Showing posts with label umeå. Show all posts
Showing posts with label umeå. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Masshysteri - Vår Del Av Stan

I popped into one of the many record stores that have popped up in the north Seattle suburbs in the past couple years today. I didn't know what I wanted; only that I wanted to hang out for a while, have a beer or two (it's a record bar, duh), and buy something based on someone else's taste.

It didn't quite work out that way. While my bartender and I discussed the finer points of late 90s power violence and I shared my opinions on Coalesce, my record tenders couldn't quite point me in the direction of something I didn't already own. They DID suggest Lip Cream's "Kill Ugly Pop", an Abrasive Wheels compilation, some Sleep records. All good recommendations; all recordings I already own.

In the end, I picked up a copy of World Burns To Death's "The Sucking Of The Missile Cock", a Portland crust classic, the Hardcore Holocaust release of which I probably sold in the mid-aughts to make a mortgage payment. This led me down the path of talking about records that Sonarize had reissued in recent years, which took me to Scandanavian hardcore, which brought me to Masshysteri, one of the most perfect punk bands of the past 20 years. This is their first of two full lengths, released by Feral Ward here in the States and by Ny Våg in their native Sweden. Masshysteri was the continuation of a line that includes the Vicious, Regulations, the (International) Noise Conspiracy, Insurgent Kid, and INVSN. Hell, one of their members used to be in Doughnuts, a Victory Records band that I actively ignored in the 90s but keep thinking I'll finally check out one of these days if I can just find a copy of their full length in the dollar bin.

ANYWAY...

Masshysteri: good-ass band. It's hardcore kids playing power pop, which is my favorite performance style of power pop.

Click here to download.

Monday, October 7, 2024

various artists - Northcore: The Polar Scene Compilation

Just your run of the mill Swedish punk and hardcore comp from 30 years ago, split between bands I knew already and bands I didn't.until I laid my paws on this eighth release from the esteemed Burning Heart Records.

Yeah, so I know Refused all too well, Randy, Fireside, Doughnuts, and Abhinanda. I feel varying levels of interest in them. But to discover Drift Apart or Breach here was well worth the $2 I think I spent earlier this year. Somebody like Shredhead isn't what I would seek out, what with their proto-nu metal groove thrash, but it's not bad. It's the kind of scene curiousity that existed a lot back in the 90s and seems to have died away as the internet consumes us all.

Click here to download.

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Regulations - Different Needs E.P.

Here's the final Regulations 7", and the penultimate recording of, arguably, my favorite Umeå band (you heard me!). Released on Havoc in three pressings here in the States, and co-released by Ny Våg Records and P. Trash Records in Europe, this came out around the time of Regulations' second U.S. tour. Which was the tits. It's a bloody shame that the hard drive holding all the pictures I took at that show has disappeared.

Have you not checked out the other two Regulations posts? Have you no clue what to expect? Imagine, if you will, a melding of late 70s Swedish punk rock, the Dils/Weirdos/Randoms portions of Dangerhouse, and an aggressive sprinkling of 90s skate culture. Now distill it through Euro leftism and youth culture, and you have the "Different Needs" E.P.

And if you don't get any of those references, then, I dunno, short, snotty, and fast punk rock songs?

I am constitutionally obliged to point out that the 3rd and final pressing of this record is available for one measly dollar via Felix von Havoc's eponymous label, which, honestly, is 20% of what I happily paid for a copy back in 2007. There's a part of me that wants to order 10 and send them out at random to folks who have never heard this record; that's how strongly I feel about the band.



Click here to download.


Wednesday, November 18, 2020

The Vicious - Alienated

Simultaneous with his work in Regulations and the Lost Patrol, Robert Hurula Pettersson fronted a little four piece in Umeå called the Vicious. Remember that comment a few weeks back about Umeå being an incestuous scene? Well, maybe that's not the appropriate adjective, but the Vicious' lineup doesn't contradict that statement. Robert had been playing with drummer André Sandström in power poppers turned post-punkers the Lost Patrol/Invasionen/INVSN. Guitarist Sara Almgren had been a member of the (International) Noise Conspiracy since their inception, and in the legendary all-female vegan sXe group Doughnuts. And bassist Andreas Johansson had been playing with the Umeå post-metal band Cult Of Luna going back to their second LP. It was, to be fair, a murderer's row of players.

So it should prove no surprise that this, their only LP, is a full-blown ripper. Released in 2006 in Europe by Ny Våg Records and Cage Match Federation, and in North America by Yannick Lorrain's Feral Ward, this was the hot record all summer. They'd tour the US in 2007; of course I missed them, to my eternal regret. Andreas had left the band by that point, replaced by Erik Viklund on bass. Given the choice between vinyl and CD, I chose the compact disc, since it had the first two Vicious 7"s on it as a bonus. And that's how I'm able to share it with you.

After that tour, the four members of the Vicious would return home, drop their English-language songs for their native Swedish, and turn into the beloved Masshysteri. I did see them play in the back of a comic shop in Baltimore to a crowd of circle pitters and bummed-out gamers. It was fucking magic. They'd continue to build upon the Vicious's blend of Dangerhouse-style punk, New Bomb Turks riffs, and bubblegum pop.



Click here to download.

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Regulations - Regulations

Prelude: Today is the fifth anniversary of the last show at Charm City Art Space. It closed a year after I left Baltimore, replaced by a tattoo shop that I assume is still there (?). I've already written about them before; I'll write about them again. But seeing as how they were doing their second American tour behind this release when I saw them in 2007 at CCAS, I guess it makes sense to write about this now.

If you don't get revved up by the opening chords from Marcus Axelsson's guitar on "Anna's Eyes" from Regulations' self-titled record, then you probably don't like punk rock, and should probably just put this down.

Everybody associated with this record is on fire here. Regulations have really hit their stride here, channelling Dangerhouse Records through Umeå skatepunk. Dennis Lyxzén co-produced this slab with the band and released it on his Ny Våg Records; you may know him as the singer of Refused, the Lost Patrol/Invasionen, the (International) Noise Conspiracy, and AC4. This was a co-release in Europe with Kick N' Punch Records in Denmark, who also put out records from Amdi Petersens Armé, Gorilla Angreb, and Hjertestop (amongst others) over their 21 releases in the aughts. Felix von Havoc put this out on his eponymous Minneapolis label, in the middle of a year where he put out the second R.A.M.B.O. record, a pair of reissues from the Finnish hardcore band Riistetyt, and the second Kylesa record.

More than anything, it's this record, along with the "Electric Guitar" comp that came out around the same time, that got me paying much more close attention to European punk rock. It was such a good year both domestically and internationally, but 2005 was the first year I made a conscious effort to seek out European releases. At the time, I thought it was just because I was a newlywed living with my father-in-law to save money for a house I couldn't afford. Turns out I got a lot more out of that newfound interest in Swedish crust than I did out of the house.



Click here to download.

Friday, October 30, 2020

Regulations - Electric Guitar

I can't believe it's been 15 years since this came out. What a banger.

I knew a little bit about Regulations before I snagged their first 7", "Destroy", back in 2003. I knew it was three of the members of E.T.A. I knew it was coming out on Busted Heads in Sweden, a counterpart to 625 Productions in the Bay Area, or Havoc in Minneapolis, or Amendment down in Virginia, all of which were putting out amazing, modern thrash. And I knew they were from the cradle of modern Swedish punk, Umeå, an incestuous, delightful hive of some of the most progressive DIY punk and hardcore on the planet. They were setting trends; we were lapping it all up.

But I didn't know that what I'd hear was more of a throwback to the early 80s, more influenced by the Lower East Side than skateboards. It was so amazingly fresh, due in no small part to the bass sound developed by this dude Robert who'd signed on with the trio of ex-E.T.A.'ers. It was fast but clean, something you could dance AND sing along to. It kinda felt magical.

Regulations records came in fits and starts. They'd released another, self-titled 7" on Malmö's Putrid Filth Conspiracy. Then, in 2005, Havoc put out a 12" & CD, collecting both 7"s and a new mini-album, "Electric Guitar", in support of their first North American tour. I listened to that record non-stop all summer long, into the fall, through into 2006 and beyond. After all, if you're going to let kids channel a band like the Dils and lock them in a house through a long Scandinavian winter, you're probably going to get something worth listening to.



Click here to download.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The Lost Patrol Band - s/t

While I think it'd be terribly presumptuous to say Tony Pence is one of my top bros, he's absolutely on my Top 5 List of Musical Gurus. I can run a finger along a rack of CDs or box of 7"s at the house, and at least 30% were purchased as a result of something he's played me, or name-dropped, or pointed out in a zine. I had a dream about owning a record store; he went out and actually opened it. A good dude with impeccable taste...which is why I like to bring him toys.

Case in point: the Lost Patrol Band. There's a good chance I would have come to find these cats eventually. But shortly after he opened Celebrated Summer, I paid Tony a visit, and he was playing this. Great guitar pop? You betcha. Ex- & current members of damned near every great Swedish punk rock band? Absolutely, kitten. I had to have it. But what would stand in my way? It turned out some legal troubles over the band name led to the entire catalog being taken out of print. A low down dirty shame. But no Wayans project ever stood in my way. I pinned this butterfly down in a 3rd floor walkup in Pittsburgh last year. Asking price? $6. Beautiful.

/just finished watching The Kid Stays In The Picture










The Lost Patrol Band - s/t
(click the record to DL)

RIYL: tight jeans, "Who Put The Bomp?", stripes

Read This One

Post #400: Double Dagger - Ragged Rubble

It took from May to August 2000 to go from 100 to 200 posts. Then I hit 300 posts two days before Christmas 2000. And now I'm here, anot...

People Liked These