Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Won't Leave It Behind

Another major blogging hiatus is coming to an end, my computer is partially broken but that's only partly an excuse. Really I've just been lazy and with school starting and sucking not only money but most of my liveliness out of me, I'm having a more difficult time getting motivated. I didn't blog much this summer mostly due to not really listening to as much music as i would have liked, i found myself dedicating most of my free time to reading this summer.

I also think I've found more of a balance as to where hardcore and punk fit into my life, i no longer really look to lyric sheets for an escape or for "enlightenment" or whatever you want to call it. That probably has more to do with age, most kids around playing bands are around my age, or if they're now defunct they were around my age when they wrote their best stuff. I guess in a lot of ways I've stopped looking to punk or hardcore for my identity, that's stupid anyway, but i would say as a younger kid it helped me in a lot of ways. I'm not trying to say that kids in their early twenties don't have anything good to say, it's quite the contrary, there's something amazing that you can only really capture in your youth, the older you get the harder it is to sustain but i would say one of the most important things a person can do is hang on to their youth, to never get old in spirit.

The point I'm trying to make is that i think you move past the point in life where punk music can really have a profound impact on your life, that's not say you stop participating in it, or stop loving it, it just means that you're able to put it into a greater perspective that sees punk music as only a piece in the vastness of your entire life and your development as a person. I think the impact that punk or hardcore can have on a person can resonate throughout their whole life and can help them connect or carry on what it meant to them to others, it never dies, it just shifts priorities. Punk music has had a huge impact on my life, it's shaped part of who i am now, i can still remember the first punk song i ever heard, i was 11 or 12 years old and my aunt bought me a cover album which included a song by MxPx. I must have played that song a thousand times over within a week, something just clicked, the rest is history. A lot of my ideas as a kid in high school came from the music i listened to and for that I'm incredibly thankful, thankful i had music to spare me from the otherwise mundane existance of an awkward, angry teenagers life.

Although my philosophical bent on life has been changing and is in some ways moving away from some of the more dominant ideals in punk music there are still a lot of relevant bands whose political and social commentary speaks to what i believe. Good Riddance will forever be that band, specifically their record Operation Phoenix, which is a masterpiece. There are also bands like Minor Threat and 7 Seconds that speak to me and have influenced me on that level. And more recent bands like Strike Anywhere, Stretch Arm Strong, Verse, and Lion of Judah are encouraging to me, just to know that it's not lost on these bands that effecting the world in a positive way is the most noble thing a group of kids with a microphone and a few attentive ears can do.

With all that said, I've been listening to a lot of great music the last little while though and will be more so now. The Hostage Calm LP has been constantly churning the hard disk on my mp3 player, the more i listen to it the more i like it, perhaps my praise for it was a little subdued in the review i wrote for it, probably not. I've also been listening to the new True Colors 7", which is very good, maybe even better than Focus on The Light and Battery's Whatever it Takes is gaining near legendary status in my personal discography.

Over the past year or so I've been giving more time to Battery's entire discography and i haven't been slightest bit disappointed. I remember when i first heard of this band and i went through a struggle to get all their material so i could listen to all of it. Whatever It Takes was the first album i came upon and as often seems to be the case, with myself at least, it's still my favorite stuff by them even though I've had a chance to listen to their full discography thoroughly enough.

I think this album flows together better than any of their others, the production is a bit more crisp and seems to capture them as a band better. I've never been awed by Battery's lyrics, with the exception of Why Is She In Pain and this record is no different, the content is really good it's just not written great. They still saywhat they're intended and what they're intended to say is definitely worth saying. The song Who Are You? is also one of my favorite Battery songs, i love the riffs and melodies in it. This record really seems like a completion of their style, i don't want to say they coined a new style of hardcore but they certainly had a sound that would not have been recognizable before their existance. They're one of a few bands that have a distinctive style and sound that sets them apart from they're contemporaries and this record is in my opinion the most complete display of Battery's style of hardcore punk. If you don't have this record yet, pick it up here: http://revhq.com/store.revhq?Page=search&Id=REV065

I've written too much this post, one more thing. I'm going to be turning my other blog, Against The Grain, into a book review blog of sorts . I've read a ton of books over the past few years, some of them which have been hugely influential on my life so i thought it would be cool to do a little write up on some of them. So hopefully i'll have the first one up by the end of the week, just a heads up to anyone who may be interested, it will be on Leo Tolstoy's The Kingdom of God is Within You.

Also, i almost forgot again, check out A Riot of My Own it's a really good blog by xroldx from The Netherlands. Some cool interviews and album reviews over there, definitely worth the time!

Currently listening: Good Riddance - Operation Phoenix


4 comments:

BB said...

i was wondering when you'd be back, i've missed reading you. and battery is definitely amazing, i remember picking up whatever it takes used at a record store because my friend from dc kept telling me how incredible they were. he was right, i should have listened in the beginning ha.
i look forward to the book reviews, i wish i would have read more this summer. it sucks growing up and not having enough time for everything. i still need to work on finding my balance.

xroldx said...

First Tyler thanks for linking me, I appreciate it.

Secondly I think all hardcorepunk kids who stay in the scene eventually go throught the phase you describe here. It's a part of growing up. Mostly we start listening to hardcore we're in our early teens, music means more than a steady income or a career. Then when you get older you eventually graduate, go searching for a job and all that. For some that is the point to leave the music behind, for others it's the point where they truly incorporate the messages of the bands they've been listening to for so long in their personal lifes. It's a transcendce that I find very interesting and personally feel goes on forever.

Can't wait for the bookblog, I have similar plans myself but with the new kid on the block I doubt I will find the time soon.

Tyler said...

I slept on battery when i first heard of them too, kind of stupid but i finally came to my senses.

I agree with your assessment on growing up and how it works into hardcore punk Rold. I still haven't had to get out and get a "real" job, I've worked max 8 months on end and almost went ballistic nearing the end. I really don't know what I'm going to do when i graduate with some near meaningless degree in April.

Speaking of beginning to live out what has been said by the bands you've listened to for so many years, i think that's sort of where i was trying to go with this blog. It's like i have a philosophy on life, the foundation is set in stone, whats left is to build the structure. That foundation has been shaped in an aspect by punk but also many other things that happen and affect a person throughout life.

I'm at the point now where i don't want to hear the same worn out stuff, in large part i'll only listen to what complies with my belief system, i feel like I'm cheating myself otherwise. It might seems close minded or presumptuous but i think there comes a point where the "philosophy" pushed by punk music, if it can even be called that, takes a back seat not necessarily to priorities but to a seeking of deeper meaning in life.

Mike said...

I was so disappointed when I picked up that Battery album. I remember a story that the Ten Yard Fight guys told me about Ken Olden telling them that he can write hardcore songs in about 5 minutes, and this album really sounds like they did just that...it sounds rushed. For me, it really lacks all the passion and urgency of their second album...whos name completely escapes me right now.