Tuesday, September 29, 2009

RORSCHACH. Sept 24th 2009. Asbury Lanes. AP. NJ.







The first time I heard Rorschach was in 1991.
My friend Greg was driving to Ocean County Mall so we could sit around and look at girls. Maybe pick up a new cassette at Camelot music and wonder why life was so boring in the suburbs.

Greg always liked to show off some music he thought you hadn't heard and would blow your mind. He played me Rorschach and at that time it was just to much for me. I can't remember why exactly, it was just dark and depressing.

Later on it was their cover of King Crimson that would make me appreciate them and revisit the cassette Greg had played for me. In any event I never saw Rorschach and when I heard they were playing a few shows 15 years later (or so) I wanted to go.

Asbury Lanes is always a good spot to see a band as you can get up nice and close. It has an intimate setting that makes for a great vibe.
The opening bands were 2 of NJ's current crop of bands.

Torchbearer plays tight hardcore that reminds me of that early 90's vibe where people were being a little more creative with the tunes. They played a great set that night and the drummers crushing performance certainly left an impression.

Black Kites played next. A 3 piece with a guitar player, drummer and vocalist. With no bass player I was surprised how full they sounded. The guitar work was great. Unique and harsh with a great tone. Solid beats and vocals dancing from screaming, speaking and death metal grunts. Very cool shit.

Rorschach was up last and when they got up there I couldn't help think..."man these guys look aged".

But then these aged punk rockers proceeded to rip my face off and damage my ear drums with a heavy dark riff based assault. Damn! These guys should keep playing! ...and write a new record.
The show was solid from start to finish. Rorschach proving to me why I was blessed to be part of the late 80's early 90's era. The shit was that good back then and still holds up.

Photo's: Shawn Zappo

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Friday, July 31, 2009

BLUE GREEN. Film Trailer.

A film about Spirituality, The Ocean and Surfing.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Sam Hammer and Clay Pollini. November 2008 Surf Sesh.

I didn't film this but I stumbled upon it and was really stoked on the surfing. Both Clay and Sam are some of the best high performance surfers NJ has to offer. In the late fall the water and air get colder. The wetsuits thicker but the waves simply get less crowded and better. These guys make surfing with all these seemingly rugged conditions like they are in warm water and in boardies. Enjoy.

November in New Jersey from Interzone To Atlantis on Vimeo.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

MEAT IS FOR PUSSIES.

MEAT IS FOR PUSSIES is a new book that is in the works from legendary NYHC mainstay John "Bloodclot" Joseph. Obviously the title is a play on what so many Vegans and Vegetarians have heard for years from the muscle head types..."That shit's for Pussies". Bloodclot plans to dismiss the bogus ideas the unknowingly ingnorant have about the Vegetarian/Vegan lifetyle in regards to Health, Environment, etc.
Here is a little teaser promo video for the upcoming book.

Monday, May 4, 2009

AMENITY. SHINE

New video from AMENITY for their new song SHINE. The video is super inspiring as this band has come back from about a 15 year hiatus. No one does it like the old folks it seems. Deeper Roots indeed!

Shine from Amenity on Vimeo.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

JUDGE. Unfinished Documentary.

Judge are easily one of the most popular, most emulated and many times most misunderstood Straight Edge bands of the late 80's. 
Judge was over the top and I think it's safe to say that was the intent. Crushing metallic Straight Edge hardcore New York style. 
Judge was many times lyrically harsh but there was also a dive into deeper emotions that young males especially could relate to (and maybe wasn't being spoken about enough at that time, nor in that format). 
I think that may be one reason the band resonated with so many different people and continues to be relevant today. Along with the hard stance on Straight Edge that some may take or leave, there was a genuine expression of the trials, pain and frustration that can be part of becoming a "man" so to speak.  
I caught this video on Tim McMahon's Blog DOUBLE CROSS. Def check the zine, it's got much quality content. 
Here it is. The unfinished JUDGE documentary.


Thursday, January 22, 2009

1.25.09. SHAC 7 BENEFIT in NJ. Asbury Lanes.


The SHAC 7 Benefit show is coming up this Sunday. 10 bands for $12. Raffles, great cause, good vibes.
Please come out and support this event so we can do more in the future.
See you there. Peace.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

MIKE VALLELY. 4 OLD VIDEO PARTS.

In 1992 Mike Vallely and Ed Templeton started TV skateboards or TELEVISION.
This is the 1992 promo. Notice the first part is from my home town at our local park from the early 90's. Brick was much cooler in the early 90's for the simple fact of that parks existence.

Find more videos like this on My Berrics

The footage is from NEW DEAL's 1991 video 1281. One on Mike's best video parts in my opinion. Skating to Dan O'Mahoney's (of NO FOR AN ANSWER/SPEAK fame)band 411.
That's all I gotta say. Watch the part, it speaks for it self.

Find more videos like this on My Berrics

World Industries infamous first video...RUBBISH HEAP. 1990.

Find more videos like this on My Berrics

This is from SPEED FREAK's which came out in 1989. Mike had already left Powell Peralta and helped form World Industries with Steve Rocco and Rodney Mullen. Mike is riding his famous Farm House deck. Skating to "Freak Scene" by skater loved grungy indie rockers Dinosaur Jr.

Find more videos like this on My Berrics

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

BAD BRAINS. THE DOCUMENTARY.

Anyone who knows me even semi well knows I love the BAD BRAINS. In fact they are one of my all time favorite bands...ever! The Bad Brains had it's initial roots in the late 70's as a jazz-fusion group dubbed MIND POWER. After hearing some punk records they decided to apply the skill they had as musicians to making punk rock at double the speed and 5 times the intensity. Later coupled with their devout Rastafarian beliefs, insane live show, Frontman HR's unpredictable and what many may call "strange" nature and a sound all their own Bad Brains became arguably one of the most important rock bands of the last 3 decades. The reach can be felt in many bands. From Jane's Addiction to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Fishbone, Deftones, Sublime, Beastie Boys and many others. BAD BRAINS plain and simple are the real shit!
A documentary film on the BAD BRAINS is currently in the works. Judging by this teaser footage this is going to be amazing.
Bad Brains_teaser

Monday, January 19, 2009

Heiroglyphics. A New Era. 1.20.09



Everyone that is really into buying cd's and dvd's knows they drop on Tuesdays. It's Monday night and tomorrow is the release date of HEIROGLYPHICS new full length "A New Era". It's a reacourring theme in most of the shit I write. The connection between Hip Hop, Punk, Metal...just all real music and Skateboarding. I first heard Del from a kid in my class in High School. Then through a skate video, namely 411 (it felt like they were in every video for like a year) I heard Soul's of Mischief. For many 93' Till Infinity was the hip hop skate soundtrack that year. You heard those songs in your head when you skated. The summer of 2003 I was living out in California, playing music and working at a Virgin Megastore. I picked this up from work when it came in. I got a lot of good Hip Hop there that summer...back to the point. I picked Heirolyphics new record Full Circle up while working there and it and is one of the best Hip Hop albums of the decade album, front to back. Heiroglyphics is Del, Souls of Mischief crew (Phesto, Tajai, Opio and A-Plus. Heiro is all the above as well as Casual, Domino and Pep Love (pick up Pep Love. Acension).
I've been waiting for a new record to take my head off like Full Circle did in 2003. So it goes without saying.

1.20.09. HEIROGLYPHICS "A NEW ERA"

Sunday, January 18, 2009

THE MIKE VALLELY INTERVIEW.




Being from New Jersey Mike Valley was always the man in my eyes. He had a raw style, attack and bag of tricks all his own. He is arguably the first pro "Street Skater" (at the time...for lack of a better term) to make it from New Jersey which made him an idol to many. When I was a kid, I'll be the first to admit...Mike was like a God to me. Now as an adult I look at Mike as a great inspiration. Someone who has followed his dreams and lived them out. Not many people have the balls to do that and Mike continues to pursue life with the vigor of a wide eyed teen ager. Heading towards 40 Mike still destroys on a skate on any terrain put before him. He is a family man, a touring musician, Hockey player and someone who no matter what the naysayers had to offer continues to walk his own path in the world of Skateboarding and beyond.


It's been almost 6 years since the last time I've interviewed and as per usual with you, you have a ton of shit going on. So the first thing I want to touch on is the root of it all for you which I would suspect is Skateboarding. It's insane because when I was a kid it seemed there was no life for a skater passed 25 let alone 35 but it seems you just keeping going. You have worked hard and have been blessed to be one of the few who have made a solid career for almost over 2 decades.So my question is where are you at now with 2008 coming to a close with Skateboarding?

Thanks man. Yeah, I've been doing this a long time but you know I still love it and value it as much as the day I started. The actual act of riding and what I get out of it and what it means to me has never changed. Professionally, through the years, I've been up and down, championed and shit on -- that's just the way it goes, especially when you don't play by the rules. I just try to find a way to participate and be a link in the chain every step of the way and I don't really pay much mind to what the industry is churning out. I'm too busy and too focused on my own skating, on my own projects.

Last time we spoke at length it was after a Mike V and The Rats show you had played with Greg Ginn, I believe in Santa Monica. I dug The Rats stuff but I have to say Revolution Mother is a huge progression and I'm glad to see the band is doing so well for you. What are the plans for the band this upcoming year. Record releases, touring, etc???

I think 2009 will be a good year for Revolution Mother for sure. We will start recording a new record in January and hope to have it out by late spring where we will begin touring the world in support of that record. We feel primed after almost two years of touring to really make a great record and be able to support it with a rocking show that no one in attendance will forget.

Now in addition to Skateboarding and Music you have all this other stuff happening. Man, you are like a fucking machine. I heard you etched a deal with The Anaheim Ducks and it's pretty well known you are a pretty big hockey fan and player. What exactly is the deal and how did that come about?

I'm not a machine, just an intensified and inspired individual. I believe we only get one time around in this life and I'm not about to waste a minute of it. I get up early and I give it my all across the board all day long. You know, I just love life and I go about staying in love with life by doing what I want to do and pursuing my passions. Hockey is and has been a great passion of mine and from that this relationship with the=2 0Ducks has formed. Being a Ducks fan, one thing lead to another where I now have a mini-reality style TV show that airs on Ducks broadcasting, I do a blog on their website and I am coming out with a cobranded line of apparel with the Ducks and Element that will be sold exclusively at the Ducks Team Store at the Honda Center in Anaheim. On top of all of that I am pursuing playing in a professional hockey game or games in the ECHL or with any league that will take me.



Alright man, as if all this wasn't enough you got in a movie Mall Cop. I've seen the trailer and it looks pretty damn funny. When is the movie coming out, how was the whole experience and do you plan on doing any more acting ventures in the future?


Paul Blart: Mall Cop starring Kevin James hits theaters on January, 16. It was a great experience working on the film and I feel like it's going to be a really good, well received movie. I feel great about my role and work in the film and I can't wait to see it. I definitely plan on pursuing more acting and stunt work in the future, I found it agreeable with me for sure.

What about the wrestling, you were going hard with that for a while and imagine somewhat like skateboarding it has to be pretty brutal on the body. Is that something you are still doing or has that been put to the side with all these new projects?

I haven't wrestled in a long time. It was something I did at a certain level at a certain time just to do it. I would definitely wrestle again, I still love and watch and am a fan of professional wrestling. If I could work with the WWE at some point I would drop everything and do it.

I was watching the Drive dvd and noticed when you were in Africa you were eating what looked like meat. Yourself, Ed Templeton, the influence of hardcore music and Eastern Philosophy turned me onto vegetarianism in 1991. But the first initial thought of it was when I heard you were and at that point it was almost something I had never heard of. I was just wondering is that a dietary choice you still follow somewhat or have you decided it no longer makes sense for you at this point in your life?


I've been eating meat since 1999. I would say I have a pretty well balanced diet at this point in my life and that although I eat animal products I'm still a very conscientious eater, maybe even more so then when I was a vegetarian. I was a vegetarian since 1988 and a vegan for several years but those dietary choices were more like religious subscriptions than dietary or health decisions. When the hold of the cult of vegetarianism got old for me my diet changed and I think and feel in many ways it's personally for the better. The vegetarian diet never actually agreed with me physically so it was a very hard thing to maintain for nearly 11 years.




When we spoke in 2003 it was post 9-11 and the country was in a pretty crazy state. I thought you had a lot of thoughtful things to say in reference to the political and social climate that was present at that point in the United States. I'm curious how you are feeling now with Bush finally exiting the White House, Barak Obama entering and all the challenges this country now faces?


Politics absolutely bore the hell out of me. I don't really value the people, processes or propaganda associated with any of it. I don't care who the president is, I don't care what the political or social climate is, I don't have time for the rat race -- not one ounce of my energy gets spent on any of it anymore. I'm more interested in true freedom, true liberation and I don't see politics as an answer. No government, so system and no political or religious ideal can solve any of our problems. It all comes down to the individual. I'm only interested in individual revolution -- that's the only thing that matters.

Ok those were to serious questions in a row. Maybe I need to lighten the mood a bit. Mike, tell me about the insane hair growth. You went full on gnar rock star with it. You got the Hesh hair and beard going on. You were always the dude with the shaved head. What prompted the hair farming?

I broke my leg three years ago and I was laid up for awhile, the hair just started growing. But more so, I just wanted and needed a change. Just when you think you've got me figured out... well, I go and change it up.

How is the family doing? Everyone knows you are a solid family man and for us fathers out here you are an inspiring guy. You have a ton of creative things going down but you still maintain the family. How do you do it because I imagine it can be hard.

The most important thing is being consistent. The same energy and passion I put into my skating and music or whatever it is I'm doing -- I put that same energy and passion or more so into my home life. Beyond that, I have an amazing wife who covers for me and who supports me and believes in me. It's really not hard at all -- or I don't look at it that way. This is my life, these are choices I made, I embrace each moment and give it my all, nothing hard about that, that's just my life, that's just what is required of me.


So that's all I have for you today. Any last words, shouts, etc?

Thanks for the time my friend, it's appreciated.


Mike I wish you a great 2009 man. Thanks for the interview and 20 years of inspiration.

Thank you.

THE BELMAR SKATE CREW. 1995. NJ, Philly, NYC.

You may have seen this video as I know I have posted it on my previous Blog DESTROY BABYLON. I'm putting it here for archive purposes and for that fact that once in a while I enjoy watching it.
It takes me back to a simpler time when you could work all day, then drive to the city of your choice and skate till 2 am. Get home @ 4 am, hit work the next morning and do it all again.
We had some great times. But I'm not living in the past. I still skate today, not like I did when I was 25 but I still get out there and do what I can do at 35. The point is just to do it for the reason you fucking started, to have fun and be creative.
The skaters in this video are Don Binaco, Myself (Shawn Zappo), Brian Binaco and a very young Tim Plunket (1 Trick).
Enjoy.

THE GAVIN VAN VLACK INTERVIEW. PART 1.



Gavin Van Vlack is arguably one of the most creative and influential guitarists to come out of the New York Hardcore Scene of the late 80's early 90's. Playing in many bands from the Young Republicans to Side by Side, New York Hoods, Absolution, Burn, Die 116, Pry and Big Collapse...Gavin has been creating music longer than some of his fans have been alive. The first time I got to see Gavin crush on stage with a guitar was with Burn in 1991. I was already a huge fan of Absolution and Burn was the next evolution of that vibe, I would blast a cassette recording of the 7" in gym class and people didn’t know what to think. For the time the shit was some of the harshest shit out. Still to this day Burn stands the test of time as many hardcore records get filed in the “forgettable” section. Recently Gavin did a reunion show with Absolution at the Knitting Factory in NYC and they were amazing. The show had an eclectic mix of people and you could fell those old vibes that made hardcore such an amazing force in the past.


I met with Gavin in August and we sat down at a local spot in Brooklyn and had an hour long conversation. Gavin always had an intimidating aura while on stage but face to face he is one of the most down to earth, chill cats I have met in recent years.
I’m glad to have had the chance to chat with him and I hope we hear more from him and his Les Paul in the future. Be on the look for a few more Absolution shows coming up in the near future. I hope you enjoy the interview as much as I did.
Peace.




How did you get involved with playing music?


Music was always there, when I was brought up as a kid music was always around the house. There were always instruments. There was always a guitar around the house and it was never “Don’t touch my guitar”. It was something to play around with. Kids are inherently drawn to rhythm. If you put a baby around something with a beat you’ll see they’ll start to move and that’s just how I was as a kid. I was fascinated by it. I’ve always been one those people who wanted a little bit more and I was raised in Vermont, New Hampshire where there was always a little bit less. I’m not saying that to dis on Vermont, New Hampshire but I was one of those people who was like, “What’s next???” What’s the next thing? There was always this void I was trying to fill and music did it. First it was music. Then it was Rock! The earliest stuff for me was Glen Campbell and that was fucking glamorous to me. My first live show and it was accidental was Waling Jennings and it was at a Roadhouse spot he would play all the time. They were up on stage and people loved them. I gotta be real, that was a draw to it. People always think and talk about music...and I try to keep it as real as possible because it is an art form and I do look at it like that. But when you are a kid at that age and you see these people...you’re like WOW! Like Kiss cause back then...not this new Kiss that came up in the past decade but the real Love Gun, that era Kiss. There was that fantastic bigger then life Kiss. Kiss, Alice Cooper. One of the most monumental albums in my life was Pink Floyd’s The Wall. Even though that is one of the most anti-rock rock records ever.

There was just so much stuff. Black Sabbath. Early Ozzy Osbourne with Randy Rhodes because I cannot stomach anything after that. When he turned into the soccer mom, that whole shit I didn’t acknowledge. People can be like, “Gavin is being a snob again” but the Randy Rhodes era stuff is the quintessential Ozzy Osbourne. That was the real shit that made him and the other shit was ehhhhhhhhhh.

I grew up in Vermont and it was a slate mining town and there really wasn’t anything there. I remember being into AC/DC and people calling that punk rock. Lord forbid when I found out about The Ramones, X, Spizz and what was really punk rock back then. Circle Jerks! Oh forget it! You may as well call it a day, write 666 on your forehead because you are punk rock. You jumped around on glass and all this shit. To me it was so much different. I am an iconoclast by nature and I’m not saying that so that Gavin is Mr. Different. No! I’m trendy. I’m super fucking trendy because when everyone follows one path I’m garunteed to walk the other way. I’m absolutley predictable. An iconoclast is. Where not that different, we just don’t want to follow the same path. I feel ridiculous bringing up that word because I’ve used it for a long time. Now I guess it’s a big ad campaign for a shoe company which it is, it’s just funny.
But yeah that was it. Music got me into music. Music...honestly. But then it was the fantastic that really kept me there. That was the thing with Kiss, you saw this big rock show and there was that dark side that was introduced through punk rock. Stuff like that. It was like...ahhhhhhhhh, this is cool. This is real friggin’ cool! These guys don’t care, they are playing balls out and it was beautiful. It was absolutley beautiful.

When did you get to NYC?


We moved down to the city in 1981. My mom had cancer, they moved to the suburbs because they realized it wasn’t smart to take a kid who was originally raised in the swamp and throw him in the ghetto. I got into some trouble real quick. Then I moved upstate and went to school up in Westchester. I was always coming down to the city because that’s where all the shows were.
I was constantly between NYC and Stanford/Norwalk. Everyone remembers it is as the Anthrax but I remember when the Anthrax was in Stanford and the Sheridan Brothers owned it. It was a basement of an Art Gallery they ran next to an abandoned gas station. I remember seeing the Chilli Peppers there on their first tour. 7 Seconds would play there on the regular. It was like they lived in the next town they were there so much. Then all the great CT. Bands that were out at the time...Vatican Commando’s, Violent Children, Reflex from Pain, 76% Uncertain...there were so many great bands. CT. Punk rock bands are almost completely unknown now and many were groundbreaking bands. At that point it was the whole east coast corridor from D.C. to Boston. Everyone talks about the violence, this, that and the other thing. I want to talk about the bands! I want to talk about Eye for an Eye, Wrecking Crew, Swiz...all the bands...there are so many. Bands that people don’t even remember anymore. God, just think about the Pagan Babies from Philly! They were really out there and is I like to put it “On the Tar”. We were out there playing from town to town. I don’t care if you can set us up in your basement, We’ll play! That was a really big part of it. I got down to NYC in 1981. So I was a young kid. One of the first things I remember seeing was John Golden/Wrecking Machine in this denim jacket, 7 inch nails sticking out of it. I was thinking, “Oh my Lord, this guys is scary”. He was a huge kid and he was Jewish. Back then there was a contingency of White Power Skinheads and John didn’t take any shit. He was very vocal and combatant to all that stuff. I remember seeing guys like him and Vic Venom who was the guitar player from Nausea. I remember the first time I saw Vic he had this Venom jacket which was just the most awesome thing in the world, he had soaked out hair and it was just like he was the coolest guy in the world. He was one of the best punk rock musicians... actually he is one of the best musicians I’ve ever known in general. The guy can play anything and make it sound amazing. He just has always been able to do that. He is a very humble, humble, humble cat on top of that, which is pretty hard to find. For some of us punk rock hardcore kids, we’ve taken this style of music and we just think we are the shit. We think we are fucking amazing...God bless us and Fuck us!


What was the first band you played in?


First band I ever played in was around 1983 with John Porcelly from Youth of Today, Sam Collins who runs a production company on the West Coast now. He does production and mixing for a lot of Alt/Art type groups. Everyone knows Porcell from Youth of Today, Judge and Shelter. The band was called the Young Republicans, we used to play the Anthrax. We played aq bunch of High School parties and stuff like that. That was the really legitimate first hardcore band I did. It was generic three cord hardcore but the reason they liked me was I had started playing guitar a long time ago and I had a very, very metal influence. I saw Metallica on the “Kill em All” tour. I saw Raven, I saw Anthrax when the first singer Neil was with them. I was a metal kid! Metal kids...we became Hardcore kids. But metal kids...we basically sat in our bedrooms and practiced a lot and got really fucking good and that was kinda it. We were nerds!
We listened to records religiously and learned them note for fucking note. I don’t even think I’m a fraction of how technically good I was between the ages of 16 and 19. Then from 19 to 24 I got really out there and really weird. I consider that a different type of good but not the technical prowess I once had. I think my song writing ability is much better as I realize I don’t need to play as much now to put something across. But at that point it was like “Let’s get this guy, he is outstanding” and it was great. I was playing with this band, I was the best musician in the band but they much cooler then I was. Porcell went to the most un-punk High School in the world....John Jay. He was a punk rock kid but I remember seeing him because he played football. He had taken his pads off and underneath he was wearing a Sex Pistols shirt. I was like this guys is so fucking cool, he is riding both sides of the fence. Porcell was always that guy. Ever since I’ve known him he has been that guy. Super even keel, super sweet, super honest...a real Human Being! There was a point when my mother had passed away and I was living from place to place and Porcell used to sneak me into his parents house. I would sleep on the floor next to his bed until his Pop “The Big V” caught me and kicked me out at 2am. Porcell has always been a really good friend and always looked out. So yeah..the Young Republicans was the the first legit hardcore band I was ever in.

(More coming soon, be on the look. This is about 13 minutes of an hour interview. Much more to come!)

THE ROB FISH INTERVIEW.




Rob is originally from New Jersey and has been doing bands before I even knew what hardcore was. The first band of his I saw was Resurrection @ Middlesex County College. The mixed the newer 90's sound with a ferocious Rollins era Black Flag feel. Not exactly in sound. But Rob was and is brutal on the vocals. I'm not even saying he sounds like Rollins, he doesn't. I'm just saying that dark feel. It just had a darker emotional content and feel which reminded me of Black Flag. Anyway...Rob now fronts 108 which at this point is a legendary hardcore band that returned from the dead but is still creating new records that rival their previous. 108 will be on tour this Spring. I suggest if you have never seen them, do it. If you have, then you already know the deal.

What were some of your earliest musical inspirations and when did you realize you wanted to make music?


As a kid I wasn't all that huge on music until around 1981. Up to that point I heard whatever my Mom played and even though I really love some of what I heard from my mother and am still influenced by it today it really wasn't until 1981 that I got lost in music. The first record that really hit me was The Message by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. Although my social circumstances were rather different than theirs the sense of desperation and urgency in The Message really hit me hard. By the age on 9 I had already experienced so much fucked up shit in my life from sexual abuse, to the suicide of family members, to finding my Mother after having tried to commit suicide that I had already developed a very deep seeded sense of loneliness and desperation. It wasn't until the late 90's that I could even deal with these things in a direct manner or even understand the magnitude of it all and how heavily it played into my life and who I was but with that said it was my connection with The Message that really gave me access to music as a way to cope with what I was feeling even if just on a general level. From there I really got into hip hop. Then in 1985, when I started high school, I had this kid in my shop class that I knew when I was younger. We were at the same table and didn't recognize one another for a few minutes as we hadn't seen one another in years and I didn't recognize him with his long hair and jacket covered in metal patches. After a bit we recognized one another and for the remainder of the class we talked about music and what we were into. As class was ending he gave me a cassette with Black Flag on it and as soon as I put it on it was over and I was hooked. I, of course, could relate more with punk music because the social setting was much more similar to my own and by that time Hip Hop had really started to shift in terms of lyrical content and I just felt less connected. Looking back prior to 1981 the two artists that really stuck with me were Janis Joplin and The Beatles. My mother LOVED Janis Joplin. My mother had a rough life. She was sexually abused too but also had to drop out of high school to care for her sick Mother and had a disease which, at least at the time, was both hard to diagnose and little was known about it. All of her physical struggles were chalked up to "mental issues" which simply exaggerated the mental problems she was already dealing with. I remember her singing along to Janis Joplin and there is a really heartfelt pain in that music which stuck with me. Of course The Beatles are more known for their early pop songs than anything else but they also had this deeper emotional aspect top them that I connected with. To this day Eleanor Rigby is one of my favorite songs. As far as when I wanted to make music that wasn't until 1988 because I had little talent and I certainly wasn't able to express even a small glimpse into what I had gone through or was going through so doing a band never occurred to me. Somehow Release started and I was the singer.


I didn't write much of the Release lyrics until the later songs that were on the last two ep's but regardless the emotional release in doing a band, even if the lyrics were rather generic and stupid, was important to me and helped me have an outlet for all of the pent up feelings and emotions. I know that most of it came out awkwardly and even embarrassingly to me today but it was still a healthy and important step for me.

You've been in a long list of bands over the years. Can you give us a run down of the all the bands and projects you have been a part of?

I was in Release from 1988 – 1990, Ressurection from 1991 to 1994, 108 from 1993 to 1996 and then The Judas Factor from 1998 to 2000. After that I laid low musically until 108 reformed and started recording and touring in 2005.

As someone who personally lived through some hard times and depression I always was attracted to your lyrical content. It seemed to deal with the darker side of emotion many times. If you would like tell us a bit about your own struggles with depression, darker emotions and other painful situations you may have dealt with.

Well even at a very early age I always felt very disconnected from my surroundings. I have likened it to living life like you are in a movie in that I was there, witnessing everything going on around me but felt as if I had no say in what the next scene was or what was happening tome. I felt helpless, alone and sad. When I was between the ages of 7-9 I was sexually abused which took those same feelings and dramatically increased them. I started to act out heavily because I was so angry, scared and confused and had no way to even mentally or emotionally process it all. I guess when I tried to burn down my elementary school in the fifth grade or coming home with huge lacerations on my hands from smashing windows with my hands someone should have realized I wasn't just being "a boy" but a lot was going on with my family and I think, like me, there was a general sense of denial and emotional inability to deal with everything going on. I started to have thoughts of my own suicide when the sexual abuse started because now I really felt unable to control anything and my loneliness was magnified. I never went very far with those thoughts until the early 90's because in the beginning just the thought of it, visualizing just how I would do it and what I might feel, was enough. On the outside I don't think any of my friends knew what was going on. Of course they saw my rather extreme and often erratic and unprovoked behaviors and for a long time, until the last year, I really resented them for never just pulling me aside and asking me what was wrong or doing anything to intervene. When 108 was recording our last record I wrote a song about my feelings in that regard called My Redemption Song, which was influenced by the Bob Marley song Redemption Song. It was my way to just express how hurt I was. I felt like my outbursts and erratic behavior was a form on entertainment for them. However I have come to realize over the last year that just as I was a kid unequipped to deal with the shit I was going through they too were kids dealing with their own lives and were anything but equipped to deal with anyone else's personal issues.

My Redemption Song – this is my redemption song and I've laid it out for all to see because there is no way that you can think less about me than I haven't thought about myself. This is a new day for me where I write my own story. The past is far away and it will stay that way. – this is my redemption song and I've laid it out for all to see because there is no way that you can think less about me than I haven't thought about myself. I'm gonna burn this part of me in effigy and if you're not careful I'll take you with me. Conflicted and flawed, Awkward and fucked up and you never said a word. Just watched as I implode and I can only hope it was as entertaining to you as it was painful for me. (108, A new beat from a dead heart lp, 2007)

As I said earlier lyrically it was all slow to come out as not only had I not even been able to process any of what I experienced intellectually or emotionally but I certainly had no confidence to express the little I could understand or come to terms with. I think the first song where I could express anything was one of Release's last songs called Calm before the Storm. In Ressurection I at least was able to start expressing the anger I was feeling. Fuck your Sympathy was my way to address my mothers death and I continued to at last be able to express the anger I was feeling. During my initial time with 108 I wrote very little even though I was going through hell. I would contribute ideas here and there but not whole songs until I wrote Curse of Instinct which was really important for me. It was the first time I could even express the emotional side of myself and it was a defining aspect of why I was in 108.

Curse of Instinct - Curse of instinct never knowing peace even pain is welcome when you cannot feel a thing and it only gets harder to put together the pieces that just don't fit; they just won't fit. And it only gets lonelier when you're stuck outside. Caught in that void; drown in denial and it only gets harder to fit together the pieces; it only gets lonelier when you're stuck outside. You can't fit together the pieces and you're ripped apart by the void. The emptiness in you… the emptiness in you. And I won't lie anymore; I won't hide it anymore. The emptiness, the void, the void in my heart, the you. Can you feel it? Can you feel the emptiness in you? The emptiness, the void, in you. (108, Curse of Instinct ep, 1996)



Things had really escalated in terms of the depth of my emotional issues and depression during that initial time with 108 . In 1995, in between US and European tours, is when my thoughts on suicide and my desperation came to a head. It wasn't rare during that period that I would be incapacitated for days by crushing headaches and I could do nothing but lay in a dark room and the feelings of torment were overwhelming. This time I was in pain for days until one morning I woke up feeling different. The headache was gone and I felt focused and determined to end my life. The thing was it wasn't an emotional feeling this time as I felt so calm. I woke up, got dressed and walked to Washington Square Park which was just a few minutes from where I lived. I still remember the walk. It was a beautiful day, sunny, warm and a light breeze. I swear I even heard birds singing in downtown Manhattan. I stopped at an ATM and took out the little money I made on tour and kept on to the park. When I got there I was, of course, approached by one of the many drug dealers. I told him I wanted a gun. He told me $400 which is all I had and I gave it to him. He told me to come back in an hour. I walked around the park and felt so calm and in control. An hour later I was walking back to my apartment with a small handgun. There was aspiring in my step and it was like my senses were all heightened. The beautiful summer day, the sounds and smells I encountered all felt good. I went into my apartment, wrote a short note apologizing to my father, my few friends and my wife and then sta on my bed. I took out the gun, put it in my mouth and the overwhelming sense of control, the control I had yearned for my entire life, was now in my hands and it was the most amazing and liberating feeling in the world. With that newfound sense of control I just realized I didn't need to die. I needed control. So I took the gun out of my mouth and put it in the bag I g ot it in, along with my note, walked downstairs and down to Avenue D and threw it in a dumpster. I struggled heavily with my depression for many more years to come but now, in the least, I knew I could have control and all I wanted was to find my way to having control over my life. It was at this time that I started to let go of all of the things that I had allowed to define or distract me from what I was struggling with which included the way I approached my spirituality, my relationships and everything else.

One Fine Day – One fine day, gun in hand, purpose, clear intentions. Passion in my heart, fire in my veins, no more insecurities, no more self loathing, this is control. All I wanted was control, a sense of control. Now it's in my hands, the ultimate control. Never meant to be, it never should be but for one fine moment I felt control. (The Judas Factor, Kiss Suicide ep, 1999)

The Judas Factor started as an idea where we would practice a few times, record an ep and that was that. Up to that point it went so fast and I found myself disappointed that I hadn't continued with what I discovered when I wrote Curse of Instinct which was to invest myself and what I was feeling in my music and not self censoring myself. So with that I decided I wanted The Judas Factor to be a real band but needed it to be a situation where I felt absolutely comfortable expressing whatever it was I needed to express. Once that happened the songs really started to flow and I wrote a record, Ballads in Blue China, which is absolutely the most intense and emotionally expressive record I have ever written in that it was a record about me whereas most bands, lyrically, you have to represent the viewpoint of the collective unit. So with this record I was finally able to talk about the sexual abuse I suffered, my feelings of isolation and depression and I feel that the record perfectly expressed everything I was feeling and going through at the time.

Beauty Mark - I can see myself, vulnerable, innocent, just what you were looking for. You set the stage for what is my life and I've played it back a million times. Oh, how I tried to purge this from my mind but it's always tearing at me and I can't help but wonder if you ever think about me because I can't get you out of my mind. You're faceless, heartless to me. Was I the only one? You are the rotting teeth in my mouth and everyday you're there to remind me. You symbolize my pain, you're that gun in my mouth but no bullet can make this go away. I only wish I could share this with you. Do you have a son? Is he beautiful? Innocent? Did you share with him what you shared with me? You're my beauty mark. (The Judas Factor, Ballads in Blue China, 1998)

It was absolutely liberating. Once that record was released and some more songs were written for what was to be our second LP I found that, for me, the band had served its purpose and I didn't know if I could continue to do it emotionally. So with that we hastily recorded an ep, which I really like the songs themselves but the performance is rather poor because we weren't in a good place as a group, and with that it ended. At that point I was just mired in regret and although in some respects regret is a good thing but the thing is you can't change the past so being steeped in it was becoming very counterproductive. The expression that was at first liberating to me was now becoming suffocating.



Chose your poison -There's a stranger in my head who wants a hand in my death. There's this weight on my chest stealing away my breath. There's a mask on my face that only our 'love' could replace. These hands around my neck are teaching me about regret. Your silence speaks volumes, so there's no need, to line up with your grievances. Actions mean nothing, regrets powerless, cause we still can't escape our past. I want to know what it's like to feel so secure, about the promises we make, and those we break. We always swore we'd be better then this. Choose your poison. The thoughts we had, fuck good intentions, they painted us into this corner. Blank stares, lifeless minds, cutting words, the killing kind. (The Judas Factor, Ballads in Blue China, 1998)

After The Judas Factor ended I moved to California and then in 2005 108 happened to get together for a show and the energy and relationships blossomed which led to us continuing with the band, releasing a new LP and touring around the world. For me the new LP was important as there were some things about 108, and mainly what people perceived as it's purpose, that I wanted to address which I think we did right of the bat with the first two songs of the new LP. The first song, Declarations on a Grave, get's right to the point of balancing intellect with the reality that we cannot intellectually understand all that surrounds us. This doesn't equate to God, God's or the lack thereof rather the infinite possibilities and being open to them.

Declarations on a Grave – We got the gift to over enunciate poetic declarations on a grave. Our policies to protect us just serve to suffocate us with a constant need to validate all we feel. Intellectual limits bring death to emotion when we don't take the risk to experience th edancing lights, flickering in our minds, that remind us we're alive. (108, A new beat from a dead heart lp, 2007)

The second song, Guilt, speaks to the unfortunate realities of how spiritual theologies or practices become warped and even counter productive to their very point, when they become a tool to control or judge others.

Guilt – Empires built on doctrinal guilt, controlling man with what we can't understand. Words, body and mind enslaved at a shrine with little left except for pending death. Guilt, guilty for being alive. Written word designate death when desires define degrees of helplessness. When birth and gender assign entitlement while feelings and emotions are left for death. Guilt, guilty for being alive. This is our sickness, no one to blame, when "sinful" minds handicap our existence. So much for being free, so much for being me. (108, A new beat from a dead heart lp, 2007)

I guess when you look from band to band there is an evolution in terms of how I came to grip with who I am and how openly I could express it. One thing si for certain and that is I wouldn't be alive if it weren't for music and the opportunity I have had to express myself with it.

Did these early struggles and "slaps of reality" turn you toward your spiritual search?


Yes, it certainly did. I can probably best be described as an intellectual agnostic and an emotional theist. What I mean by that is it has never been about truth or right verse wrong for me and to be perfectly honest the whole question of does God exist means little or nothing to me. It is essentially irrelevant tome personally. Spirituality, to me, is about inspiration, experiences and aspiration and it holds no weight in how I view the responsibilities of the rest of the world. I like reading the lila of Radha and Krishna and I am attracted to meditating and aspiring to the idea that one can be Radha's manjari and facilitate her relationship with Krishna. It is about what brings me inspiration and happiness and that is about it. When I first started reading books from the Krishna movement I was drawn to it by the tenants of karma. I needed something, anything, to help me answer why I experienced so much horrible shit. It was an emotional escape and I absolutely needed it in order to survive. It served its purpose well. I was never the type of person who thought my spiritual musings should be used to govern another. I never equated being a vegetarian and finding comfort with the idea of karma with some social cause like being pro life. I never equated spirituality as a way to decide who another person should love or marry. I just never got to that point of no return when it came to spirituality. It is, for me, about me and what inspires me.



On the spiritual path growth is a huge factor. If you stop growing or become stagnant it is somewhat like death. Where do you think you are at now on your personal journey as compared to when you first began?


I mean I am essentially the same person. By the end of 108 I stopped seeing how being tied to some religious institution even loosely was helpful and by 1998 I had left behind those trappings. Where am I at now? Who knows. I am who I am and I will embrace that which brings me hope and happiness and leave everyone else to debate right verse wrong and all of that other stuff. I am happy and this is about the first time in my life I can truly say that.

108 in the begining was a pretty straight forward in your face Krsna Conscious band. How is it different now that everyone has been through their own personal transformations?

Well during the first run of 108 we were very differently people, especially Vic and I, and had a hard time relating emotionally and personally but we had some similar thoughts and inspirations and we made those the center of the band and went at them ferociously. At this point we are all much closer emotionally and personally and 108 continues to be a vehicle for us to put forth our similar thoughts and inspirations. To be honest the biggest difference is that there is now 3 equal voices in the song writing process and the lyrics. Up to Curse of Instinct Vic write all but a few words of every 108 lyric whereas now I write the majority of the songs while Vic has written a few and Triv has also contributed some amazing lyrics. Musically we all write and jell together well.



Alan Cage recently joined the band and you guys did a tour in South America. How has the new addition been for the band?


Playing with Alan in South America was great. He is a great drummer, one of my favorites from the hardcore scene, and we all got on well and had an awesome time. At the same time we all learned long ago that 108 will probably never be a band with a drummer and the best way for us to exist is to have friends play drums for us when schedules allow. So we may work together more with Alan in the future if the stars align otherwise we will play with some other friends.

From what I understand you guys live in different locations through out the U.S. How does this translate into the writing process for the band?


Yeah, well I live out in Oakland and most likely will move to Portland in the next year while Triv is in Boston. Vic is currently in San Diego but he plans to move with his family to Japan in early 2009. I guess being a band spread all over the US was too simple for us so this will present a new challenge but realistically it won't change much. Between work, families and conflicting schedules we essentially get together once a year to write and practice for 3-4 days and then go on tour. We all write and will send ideas back and forth and when we are together we play with it all and just hit record and play and see what comes out.

108 is releasing some new music soon, What info can you give us on the new music. What direction is the music heading in?


We plan to get together in February to at least record a new ep. As far as to what you can expect who knows.

You are lining up a U.S. tour for Spring. Do you have any solid dates and locations on that tour yet??? Any plans for a possible Euro tour or anywhere else?


We are finishing up booking a 15 date US Tour in April. We have 16 days to hit as many places as possible so we have lined up some great shows and bands for shows on both coasts as well as a bunch of cities that we haven't been to in 13 plus years which is awesome. I am really excited about some of the bands we are doing stints of the tour with but Andy at Deathwish Inc. is making me stay quite on who it all is until we announce the tour! We will hit Europe for 12 quick shows this summer and plan to head to Japan with our new record next fall and will try to make a show or two happen in India because it would be so bizarre. We plan to stay as active as we have been which is a few 2 week tours spread throughout the year.

What are your feelings on the current political climate in the United States and some of the issues we are facing with?


That is a hard subject to be so general about but essentially I am a strong believer in keeping God out of Government and in that sense the US scares me as I believe that those lines and the separation of church and state in thinning constantly which scares me. I was very disappointed to see Prop 8 passed in California and still see so much of our country ignoring the rights of its own citizens. I am honestly sick of hearing about the "sanctity" of marriage. What is this sanctity and where does it exist except in their heads? Certainly the divorce rate and the amount of emotional and physical abuse that is rampant in marriages doesn't speak to this sanctity. I was happy to see Obama win because at least he will not place individuals into the Supreme Court who blur the lines between God and Government when those seats become open. Of course he isn't my ideal candidate but he was the best that was being offered up who had a shot at winning. Still I think he can do next to nothing and his being elected is still so important to the direction of this country because now a huge percentage of our population who don't fit into the white and Christian demographics now have a real example to hopefully inspire them to take up being not just politically active but hopefully inspired to dedicate their lives, to whatever extent they are so inspired, to help bring about real freedom and equality and know that if they aspire to be the next President they will not be limited by birth and gender.



Do you think spirituality plays a part in correcting some of the problems that we now face?

I don't know. I think being an honest, loving and caring person is the most important thing. If "spirituality" gives one license to discriminate than absolutely not. If it is a way to tap into ones own sense of compassion than great. Spirituality is what you make of it. I had one morning where I woke up inspired and just wrote out this long and rambling, which became a song called The Sad Truth, that is a take on what defines my own Carpe Diem which I guess I would think would correct such problems. I guess everyone has an opinion. I dream of a world where flags are nothing but cloth and the only thing that matters is love, life and freedom. Where the bottom line doesn't determine life and we aren't defined by income bracket, a pretty house, faith, a lack thereof or a fucking degree. Where we think before we act and act before we critique. Where we think about who is next and make it cleaner than how we found it. Where we mean what we say and only say what we mean and where ideals are meant to better ourselves and where we aren't afraid to say I can't. Where sorry is a liberating word and thank you comes from the heart. Where we don't just watch but we decide to act. Where we refuse to live only until its time to die. Where we refuse to live only until its time to die.

Where feelings and desires mean more than quotas, expectations and disappointed stares. Where we have a right to hurt, scream, cry, live, die and sit in silence just because we fucking can. I dream of a world where I can love you in spite of what keeps us apart and where second best is as good as first or a millionth.

Where we don't over analyze every breathe or under appreciate what our words mean to another. Where we find comfort in silence and a place of peace in all of the noise and where everything that is thrown at us makes us better, stronger and more appreciative. Where we celebrate life, death and all that comes in between. Where songs sing to us and a loved ones words make us dance. Where what we see in a mirror is a happy, satisfied and fulfilled individual and where we feel bad about how we look at others and not just because of how others look at us.
I dream of a world where I can love you, where I can feel you and where I can know you without having to own you, without having to hate you or without having to fuck you. A world where I can love you, where I can feel you, where I can know you without having to own you, without having to hate you, without having to fuck you, fuck you in more ways than one.

I dream of a world where a smile isn't a rare gift and where sadness isn't a curse and where the two together make life worth living. Where we aren't forced to validate every feeling we encounter and where such feelings bring a new beat from a dead heart. Where our world is shaped by feeling and not by another's expectations. where media doesn't define friend or foe and doesn't tell me how to look, how to feel, how to act and how to live. Where a flower, a smile, a thought, a touch, a smell makes it all worth it and where the hardest words are nothing but poetry that spills from our mouth.



Any last words or wisdom for the youth out there?


Be compassionate to yourself and the world around you. Don't wait for change and don't allow the weight of others expectations weigh you down. Live.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

REIGN SUPREME. PHILLY HEAVY and HARD!




Here is new interview with Jay Pepito, Frontman for Philadelphia's REIGN SUPREME.
REIGN SUPREME have come on the music scene with an attack and hunger to make shit happen. Gaining much praise for their debut EP "AMERICAN VIOLENCE" on MALFUNCTION RECORDS they came out the gates swinging. Now after months of touring they have an LP waiting to drop as well as a tour in the States and Europe.
Not only a hard working band but they have the sound and a crushing live show to back it all up.
When they swing through your town def check them out.
Peace.

You guys haven't been around that long but it seems you have gotten a lot of work done in such a short period of time. I would have to say your work ethic is pretty fucking inspiring.
That being said how was it on the road for you guys. With the economy the way it is, gas prices...it's extra hard for hardcore bands these days. How was the experience?


The last us tour we did was trying at times, but overall, really rewarding. It was a 2 month full US tour, with stops at the SOUND AND FURY and THIS IS HARDCORE festivals. Appearances on both coasts, and dates in Canada and Mexico. I can't complain at all, I heard a lot of bands had a ton of financial trouble and other mishaps this summer, and we actually managed to come out pretty unscathed from the tour. So although the gas prices and competing with other touring packages definitely hurt us, they didn't kill us. It was an unbelievably fun experience, and I honestly wish every tour could be as full of fun and ridiculous memories as that one was.


The American Violence EP was very well received universally through out the hardcore scene. It def was a very powerful debut. When we spoke in New Jersey you told me the LP was going to be on another level. Very heavy and brutal, it made pretty amped to hear the finished creation.
Tell me a bit about the writing and recording process on that??? What was inspiring you???


Thanks for the kind words! I think AMERICAN VIOLENCE did well, but it was only an EP, so it could only carry us so far i guess. The writing process for the LP has been an arduous and intellectually punishing pursuit, but i guess i can at least be happy that it's done. I'm really proud of it too. As far as the writing went, some of these songs have been around for a while, some were written the night before we started tracking. basically, we just tried to write the heaviest record that we could, while incorporating some elements that were original and unique to our band, and still not stray too far from the basic formula for hardcore. It's unusual as a hardcore record in a lot of ways, and I think that has to do with some of the really subtle influences on my playing as of late. This record, like AMERICAN VIOLENCE is heavily influenced by the basic stuff that we emulated when we started. Pantera, Machinehead, Sepultura, Madball, Entombed, Hatebreed, Figure Four, etc. But I think as we grow as a band, I'm able to kind of wear my influences on my sleeve, so a good amount of the music I listen to outside of hardcore is prominent as well. Stuff like The Deftones, The Breeders, Nirvana, Explosions in the Sky, Hum, Unsane, New Order, etc. and as far as the recording process goes, just go to Myspace, and type in 'Reign Supreme studio update' and check out the videos we are releasing to promote the new record. Some extra insight into the recording process.

Where did you guys record the LP?


At the machine shop in new jersey, with our producer Will Putney, who also recorded 'American Violence'. The drums were tracked at another place, but I can't remember the name of it. The dude Tom who owns it is the editor of Revolver, he had so much cool stuff in his place. After I left, I really decided I'm going to purchase a guitar with a tremelo haha. I met Sal Villanueva in the hall, while walking to the bathroom, so that was pretty cool. haha.

When is the record gonna officially drop?

Yikes, I don't know. I guess March or April? Depends on when mixing and mastering and artwork are all done, and Deathwish is ready to put it out. Spring, I'd say. But you can probably hear teasers in advance at: www.myspace.com/reignsupremehardcore
or
www.deathwishinc.com.



What are your plans when the LP comes out. I know you are planning a tour to Europe in April. Anything else in the works. It seems more and more foreign countries are supporting hardcore on a level that doesn't even happen in the U.S. South America is huge now. Japan. Australia. Where are you going to take this music???


I'm pretty sure before we throw in the towel on this band, we're going to have played everywhere that could possibly want to hear us. We started this band to tour, and as long as it's something that we can do, we will do it. I am not positive yet, but I'm pretty sure 2009 will have 2 Euro tours, and we'll probably hit up South America as well. Maybe in 2010 we'll do the Pacific Rim. I've been dying to tour over there, so we definitely will, as soon as it's something that seems to make sense for us at the time.

When you played NJ I noticed you called out the New Jersey message board crowd. It's funny, I have had my own personal experience with that and they are a strange bunch to say the least. Although I feel like I could imagine, What fueled that???


Serioulsy it used to be my favorite hardcore scene, now it's full of pretentious nerds, who fucking turncoat within seconds of reading whatever everyone else thinks on those stupid fucking messageboards. So lame! I guess I'm bitter, because my band will never get as much love at home as we do from Bumblefuck, South Dakota. But the fact is, New Jersey and the surrounding East Coast scenes, are so full of spoiled, shitty brats, who infiltrate hardcore, and turn on it within just a few short years. They get so much great Hardcore and are surrounded by so much history, that obviously, it gets taken for granted and never truly appreciated. I'm sick of it. and I'm sick of my band being the target of attacks by nerds who've NEVER BEEN IN A BAND, or who've never been on tour, or who've never done a zine, or who've never done fucking shit for hardcore, other than occasionally pay the cover to go see a show, so they can get seen, and go home and post about how gay and bad it was, and how every band except for the ones that it's "ok" to like are so blah, and how much better things were when Striking Distance and Knives Out were playing shows. Get the fuck over yourselves! Hardcore will live on without you, Hardcore will survive you! I KNOW WE RIP OFF HATEBREED AND THAT ONE SONG SOUNDS EXACTLY LIKE 'HOLD IT DOWN', WHOA CONGRATULATIONS, I DIDN'T KNOW FREECAKE WAS GIVING OUT FUCKING BFA'S FOR MUSIC THEORY. IT WAS A FUCKING ACCIDENT, THAT'S WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU DEVOTE YOURSELF TO HARDCORE AND LOVE IT, SOMETIMES YOU UNCONSCIOUSLY CREATE SOMETHING THAT ISN'T SO FAR OFF FROM THE ORIGINAL. WHATEVER. FREDDY MADBALL LIKES MY BAND, SO TEABAG ME, NEW JERSEY.

Last time I interviewed you we spoke a bit about the political situation at hand. Now we have a new president elect. Barak Obama. Personally I never put my faith in politicians but I did feel on a racial/social level somehow this was a step in the right direction for our Country. How are you feeling now that it seems we may have some wind of change blowing through our political system no matter how small it may be?

Caps lock off. I think it's great, honestly, I'm surprised. But I think it's cool, he's got a lot of charisma, and it seems like the air is ripe with this rhetoric of change and progress with socially relevant implications. I'm secretly hoping he decides to subsidize touring musicians, and provide healthcare for starving artists. like me. i guess we'll have to see how much change actually occurs though. I'm skeptical one president can fix years of misconduct and short-term thinking.


How do you feel about the current state of hardcore in the U.S. I know where you come from you have a very solid scene. Joe Hardcore runs very professionally booked and promoted shows and the shows I have seen at The Church are always insane. But being on the road how do other places compare to your home town?


Also how do you feel the overall consciousness of the people involved is? Sometimes it seems people are more coming out to be entertained and consume merch. That is well and good but hardcore is about the message. Do you think people are taking away something that is inspiring them to strive for a better life of their own choosing?


I've lived in Philadelphia for like 7 years now? It's great. The Cro-Mags show after Christmas was one of my favorite shows I've been to in years. SEEKERS OF THE TRUTH OMG!!! But Philadelphia is great, a ton of friends, and a lot of younger kids always coming out and getting siked on shows, and by younger, I guess I mean kids that I've seen around a lot, over the past few years. Not over the core in two years. As far as the consciousness of the people involved, I don't really care either way. Hardcore is not about the message. Some bands are. Murphy's Law definitely wasn't. Negative Approach and Black Flag definitely didn't have a definable message, other than 'fuck everyone who isn't us'. I'd like to think that there are some bands out there that stand for something more than a slogan on a shirt, or a political ideal that has no real substance in the material world. But Reign Supreme is not one of those, we are pretty much a self-interested tool of expression, emotional and musical. I don't write about external things that I feel some calling to try to fix or preserve. I write about internal struggles I deal with, and the influences of the outside world on me. I just write about whatever i feel in my heart, and though sometimes that has a spiritual tinge on it, it's definitely not me trying to get more people to pick up the Dhammapada. It's more about me exorcising demons and trying to live my life as strongly and fully as i can.

Jay...That's all I got for you this time around. I thank you for your time and I wish you the best with this new record and new year. Any last words or shouts???

Nah...not really. Thanks again man, and I hope you and everyone reading this gets a chance to check out our new record, and maybe even come see us live and bang your head.

Friday, January 16, 2009

MCRAD. PHILLY SKATE ROCK.






Chuck Treece has been involved in the Skateboard and Music scene for over 25 years.
Music and Skateboarding have always had a deep connection. The fact that many skateboarders make music and many musicians skate is well known and becoming even more apparent each year.
With his constant involvement in both these subcultures over that 25 year span of time Chuck Treece has been a pro skateboarder who continues to skate to this day. He has been and continues to make music constantly through many avenues. Chuck plays with his own band McRad as well as the following bands/projects over the years...Bad Brains, Underdog, The Roots, Stiffed, Santogold, Supergrub, BLK TOP and Dub Sabbath to name a few.
For many the first time they heard MCRAD was on a Trasher Skate Rock tape or in a Powell Peralta video. His sound was very unique but also had a hint of Bad Brains. This combination would make me an instant fan as a teen and his songs would be mental soundtracks as I skated through the streets of my town.

Here are a few pictures from a show MCRAD just played @ Kung Fu Necktie in Philly this past Monday. It was a benefit show for DIY Skateparks in the Philadelphia Area. The local skate community was in effect, videos were being played, beautiful women were in the mix and Positive Vibes abound!

For an over 100 pictures from the event as well as a small write up check:
www.phrequnecy.com

To hear MCRAD go here www.myspace.com/mcradband
or pick up their newest cd "FDR".

MCRAD are playing the SHAC 7 Benefit @ Asbury Lanes on January 25th. Check them out.

OVERSTAND. RAZORS EDGE Recording Sessions.






OVERSTAND. RAZORS EDGE Recording Sessions.
Over the weekend of 1.10 thru 1.11 we were locked up in our music creating compound on Cookman Ave. in Asbury Park, NJ.
Ryan Jones was again manning the "boards" and we laid down 5 new tracks that along with all our recording to date will be released as a CD on LET IT RIDE Records from Germany.
As of today the songs have not been mixed or mastered. As per usual after recording I have been listening to the takes non stop.
I have to say I am very happy with what I hear and more then impressed with what Ryan Jones had done so far. Cannot wait to hear what it sounds like when he is done mixing.
The songs are a step forward from the original 6 we recorded. I hope the people dig the new elements we have brought into the mix.
2 songs will be up for preview as soon as mixing and mastering is complete.
You can hear the original jams here: www.myspace.com/overstandnj
Also...anyone looking to do great and inexpensive recording get in touch with Ryan Jones. Just in the short time since we recorded the Kali Yuga Sessions, Ryan has made huge progress with what he does in the studio. Def hook up with him while it lasts, eventually he will get paid what he is worth, which is much more then what he charges now!
Peace.