The Blood Brothers
Photo credit: Martyn Atkins
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Tying a Noose of Piano Wire Around the Throat of the Past
With television a fluorescent tombstone and radio singing music's
eulogy, our culture has sauntered into a state of emotional poverty and
intellectual deprivation. Propaganda fills our heads like a landfill.
People are exploited, sex and politics corrupted, art tarnished. In
spite of all this, rock 'n' roll's nihilistic voice has been stitched
shut, wandering a depressing landscape: still astray in the darkness of
Nirvana's shadow, riddled with swollen egos and over-inflated poseurs.
The disease of rap-metal and the lingering illness of MC5-mimicry now
stunt rock's growth, limits it to its rudimentary DNA.
"You don't need a doctor, honey/ You need a mortician." This is what
Johnny Whitney stammered at the end of the Blood Brothers' 2000 debut
album, and no one envisioned that he, along with his four musical
arsonists, would end up morticians to the benign corpse of rock. The
Blood Brothers new album, Burn Piano Island, Burn -- equal parts
cathartic release and beautiful chaos -- is rerouting the course of punk
music.
But the Blood Brothers' postmodern punk rock is slaughtering more than
just music and its typical conventions (although those too are being
torched and charred). It's ravaging our deteriorating culture and
torching society's dollar-driven distortion of sex, media and politics.
Like a musical synthesis of William Burroughs, the avant-garde, At the
Drive-In, androgyny, The Shape of Punk to Come, surrealist
poetry, and Noam Chomsky, the Blood Brothers have assembled an album in
Burn Piano Island, Burn that transcends stereotypes and trends.
Words can hardly describe their punk-noise, with lyrics that read like a
dystopian novella, and sounds like a rock'n'roll Armageddon. But this
culture crash was no accident.
Carving Out the Hymn in Skin
The caustic punk rock roots of the Blood Brothers reach back to their
high school days when the 15-year-olds were slaughtering their first
victims at basement shows. After their first material appeared on Home
Alive -- a Seattle stationed anti-violence organization and advocate for
human rights -- they tore apart the West Coast scene both onstage and on
vinyl. With one self-titled seven-inch and a split with Chicago's
Milemarker, the Blood Brothers hacked these hardcore building blocks to
construct Burn Piano Island, Burn: an album that can glue empty
souls back together and fill the gaping holes of our culture.
Contrary to nostalgic-rock rewinders, this revolutionary gash in rock's
now soft commercial skin doesn't take place in hipster scenes or hype
avenues. Instead, this fire-breathing Seattle quintet exorcised their
hardcore demons and hacked two albums of rough, jagged, brutal punk rock
that bore no relation to the drivel being passed by MTV under the same
pop-prefixed genre label. Arguably just avant-hardcore prerequisites to
the society ravaging neutron bomb that is Burn Piano Island,
Burn, This Adultery is Ripe (2000) and last year's March
on Electric Children, were both equally equipped to drop jaws and
scar ears.
However, the large evolutionary leaps taken by those LPs were more than
mere vertebrae in Piano Island's spine, as each release has
carved its own dynamic, abrasive niche into the hardcore canon. In
retrospect, co-vocalist Jordan Blilie now pinpoints This Adultery
as "too poppy" and Electric Children as "more metal." That is, if
the pop he speaks of spews genre-corroding acid rather than saccharine
and the metal referenced is sent through filters of dystopia and
nihilism.
Still, March on Electric Children holds the vital metamorphosis
from hardcore traditionalists to avant-garde extremists. That album was
a conceptual post-hardcore opus which chronicled media's degradation of
humanity, sex and thought. Much of Piano Island's surrealist
vision has its roots entrenched in the disc's nine songs. Replete with a
cast of surrealist lyrical characters -- for example, Mr. Electric Ocean
(the mass-media) and the skin army (the superficial populace) -- the
Blood Brothers have now abandoned the premise of a concept album in
order to outline society's impoverished moral values and destroy them accordingly.
But even the name that bears the title of their ArtistDirect Records
debut -- Piano Island -- traces its lineage through the lyrics of
Electric Children and into a song title surfacing on This
Adultery. "On our first record it started as just a fictional place,
but now it's evolved into an embodiment of everything exploitative and
disgusting in our world. And [Burn Piano Island, Burn] is getting
rid of it," Blilie promises.
Sealed Inside are Secrets Screaming to Speak
Needless to say, however brilliant the Blood Brothers' two noisy
culture-shock discs were and however raw their early spine-extracting
hardcore vinyl experiments, this new album multiplies it all by ten.
Burn, Piano Island, Burn is more daring, fully developed,
incendiary, and just plain staggering than the thousands of bands aping
the Velvet Underground's lo-fi pre-punk or posing as new Stooges. The
problem is, what those creatively bankrupt bands lack, the Blood
Brothers recapture in influence and motivation. They mutate and distort
it, chew it and spit it out into a new, postmodern form of fucked-up
punk rock where its musical knives are as sharp as its mind. Just listen
to the 37-second opening track, "Guitarmy" and you'll realize no other
record in ages has been this simultaneously intelligent, tenacious,
visceral and vital as they so brashly proclaim that they'll send our
culture into a car crash: "We wrapped your Corvette in cellophane, set
it aflame . . . / We doused your TV set in propane."
However, what makes Burn Piano Island, Burn a profoundly
revolutionary record is its sheer subversion: it destroys norms and
preconceptions setting everything aflame from the inside out. The Blood
Brothers extract all the thick-headed testosterone and tough guy
masculinity that used to be a prerequisite to hardcore, they play
without an ounce of highbrow pretension and they produce a new
form of culture, not just eat up its remains. And, unlike that other
major-label "underground" band the Strokes, the Blood Brothers could
actually inflict a cerebral rupture on the music industry. That's right:
Piano Island has surfaced on major label radar (ArtistDirect) and
was funded by the very corporate puppet strings the Blood Brothers
assault in their lyrics.
Directly retaliating against all indie elitists and hardcore fascists,
the Blood Brothers realize that their dystopian punk-noise will heal
more hearts and eradicate more cultural cancer by using a major label's
reach and magnitude. Imagine if Nirvana ignored Geffen's offers -- what
beacon of recent rock would flicker its light of hope? By subverting
trite indie trends the revolution is now fully accessible: Burn Piano
Island, Burn -- while more indie than the indie rockers and more
punk than the punk rockers -- smolders with a potential energy to burst
corporate rock into flames at every chain record store across America.
"Torch these hands dipped in gold lacquer" sneers the title track.
Even without their subversive ideals, transcendent noisy qualities and
intellectualism, the Blood Brothers' caustic grooves, mind mincing
guitars and avant-garde experimentation simultaneously accelerates punk
rock into the future while hearkening back to its original dissonant and
destructive origins. But it's the twin vocal turbines that light the
fuse: Johnny Whitney and Jordan Blilie instigate Piano Island's
musical monsoon by personifying caffeine in their hair-raising,
vein-splitting vocal desecration that is more brains than brawn and even
a bit gender-bending in its anti-manly sound. Hissing and spewing lines
back and forth, the two rail-thin vocalists spray mace or spit enough
sugar to send stagnant hardcore traditions trembling back into its burrow.
Call them rock 'n' roll contortionists: while Whitney spits sassy
squalls of venomous pop hooks, Blilie snarls through spoken word
surrealism and art-school screams that, together, create the most
brutally nihilistic, radically destructive style of vocals this side of
Raw Power. And the interplay between the two is simply
astounding: songs such as "Six Nightmares at the Pinball Masquerade"
find Whitney jolting and jerking from the sassy, effeminate pop squeals
of, "Can you feel your sweat beading porcelain?/ Your skeleton
outgrowing its skin?," into Blilie shredding any remnants of musical
coherence with anarchic screeches and screams before slinking into a
whisper of tempo-halting, free verse poetry. The dichotomy of
bone-breaking screaming and jittery pop shrieking is like nothing rock
or any of its inert subgenres has ever heard -- and there is beauty in
its brutal destruction. Unpredictably violent and spastically catchy,
the two throats chew the traditional hardcore vocal structure into
tatters as they spit a grotesquely poetic ode to how people cloak
themselves in lies and fake personae. Surrealism coats their words --
"The maitre d's quiver as they watch you shiver as the mask and mouth
knit into each other.../ I saw the mirrors cringe/ The choir voices
bend/ The costume in my skin" -- as the band raptures between frenetic
mayhem, irresistible hooks and riotous energy while transcending all the
genres that've shackled rock.
But after the vocal shrapnel breaks necks and stereotypes alike,
Piano Island is the first Blood Brothers' album to feature an
instrumental equivalent to their vocal arsenal that is at once an
antidote to everything rock isn't and everything it should be. Although
they layer their auditory anarchy with bass lines that stab your brain
and writhe in your body, wiry guitars layered as dense as concrete and
drums that fracture both bones and beats, Piano Island is also
replete with pianos, synthesizers, acoustics and glockenspiels to create
a brutal sonic playground that expands (and explodes) your mind. As
drummer Mark Gajadhar explains, "I get bored after about four measures,
so I have to keep everything changing just to keep myself happy. If I
didn't have that, I'd probably have to quit the band." This need for
creative release and yearning for cathartic invention is what plunges
the Blood Brothers' insights into the depths of humanity to make an
musical alloy that is both radically dynamic and continually threatening
to rock's trite traditions.
The evidence seethes in every aural inch, but the Blood Brothers'
visionary prophecies become clear and vividly terrifying in Piano
Island's closing song. "The Shame" epitomizes the Blood Brothers'
conquest -- both musically and ideologically. "From these cliffs you can
see the whole city laid out groveling like a field of wounded soldiers/
The billboards in heat and hissing/ The sky scrapers stitching the gash
of the earth/ As they waltz the broken dance of their limbs/ Their
ballroom has been groped by so many evil whims." As Whitney sputters
these lines, the band collapses into a clash of the avant-garde and the
post-hardcore, an obstacle course between our everyday exploitations and
the strength to survive them. This is their shame (and their
inspiration): the world we live in.
The Fornication of Fear and Flames
Ultimately, the Blood Brothers are simply far too good for their own
health -- and yours. They channel the Velvet Underground's nihilistic
voice instead of merely imitating it. They accelerate the Clash's
self-titled debut and Wire's Pink Flag up the speed of light, but
they don't clip their riffs or rip off its proto-punk shriek. And the
conclusion here is clear: the Blood Brothers inject much needed
subversion into lukewarm corporate-rock world (and they do this from
inside the industry's walls). They abolish trends and stereotypes (and
dismantle the enforced structure that such trends create -- both
musically and ideologically). They turn punk rock back into an
intellectual force (by stripping the rotting skin of our society to
reveal a decayed corpse).
But heed my warning: Burn Piano Island, Burn is addictive and
lethal. The Blood Brothers are saviors to a generation sick and fucking
tired of choking on testosterone rock, weary of having their eyes
polluted by a Hollywood screen, pissed at seeing sex, media and art
being bought out by the largest dollar sign. I'm convinced these sounds
won't just abort every other band who think they are playing important
heavy music, but they'll unite the alienated, give hope to the suicidal
and rejuvenate the depressed.
Burn Piano Island, Burn is an escape, a cathartic cure for
emotional impurity and cultural decay. It's an ear-shattering wake up
call to the mass-media toxic waste dump we call television and radio;
shock therapy for a culture sauntering into an ignorant, cold slumber.
Has your blood turned into antifreeze? Has your heart contracted into
concrete? Does your mind dream in dollar signs? The sleepwalk ends when
Burn Piano Island, Burn meets your ears.
2 June 2003