Edible Fetus

Monday, April 24, 2006

No mas...

Ok, so I'm done. Not that anyone'll really give a rat's ass, but I found doing a blog to be very tedious...I have decided to post in the forums I post in and concentrate on my other on-line venture - my adult site. At least for now, that seems to be taking a shitload of time to get off the ground. So, I'll see ya when I see ya. It's been real.

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Venom - Possessed


I remember buying this LP (yes, as in record) when it came out and I can also remember how much I loved it. 20+ years later and I still rank this as one of the most influential metal albums in my life.

There has always been this raging debate about whether this album sucks or not, with most people saying it does. Even guitarist Mantas has expressed displeasure with this album.

I disagree.

No, it's probably not as good as "Black Metal" or "At War With Satan," but "Possessed" has some really stellar moments which I feel are tooo often overlooked in favor of just bashing the album outright. "Satanachist" is superb, the title track is downright spooky in a lo-fi way and "Suffer Not The Children" still ranks as one of my favorite Venom anthems of all time.

Perhaps the fact that all of Venom's little children of the day - Slayer, Metallica, Exodus, Megadeth, etc. - were releasing albums at the same time as "Possessed" that Venom just couldn't keep up with. Venom was minimalist metal - their admitted lack of individual talent being made up for in collective brutality - and the aforementioned spawn were all quite technical...the metal world was shifting and Venom got lost in the shift...sadly I feel that "Possessed" was one of the great overlooked casualties in the rise of the new breed of metal.

Well, judge for yourself. This is the re-release with bonus tracks. Props to ChaosAD on Evil's Metal Vault forum for requesting this post and making me revisit one of my favorite albums of all time.
1. Powerdrive
2. Flytrap
3. Satanachrist
4. Burn This Place To The Ground
5. Harmony Dies
6. Possesed
7. Hellchild
8. Moonshine
9. Wing And A Prayer
10. Suffer Not The Children
11. Voyeur
12. Mustique
13. Too Loud (For The Crowd)
14. Nightmare (12'' Mix)
15. F.O.A.D. (12'' B-Side)
16. Warhead (12'' B-Side)
17. Possessed (Remix)
18. Witching Hour (Live)
19. Teachers Pet/ Poison/ Teachers Pet (Live)

{I killed this link because some scumbag with a blog who can't be bothered to upload his own albums pulled a cut and paste. One note: UPLOAD YOUR OWN FUCKING ALBUMS YOU LAZY DOUCHEBAG.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Motorhead LIVE!


Back in the day, during the "Operation Rock 'N Roll" our with Motorhead, Judas Priest, Alice Cooper, Dangerous Toys and Metal Church, I was fortunate enough to score backstage passes at Great Woods in Mansfield, Mass. I was absofuckinglutely psyched and looking forward to meeting the Priest guys, Cooper and, of course, Lemmy.

So, I go backstage and, lo and behold, no Cooper or Priest. I looked aorund in disappointment at the B-Team I was left with (no offense to Church and Toys, I loved and love ye both, but let's face it, you were no Judas Priest) and then, out of the corner of my eye I caught a welcome glimpse of Lemmy Fucking K!!! He was sitting at a table beneath an umbrella, drink and smoke in hand and was, by far, one of the nicest, most amiable folks I've ever had the pleasure of meeting. I came away with no Priest or Cooper autographs, but I did (and still have) go away with a picture of myself with Lemmy.

Rock And Fucking Roll...

This is a bootleg with an odd set list from 1983 at the Sheffield University on June 9....

Enjoy.
http://rapidshare.de/files/14210389/MH-Live_In_Sheffield_1983-1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/14212522/MH-Live_In_Sheffield_1983-2.zip

Ronnie James Motherfucking Dio!!!!


Nobody is more metal than RJD...NOBODY. Ozzy's more Rock 'N' Roll, Rob Halford is....well, you know. Lemmy might've had a shot, but then came that unfortunate quote of his claiming that he liked Ozyy better post-Sabbath than he did whilst Ozzy was fronting Sabbath - and that's just dumb.

So, we are left with lil' ol' Dio. Even though I gave up on him sometime around 1990, Dio continues to amaze me, especially since he is humping 50 now and still has the pipes to pull off the classics...if you've heard his most recent DVD, you know of what I speak.

Anyway, I came across a good Dio boot and an audio rip (both from the 80s-era Dio) and figured they warranted a post here on the Fetus. Do enjoy.

First up is the audio rip to the Dio video (as in VHS) "A Special At The Spectrum" from 1984...the tracklist for this bad boy is:

1) Stand Up And Shout
2) Don't Talk To Strangers
3) Mystery
4) Egypt
5) Heaven And Hell
6) The Last In Line
7) Rainbow In The Dark
8) Mob Rules
9) We Rock
I killed this (see the Venom post above)

Second up is a 1983 Bootleg from Vrendenberg...the set list for this would be:
1) Intro
2) Stand Up And Shout
3) Straight Through The Heart
4) Shame On The Night
5) Children Of The Sea
6) Holy Diver
7) Drum Solo
8) Stargazer
9) Heaven And Hell
10) Guitar Solo
11) Heaven And Hell (reprise)
12) Rainbow In The Dark
13) Man On The Silver Mountain
14) Startstruck
15) Man On The Silver Mountain (reprise)
16) Evil Eyes
17) Don't Talk To Strangers

As you can see, this is right before "The Last In Line" and thusly concentrates on Dio's earlier and pre-solo materials...

I killed this (see the Venom post above)

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Venom - 7th Date Of Hell


Ah...Venom. There will always be a dumb-ass debate about what band "created" what form of Metal and what band falls into what category and all that other happy horseshit. Who cares, really? No matter what your position is on any of these arguments, there can be no denying that the U.K.'s proudest Satanic sons are at the head of the class. Before they were plagued by line-up changes and general stupidity, Venom ruled the roost in my opinion. And this video (the audio rip of which is featured here,) was absolutely killer.

I'm not sure where the last two songs came from, as the video ends after "Bloodlust," I believe, but they're pretty great versions, so they stayed in my upload. Enjoy...

1 "Leave Me in Hell"
2 "Countess Bathory"
3 "Die Hard"
4 "7 Gates of Hell"
5 "Buried Alive"
6 "Don't Burn the Witch"
7 "In Nominie Satanus"
8 "Welcome to Hell"
9 "Warhead"
10 "Stand Up (And Be Counted)"
11 "Bloodlust"
12 "Witching Hour"
13 "Teacher's Pet"
http://rapidshare.de/files/12867603/7th_Date_Of_Hell_VHS_Audio-1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/12922789/7th_Date_Of_Hell_VHS_Audio-2.zip

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

More Posts From Elsewhere...

Here's some more randomness I uploaded. I must've been on a country kick without even realizing it...

Shooter Jennings - Put The O Back In Country (Waylon's kid)
http://rapidshare.de/files/7658159/Shooter-Put_The_O_Back1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7658106/Shooter-Put_The_O_Back2.zip

Hank Williams Jr. - The Best Of...
http://rapidshare.de/files/7424280/HankJr-Best_Of.zip

Hank Williams III - Rising Outlaw
http://rapidshare.de/files/7423240/Hank3-Risin_Outlaw1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7423374/Hank3-Risin_Outlaw2.zip

Hank Williams III - Lovesick, Broke & Driftin'
http://rapidshare.de/files/7423211/Hank3-Lovesick1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7423276/Hank3-Lovesick2.zip

Merle Haggard - The Peer Sessions
http://rapidshare.de/files/7424329/Merle_Haggard-The_Peer_Sessions.zip

The Repo Man Soundtrack (Circle Jerks, Black Flag, Iggy, Suicidal, etc.)
http://rapidshare.de/files/7543367/Repo_Man_Soundtrack1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7543355/Repo_Man_Soundtrack2.zip

Sick Of It All - Yours Truly
http://rapidshare.de/files/6990386/SOIA_-_Yours_Truly1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/6993346/SOIA_-_Yours_Truly2.zip

Body Count - Live At Lollapalooza
http://rapidshare.de/files/5579952/Body_Count_-_Live_At_Lollapalooza.zip

Recent Posts From Elsewhere

Here's a collection of previews I uploaded and posted elsewhere. There's a little bit of everything here...

Toadies - Rubberneck
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7700266/Toadies_-_Rubberneck.zip

Toadies - Hell Below/Stars Above
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7699714/Toadies_-_Hell_Below1.zip
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7700118/Toadies_-_Hell_Below2.zip

George Thorogood - Let's Work Together (Live)
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7700232/Thorogood-Lets_Work_Together1.zip
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7700240/Thorogood-Lets_Work_Together2.zip

The Cars - The Cars
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7664198/The_Cars_-_The_Cars.zip

Soul Coughing - Irresistible Bliss
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7658254/Soul_Coughing_-_Irresistible_Bliss.zip

Shooter Jennings - Put The O Back In Country
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7658159/Shooter-Put_The_O_Back1.zip
hxxp://rapidshare.de/files/7658106/Shooter-Put_The_O_Back2.zip

The Freeze - Token Bones - Cape Cod-core


Ok, now that I got my Matisyahu post out of the way, I can get back to the business of doing this big-assed run of Boston punk/hardcore. First up is the wonder and beauty that is The Freeze. Since starting out playing in lovely Cape Cod in the '80s (their first single, "I Hate Tourists," accurately captured many full-time Cape Cod resident's feelings, especially during the traffic-heavy summer months,) The Freeze continue to play to this day, albeit with only one original member.

This collection covers their whole career, from the comewhat sloppy, but undeniably inspired early days to the more metallic, yet still very good "Misery Loves Company" era plus everything between and beyond...try them, you'll like it!

http://rapidshare.de/files/7559724/Freeze_-_Token_Bones1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7559538/Freeze_-_Token_Bones2.zip

Matisyahu - Live At Stubb's

Hasidic-hop?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!

Ok, I've heard pretty much everything in my day and very little gets me really excited nowadays (at least musically.) That being said, this CD absolutely stunned me (and continues to do so) from listen one. The live version of "King Without A Crown" on this release is totally incredible. As is the "Beatbox" jam. As is "Sea To Sea." As is nearly everything on it.

If you know nothing about Matisyahu when you listen to this, the vocals alone are enough to give you pause. Peter Tosh's smoothness meets Eminem's frantic wordplay and the resulting child is near-genius. Add to this the oddness that Matisyahu (the singer) is Hasidic and you have quite the enigmatic soon-to-be-superstar. Really. This will be huge in a couple of years. My wife and I are going to see him live in Boston the day after Christmas making Matisyahu the first musical act we can agree on. Enough said.
Code:

http://rapidshare.de/files/7739174/Matisyahu-Live_At_Stubbs1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7739207/Matisyahu-Live_At_Stubbs2.zip

Sunday, November 13, 2005

This Is Boston, Not L.A.


I couldn't think of any album more fitting to start this monster thread of Boston punk/hardcore/metal than the phenomenal compilaiton, "This Is Boston, Not L.A." Featuring eraly-career tracks from such Boston punk/HC luminaries as Gang Green, The F.U.'s (later to become the Straw Dogs,) Jerry's Kids, and The Freeze among others, "This Is Boston..." served as the defining moment in the very early Boston scene.

The following review was written and posted online by someone who has a great grasp of what this album meant to people when it dropped. FYI - this is a review of the original vinyl release from '82. The rip here is from the CD re-released by Wicked Discs. The re-release also contained the "Unsafe At Any Speed" EP, which accounts for the extra songs at the end of this upload:

"You know those moments in your life when you experience something for the first time and you think to yourself, “Wow! This is amazing! I like this so much I’m going to ______ for the rest of my life!” Now unless the ______ you’re filling in is “shoot heroin” or “listen to my talking dog” this is usually a positive development. It happened to me when I first met my wife. And when I first went steelhead fishing. But my very first life changing experience, the first time I knew that things would never be the same, I was much younger….

Becoming Punk

I was 13 in 1985. I remember that summer more clearly than any other time in my childhood. ’85 in Boston was a very hot summer. When I close my eyes now and think back, I can almost smell the melting asphalt of the streets that I would race down on my fat, bright green, Sears-bought skateboard. I can see the broken glass on the sidewalk glinting in the sun and hear the static skit-skit-skit of the wheels beneath me.

I’m not a very sociable person, never have been, but at 13 I was feeling particularly alone. That summer my older brother Ed, who I usually hung out with, had gone off and got himself a job scooping ice cream at J.P. Licks. With no one to hang out with my days were spent cruising around the city streets on my cheap skateboard and sitting at home in the air conditioning figuring out how to use my parents old TRS-80 Model 3.

One day my brother brought home a very strange looking kid that he worked with at the ice cream shop. I knew he was from my bother’s job because he worked in Cambridge and there is a lot of weird looking people in Cambridge. We were introduced and I leaned that his name was Rusty. Rusty Nails. Rusty had brought a bunch of records with him that he was lending my brother. They both disappeared upstairs to Ed’s room and soon I heard the muffled sound of music and my brother’s god awful bass playing filtering down through the floor.

The next day I sneaked into my brother’s room to peruse his minute collection of old porn mags and found Rusty’s pile of records sitting in the middle of the floor. I was curious as to what kind of music interested someone who looked so much different (and cooler) than the people in my neighborhood. Up to this point music wasn’t really important to me, it was just something that provided background noise to whatever activity I was involved in. Listening to music was not an activity in and of itself.

I pushed the records around in front of me, fanning them out like a deck of cards. I played the records one by one from the top of the pile down. Looking back now I realize that Rusty had some pretty eclectic taste in music, everything from Echo and the Bunnymen to Fishbone. I liked most of it, especially the funny stuff, but I’d hit a slump of three or four slow goth albums and was quickly getting bored. Deciding to give Rusty’s music one more shot before I went out skateboarding I reached for This is Boston Not L.A. and experienced the mystical revelation that is Punk Rock.

My jaw dropped and the hair on the back of my head stood up as flailing guitars and screeching feedback turned me into a new person. 30 second songs filled with chaos and immediacy poured out from my brother’s cheap speakers and into my ears, entering my brain and changing me forever. I felt the metamorphosis come over me as I slowly became charged with this vital energy. I thought to myself, “Wow! This is amazing! I’m going to listen to punk rock for the rest of my life!”

The Record

I didn’t know it then, but I was listening to some of the finest hardcore punk rock ever created.

With the success of other regional punk scene compilations like Flex Your Head and Process of Elimination, the Boston record and comics store Newbury Comics decided to release their own comp., documenting the bands who made up the Boston hardcore scene of the time. This is Boston Not L.A. was the 12th release on Newbury’s label, Modern Method, having been recorded in 1982, a time when the sound of American punk/hardcore was still evolving. This diversity of style is well represented in the artists selected in the compilation. Some of these bands have talent and some do not, but they all have something to say. Remember, these bands were young and raw, the average band member age in Gang Green on this recording is 15.

There are thirty tracks in all, from seven different bands. If you care, the average time on these songs is about minute each.

The Songs

Jerry’s Kids have the first six songs:

1. Straight Jacket
2. Uncontrollable
3. Wired
4. Desperate
5. Pressure
6. I don’t wanna

Jerry’s Kids play with a full-on sloppy/fast hardcore style reminiscent of Minor Threat or a sped up Circle Jerks. The songs are short, with simple to the point lyrics. The stand out cut here “Uncontrollable” about how much it sucks to be the unpopular kid no one wants to be around. The singing is so full of anger, the lyrics are almost choked out instead of sung. Like most of the bands here, if it wasn’t for the lyric sheet I’d be lost. Jerry’s Kids were never known for being the most talented band in Boston, but the ferocity of their playing and the desperate, emotionally raw sound they generated, created some of the most “punk” music I’ve ever heard.

Proletariat

7. Options
8. Religion is the opium of the masses
9. Allegiance

Proletariat are the odd men out on this record. A highly political leftist/communist band they sound more like the British punk of the time than anything coming out of the US. Their stand out song is “Religion is the opium of the masses”, a rallying cry to enlightenment and a wake up call to people following church dogma like sheep. Not technically hardcore, this is still good, sparse sounding punk rock reminiscent of non-ska Citizen Fish.

Groinoids

10. Angel

The Groinoids have only one song on This is Boston not LA, but it’s still a good representation of garage punk. Played fast but very sloppy, with lyrics that make no sense at all, The Groinoids are probably the most forgettable band on here. Maybe if I’d ever heard more of their stuff I might feel different, but I was never compelled to search that out.

The FU’s

11. Preskool dropouts
12. Radio UNIX USA
13. Green beret
14. Time is money

The FU’s were an amazing and influential hardcore band from Boston who put out quite a few excellent records. Sounding a lot like bands from the early New York scene the FU’s blazed through their minute long songs with a thumping double time put down by a unusually talented drummer. Their stand out cut is Radio UNIX USA, a song which encapsulates all that punk and hardcore music was created to rally against.

Gang Green

15. Snob
16. Lie Lie
17. I don’t know
18. Rabies
19. Narrow Mind
20. Kill a commie
21. Have fun

How can I describe the God-like punk rock experience that is these seven songs from Gang Green? Blazingly fast on all fronts, with a lead singer forcing his voice to do things no human throat should be forced to endure, these Gang Green songs ALL stand out. If I were to play this record for someone with absolutely no exposure to hardcore, they would recognize that what is happening with this band transcends the intensity of anything else they’ve heard. Speed, intensity and cohesive song structure are the traits that put Gang Green in a class all their own. All of these songs clock in at under 35 seconds, most with 2 to 3 second insane guitar solos. From the initial blast of feedback to the final chord played Gang Green never lets up. If I had to pick a favorite song I’d have to say “Rabies”, but really they are all better than 99% of all the other punk rock music ever made.

Decadance

22. Slam

Decadance also have only the one song here, but it’s a classic nonetheless. Remember when slam dancing and the mosh pit weren’t parts of the popular lexicon? Back before the days of football jocks making football field sized pits at Woodstock? Well, that’s what this one’s all about. A little dated now, but if you close your eyes and listen closely, you can still hear the honesty in this song. LA style mid-tempo hardcore that gets you ready to Move some SH!theads Over.

The Freeze

23. Broken Bones
24. Idiots at happy hour
25. Now or never
26. Sacrifice not suicide
27. It’s only alcohol
28. Trouble if you hide
29. Time bomb
30. This is Boston not LA

The Freeze are probably the most musically talented band represented here. Known for writing longer songs (up to 1minute :30!) with clever, story based lyrics, they played some of the best punk rock loser anthems ever recorded. Their songs are about racism, townie-ism, and narrow minds. Finest among them is "Broken Bones", a rousing sing-a-long about being the only weird kid at the party and what pea-brained drunks will do to prove their man-hood. With an amazing rhythm section, The Freeze drop seven golden gems of punk rock goodness. Of all the bands on this compilation, The Freeze were the one band who would go on to continue recording relevant music. If you pick this up and like their stuff go get “Token Bones” the Freeze retrospective, it’s an excellent overview of their music.


The Lowdown

Sitting down in front of my brother’s stereo with that pile of records during that hot summer afternoon in Boston was the first time I ever heard music that forced me to listen, music that would never allow itself to become just background noise. It changed my life forever. If you are at all interested in early 80’s punk/hardcore and have never head This is Boston Not LA, drop what you’re doing and go get it. You’ve been missing a classic.

If you’re into today’s music, nu metal (bizkit) or pop-punk (blink182) and are not hopelessly narrow-minded pick up this comp and get educated.

With that I’ll leave you with a snippet of the lyrics from The FU’s song Radio UNIX USA. This pretty much sums up what punk rock means to me…

I wish I was a man like you
I wish I could look so bad
As you sing all your hit songs
‘bout all the sex you’ve ever had.

Your riffs are so mean and professionally clean,
I’m impressed with all your preteen groupies,
And how you really know how to rock.
I’m impressed with all the money you’ve made,
Sucking record executive c*cks.

Your riffs are so mean and professionally clean,
So tight-@ssed controlled are your five minute solos,
But you’ve got,

NO BALLS, NO BALLS, NO BALLS, NO BALLS! (X8)
"

The only issue I have with the above review is the author's assertation that The Freeze is the only band that went on to record anything relevant. I think that statement is not only untrue, but borderline idiotic. Gang Green released the genuis "Another Wasted Night," The F.U.'s released "My America" and then became The Straw Dogs and released a couple of killer albums and Jerry's Kids would go on to release "Is This My World?" which I think is one of the best Boston HC albums to come out...not to mention that members from these bands went on to play with such bands as Agnostic Front and Mung. I think a sweeping statement on a band's musical "relevance" is ill-founded, especially in such an otherwise killer review.

Get this.

http://rapidshare.de/files/7546445/Boston_Not_LA1.zip
http://rapidshare.de/files/7546567/Boston_Not_LA2.zip

Saturday, November 12, 2005

The heavier side of Beantown...

Ok, so iunex at the skafunk board asked for some Tree and it got me thinking about how incredible the punk/hardcore/metal scene used to be in Boston back in the day. I can remember being able to see two or three shows in a single day - all-ages afternoon show at the Paradise, then a late-afternoon show at TT The Bears and then a night show at a YMCA gym. Those were the days. Now, you're hard pressed to find anything going on in the Boston/Cambridge area at all.

Anyway, after getting the Tree upped and posted, I figured I'd start on a grand undertaking and upload a shitload of Boston acts and do a massive bunch of posts for everyone. I started today and want to get at least 75% of my planned uploads done before I share with anyone. I encourage you to listen and then go out and buy these - most are released via small, independant labels by bands that could really use and benefit from the sales. Most bands which will be featured are defunct (or should be at this point,) but all of them hold a special place in my blackened heart.

Without blowing the whole load at once, I will tell you that some bands which will be featured in this on-going post are: Post Mortem, Sam Black Church, Stompbox, Mung, Jerry's Kids, Gang Green, SSD, High Defiance, Roadsaw, as well as a bunch of killer comps. featuring Boston area bands...keep checking back, it'll be a monumental bitch of a post run.