Showing posts with label THE CURSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THE CURSE. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Sid's Kids studio 3 session



Sid's Kids are a punk band featuring Cleave Anderson on drums and Marcel laFleur and John Sutton on guitar and bass from Arson. The band is similar to the Screwed in that they focus on early punk classics. This group is a bit of a session band set up to host a punk / new wave night and have involved quite a few players from Toronto's early waves of punk. The band does some covers like the Damned's "Born to Kill" and the Saints "(This) Perect Day". Covers by local artists include:


Mickey Skin singing the Curse's song "Shoeshine Boy",


Chris Haight singing for Zoom and Viletones songs "Sweet Desperation" and "Does She Jump".


Fergus Hambledon sings and plays guitar on A Passing Fancy's "I'm Losing Tonight" and the Basics' "I Can't Help"


Barrie Farrell sings and plays guitar on the Existers "Never Think Big".

There is also an interview done with the group. One of my realizations in doing this interview is that this is a special group of people. The first wave of Toronto punks have remained to be active as a scene which is something I have noticed in other scenes. It is pretty special and continues to impact our scene in many ways. The other thing that needs to be said is that Cleave Anderson is the glue behind so many of these projects and his energy is infectious.

The session was recorded and cleaned up by Jon Hawkes.

Aldo filmed the session and it is amazaing what he was able to catch. Here is a link to the Punks and Rockers youtube channel




Sunday, April 1, 2012

Review - Treat Me Like Dirt

Saira Chhibber is a DJ for an open format show up at CHRY with a heavy punk slant. She wrote this review of Liz Worth's Treat Me Like Dirt for MRR, which appeared in the April 2012 issue (#347).

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday, May 1, 2011

“Trouble in the Camera Club” by Don Pyle, 8-1/2 x 11”, 300 pages


This is an incredible coffee table book on the Toronto punk scene through the excitement of the eyes of a fourteen year old first going to shows. Shot originally as keep sakes or momentos, these photos capture a new time in music for Toronto, which was Toronto’s first wave of punk. The book begins with some photos of the RAMONES first show in Toronto on September 24th, 1976 at the New Yorker. A botched attempt at filming the RAMONES leads to Don saving up to buy a 35 mm camera. Don also joins the yearbook club at Runnymede Collegiate, which gives him access to a darkroom, chemicals for developing film and the how to on DIY photographs. At one part of the book Don recalls that he bought “black and white film by the foot and he would wind his own canisters so that he could squeeze in more shots per roll. At times this would cause the sprockets to disengage.” This description captures the frugal nature of punk in describing the lack of resources but the determination to make these keepsakes nonetheless. The DIY practises as applied to photography out of necessity are captured. This kind of insight goes a long way and in some ways captures the essence of punk. That and the stories about the context behind the photos of these shows that took place in Toronto between 1976 and 1980. Don recounts these stories with incredible detail as only a music fan could.


“One afternoon I was flipping through the delete bins in the back of a Yonge Street record shop when this music came on over the stereo. In a wave of goose bump rush I hurried to the front to confirm what I already instinctively knew – it was the first Ramones album.”
Don also captures what it is like as an underage teen when going to shows.


"The first “bar” show I went to was the Crash ‘n Burn where my worries about being asked for ID disappeared as the door person took my money without question or a second notice.”
Nobody I know captures that nervousness, but most of us experienced it. This also describes the difference between bar show and those bigger concert hall shows that were all ages.

The story of the Toronto punk scene begins with some old movie houses, namely the Roxy and then the New Yorker, which housed the first shows when not screening John Waters or Alejandro Jodowsky films.

Don also adds to the punk rock archeology going on about the Toronto punk scene with a band called the HATE.


“The Hate performed one of the most memorable gigs I witnessed at the Turning Point as the singer Angie Ignorant stormed the stage with his cock impaling a photo of Pierre Trudeau, urine spraying the audience from what looked like Pierre’s mouth.”

Trouble in the Camera Club has some of the most accurate descrptions of the early Toronto punk scene releases. Here is Don’s review of the first VILETONES ep.

“Screamin’ Fist”, the first song on the first single by the Viletones is perfection in it’s goose bump inducing heaviness – the bass playing sixteenths on one note, then one big chord, a furious drum roll and then the whole band pounding one dirty chord. The record’s dynamic production and intensity were never matched again.
Don goes on to write about TEENAGE HEAD, the CURSE, the UGLY, the CARDBOARD BRAINS, the POLES, and the DEMICS with critical ear as only a music fan could. The accuracy of the description makes me think that Don missed his calling as a music reviewer, but this would just be one of his many talents.

“So many people have a desire to be given a finite defintion of punk, but so much is left out of the true story. Imagine a thousand embers sparking at once but all separate from each other, it became a movement, the thing that got called punk.”
Some of the early punk bands that Don got to see included XTC, the SLITS, the UNDERTONES, GANG OF FOUR, and BILLY FURY. Some photos that made it in the book include the CLASH, the RAMONES, BLONDIE, IGGY POP, and the DEAD BOYS.

Don also pays tribute to the flyer.

“Posters stapled to wooden telephone poles and handbills put up in the couple of used clothing shops were coded transmissions that could only be comprehended by those tuned to the same frequency. Cheap photocopies were the new thing.”
There are a lot of flyers used in the layout. Lots I have never seen before giving another added layer of historical relevance to this book. Photos, flyers and ticket stubs along with the stories make for the best scrapbook I have ever seen on the Toronto punk scene. In this Don’s reflections are more than mere artifact. He provides analysis. Sometimes it is favourable as in the VILETONES review already expressed and other times critical.

“In retrospect, I see aspects of how conservative punk was. Long hair and wide pants were not allowed, women were rarely equal and “faggots” were often reviled even though the origins of the scene were in gay discos and with homo art cliques. In so many cases, the new gestures and poses playing out were still firmly rooted in traditional images of rock stardom and bad seed mythology, despite the cleansing effect we dreamed punk would have on the old vision.”
Don pulls no punches making this a trusted account of the times. It is one of the most accurate records I have read of the period and it is easy to read because Don is so excited by his discoveries in music, which happened to coincide with punk. I couldn’t put it down and although the photos are spectacular don’t cheat yourself out of the insight provided by Don’s recounting of the times. This appealed to the historical musicologist in me.

I also noticed that the price is the same in Canadian as it is in American prices reflecting the strength of the Canadian dollar. We are on par with the Americans. Subtle but reflective of the unintended case made about our punk scene. (www.ecwpress.com)

Monday, April 18, 2011

Radio - Sunday, April 20, 2011



Click for download

This was our fundraising show and there was a lot of special guests that came in. ZA special dedication went out to lasha and Jimmy on their new baby boy Zenon. We spoke with Don Pyle, Tank, Zero, Mickey Skin, Cleave Anderson, Rude Van Steenes, Marcel Lefleur, Pete Jones, the Blue Demon, Dhaibid James, Pete Mahoney, and Greg Benedetto. Thank you to all who pledged and helped us reach our goal in the "Love Your Radio" campaign. We appreciate it and are looking into an echo chamber.

LORRAINAS – Johnny (Self-Released)

TYRANNA – Johnny (Boppa Do Down)
ZRO 4 – Disgusting (Unreleased)
THE CURSE – I Accuse You (Other People’s Music)


THE VILETONES – Screamin’ Fist (CIUT)
TEENAGE HEAD – Little Boxes (Sonic Unyon)
DREAM DATES – The Mess You’re In (CIUT)


999 – Action (Captain Oi!)
ARSON – Coho Coho (CIUT)


CAREER SUICIDE – Dicta-Flag (CIUT)
CAREER SUICIDE – Jonzo’s Leaking Radiation (Deranged)
TOTAL TRASH – (CIUT)
KEEP IT UP – Keep It Up (Feelin’ It)
ENVISION - Support your Scene


BLACK FAXES – Upon the Vine (CIUT)
JOHNNY ONSLAUGHT – I Kick My Bike and it kicks Me Back (Unreleased)
CURSED –
BRUTAL KNIGHTS – I Do Nothing (Deranged)
GORILLA BISCUITS – Start Today (Revelation)
SCREAM – It Came Without Warning (Dischord)


JFA – I Don’t Like You (Placebo / Alternative Tentacles)
DOA – The Enemy (Sudden Death)


TRAGEDY –


DISFEAR – Get It Off
- Brick Wall
- Fucked Up

Monday, February 21, 2011

Radio - Sunday February 20, 2011


Click for download

THE LUCKY ONES – Drunken' Holiday (Stumble Records) 



THE WELDERS – S.O.S. News (BDR Records)
THE ‘B’ GIRLS – Jealousy (Other Peoples Music)

ZRO4 – Dominoes (Unreleased)
THE CURSE – Switchblade Love (Other Peoples Music)
TYRANNA – I Wanna Be Where the Boys Are (Unreleased)

TRANZMITORS - Look What You're Doing (Cat Call / Ugly Pop)
OFF - Fuck People (Vice)

GAUNT - Quality of Armor (Bag of Hammers)
GENTLEMEN JESSE AND HIS MEN - You've Got the Wrong Man (HoZac)
JESUS LIZARD - Chrome (Touch and Go)

A.N.S. – Let’s Drink Some Beer (Tank Crimes)

TENSE REACTION – Pull the Plug / Full Speed to Nowhere (Bong Records)
RUIDOSA INMUNDICIA – Despierta (Heart First)
OTTAWA – Victim of Dedication (Residue)
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY – Legacy (Residue)

FAITH - You're X'd (Dischord)
BLATZ - Fuk Shit Up (Lookout)
FILTH - Today's Lesson (Lookout
VOID - Time to Die (Dischord)
PROPAGANDHI - Who Will Help Me Bake This Bread? (Fat Wreck Chords)

CHIEFS – Knocked Out (Dr. Strange)
THE STRIKERS – Kick Around (BDR Records)
THE FALLOUT – A Shot Rings Out (Insurgence)
CHEMICAL THREAT – They Don’t Care (Self-Released)
TERMINALS – Far From Home (Self-Released)


FLAMIN GROOVIES - Teenage Head (Buddah)
THE IVBIDDEN - Sick and Lonely (Norton)
THE LEATHER UPPERS - Wizard's Castle (Goner)


RAJAHTAA - Nothing to Lose (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Vaihtoheto (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Hinta (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Terror and Violence (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Pissa ja Paska / N.Y.T. (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Crucified Child, Part II (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Miks Haluat Tapella (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Stop the Slaughter (Self-Released)
RAJAHTAA - Crucified Child, Part I (Self-Released)

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

the Curse





In the recent issue of MRR, the reprint Chapter 12 of Treat Me Like Dirt which is a chapter about the Curse. The Curse finally get some international recognition. And the uniqueness about this piece is that there is a bunch of new photos with the Curse that were not available in the book. The piece appears in issue #327 or the August 2010 issue of Maximumrocknroll. You can get copies at http://maximumrocknroll.com/subscribe/.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell – Toronto Punk photos and gigs circa 1977 – 1978

Vince Carlucci is the guitarist and co-founder of the CARDBOARD BRAINS. The CARDBOARD BRAINS were an important part of the early Toronto punk scene. They appeared in the Last Pogo, they released two eps and a live LP, they played regularly with the VILETONES and the UGLY. It goes without saying that they were an important part of Toronto’s punk scene.

The flyer

The Oz Gallery, 134 Ossington Avenue


Well Vince has been writing a book titled “I Was a Cardboard Brain”. Although it sounds like a biography on the band Vince tells me it is more about the observations of someone witnessing an explosion of music at the time. As a member of one of those bands he will have some unique stories and shared a few of them with me just before the closing night of the exhibit. Anyway, the exhibit started out as an accident. Vince was looking through his pictures for the book he is writing and a friend of his realized that he had an exhibit in his boxes. He encouraged Vince to blow these photos up and put together an exhibit. The photos capture some iconic moments the way Don Pyle’s “Trouble in the Camera Club” did.

Like Don’s exhibit, Vince’s shots are in stark black and white. And Vince speaks very highly of Don’s photos and his eye for taking a shot. For the exhibit Vince focused on the liberators of punk who made it to Toronto. The Ramones, the Dead Boys, Iggy Pop, Patti Smith, Blondie, and Vince has great stories that accompany each photo. The Blondie shots show how nervous she was performing to the Toronto audience. It was early in her career. The guitarist in Patti Smith’s band came in and saw the exhibit and he did the audio sync up for the movie “Blank Generation” which was the movie that the Gary Topp first started showing about this thing called punk. David Bowie playing keyboards for Iggy Pop at Seneca College just before “Lust for Life” had come out. The Ramones shot at the New Yorker , which was the same gig that Peter Gabriel of GENESIS walked out of. The stories go on.

And these icons of punk played along side our own icons. There is a great shot of Steve Leckie in leather with his hands sneaking down his pants. The photo strips of the UGLY in a rehearsal space are precious and playful making for some of the best pictures I have ever seen of the band. A live shot of the CURSE at the Crash ‘n Burn is an amazing shot and Mickey Skin said it was the first shot she has ever seen of the CURSE playing live. She was so floored with the photos that she brought her parents back and Vince was telling me of some of the amazing recollections Mickey’s mom had on the local scenesters. I wish I were a fly on the wall for those stories.


The picture of the Curse


One of two walls of punk icons, the liberators of punk.


And keeping in the punk tradition, Vince also put up a wall of flyers. Loads of flyers I have never seen before.

The last roll of photos that Vince took was of the CARDBOARD BRAINS. Vince was telling me that once he got involved in the band, his photo shooting days stopped. It’s sad really, but at least we have some incredible evidence of a scene breaking. The CARDBOARD BRAINS portrait is stunning and looks like it was in a basement rehearsal space. That’s where it always starts out. And the photo is bordered with the flyers.

So the exhibit has closed down although the restaurant, REPOSADOS LOUNGE at 136 Ossington Avenue, will continue to hang some of the shots. If you missed the exhibit some of it lives on at REPOSADOS. A 3 foot by 4 foot framed shot of Iggy lives among some of the others. I asked Vince about some of the photos that didn’t make it in this exhibit and there are others which include the BOYFRIENDS and the TOYS in the mix. Vince is working on his next showing and is getting back to his writing, but you can order prints at vxcc@sympatico.ca.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Sunday, June 6, 2010


Click for MP3 download

BIG BOYS – Assault (Touch ‘n Go)
DICKS – Off Duty Sailor (Alternative Tentacles)
GO – The ABC Song / A Day to Fight For (Epistrophy)
BEHEAD THE PROPHET NO LORD SHALL LIVE – Lewd Lewd Lewd / He's the King of Everything (Outpunk)
MUKILTEO FAIRIES – Queer Enough for you (Outpunk)
SCREECHING WEASEL – I Wanna Be a Homosexual (No Budget)
THE RUNAWAYS - Cherrie Bomb (Mercury)

DILLINGER 4 - Mosh for Jesus (Hopeless)
D4 - Invader Ace (Flying Nun)
SUBHUMANS - Firing Squad (Alternative Tentacles)
SUBHUMANS UK - Reality is Waiting for a Bus (Bluurg)
THE CURSE - Something You Can't Tell Your Mother / Raw (Other People's Music)
CURSED - Promised Land / Polygraph (High Anxiety)

WHITE WIRES - Don't Call Me When You're Ill (Ugly Pop)
LIMINANAS - I'm Dead (Hozac)
BRAIN JONESTOWN MASSACRE - Oh Lord (Bomp)
SHUT UPS - Baby Come On (Junk)
SMITH WESTERNS - Tonight (Hozac)

THE ENDLESS BLOCKADE – Deutoronomy (Deep Six)
PLAGUE RATS THROUGHOUT HISTORY – Panic Action Aristocracy (Primitive Air Raid)
KYKLOOPPIEN SUKUPUUTTO – Vesi (Primitive Air Raid)
THE BASTARD NOISE – Manphibian (Deep Six)

POWERHOUSE - Fear of Falling (Blackout!)
POWERHOUSE - Growing Stronger (Self-Released)
IN TIME - Keep it Together (Self-Released)
IN TIME - Working Poor (Self-Released)
TRUE COLOURS - Bad Change
TRUE COLOURS - Why Do things Come to an End (Powered)

THE UGLY - All Because of You (Bomb)
PAGANS - Not Now No Way (Tree House)
ZEROS - Right Now (Bomp)
MUDHONEY - You Make me Die (Sub Pop)
X - We're Desperate (Dangerhouse)

Monday, May 17, 2010

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Mark Gane and Martha Johnson from Martha and the Muffins

Henry Martinuk, Mark Gane and Martha Johnson


Henry Martinuk, Mark Gane and Martha Johnson


Click for Download

MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Suburban Dream (Muffin Music)

ROXY MUSIC - Virginia Plain
MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Daytripper (Live)

THE DISHES - Summer Reaction (Regular)
THE CADS - Crabwalk (Live)

MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Primal Weekend (Live)
MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Paint by Number Heart (Live)

MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Love Began with Eve (Muffin Music)
MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Mess (Muffin Music)

MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - One Day in Paris (Virgin)
MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Swimming (Virgin)

THE CURSE - Shoeshine Boy
THE ANEMICS - Sick Boy (Live)

MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS - Jets Seem Slower in London Skies (Virgin)

Monday, April 5, 2010

Sunday, April 4, 2010


Click for download

CITY SWEETHEARTS - Hot Ten (P Trash)

MARGARET THRASHER - Airport Violence (P Trash)
BEYOND PINK - Work Out to Kill (Emancypunx)
MAX AND THE MAKEUPS - Day In Day Out (Puke 'n Vomit)
THE HORNEY BITCHES - Suck 'n Swallow (Trigger)
THE CURSE - Teenage Meat (Other Peoples Music)

TRIAL - Seems / Serene / Reflections (Equal Vision)
PLANET X DANGER - What I Despise (Self-Released)
UNRESTRAINED - Face Fear (Bloody Knuckles)
DEFEATER - Beggin' in Slums (Bridge 9)

CHINA WHITE - Solid State (New Underground)
WHITE FLAG - Middle Class Hell (Gastanka)
DOA - The Enemy (Alternative Tentacles)
VANDALS - Big Brother vs. Johnny Sako
NUNFUCKERS - Snap (Self-Released)

KRAPPY DRACULA - A Good Flying Bird (Self-Released)
EVAPORATORS - The Bombs in my Pants (Mint)
BAD TASTE - The Day the Sky Exploded (Feral Kid)
EMPTY VESSEL - Textbook Execution (Blind Spot)
CRITICAL CONVICTIONS - Anomie (Self-Released)
AK47 - They Killed Radio Raheem (Ransom)

TEENAGE HEAD - Let's Shake (CIUT)
MOLESTED YOUTH - Shining Light (CIUT)
HOMOSTUPIDS - Cave Man (CIUT)
HOSTAGE LIFE - Sons of Hostage Life (CIUT)
RAMMER - Throat of Hell (CIUT)
SNAKEPIT - Hipsterectomy (Self-Released)

CURSED - Reparation / Promised Land (High Anxiety)
VIOLENT ARREST - Heretic (Deranged)
BLACK FAXES - Animam Edere (Self-Released)
VILE NATION - Don't Miss It (Way Back When / Even Worse)

INFEST - Where's the Unity? (Drawing Blanks)
AVAIL - Connection (Catheter Assembly)
NEUROSIS - Pollution (Lookout)
DROP DEAD - Fucking Assholes (Selfless)

Demo Feature
SLOBS - Memory Lapse (Self-Released)
SLOBS - No Escape (Self-Released)
SLOBS - Chronic Disease (Self-Released)
SLOBS - Hope for Nothing (Self-Released)
SLOBS - Done Caring (Self-Released)
SLOBS - Write Offs (Self-Released)

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Moments the night of the Wayne Brown interview


Dog eat dog


Aldo Eldric, Wayne Brown, and Greg Dick


Stephe doing some tongue wagging


Wayne Brown and Greg Dick


The re-appropriated chalice. Wayne was trying to turn wine into blood.


Wayne sports a Habs toque and Greg gets to the crux of it.


Stephe, Wayne, Harrison and Linda



Wayne Brown, the gothic cowboy

Harrison makes out with straight Ed

Monday, January 18, 2010

Sunday, January 17, 2010



Click to download the show
THE VILETONES – Screamin’ Fist (Other Peoples Music)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE RAMONES – Texas Chainsaw Massacre (Sire)
Interview with Liz Worth
TEENAGE HEAD – Little Boxes (Sonic Unyon)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE DIODES – Noise (Polydor)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE POLES – CN Tower
Interview with Liz Worth
THE VILETONES – Rebel (Other Peoples Music)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE UGLY – Alley Cat (Other Peoples Music)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE CURSE – Shoeshine Boy (Other Peoples Music)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE FORGOTTEN REBELS – Third Homosexual Murder (Other Peoples Music)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE DEMICS – New York City (Ready)
Interview with Liz Worth
THE B GIRLS – Fun at the Beach (Other Peoples Music)

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Treat Me Like Dirt

Liz Worth interviewed as many first wave Toronto punks as she could find. She organized their story telling into chapters based around event and ways to describe the scene. The result is an anecdotal story telling by the characters that made up that scene. It is brilliant because punk is an oral history and Liz uses their quotes to retell their stories. She doesn't re-write or paraphrase or even use rock journalism techniques. Instead she gathers quotes by the folks involved in the incidents and has them tell the story. There is always more than one story teller so they go back and forth and you get a perspective on the folk lore and legends of Toronto. Gary Topp, Colin Brunton, Steve Leckie, members of Teenage Head, members of the Diodes, members of the Ugly, and loads of other unsung bands that made up the scene. She hads done an incredible job here of bringing the stories back to life. And Gary Pig Gold of the Pig Paper assists in the editting and Ralph Alfonso publishes this on Bongo Beat Records so this has more than gone through the first wave filter of fact checking. You can be assured that the stories in here are accurate.

Monday, January 30, 2006

Sunday, January 29, 2006

NO FUN - Suzyside (WTS)

GORILLA ANGREB - Supersyn (Spild Af Vinyl)
HJERTESTOP - Ind I Lejren (Kick n Punch)
TRIGGERS - Gasoline (Vinyl Warning)
MANHANDLERS - Die Love Die (Criminal IQ)
VENUS AND THE RAZORBLADES - I Wanna Be Where the Boys Are (Spark)
CURSE - Shoeshine Boy (Mans Ruin)
AVENGERS - The Amerikan In Me (CD Presents)
X - Nausea (Slash)

BGK - Membership (Alternative Tentacles)
WASTED YOUTH - Problem Child (Sanoblast)
RAW POWER - State Oppression (Ugly Pop)
ADOLESCENTS - Marching With the Reich (SOS)
ADRENALIN OD - Suburbia (Buy Our Records)
FUs - CETA Suckers (Modern Method)
BIG BOYS - Were Not In It to Lose (X-Mist)

RAMONES - Do You Wanna Dance? (Sire)
DICTATORS - Stay With Me (Impossible)
REZILLOS - (My Baby Does) Good Sculptures (Sire)
TEENAGE HEAD - Top Down (Page One)
VAPIDS - Cynical Solution (Drunk)
UV RAYS - Flip Out (Razorblade)
JEFFIE GENETIC & HIS CLONES - Forgetting What I Know (Dirtnap)

HONG KONG BLONDE - Hell Is Alive (Ugly Pop)
KNIFE FIGHT - Destruction (My War)
STRUNG UP - No End (Tank Crimes)
86 MENTALITY - Scumbag (Grave Mistake)
UNDER PRESSURE - Gift (Sound Pollution)
VIOLENT MINDS - Hit List (Town of Hardcore)
FUCKED UP - Baiting the Public (Burning Sensation)
ASBEST - Stirre (Kick n Punch)

LEFT FOR DEAD - Skin Graft (No Idea)
CURSED - Polygraph (Deathwish)
BLACK HAND - Bullet In, Bullet Out (Scorched Earth Policy)
INEPSY - Street City Kids (Feral Ward)

POINTED STICKS - Somebodys Mom (Quintessence)
DISHRAGS - Bullshit (Other Peoples Music)
B-GIRLS - Fun at the Beach (Bomp!)
RIFF RANDELLS - Heartbreaker (Alien Snatch)

Demo feature
SOCIAL CIRKLE - USSA (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Calling In (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Burns Me Up (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Cant Take It (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Private World (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Paralyzed (Over You) (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Drunk Cop (independent)
SOCIAL CIRKLE - Nothing Can Save You Now (independent)

Monday, May 9, 2005

Radio - Sunday May 8th, 2005


FIGHTING CHANCE - Bullets (Insurgence)


THE OPPRESSED - A.C.A.B. (Insurgence)
THE DRIVE INS - Paranoia (Dirty Punk)
CIDER BREAKFAST - Father and Bones (Dirty Punk)
NEOPHYTE - My Generation (Dirty Punk)
BROKEN BONES - Systematic Abuse (Dr. Strange)


AGENT ORANGE - Your mother sucks cocks in hell (Kangaroo)
YDI - I killed my family (Red Records)
UNITED MUTATION - Fugitive Family / Plain Truth (Wortld's Finest Hardcore)
UNDERTONES - Family entertainment (Sire)
RAMONES - We're a happy family (Sire)


SOLID GROUND - Should have known better (Vendetta)
VOORHEES - We can't be shared (Hermit)
SOLDIER DOLLS - Rising crime (Self-Released)
SKATE FAST AND DIE - Skate fast and Die (Self-Released)
UPSTAB - Punch Police (Even Worse)
WAR OF DESTRUCTION - Isolation (Grand Theft Audio)
THE NERVES - An eye for an eye (Scarey)


TOM AND THE BOOT BOYS - Fuck them all shit (Pogo 77)
THE ERECTIONS - Crazy Oi! (Pogo 77)
ORDER - Senseless Problems (Pogo 77)
THE GENBAKU ONANIES - Fuck all (Anal Fire Wolf)
THE YOUNG REPUBLICANS - Wasted Youth (Hardcore Kitchen)


CURSE - Raw (OPM)
VILETONES - KGB (OPM)
UGLY - Stranded (Explosion)
SWINDLED - Hymn #84 (Self-Released)
BLACK DONNELLYS - Anything and Everything (Audio Fellatio)


DESPISTADO - Plans (Jade Tree)
I SPOKE - The ideology of the cancer cell (TCI)
EVIL ROBOT US - Anti-Product (Self-Released)
CAPITAL DEATH - A boy and his lawnmower (CIUT)
ONE MAN NATION - Cynacism killed the idealist
Demo Feature
POSER DISPOSER - Dis-gusting bird holocaust (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Cutlass (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Better than TV (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Seagulls (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Rollin' and Controllin' (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Drugs win drug war (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - 27 (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Dishwasher (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Shitty deal (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Kalabarasinn (Self-Released)
POSER DISPOSER - Waiting to Inhale (Self-Released)


THE PROCESS - Kino Kill 33 (Burial)
BATTLE ROYALE - Gegner ich (Vendetta)
NEVER ENOUGH - Our younger selves (Vendetta)


PANTY CHRIST - Father's Day (Self-Released)

Tuesday, June 13, 1995

The Curse "Teenage Meat" CD

"Teenage Meat" is basement recordings and lo-fi material recorded by the Curse. This also includes the "Shoeshine Boy" single the band released along with some live material. Other People's Music released the CD. You can find a link for the CD at http://nonozeroblog.blogspot.com/2009/06/curse.html. The songs on here are:

1. Raw
2. Aggravation
3. Switchblade Love
4. Something Ya Can't Tell Your Mother
5. I Accuse You
6. Eat Me
7. Shoeshine Boy
8. Killer Bees
9. Teenage Meat
10. Oh My God
11. Feelin' Dirty
12. Something Ya Can't Tell Your Mother
13. I Accuse You
14. Switchblade Love
15. Eat Me
16. Aggravation
17. Blunks
18. No More Ice Cream
19. He's My Boy
20. Johnny Feels Good
21. If It Tastes So Great, Swallow it Yerself

Wednesday, August 8, 1979

Saturday, December 16, 1978

Wednesday, September 20, 1978