PBP RECORD REVIEWS
Check out some reviews of some of the latest records on PBP. Taken from Suburban Voice on line zine
BUNNY SKULLS-18 Song EP (Punks Before Profits, 7″ EP)
Formerly a duo, now a trio and I neglected to review their first 7″. Distored, raw hardcore in short, sharp installments. I mean, you’re not going to find any three minute epics here. It’s not all blinding thrash either. “Daily War” actually has something of a melody. Pretty tongue-in-cheek and particularly contemptuous of crusties, suicide punx, youth crew-ers and people who wear Hooters shirts. What’s funny is this sounds like it was recorded on a boombox or four-track but it was actually recorded by Steve Albini at his studio. And he does a great job of making it sound like a boombox recording. I just went back and listened to their first, one-sided EP and that was recorded on a four-track and is sonically similar. Maybe you can still score one. Go to www.myspace.com/bunnyskullsband. (PO Box 1148, Grand Rapids, MI 49501, www.punksbeforeprofits.org)
RAMMING SPEED-Always Disgusted, Never Surprised (Punks Before Profits, 7″ EP)
Boston’s metallic hellions Ramming Speed are back with four new tracks. The main muse is straight-up thrash metal with some blowtorch leads. That’s particularly true for “Too Close To Almost,” the best song here and almost close to catchy (sorry). Given to blasting on occasional and Jonah Livingston has the sticksmanship to pull it off but they’re at their best when sticking to the traditional trappings. The lyrics deal with economic collapse and putting too much faith in political leaders i.e. the current occupant of the White House to make things better for the underclass (“No Hope”). Pretty good but you really need to see them in their live, hair-flying fury. (PO Box 1148, Grand Rapids, MI 49501, www.punksbeforeprofits.org)
RELIGIOUS SS DISORDER-Prey (Punks Before Profit, 7″ EP)
Dark and churning punk with tribal-like rhythms, buzzing guitar and bass, plus vocals with a whole lotta reverb on them. The title track begins with collage of clips repeating the word “terrorism” ad infinitum leading into the musical fray. The more aggressive punk side comes up for “Critically Think” and “People Not Property,” but there are other times where there’s an anarcho punk vibe and that adds a distinctive flair. One of the better recent releases from this label and well-packaged with a hand screened cover and poster. (PO Box 1148, Grand Rapids, MI 49501, www.punksbeforeprofits.org)
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