it is as emotive as an early Bob Dylan song, but done with a much better singing voice.  It brought to mind a time one of my fishing buddies on a fishing trip stopped for a drink at a bar in Sierra City on the way back from the river to camp.  There, on a bar stool in the corner, was his first ex-wife.  We didn’t see him back in camp the entire weekend.  In fact, he made his own way back to the Bay Area days later as we all avoided phone calls from his wife.

The last two songs on the album are “I Pretend To Understand” and “My Baby Loves Sudoku.”  The former is a slow country blues about being unable to remember or understand, but, acting like you do.  The latter is a tongue-in-cheek novelty bluegrass epistle on how Sudoku ruins marriages.  It is the closest song on the album to a kid’s song.  Both are a bit silly - like when a fishing partner’s wading shoes soles fell apart in the river and I watched pieces of leather and felt float by while he stood in the river in neoprene stocking feet.  He then knew there was a two mile walk in bare feet out of the canyon ahead of him.  He just went back to fishing for trout until it turned dark.

All in all “Lookin’ At Lucky” is a clever, light, well-performed and well-written first attempt to venture into the world of adult music.  The cuteness and cleverness of Trout Fishing In America’s children’s songs remain.  The musicianship makes each song fun.  The album is like wet-wading - pulling on the old felt-soled boots and leaving the waders behind.  You’re not going in deep or traveling far, but, it sure is damn refreshing. especially if you have a great cast.

- Old School



Quartz - Stand Up and Fight


Back in high school, Brett and I were brothers in arms.  Rock and roll arms that is.  A tad more seasoned than I was, Brett burst my musical cherry by taking me to my first big-time rock concert; AC/DC, Cheap Trick, Ted Nugent, Blue Oyster Cult, and Boston.  Or was it Journey headlining?  Hell, with all the acrid smoke wafting in and around my virginal nostrils that day, I’ll never remember. 

But I do know that Brett also introduced me to the endless hours of joy that became known as the bargain bin dig, and opened up my ears to crazy new sounds in metal, like UFO.  Influential in my life, hell yeah!  It’s safe to say that The Ripple Effect would not exist in many ways, if not for Brett.  A while back I wrote of “big brother” Danny shaping my musical childhood, well Brett was responsible for my much louder heavy metal adolescence.

And with a brother like that in the late seventies to early eighties, you better believe we launched headlong into the NWOBHM and launched hard.   Seemed like we were on a quest to constantly outdo each other, being the first to turn the other guy onto a new band.  For every Tygers of Pan Tang, Girl School, Bitches Sin, Praying Mantis and Witchfynde that Brett found, I pulled out an Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, Saxon, Vardis, and Motorhead.  He popped out an AIIZ and I whipped out an AngelwitchWild Horses, Raven . . it didn’t matter.  We were there.

Then how in the hell did we miss Quartz?

Perhaps it was because Quartz were just a bit ahead of our time, their debut album being recorded in 1976 and 1977.  But that shouldn’t of mattered.  This rambunctious platter I now hold in my hot and steamy hands, Metal Mind's just released reissue of Quartz’s second album, Stand Up and Fight, was originally put out in 1980.  That was our time.  And further, Quartz were originally championed by Tony Iommi and his management group.  He produced their first album and Quartz Geoff Nicholls left the band to join Black Sabbath in 1979.  And we were definitely huge Sabbath fans.  So how this record escaped the attention of two pimply-faced, metal mad teenage boys with a ’66 Mustang remains a mystery never to be solved.

But thank God it’s been rectified, because Stand Up and Fight is one helluva blitzkrieg of riff-mad NWOBHM.  A molten cauldron of screaming guitar licks, trodding bass lines and bone-shattering drums.  An album chock-full of one pounding primal metal fest after another.  An album not to be missed.

Mike Taylor was a singer for the ages, with a voice gruff enough to stand out against all the fey pretty boys of the day, but still sweet enough to scale the heights and bring the passion to the songs.  The closest similarity I can find to his voice is Daryl Braithwaite from the latter Aussie band, The Sherbs; but that reference is probably too obscure, so let’s go with a husky Geddy Lee with a case of laryngitis.  Guitarist Mick Hopkins could shred and rip with the best of them, laying down wailing solos or tearing through grinding gears of riffs.   And the rhythm section of Malcom Cope and Derek Arnold were steadfast in their dedication to rock. 

And boy, could they rock.  Ignoring the sole misstep of “Can’t Say No To You,” a timid American-aimed rocker that sounds suspiciously like Foreigner's “Feels Like the First Time,” the rest of the album and the one extra bonus track “Circles” are the true essence of the NWOBHM. 

I’m not going to go into each track here, because I’m gonna run out of adjectives way to soon.  There’s just no way to sum up the raging riff drag race of “Charlie Snow" and it’s cocaine reference.  It’s impossible to describe the bullish metal assault of “Rock ‘n’ Roll Child,” or the angry power wrapped up in powerchords and wailing solos of “Revenge.”  I don’t have the words to lay down how I feel about the mad rockers, “Wildfire,” “Circles,” or “Stoking Up the Fires of Hell.”  Let’s just simply say that Stand Up and Fight is simply . . . simply fantastic.  Raw and primitive, riff-mad metal.   An album that absolutely shouldn’t be missed.

Brett, brother, have I got one for you!

--Racer

Buy here:  Stand Up & Fight





Ripple News - Exploding in Sound Roars Back with another Killer Compilation -- for Free!


The never ending search for great music has become a little bit easier, thanks to SONIC WAVES, the brand new digital compilation from tastemakers ExplodingInSound.com.  Download it for FREE today and come discover your next favorite band. The line-up is a dream come true for the folks at EIS, with songs from Karnivool, Oceansize, Alberta Cross, Dead Confederate, This Town Needs Guns, Native, Retribution Gospel Choir, Tera Melos, Sebastien Grainger, Shoes And Socks Off, Medications, Night Horse, Royal Bangs, Mojo Fury, The Library is on Fire, and many more.
 
SONIC WAVES draws inspiration from a time when radio DJs played the music you needed to hear, rather than the station’s predetermined playlist.  These are the bands keeping rock music genuine, intelligent, and explosive; these are the decade’s future legends.  Fans of post-punk, progressive rock, alternative, grunge, and indie rock will surely find themselves immersed in the twenty one songs that comprise SONIC WAVES, a collection of brilliant rock music from around the globe.  With every compilation Exploding In Sound seem to outdo themselves and SONIC WAVES just might be their masterpiece.

Sharing of the compilation and the links to download is HIGHLY recommended and encouraged!  Your friends are going to want to hear this, so spread the love.  SONIC WAVES is a free compilation to be used for promotional use only, with a goal of reaching music fans worldwide, helping to provide great music to the masses.  Word of mouth is always appreciated.  Enjoy.

DOWNLOAD here:  Sonic Waves



“SONIC WAVES” TRACK LIST:

1.       Karnivool – Set Fire To The Hive

2.       Oceansize – SuperImposer

3.       Tera Melos – The Skin Surf

4.       Medications – For WMF

5.       Alberta Cross – ATX

6.       The Library is on Fire – Magic Bumrush Heartz

7.       Dead Confederate – Giving It All Away (feat. J Mascis)

8.       Native – Backseat Crew

9.       Retribution Gospel Choir – Hide It Away

10.   Vending Machetes – M.O.

11.   Shoes And Socks Off – No Fighting in C101

12.   Earthtone9 – Amnesia

13.   Mojo Fury – Deep Fish Tank [Factory Settings]

14.   Vietwow! – Irritable Brain Syndrome

15.   Royal Bangs – War Bells

16.   Sebastien Grainger – I’m All Rage [Live ‘05]

17.   Suns of the Tundra – Caught Telling The Truth

18.   Art Versus Industry – Devour

19.   Night Horse – Rollin’ On

20.   The Fling – Out Of My Head

21.   This Town Needs Guns - Panda