Showing posts with label John Doe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Doe. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2015

X O X: We Had a Date [1980]

Text by Doris Kiely © FFanzeen, 1980
Introductory text © Robert Barry Francos / FFanzeen, 2015

I have never seen X play live, I’m sorry to say. Yeah, I saw them a number of times performing on TV on shows like Dick Clark’s American Bandstand and a couple of those late-night in concert kinds of shows, but never when I was in the same room.

Early on, I gravitated towards Excene Cervenka’s voice, as the female tones have always appealed to me, but over time I came to appreciate just how amazing John Doe actually was at the time. The guitar work of Billy Zoom has always been a stand-out, but I’m hardly the first one to notice that; same with drummer DJ Bonebrake. The whole band body politic of their personal and sexual relationships seem odd to me, but it’s nice that they’ve pretty much stayed together as X. Also, Excene and Doe have their equally worth hearing Americana side-project, the Knitters (sort of a mix of X and the Blasters members).  Doe and Excene have also released a duet collection.

While Doe has had a pretty decent on-and-off acting career over the years, sadly Excene has slipped into a right-wing conspiracy nut (check out her YouTube channel), and I have seen her referred to as “the Victoria Jackson of punk.” Sigh.

To be honest, quite embarrassingly, I don’t remember Doris Kiely, who wrote this piece, which was originally published in FFanzeen, issue #6, dated Year-End 1980. It’s an interesting, poetical stream of consciousness piece. Doris, feel free to contact me!  – RBF, 2015

You don’t like anything to be called New Wave. You didn’t mind so much when it was called punk. Greill Marcus wrote, “X is the band that has defined LA’s punk scene.” In NY, their hard-edge is an anomaly in the lapping curls of the New Wave night clubs. Sid’s dead, fashion changes, this apartment is too small for me and the cat and the laundry. You say apartments are cheaper in LA. You say you’ll go uptown to 80s [Club] with me.

The shop is closing, metal gate half across the door. The guy was nice, showing me old jewelry, each piece a talisman with a mysterious history. Walking, there was something I wanted to write. Ringing your doorbell I forgot what it was. No weekly papers, no coffee or booze. Before going out we watch TV.

X spray-painted on a wall about to collapse. Prisoners pushing against it trying to get free. Suffocating, they have fortitude left to make rough sounds, dreary, vertical songs. What am I thinking? Nothing. This is music about loathing and death. People are dancing to it.

Excene wears chains, charms, medallions. Holds her head like she’s drunk, trying not to vomit. Her voice is bratty, a net John Does get caught in, writhing. He’s pensive, a charismatic bassist-singer. Billy Zoom, guitarist, grins sadistically, unrelentingly. I’m on a chair that’s an oasis. X is fast and constant.

You say, “Jane was in a good mood today, she said she was OK.”
I say, “Did you ask her how many pills she took?”
She told you she thinks I’m jaded.

Critics on both coasts invoked X with hyperbolic claims. In NY, R. Meltzer was “gratuitously grandiose” in his critique of them, and R. Palmer referred to their “sheer musical excellence.” Robert Hilburn of the LA Times called X the American answer to “the rock challenge raised by the Sex Pistols and Clash.” The expectation which accompanied X to New York was so great that much of the audience was unduly disappointed. No surf-punks here diving off the stage.

X’s malevolent lyrics are two horrified consciousnesses streaming. Excene bends beneath the microphone, screamed, “Get Out.” It’s not just about a girl who has to leave Los Angeles. “Get Out,” I would curse silently at my girlfriend’s brother, repeating it till he left us alone. “The days change at night/change in an instant,” sounds perfect. I can read their minds. They’re on stage letting me. X is so in pain, they’re lovable. They look rather like misshapen freaks. The drummer, DJ Bonebrake, is hidden.

“I’d slap that bitch,” you say. The women in the ladies room at 3 just got there. They missed the sacerdotal offering, X’s melancholy pastiche of corpses. You say they’re monotonous. You don’t have the record Los Angeles, on Slash [Records]. Its coarse texture is soothing, emotional facets, serious music; a miasma of dust and opiates which is a city. The music sounds like traffic, litter on a hot beach, and rock’n’roll at a high school dance.

X remains a tradition the Sex Pistols initiated. Even so, they exert a powerful originality, and alter our preconception of the laid-back California mentality. The audacity of their non-innovation is entertaining. You say you hung the poster from the Beatles’ white album over your bed for two weeks. Instead of fleshing New Wave romance, X presents skeletons and boney sounds. The songs are narrative, literal, immediate; they make us privy to the band’s disgust. This incites a certain opposition and alarm, which makes them repugnant to some listeners.

X’s tidings of grief are ginormous. They signify intelligence in the face of emptiness. “Thanks a lot,” repeats Billy. “They’ll make a movie called Rock’n’Roll College. It’s hot tonight, isn’t it?” you say. I remember Help carved in crooked letters on a school desk.

 


 


 

 

 

Friday, January 6, 2012

DVD Review: X: The Unheard Music (The Silver Edition)

Text © Robert Barry Francos/FFanzeen, 2012
Images from the Internet


X: The Unheard Music (The Silver Edition)
Written and directed by W.T. Morgan
Angel City Media, 1986 / 2011
84 minutes, USD $16.95
MVDvisual.com


The band X (aka X The Band), formed in 1977, was one of the greats to come out of the early SoCal hardcore punk scene for many reasons; for me, the most impressive was that while they their music was on the cutting edge in both sound and style, with biting, sarcastic and ironic lyrics, they were not hardcore. I would describe it more as rockabilly-punk, leaning more towards, say, the Blasters and early Cramps sounds than the Circle Jerks or Black Flag.

Like the Who, all performed their parts as lead: elder member Billy Zoom, a master at the six- and twelve-string (among other instruments), played like a house on fire, all the while a big smile was usually plastered on his face (some would say smugly, but I say even if so, why not?). Bassist and co-vocalist (and key songwriter, not to mention film actor, much like Henry Rollins) John Doe handled his ax with a strong hand; while not as fluent on it as Entwhistle (then again, who else is?), he had a solid command of it. His vocals are classic rock and roll, and yet unique enough to pick out of a crowd. No one would ever call Excene Cervenka a great singer, but of course, that’s what makes her such a great singer. Her slurred and whiney vocals are a key to the distinctive sound that is X. Her tortured artist / poet soul is a key component of the band. DJ Bonebrake is one of the better drummers (and avid xylophonist, as is demonstrated in this documentary), with his schoolboy charm looks and devil glint in his eyes. One amazing section of this film is when he taps three different rhythms at the same time with his hands and foot while standing in a kitchen. I’m happy enough just to tap my head and rub my stomach.

My first experience of X was the single “White Girl,” which ironically I heard just about the same time as the Vktms’ “100% White Girl.” It was a couple of years later that I got their albums Los Angeles and Wild Gift. I was intrigued, but not bowled over. I did, however, enjoy the band’s appearances in the ’80s on American Bandstand (including doing an abbreviated “True Love Pt II”). And yet, though not appearing on this DVD, my fave cut of theirs remains “Burning House of Love.” As time has gone on, I’ve appreciated them more.

The documentary X: The Unheard Music came out 25 years ago, and yes, it is a good view of the history of the band, but it also is a record of the punk scene of the time; or at least the frame of it. For example, we get to see Brendan Mullen, owner of the infamous Masque Club, revisiting the club after years of it being shuttered. We also get to visit the studios of KROQ and meet DJ and ex-Black Flag vocalist Jello Biafra and the Mayor of the Sunset Strip, Rodney Bingenheimer, who discuss the band. A chilling moment is when we se Excene backstage at the closing Whiskey-A-Go-Go touchingly explain the famous night the band played right after they learned about her sister, who died on the way to the gig.

The documentary proper starts off, though, with a focus on all the members of the band individually, including home shots and pictures from childhood. Thrown in is audio clips and a (public access?) television interview with the band who conveys the story of the band’s formation.

Through live shots of the band playing on stage, then-MTV-style music videos, and studio recordings over b-roll, we follow the group as they are about to break. This leads to some interesting moments, such as a blending of one interview with an MCA Records A&R person who dismisses the band, and another of Slash fanzine’s Bob Briggs, who brought the band to him. The director shows a keen sense of humor as he interchanges the executives professing for the band Point Blank as the next-big-thing with a commercial for the Edsel (which was, coincidentally, the final Jeopardy question/answer the night I watched the DVD), which made me laugh.

This is just part of the undercurrent of social culture that is thrown into the mix throughout the entire film. For example, Tommy Hadges, program director for KLOX-FM, discusses how FM radio was to open up airwaves for indie music, but instead became swallowed up by corporate interests. Luckily, X signed with Elektra, and we see the beginning of the rise, such as it was, as they do in-store signings and performing on stage; the rest became history after the end of the documentary.

One of the other much-discussed scenes is the filming in the studio of the recording of “White Girl,” with their producer (and ex-Doors) Ray Manzarek. In a brief interview piece, he comments that after seeing the band at the Whiskey-A-Go-Go, he wanted to take them into the studio. It’s definitely a goofy moment, which is explained in the extras as Doe admits that the scene was faked / lip sync’d. Doesn’t matter, it’s still a wonderful moment as Doe drops his cigarette to sing and JD is wearing sunglasses in the studio, among other fine shots.

Director Morgan does quite the duty of telling the story of X, a nearly post-punk history of the SoCal clubs, and mixes them all with appropriate file footage from yore days of television and film. There is also many quick edits that are similar to the band’s “Wild Thing” video (did he direct that?).

Even in the early parts of this film, some of the future shows itself when Excene and John sit in their apartment singing the roots songs “Ramblin’ Man” and “Honky Tonk Blues.” This is prescient of them later forming country/rock/blues/roots band the Knitters, with members of X and the Blasters.

Besides being released in both stereo and 5.1 Surround HD, there are a few nice extras included. First up is an 18.5-minute current interview with John and Excene, who posit their experiences with X in general, and with their memories of the actual filming of this documentary, which was quite fascinating. This is followed by an interview with the Angel City crew who filmed the doc, including its director, around the time of the shoot. Next is a live outtake of the band on stage playing “Some Other Time.” The last two are the original trailer for the film (below) and still photos of the self-decorated song and poetry books of Excene.

While X did not last, due in part of impatience of band members and infidelity of others, it’s great to have this film as a testament of what it was all about at an important time in the band’s career. Meanwhile, they have reformed both X and the Knitters, so there’s still much to watch for coming ahead.

Song list:
Los Angeles
Year One
We're Desperate
Because I Do
Beyond & Back
Come Back to Me
Soul Kitchen
White Girl
The Once Over Twice
Motel Room in My Bed
The Unheard Music
Real Child of Hell
Johny Hit & Run Paulene
I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts
The World's a Mess; It's in My Kiss
The Have Nots