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Archive for March, 2010

Cabezas Cordades–Teen Age Thugs

March 31st, 2010

Teen Age Thugs 7"
Teen Age Thugs 7″

 

This is a tough, catchy jam called “Teenage Thugs” that has really been stuck in my head. On it you can hear a lot of early punk rock influences. Proto-pop-punk band Cabezas Cordades (Cut Off Heads) came blistering out of Tijuana in the late ’80s led by the activist rants of the lead singer Raul Velasquez who claimed a blood connection to the Zapatistas and Sandinistas, among other oppressed people around the globe. LA hardcore band Suicidal Tendencies brought them on a brief tour that garnered the Cabezas a small deal with Mexican Metropolis Records. Quickly appeared “Teen Age Thugs,” a prescient tune about the horrors of child gangsters, as well as “Gangster Funeral,” “Mule Blues,” and “Xenophobes.” There first two records came with an inserted map of the best and safest route for immigrants to cross the Sonoran Desert. Included on the B-side was a visceral spoken-word repudiation of the US and Mexican government by Velasquez.This is a tough, catchy jam called “Teenage Thugs” that has really been stuck in my head. On it you can hear a lot of early punk rock influences. Proto-pop-punk band Cabezas Cordades (Cut Off Heads) came blistering out of Tijuana in the late ’80s led by the activist rants of the lead singer Raul Velasquez who claimed a blood connection to the Zapatistas and Sandinistas, among other oppressed people around the globe. LA hardcore band Suicidal Tendencies brought them on a brief tour that garnered the Cabezas a small deal with Mexican Metropolis Records. Quickly appeared “Teen Age Thugs,” a prescient tune about the horrors of child gangsters, as well as “Gangster Funeral,” “Mule Blues,” and “Xenophobes.” There first two records came with an inserted map of the best and safest route for immigrants to cross the Sonoran Desert. Included on the B-side was a visceral spoken-word repudiation of the US and Mexican government by Velasquez.

Cabezas Cordada (Cut Off Heads) came blistering out of Tijuana in the late ’80s led by the activist rants of the lead singer Raul Velasquez who claimed a blood connection to the Zapatistas and Sandinistas, among other oppressed people around the globe. LA hardcore band Suicidal Tendencies brought them on a brief tour that garnered the Cabezas a small deal with Mexican Metropolis Records. Quickly appeared “Teen Age Thugs,” a prescient tune about the horrors of child gangsters, as well as “Gangster Funeral,” “Mule Blues,” and “Xenophobes.” There first two records came with an inserted map of the best and safest route for immigrants to cross the Sonoran Desert. Included on the B-side was a visceral spoken-word repudiation of the US and Mexican government by Velasquez.
Though Velesquez walked a righteous path, his bandmates fell into heroin use and crime. Despite their inability to contribute musically, he was unable to give up on them. As he said in an interview, “to give up on my musical brothers is to contradict everything I stand for.” His musical warnings ultimately served as a prophecy for the demise of their own creators.

Albums, Punk

Earth Girl Helen Brown–”Hit After Hit”

March 3rd, 2010

How about that new Joanna Newsom record, huh? Pretty great. But enough people are writing about her. Sonny Smith recently turned me onto this really incredible singer that I can’t stop listening to. “Earth Girl Helen Brown,” is her monkier. She had an sad, strange life, which explains the weirdo, fascinating music.

Earth Girl Helen Brown "Hit After Hit" (Side A); El Rincon Record Palace  002

Earth Girl Helen Brown "Hit After Hit" (Side A); El Rincon Record Palace 002

Helen Brown was born in Vancouver, Canada, but raised in an Athens, Georgia-based religious cult, and was blinded in one eye from a childhood baseball injury. As an adult, she dropped out of Evergreen and traveled the country for a while as a nomadic psychedelic folksinger, before forming her first band One Eyed Tramps. For years, she lived alone in a mountaintop in southern Alaska, where she befriended a Cherokee Shaman (later revealed as a fake) who encouraged her to pursue a frustrating academic career. Rampant drug use, frequent fainting on stage, and occasional self-inflicted knife wounds on stage led to more interest in her stage antics than her music. However, a few sides did emerge in the late ’90s (recording dates unknown), which feature a unique mix of country, girl group, R&B, and ghoulishness. Crude and amateurish at best, these recordings are appreciated for their sincerity and intensity of feeling.

 The record I’ve been listening to a lot lately is a 7″ (Shown above, great cover): “Hit After Hit,” on Side A and “So Long, Jerk” on Side B. The label is “El Rincon record Palace 002″ which I can’t find anything else about–maybe it was a home recording that was released after they were found in the ’90s. The recordings are barely audible but her anger and pain come through. The song titles break my heart a little bit. There’s something ironic in the title “Hit after Hit”: It’s like she is struggling with fame or acheivement–having “Hits”– but there’s this vulgarity and hardness to them that speaks of violence as well. Obviously, “So Long, Jerk” is about ending a romantic relationship, and it’s in this ’60s psych-folk style, but there’s something almost punk about it. It’s hard to think of this woman ever sitting behind a desk as an academic. There’s something truly wild in her voice.  

Albums, Folk, Hits, Just Weird