Showing posts with label family curse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family curse. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2014

The Family Curse "Twilight Language" on Drawing Room Records


I had completely forgotten about this hilarious thread on the Termbo message boards about another band named Family Curse but this full length should finally settled it once and for all - this is the real Family Curse. The one you can’t escape, the one that keeps appearing when things started to go right. Just when that last tragedy is finally over those ugly realities about death and selfishness come back again twice as hard. That’s the kind of overwhelming manic energy you get from Twilight Language. Creepy pieces of The Cramps combined with the energy of the Hot Snakes examining the darker final side of things with punk seances.

A scuzzy looped sound kicks off A-Side’s "No Return". Massive dead drums and fuzzy bass open it’s low end to get layered in a dense massive pile at speed. All the elements right out of the gate already at 10 and with an unhinged higher end feeding this backing melody. It’s a tightly wound track of twangy high strung electric that keeps getting faster and faster, briefly blowing out a chorus in a Deadbolt b-movie style. This is even more dangerous and playing with more pop structures of surf and garage crunch. It’s a fast ride with Erick Bradshaw’s lower register talky delivery out of a creepy echo of haunted vocals. Feel the neon and sunglasses, they might have black leather jackets and juggle daggers in those huge landscapes a la Jesus and Mary Chain peeling back the layers like a scab.

Erick’s delivery on “Julia Armant” tries to blindside you if you don’t know their dynamics. Clackity guitars that pick a little melody to focus on while Erick talks about all the people surrounding Julia; the mortician, the undertaker, all present in this groove jangle pop. Ending up with huge punk energy out of a twitchy nothing, their own kind of arty At The Drive In sound, frantic and way faster than these rails should carry anything. They're desperately trying to escape the literal spirits of hardcore, refusing to give you room to breathe or pause for reflection. This isn't feel good party punk. It’s an occult search for the unexplained punk.

"NY NY NY" is a case for a dark punk sound in a city that can still harbor those unsettling places amidst the corner starbucks. Erick expands complete vocal melodies that feel barely sketched out by the rest of the band in their ever present bashing energy. But it has to do with those breaks, if they gave anything else a chance to get in here who knows what kind of ghosts of punk could be conjured. It's a decidedly pessimistic view of ‘dreams dying on the sidewalk’. No actual people are dying, Manhattan is becoming like the suburbs that you hated and ran from in the first place.

"Memory Sickness" runs with frantic jitters and creaking metal croaks of strings between strums. Erick’s groaning in his lower register horror narration, talking about ghosts walking downtown, obsessed with the dead at this point. Each one of these tracks is an adrenaline jolt waiting to fire up all punk neurons in spasms of muscle. The density comes slamming in like a heavy blanket that’s half smothering devolving into a heavy dose of cymbal crashes overpowered by this wall of distortion. Erick hits on this odd vocal timing that dives the opposite way into the lower reaches of his delivery. The devil tombs are all visible in a walk down the city street, it’s just the way they look at things with graveyard tinted glasses.

"Scorched Earth Policy" pulls outs a heavy foundation of thundery crunch for this final track. Almost in Jello Biafra style he’s describing what the institutions have done to this town. You can hear the contempt and disgust diving into the even darker stuff. Burn the churches, torch all the fields kill all the horses. As catchy as it is, it’s intended to make the lyric that much weirder and terrible. Like some kind of Brothers Grimm fairy tale, when you actually get into the meat of their argument it's a terrible, weird world and you’re going to die - chances are in a horrific way.

Pick this up from Drawing Room Records.






Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Family Curse / White Murder on Doormat/Drawingroom Records


Got another single from Drawing Room Records sister label, Doormat Records from Jeff, who turns out goes to the Word book store bookclub group we've both been attending for a while. The seven inches world got a little bit smaller, and if I wasn't talking about these already I'd definitely be tracking them down, the guy knows music, all kinds of music and just wants to get quality stuff out there he stands behind...exactly what singles have always been about...a financially ruinous way to show you REALLY care about the music. Isn't it enough to see a show, or buy a CD? JEff says no.

This one is a split from Family Curse (NO 'THE") out of Brooklyn and LA's White Murder, I was a little familiar with Family Curse from their first single on Drawing Room a little while back and A-Side's "Middle Age America" has it's speed pop punk sights sent on the rapidly shrinking middle class. They're losing their McMansions and jobs at AIG, and Family Curse wants you to know it's their own damn fault. These guys seem to be working right on the serrated edge of a post hardcore and catchy punk, they list Drive Like Jehu as an influence and that's a good place to start. Erick Bradshaw has a similar powerful delivery while this rhythm section of punchy distortion and speed time signatures keeps things in perfect tight unison. Mindblowingly quick, it's all a burst of that old school punk attitude of anything on Alternative Tentacles, the evils of Corporations and Nostalgia with a polish and craft of the Hot Snakes, going straight for the suburban jugular with the chops to back it up.
B-Side's "Breakdown" from White Murder sounds like a dirtier garage located take on that post punk sound, the guitar holds the sustained bends a little longer, it's got just a hint of a blues distortion in a sort of Rocket from the Crypt way, but the vocals in unison from Hannah and Mary give this a unique slant on that cocky, leather jacket punk. Reminding me of the tougher sounds of The Coathangers, or going back even to Bratmobile, but with a polished sheen on the old dirty punk. Chugging along, they leave room for that overdrive solo, and a whispery breakdown before ending with an all out repeated chorus, "Shut the fuck up! / Motherfucker!" You'd be surprised how those two lines go together. Two coasts, in a nice pissing contest over the never ending bullshit that can be life sometimes. But at least this single should do the trick for a little while after you get that foreclosure notice. I'm talking to you america. Jeff and I are too busy spending the tiny amounts of saved money we have pressing singles. The bank can't take my records away...right?

Most Vertical Primate Erickelric from Family Curse was interviewed about the connection between these two for the Village Voice, check it out.

On black vinyl, download card with scrawled messages (duh) in the gutter on Drawing room / Doormat Records.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Family Curse on Drawing Room Records


Erick sent this over from his latest project, Family Curse on his resurrected label, Drawing Room Records, to put out two sides of an art rock, pop, power punk four piece, with Erick on vocals. Of course that many genre's dropped into one sentence is lazy of me and could be a mess, but it works in that indescribable Les Savy Fav style of being able to work with anything they come up with. It's all in service to this frenetic, epic sound.

A-Side's , "Julia Armant" has a great snare roll captured on this one, a big empty room sound, the spurs heavily rattling around in this gutsy rhythm against a jerky distorted bassline...but thats really just a tiny aspect to this multilayered pop steamroller. The punchy bass rolls around this riff, rapid fire bursts of guitar jut in throughout, the chorus literally explodes. In addition to the idiosyncratic mix of styles, Erick has that Tim Harrington emphatic, talky story delivery in a serious rocking track. There's just so many layers of disjointed rhythms, the catchiness is stumbling over itself. A double time percussion that kicks in for the chorus over this already quick beat becomes a brick wall to hurl over. They seem to never let up for a second on this impressive, almost jazzy groove, but done in a dense pop way that owes a lot to the punk attitude and delivery. Family Curse hese has insane chops...and for just a four piece? You can't imagine this level of complex sound...they're showing off serious power with a METAL double bass kick that even at their current speedy delivery is jaw dropping. This is kept up for an inordinate amount of time, looping back in for another takedown.

Not sure who Julia Armant is either? Check out this piece WFMU did about the origins.
But it wasn't until watching this video that the more psych elements of this one started coming together. A weird species of Dinowalrus? Cursive?

They just don't try to separate anything, you witness the deliberate mash, a pure blend, one of those combinations that wouldn't make sense unless you actually experienced it. The levels of talent to get to this point of being on the verge of something seriously unclassifiable.

The B-Side, "Last Days" gives the bass center stage to kick off a rough groove, which is the perfect foundation, you hear that one night before you go to sleep and rush to get it down. This one goes more post rocking the way of The Sediment Club or The Wire, anxious and jagged this time. A great repeating guitar melody that would otherwise be orphaned but they refuse to let it die...just a bunch of stubborn bastards, teasing out every last interesting variant of style, Erick doesn't even breathe... running lyrics on top of each other.
I saw you / standing / outside the gate.
I bet that means that this friend didn't make the cut in this apocolypse. The guitars are sirens, wailing at the end, echo'd vocals, warped laters of guitar, the whole thing is coming down, but dammit if they didn't tell you it was goint to end like this.

I appreciate that they have this great wrap around sticker on the lower right reminding me to play this at 45, you'd be surprised how many times you inadvertently listen to something for a while like this driving yourself crazy. I also like the fine print. Touche. Heavy green stock sleeve with download card.

Get it from Drawing Room Records who says:
Family Curse is made up of members of some great New York bands of late: punkers Golden Error, shredding post-punk duo Ribbons, and hard chargers Blood City.