[kj] INEPSY Re: In Defense of Hosannas
B. Oliver Sheppard
bigblackhair at sbcglobal.net
Sat Aug 25 09:23:23 EDT 2007
This relates to Hosannas, but it also relates to someone asking what
some good contemporary metal bands were/are:
INEPSY:
http://www.myspace.com/inepsy
If you don't like it, you suck. Any of these songs could easily go on a
mix tape with KJ's "Implosion" and Motorhead's "Ace of Spades."
-Oliver
B. Oliver Sheppard wrote:
> Actually, I love Hosannas but feel like I come from more a punk
> background, not a metal background -- hardcore punk, instead of just
> neon-glow colored UK Subs-y '77 melodic punk, though.
>
> (You can be punk without being hardcore punk, but you cannot be
> hardcore without being punk -- anyone who says otherwise doesn't know
> history).
>
> Hosannas is a great slogging, sludgy album that coincidentally sounds
> like a lot of underground hardcore punk being made these days (minus
> the orchestral parts in some of Hosannas). KJ BOASTE it was being made
> on '79-era analog equipment, in a dark cold dungeon in Eastern
> European. It is not some ProTools, slick, affair.
>
> When I say Hosannas coincidentally reminds me of contemporary hardcore
> DIY underground punk, even some crust, what I'm talking about is the
> trajectory of punk that is along the lines of Amebix, Nausea, and more
> recently Born Dead Icons and their side-project The Complications (who
> are named after a Killing Joke song and whom I interviewed:
> http://www.cultpunk.com/?m=20061117 ), Tragedy, World Burns to Death,
> Zygote, and some Japanese dark hardcore.
>
> I know that Jaz, Geordie, et. al., are probably totally unaware of
> these bands and don't listen to them at all. But that they made an LP
> that in many respects ends up sounding like some of these bands anyway
> -- that's what really brought my full attention back onto KJ, who of
> course like anyone into punk I'd heard of off and on over the months
> and years. A tendency in a lot of underground hardcore now is to
> incorporate a heavy Motorhead influence. Born Dead Icons do this;
> Inepsy do this; The Complications do it; Black Panda does it. (Look
> these bands' MySpace profiles up - esp. Inepsy).
>
>
> Track 1 - "The Tribal Antidote" is a great, churning slogfest of a
> song. It reminds me of Amebix, but also has shades of "Absent Friends"
> off Democracy -- very similar riff.
>
> Track 2 - "Hosannas" -- a d-beat song! Sounds like it'll be a
> by-the-numbers thrash vehicle, but Jaz adds in melodic vocals that
> remind of the dark British post-punk band The Mob. It's nice to hear
> KJ belt out something folks can really circle pit to. Also, it bears a
> resemblance to the very early Venom song "Sons of satan," which had an
> impact on late 80s crossover punk-metal thrash.
>
> "Implosion" -- total Motorhead worship all the way on this song!
> What's not to love? Seriously? If you like Motorhead-style NWOBHM
> stuff, why isn't this good?
>
> I have no problem with Jaz exploring the more Lemmy-esque side of hs
> vocals. He cand o it great. I wish I had his vocals. He can go fromt
> hat to sounding like the same New Romantic British guy crooning out
> "New Day." How manyf olks have that vocal capability?
>
>
> And that this is all coming from a band that played with Joy Division
> in the dog days -- it's just kind of incredible.
>
> There is another band I've recently gotten into -- Bone Awl -- who
> come from the black metal scene. Coincidentally, they sound like a lot
> of Japanese and Scandinavian hardcore, though they probably have no
> idea they sound like this, so coincidentally they've begun to attract
> a punk following, which they must be scratching their heads about.
> That's how I feel about Hosannas. It sounds like a lot of the very
> good underground hardcore being put out by some cool bands now
> (seriously, look up Inepsy, for example), but KJ are probably
> oblivious to this fact (I can't imagine Jaz sitting down with
> Tragedy's _Nerve Damage_ LP, or World Burns to Death's _Totalitarian
> Sodomy_ though I think he would actually like them), which sort of
> makes it even cooler.
>
>
> -Oliver
>
>
> Brendan wrote:
> No, come on! Invocation is epic, Gratitude is epic and a half, upsized
> with extra cheese and sparkles, Death and Ressurection show is cool...um,
> and some of the lyrics in the other songs are pretty cool...
>
> I think the main difference is that it appeals more to people with Metal
> sensibilities vs you filthy punks...? =)
>
> PS: Alex did you get around to descecrating Appetite for Destruction,
> after your Patti Smith rant I'd love to read it, even though I am a big
> fan of Appetite. I can take it...I think. =)
>
> With the utmost respect to Oliver and the contingency he represents,
> let me just say this:
>
> HOSANNAS is far and away the WORST THING Killing Joke have ever done.
> YES --> worse than OTG.
>
> Heh.
>
> Alex in NYC
>
>
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