Tuesday, August 10, 2010

The Dils - Dils Dils Dils (Comp from '91, Bacchus Archives)


One of the earliest explicitly political punk bands from California, the Dils in their short lifespan had an impact on the developing punk scenes in both L.A. and San Francisco before splitting in 1980. Despite being very obvious about their world views the Dils did not deliver their message overtop overtly hard-hitting material as one might expect from a political punk band. Instead their material has a strong pop songwriting sensibility, however the vocal delivery remains very much in-your-face, so the attitude prevents them from falling into new wave territory. The Dils are like a more political version of other bands of the time like fellow Californians the Weirdos, the Zeros, and the Urinals or across the country in Boston (Nervous Eaters, DMZ, La Peste).


Much of the early first-wave punk bands who were political instead of arty were usually too ambiguous, nihilistic or inarticulate in their outspokenness, but with the Dils you can hear the early rumblings of a much more focused and progressive political agenda in punk that would later fully develop in the hardcore movement. This comp from 1991 is the best place to start with this band, as everyone from early punk icons like DOA and Dead Kennedys to more modern bands like Dillinger Four have cited the Dils as an obscure but strong influence. This compilation is the best place to go for this band, as it compiles all of their singles and studio tracks such as the terrific "I Hate the Rich" and "Class War" plus a great live set featuring some great songs the band weren't able to record before breaking up and a rip through the Velvet Underground's "What Goes On" as well.



Monday, August 2, 2010

The Pink Fairies - Never Never Land (1971, Polydor)


Along with bands like the Groundhogs, the Fugs, the Monks, and Amon Duul, the Pink Fairies were one of the most radical and free spirited psychedelic rock bands of their era, not just musically but also in their advocation of staging free concerts, unabashed drug use and pre-punk hippie squat culture. Dropping out, indeed. The album even opens with a track entitled "Do It" clearly channeling Jerry Rubin, however limiting the Pink Fairies to being steeped in drug culture doesn't give them enough credit for how radical and later influential they were. When listening to this album it's much more comfortable to place this next to the Stooges than the Dead, and it's certainly less dated than alot of other music of the period. Never Never Land is not only an excellant slab of psychedelic and proto-metal freak outs but the band also occasionally has a certain proto-punk sensibility particularly on the track "Teenage Rebel" which is every bit a foreshadowing of punk as the Stooges in its straight forward angsty approach.