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106 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
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RELUCTANT REVOLUTIONARIES
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By Keith A. Gordon
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Along with such equally well-known peers as Black Flag, the Circle Jerks
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and X, Suicidal Tendencies emerged from the early eighties L.A. music scene
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as full-fledged punk legends, a mythological entity around which more
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fiction than fact has been spun by the storytellers.
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In reality, Suicidal Tendencies had little to do with the punks they were
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often associated with. As equally metallic as punkish hardcore in their
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musical orientation, S.T. ignored the local scene and forged a following all
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of their own. Openly and accidentally political with their lyrics, S.T.
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appealed to a multi-ethnic, lower class audience who were as alienated from
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the trendy L.A. music scene as they were from society.
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Formed in 1982 by frontman Mike Muir while he was still in high school,
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Suicidal Tendencies soon took on a life of its own. "When I was younger,"
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says Muir, I never said that I wanted to be in a band, because I never did.
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I never really liked people too much, so I never really wanted to be around
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people. But I always liked music and got hooked up with some people and we
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had ideas that we wanted to do...and we got into the situation of where we
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are now, ten years later."
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The band burst out of their hometown of Venice to become literal
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overnight sensations. "We had a lot of songs," says Muir, "so we did the
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first record and we were fortunate, we got kind of lucky with it." That 1983
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debut album, recorded in a mere twelve hour, moved an amazing quarter of a
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million copies for the small Frontier indie label, spawned a classic song
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and video in "Institutionalized" (the first hardcore video ever played on
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MTV) and even led to a guest appearance on TV's MIAMI VICE. After that
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initial success, however, the band disappeared...
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Three years later, S.T. resurfaced as a purely metal band with Muir and
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an entirely new line-up. "The second time around we realized that you've got
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to learn from your mistakes," says Muir. "We tried to get a
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major label deal, and it was really a negative situation. They didn't feel
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the same way that we did about our potential, what the band could do." The
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band eventually signed with Caroline Records, says Muir, "we did a second
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record as an independent and got into the Top 100 in BILLBOARD, and then we
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had all of these labels coming back." With eight labels vying to sign them,
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S.T. went with Epic Records.
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Two successful albums and an E.P. later, including their most recent, the
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Grammy-nominated LIGHTS...CAMERA...REVOLUTION, have served to propel
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Suicidal Tendencies into the metal mainstream. The band's material, with
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lyrics penned by Muir and the whole band often pitching in on the music, are
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sharp-edged maelstroms of energy and attitude, all fury and anger which owe
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as much to early seventies metal as they do eighties hardcore. Much has
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been said about the positive (and often overtly political) messages which
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run through the band's material, but S.T. are reluctant revolutionaries.
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"I wouldn't necessarily say that I try to bring a message," says Muir,
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"obviously, we start out with the music, that's the most important thing.
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Lyrically, if somebody gets something out of it, that's a bonus." Muir
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incorporates a lot of himself into his songs, however, often bringing his
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own struggle for self-awareness and attempt to cope with certain emotions to
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his songs. "Certain things do have a lot of meaning to me. I couldn't just
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get up there and start singing about a lot of
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things that I don't know anything about." Muir's lyrics are based upon his
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life, "and my life's not really any different than anybody elses," he says.
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"I'm sure that most people go through a lot of the same things."
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Last summer's world-wide "Clash Of The Titans" tour along with a recent
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arena-level tour with Queensryche has brought the band an even greater
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audience, though, ironically enough, they're all but banned from playing on
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their home turf. It seems that the racially-mixed band draws an audience
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which tends to scare the authorities. "We were bringing in a different crowd
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than people were used to seeing," says Muir. Myths spread about the band's
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alleged destruction of clubs, of murder and
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mayhem commited by the band's diverse following of gang members, punk
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rockers, rappers and metalheads.
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"As time went on," says Muir, "stories spead, 'oh yeah, I heard that
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people were killed at a Suicidal Tendencies show,' and those things never
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happened." What did happen was that the band rapidly outgrew the local L.A.
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club venues, and in order to play larger halls, they needed police
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permits...which, partially because of the stories, weren't forthcoming. Even
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a recent show in nearby Irvine, California, the band's first Southern Cal
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appearance in six years, which drew 6,000 fans without incident, hasn't
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changed the de facto L.A. ban for Suicidal Tendencies.
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Poised, as they are, on the bring of superstardom, the band's name often
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gets in the way of people's perceptions. "You can't judge a book by its
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cover," says Muir. "When we say 'suicidal', the last thing that we're
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thinking about is killing ourselves, it's the complete opposite!" As Muir
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explains it, to be suicidal is to face life with a certain reckless abandon,
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to be able to deal with anything that comes one's way. "To accomplish
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anything worthwhile takes effort," says Muir, "and when we say 'suicidal' it
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means 'go for it!'."
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As Suicidal Tendencies continue to bring their unintentional message of
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hope to larger audiences, Muir sums up the band's aspirations succinctly. "I
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know that we're not great people," he says, "but we're trying to be, and
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that's the most important thing."
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30-30-30-30
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
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The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
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The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
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Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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