12/30/07

Courtney Love for President

It's the future, people, but don't be scared. It's what we always wanted.
*Megafast shit, like computers and McDonalds/Sheetz/Starbucks coffee that comes out exactly
like you dreamed it would taste.
*Laptops are shrinking. They're going to be the size of phones.
*The iPhone is growing. It's going to be the size of a laptop.

All kinds of kooky shit. We're realizing what kind of sci-fi movie our future is based on and, unfortunately, we're not in Star Trek or The Fifth Element. It's more like Blade Runner over here... or the Running Man. Dystopic shit, like omnipotent predator cops and increased government surveillance Wiretaps, a heavily manipulated and spun holy war. Fifteen minutes of fame chopped down to fifteen seconds. The all star villains of dystopic film hopping out of our screens and into positions of power.

Things are getting scary... as Hillary Clinton appears to be our last best hope for this election. We're doomed to another 12 year cycle, as Hunter S. Thompson so eloquently put it, of Republican presidents. It's like in the 90s, when Courtney Love won 15 minutes of dreary fame over Cobain's suicide. We felt our nihilism slipping away with disgust, we watched as Soundgarden and Alice in Chains slowly dwindled and split. Of the scene few survive now. Pearl Jam is the only surviving giant of that sweet, sweet movement... and they only survived because they evolved.

E V O L U T I O N

Now Bill Clinton, who I will argue was a damn fine president, is relegated to cheerleader status for his strange and smug wife, the Senator from "New York."

She's as much a New Yorker as Bush is a Texan. Give me a fucking break.

Anyone who has read their histories knows that political parties, like anything, have lifespans. The two dominant parties in our nation have outlived their usefulness. The Republicans (as we know them) are the ten thousand pound elephant in the room, with a smattering of nervous Democrats profusely apologizing to everything in sight. The Democrats know they're cornered and are screaming "uncle" as loudly as possible. They've been reading the Art of War, but they've been reading it upside down. The champions chosen from the ranks are the frailest soldiers, the pretenders.

I don't know enough about Obama, but I do know that he's no Kucinich. Now THAT bastard has balls. He's doomed, though. The curse of Nader hangs on his soul, drawing somehow Perot level disrespect. He's the third-party Democrat, doomed in a football obsessed society.

What does football have to do with anything? Well, it's a contest for supremacy between two polarizing powers. The magical number two is entrenched, forever established, to where a third party candidate can only be fodder for late night TV jokes or accused of "losing the election" for down and outers on November 8th. This is a shame for Kucinich, because he's the purveyor of some damn fine ideas.

He will fail. People like sitcoms and crime dramas, people like soap operas and the gibberish hysteria of reality TV. He's too damn smart. People get too envious when they see him. He's progressive, his wife is a hot redhead half his age. He's a non-traditional politician with a Jimmy Carter peace stripe five miles wide. People hate their betters and will not bring them to power, they will only bring the contemptible to power except in rare and freakish times.

Wait, that doesn't gel either. These are rare and freakish times! The African subcontinent is eating itself alive like a boa constrictor on acid, World War 4 is building over in Pakistan (WW3 was Korea, Viet Nam, Cambodia, et cetera. Do the research, all the properties are present. -HS), our stores are full of poison (product recalls on toxic foods and toys), and our weather patterns have gone fuck crazy from global warming. I mean, holy shit, the tropics have moved! This does not mean bikinis in December... this means drier weather. The big drought in NC is a sign of things to come.

Is there some kind of James Bond villain at work... some weirdo with a metal skull living in a hollowed out volcano?

No... there is not. This is the industrial revolution at work.

R E V O L U T I O N

Humans are an active species, so I won't go screaming the Big Hate right now. We interact with our environment, it's what we do. The trouble right now is that we're interacting globally and don't yet have a comprehensive understanding of our planet on that scale, or even what that scale means. We're not going to stop using petroleum, we're not going to stop building condominiums twenty feet from the breakers.

The worst that will happen is that we won't be able to live here. The planet will kick us out and make room for the next evolution. We're used to being here, we like it here, so we need to work on how to maintain our quality of life without causing further change to our preferred ecosphere.

Keyword: change. Not damage, change. A warmer planet with different weather patterns will benefit certain forms of life.

So that's it. It's very simple. We work out a way to maintain our rampant consumption of natural resources while being responsible tenants in our preferred ecosystem. You know, be the guy who never takes a beer from the fridge without putting one back.

We're probably fucked.

Apocalyptically yours...

-HS

12/15/07

Six Questions of Death: Nat Turner & the Slave Rebellion (Published Dec '07, G-Vegas Magazine)

November 3rd brought a massive event to Eastern North Carolina. A band of ingenuity, talent, and indescribable worth to the future of music descended upon an eager crowd. Eardrums were gleefully shattered, faces were rocked off, t-shirts were sold. There were some Fayattenamese who'd made the drive specifically to see the show singing themselves hoarse, pumping their fists like the inebriated pistons of a party bus.

Psst... if you went to X-fest you missed this show.

I am speaking of the Protomen, Nashville's premier Mega Man rock opera. The Protomen are a nine-strong rock monster and, no, I am not making this up. Imagine Rush, with Geddy Lee's pterodactyl shriek replaced by a raw and cutting counter-tenor spanning at least four octaves, all in android costumes.

See, Protomen are just one example of the kind of talent and innovation that regularly slips through town under the mainstream radar. It happens in a nondescript storefront somewhere on Dickinson, in a little beer and wine store across from Sheetz, in the living room of a party house. It happens.

Caspian, one of the brightest rising stars in the post rock world, have been through twice. These Are Powers (apocalypse dance noise featuring ex-members of Liars), the Silent Years (who received a rad shout out from Spin!), ex-members of the Dead Milkmen... really, I could go on. MC Homeless relocated here from Ohio almost a year ago. He's opened for the Coup and once chased MudVayne out of a Burger King in Maine, but you can find him in 21 Eleven most days with his feet on the couch. The Kickass had one of their first shows in a long time at the Spazz, and Future Islands play local showspaces when they come around, since the folding of the Red Rooster effectively closed downtown to nontraditional music.

I don't mean to idealize, not every band is gold... but every band is real. If you want to be on the frontlines, then get yourself out to an independent show. Do some research, go listen to the bands. There are so many shows to choose from, it's hard to not find something you love. Be scientists. Check out the listings on these links.

myspace.com/spazzgallery

myspace.com/21eleven

Our underground spaces are why Greenville is a bigger NC tour destination for independent bands than Asheville... that's right, Asheville! The state's big art town! The place where you can't throw a rock without giving a multi-instrumentalist a concussion!

Anyway... enough blather.

The members of Nat Turner and the Slave Rebellion were kind enough to meet me on an offshore oil rig to protect my identity. Nat Turner, who have been playing around town since early summer, bring an uncommon amount of energy to the stage along with an activist fire that's pretty rare these days.

(full interview below... as promised)


Hawk Season: Describe a post-apocalyptic society influenced by your music.

Victor Herazo: Wow

HS: Good answer.

Chipp Weatherly: If society was influenced by our music, hopefully we would avoid the post-apocalyptic world in the first place.

HS: That's good.

Jason Luther: I suppose a society influenced by our music – by the message we're trying to get across – if our music was introduced into a post-apocalyptic world I suppose it would work a little bit better because, like, we stand for the fight for freedom and against injustice, so if you could have that whole “hey, there's this big government or, you know, military force leading the way against a rebellion” and I feel like our music would be good for that. Like the theme music in a movie.

CW: It's interesting that you would pick that question because the first song we ever wrote was about a post-apocalyptic world. “Manmade Wasteland.”

VH: I think there would still be battles with giant robots, except for everything would be equal. There'd be freedom, but there would still be giant robots.

CW: Everybody would be giant robots... with light sabers.

HS: What's the hardest thing about being a newish band?

JW: Getting out of your town, because everybody wants to know, like, if you have fans in that city. And it's like, “Well, not yet, but we will once you sign us into your venue.” We got that from the Luna Bean, the guy wanted us to send him a demo CD, and he's like “How many fans do you guys have in Wilson?” and I was like “None... yet.”

VH: I think the hardest thing is getting yourself out there, getting people to show up to shows, because at first they don't know who you are.

Heinrich Arnold: And then, likely, the majority of the town will like bad music anyways, so they won't come to support the underground music scene.

CW: Everyone loves bad music, except for us. We rock... don't put that in there.

HS: Are kids still being expelled for wearing your shirts to city schools?

VH: I think after the first one they kind of got the hint to stop wearing the shirts.

JL: It's a very interesting subject, it's kind of weird, the information came from a third party thing. It was like, my college professor heard it from one of his other students whose friend was involved with it, so I don't know exactly what happened. All I know is that I was told that somebody was expelled and that my roommate's brother was actually written up for wearing our t-shirt.

CW: One thing that should be stated, is that the way we view the name, and the t-shirt, and everything like that, you know, everything we stand for, it should not cause any discrepancies or whatever. I think a lot of times people see the word “slave” and get immediately offended.

JL: People like to get offended.

VH: Well, they need something to do, right?

JL: It's just that, it's like Chipp said, people don't take the time to read through it, think about it, like, “Hey, who is Nat Turner? Why is Abe Lincoln on this t-shirt?” Maybe you should look at the rebellion next to the word “slave.”

HS: Who would play each of you in a film?

VH: If Bruce Lee were still alive...

CW: Well, me and Jason both do acting, so...

VH: If Bruce Lee were still alive, yeah. But otherwise, Jackie Chan... or Mr. Bean? How about Mr. Bean? Okay. Mr. Bean. Mr. Bean would be mine.

CW: I think everybody should have to pick everybody else's. Like, you can't pick for yourself, you'd be like “I like this actor, he's hot... I'm hot, so...”

HA: Hmm... Jessica Alba for me.

HS: Do you have the lips for it?

JL: What kind of film are we talking here?

HS: I guess post-apocalyptic.

VH: Saving the world!

JL: I think, what about Chipp? Let's start with Chipp. Who does Chipp remind you of?

VH: Stephen Hawking.

JL: Heinrich would definitely be Steven Seagal.

CW: His hair!

JL: Make an expression like everything we're saying is stupid.

VH: Okay, Steven Seagal, it's decided.

JL: So we're decided for you, wait, did we ever decide on Chipp?

CW: No, we didn't.

VH: I don't know why this is all so difficult... it's because Chipp's so goshdarn unique.

JL: Johnny Depp comes to mind, just because he's got that soul patch and similar hair.

CW: Dude, nobody's going to watch my movie and go “WHOA JOHNNY DEPP WOW!”

VH: Dude, it's decided. It's Johnny Depp.

CW: No. Johnny Depp is such a good actor, but I get so tired of the way people act about him.

JL: He does too, though. That's why he's cool.

JL: Hugo Chavez.

VH: Chico Chavez?

JL: Hugo. Isn't he an actor?

HS: He's the president of a country.

JL:He's a president?

HS: He's in his 50s.

JL: Yeah. Let's not go with Hugo Chavez.

VH: What was that dude, from that movie, “the Mexican” or something?

JL: That's Johnny Depp.

VH: No, man.

CW: Oh! Antonio Banderas!

VH: Yes!

HS: Okay, we've got Antonio Banderas.

CW: Or Enrique Iglesias. (about Jason) No, no the guy, the guy that punches everybody, the drunk Irish dude, I think.

JL: What drunk Irish dude?

VH: Sean Connery?
CW: Russell Crowe? Russell Crowe! Yes!

HS: If you could open for any band or musician, alive or dead, who would it be?

VH: Bruce Lee.

HS: He just goes up on stage and kicks people.

JL: Exactly, that's a show in itself.

CW: Thirty minutes of entertainment.

HS: Dude, were you at the show last night where Bruce Lee kicked a bunch of people to death?

CW: He would just be screaming notes.

JL: Jimi Hendrix. I dig Jimi Hendrix' style a lot, I would love to open for Jimi Hendrix, or Led Zeppelin.

CW: What a stereotypical answer.

JL: Dude, you can't help that those are my favorite bands. Well, then, who would you pick, Chipp?

CW: We can't say Motorhed, because we play one of their songs. Bach.

HS: He was a musician.

CW: I like Bach.

JL: Have you ever heard Back's organ fugue? Dude, it's insane, man!

HS: Oh, he's crazy. So, we have Bach and Hendrix?

CW: Bach, Hendrix, and Turbonegro.

VH: Wait, who decided on Turbonegro?

JL: Chipp.

CW: No I didn't.

VH: He decided on Bach!

CW: Oh, shit, then screw Turbonegro.

HS: So the answer is... either Bach or Hendrix, screw Turbonegro?

JL: Turbonegro's great.

VH: Jason, you pick one now.

JL: I picked Hendrix, man.

VH: Okay, fine, two Hendrix. Who do you pick, Yngwie?

HA: I don't know.

VH: Do you want to put the default Dragonforce?

CW: Everybody's like “You guys could open for their Guitar Hero song!”

HA: Who did 'Yes We Can?”

CW: Oh, god, Made in Mexico?

HA: Have you ever heard that song?

HS: No.

HA: It's so dumb. (plays guitar riff) That's basically what it is.

JL: It's completely out of tune.

HS: Heinrich: do you have a choice by any chance?

HA: I'll just go with Paganini if he's going with Bach.

HS: That's fair.

CW: No, actually, I would change mine to Deep Purple and not Bach, honestly I think it would be Deep Purple.

JL: Deep Purple would be cool.

VH: Yeah, that's a good choice.

CW: That's my serious answer. Deep Purple is amazing and they have influenced me so much. I love Ritchie Blackmore. Amazing guitar player.

VH: Let's get a slew. Deep Purple, Hendrix, Bach, Paganini.

HS: Okay!

VH: ...and Nat Turner and the Slave Rebellion!

HS: That would be an awesome show.

HS: Question number six of your Six Questions of Death is... how bright is the future?

VH: Whose?

HS: It's a pretty general pronoun.

VH: Good music's coming back.

CW: I think music's coming back. It's less about the image now and it's getting more about the roots of good, solid, fist-pumping excellence.

JL: Not necessarily on the radio, but, it's got to come from somewhere.

CW: It starts in the underground and it makes its way up to the top.

JL: In the world, there's a lot of things in the world that are going in bad directions right now, but at the same time people definitely have the ability to change that.

VH: So, what do you think? Is it going to work out or not?

JL: The future for this, our society, is looking kind of iffy right now.

CW: I personally believe that we're in a transition period.

JL: Musically, it's good.

VH: It's like the fall of Rome.

CW: It sounds really weird when you just say it, I've read a couple of books on it actually, and our society is going exactly the same way as they did. It's a huge parallel. A lot of people are saying that, because we're becoming so obsessed with convenience and niceties and everything that we're going to eventually... everyone's going to turn towards that. The things that are important are going to get harder and harder to find. It's really interesting.

JL: Convenience is ruining a lot of society, like, you get more convenient robots to build your product because people make mistakes.

HS: They won't rebel.

JL: It means they lose jobs because. It's getting harder to find people, I won't say harder because some people get forced into blue collar jobs, but... it used to be, like, you grew up to be a farmer. Not necessarily you wanted to, but at least you worked. Nowadays people just keep getting off the farm. Farming's going down, city life's going up, we're just going to be one big... what's that planet called?

HS: Uh, from...

JL: You know what I'm talking about. Coruscant.

HS: It's actually based on Trantor from Isaac Asimov's Foundation series.

CW: Oh! I know that! I know that!

HS: You've read Foundation?

CW: I've read it.

HS: Awesome. Awesome. (high fiving)

CW: Trantor.

JL: You've read it?

HS: A lot of Star Wars is based on the Foundation series. A lot of sci-fi, too.

CW: Isaac Asimov is science fiction.

HS: Yeah, he really is.

VH: HG Wells!

CW: Everybody who saw the I, Robot movie but didn't read the book? Go read the book.

JL: But, Will Smith...

***

Nat Turner & the Slave Rebellion can be found online at myspace.com/natturnerx. I'll be back next month, deity willing. Stay rad.

12/3/07

Fear of a Peroxide Blonde

Later on that same day, I dropped in on my assistant who was supposedly drafting a new town charter for some obscure village closer to the ocean... fully absent of consent from said town. He was pumping the initial paragraphs full of strange anarchist drivel and belligerence about the entrenchment clause. I was shouting over the Sonic Youth ripoff band that was practicing next door, trying to get the Danger out of my system. A strange and terrible blonde cadaver hovered, following him everywhere and asking me idiotic questions.


Off the top of my head, I think the moon has ¼ of Earth's gravity. Leave me alone.


My assistant whispered with urgency for me not to leave him alone. “I think she's going to drug me and harvest my organs to replace her failing ones! I think she's a salt vampire! I think she's a fucking werebadger!”


I escaped. I could see the terror, the consuming fear of destruction. There was nothing I could do. Mulder might believe the story, but not Scully, and I can't imagine talking them down to Greenville. I'm sure they can smell the alcohol fumes all the way up in DC.


People are getting bitten by the undead that are coming to power through the underground, and it evils up the air. The Deranged are rising to power, and their evil scheme is to put the entire city on a turntable and play it backwards. They're convinced that there's a Satanic verse if you play the whole town in reverse. Welcome signs on back roads have been ripped out by an unholy force, replaced with tin sheets. “Ellivneerg” is scrawled in some kind of farm animal blood, most likely goat's blood. Wild eyed idiots sit outside of Sheetz, analyzing cloud patterns for Satan's face and working out anagrams for Greenville that make full use of the word “evil.” Once bitten, you are lost to the cause. You stagger down the middle of tenth street without regard for the speeding Jeeps. You gorge yourself on dead pigeons and McDonalds' bags. You are possessed with a strange immunity, one that prevents bars from ejecting you. Once bitten you can make an absolute beer menace of yourself without fear of reprisal. Swarms of these ghoulish jackasses can be seen throwing shoes at their terrified waitresses, howling for more beer as they work on their anagrams. No solution yet, nothing that satisfactorily incorporates “evil,” but research goes on tirelessly.


So far, the most common anagrams for Greenville are “Eleven Girl” and “I'll Revenge.”


Underground shows are becoming cathedrals of danger, as the wildest and most unhinged of the Deranged go there to purge. It starts innocently enough, with one lunatic braying along to the guitar and knocking over mic stands, but generally by the end of the night there are people who would otherwise be normal tearing PBR cans in half with their teeth. The Deranged are biting and infecting the populace at a terrible and epidemic rate. The danger is real and we have no Batman to save us.


I fled the peroxide demon that would be consuming my poor assistant, only to find myself in greater danger. Demon death horrible hounds wandered the streets, wrecking mailboxes and throwing pitchforks through screened doors, howling in the shadow of Steel Reserve. This is what I come to expect, since the door of the mental institution came off its hinges a few weeks ago. I tried to do like in the movie... I tried to walk like a zombie... but they could tell.


They can always tell.


It was ugly, some of my hair was torn out, and it ended in my flight back to my assistant's door. “You have to let me in!” I pleaded, “These deranged fuckpistols have tasted blood!”


The strange and terrible blonde emerged, following a thrown brick, gibbering and spinning her head all the way around. I lived only by virtue of quick thinking... I took off my jacket and threw it as far as I could. She charged after it, the human scent distracting her long enough for me to escape. My assistant's huge desk made a prime barricade. I collapsed, my back against it, laughing maniacally. “It isn't the apocalypse,” I said to myself, “but it sure feels like it.”


There was a small sound in the closet, and I knew Fear for a second. The door swung slowly open and my assistant emerged. “Is she gone? Is she really gone?” he asked in a tiny voice. I nodded, sighing in relief. On this particular day in Greenville he was the only non-beast I could find. Everyone else I could trust had fled town for the weekend, or, “until this whole thing blows over.”


“She's a fucking salt vampire!” he wailed. “I don't know how I convinced her, but I played dead and she eventually got the Big Hunger and had to go feed.” A scream sounded somewhere outside and I shuddered. “You know they can unhinge every joint in their body? While I was playing dead she climbed the wall in this bizarre arachnid fashion and started gnawing on the blades of the ceiling fan. Creepiest shit I ever saw.” He had scratches on the back of his neck and his feet were crammed painfully into the wrong shoes.


“All she left was this piece of paper,” he showed me a horribly crumpled and dirty sheet of paper. “They're getting closer and closer to their goal. Regardless, half of these aren't even words... Le Evil Green, Evil Gel Nere, Evil Gree Len, Ren Glee Evil, Evil Glen Ere... it just goes on and on!”

12/2/07

Sunset Over Death Mountain (further insomniac tales from the brain farm)

The biggest problem with being a Doomed generation is that there's never any payoff. We're all doomed... every few generations... but are denied the release of actual destruction. It would just be total glee, the idiot pride of being the generation that gets to see the end of the world and scream "I TOLD YOU SO!" in the last seconds before the planet gets sucked into a huge black hole or pummeled by meteors or consumed in the firestorm of our own exploding sun or even snatched up by angels while God kicks the asses of the unbelievers.

Let me reiterate something I didn't make clear enough in that last passage, yet meant to. ALMOST EVERY GENERATION IS A DOOMED GENERATION. WE'RE NOT THAT SPECIAL. QUIT WHINING.

It's perennial blueballs. It's all the giddy joy of Doom without the snide self-gratification that comes with pure, unadulterated, destruction. Everyone has this in them, it's what drives wars and suicide cults and bad movies. 2012 is the latest end of the world, but so was Y2K (remember that shit? It was only seven years ago!) and so was World War Two and so was 1900 and so was the war of 1812 and to the Native Americans the end of the world has already come and gone.

This has everything to do with everything. Apocalypticism drives so many people. It ties into this whole "peace on earth" myth. By pure physics, there can never be a such thing as an "end" to the universe. Entropy (bastardized as the definition of destruction, as that is its primary property) guarantees that nothing is ever truly destroyed. Matter can only recombine. All things break down, but this breaking down (under the native forces of the universe, Jack) creates strange and new chemical bonds. Each generation of stars is more complex than the last, due to the extreme stresses caused by the basic forces' reaction to extremes of gravity. See, gravity is an expression of mass and mass is immutable. It's pure and beautiful. Nothing is ever truly destroyed.

Only doomed, and doom is a concept for brains. Gravity never counted on accidents of the mind. One of National Geographic's best taglines: "The Mind is What the Brain Does."

***

Disorganization, an essential ingredient to the entropy process, leads back to organization through the recombination of the elements involved. Now, let's work through this. Organization (which, for the sake of this example, we will use as a starting point) fosters breakdown. Any system, like the weather, seeks the impossible (homeostasis, to be anthropomorphic). Homeostasis is death and is only death. It is, in an organism, a point of perfection in which all systems are totally equalized. This, of course, precludes hunger or any variety of desire. It also is impossible for any living being to achieve.

Such is our example, the weather. "Calm" is what happens when one is within the influence of any individual pressure system. No two systems ever have identical pressure, therefore they will force each other around. Thus are created blizzards, tropical weather, downdrafts and tornadoes, drought. These are perceived by the sentient to be "destructive," as the power goes out and things die and water is either in excess or absence. However, weather that is perceived as "pleasant" (a.k.a. calm) will follow any of these phenomena. The release of pressure (a.k.a. destruction), which is endemic to any active system, is followed by a period of renewed growth. It's the same with fire, tectonic activity, stellar collapse, and our own system of organs.

***

Now, take the concepts of Doom, our pseudo-erotic fascination with the end times, and concepts of entropy and apply them to the local music scene.

You'll thank me when you're older.

-HS

11/28/07

After dinner Q&A with the Road Troll

Winter is soon upon us, in its unique Eastern NC kind of way, which means it's going to be fucking damp and vaguely cool until February. In February it will get evil cold for maybe three weeks, and then flop around between extremes of temperature like an epileptic mudskipper.

There's evil blood in the water, and it's always gone by New Years' Day, it's just that surviving December is more of a challenge every year. The Christmas Beast has descended from the hills, reversing peoples' minds, causing their eyes to roll back in their head as they scream shit that sounds something like “S'lhok ta elas gnivigsknaht refta yad eht ta nam a dellik I!”

Disturbing reports on the street of peaceniks roaming around with heavy sports equipment, bashing each other outside of avant-garde art shows. Disturbing reports of cops found weeping by their cars, their uniforms stained and rank. Disturbing reports of anarchy on the highways, middle aged men hanging out of their car windows cackling wildly. Animals of all kinds have been seen leaving town in twos, mating all the way.

Don't worry, though. It's not the end of the world. It's just the end of the year... this is the terrible and evil buildup to my favorite holiday. Every time I survive December I sigh the world's hugest sigh. I drink White Russians in the yard, shooting my revolver with glee at passing trains.

I've lived lots of places, and New Years' is always magic. I don't know what it is, but I feel like the whole planet has been given temporary reprieve. Deity smiling its huge smile, lips and gums and teeth the distance from Beijing to Tuscaloosa. Deity says to its friends, “Well, they've fucked up every other year. Maybe if we give them a blank slate they'll do it right this year.” Glasses come together and clink.

So we get our New Years'. The baseball bats and kitchen knives and golf clubs fall to the ground in a group hug the size of Texas. For one night, all teeth are platinum bling, and something big and carnivorous smiles in the corner.

I love winter, but goddammit it's evil here.

11/24/07

Drunk by noon.

Book One: Typing With My Gloves On.

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Book Two: Fire and Brimstone.

So I tried a new thing and, no, it wasn't typing with my gloves on. I hope you enjoyed that. It came across as a bit idiotic and totally illegible. Really, try it sometime. I want some of you to leave comments to my blog, but only if you type with winter gloves on. That shit is hard.
So it's the last ECU home game and I did a thing I've never done, I went tailgating. It's 1:20 pm and I can't actually feel my face. I got drunk in a parking lot while frat types threw footballs at me... eating hamburgers and throwing shit into the road. I know this is the Greenville experience, but it's so often that I'm hiding in a book or watching some bizarre old sci-fi film instead of diving headfirst into the People.
Really, I don't know how the fundamentalists do it. They listen to crappy music, they don't drink, the don't smoke, they don't even stay up late. Really, some of the coolest shit in the world happens at 2:43am.
If I'm to believe that we're punished for drinking alcohol, then doesn't that cover drinking at 10:00am? Really, I'm fucked if this is the case. There is a simple, yet pure, glory to staggering down the street in the blaring sunlight. You make your own music at that point, you get songs stuck in your head you haven't heard since 1995, you make illogically beautiful analogies.
I don't know where I'm going with this. Cheers.

10/28/07

Street Corner Gibberish. October 12th, 2am (or: the New Shit)

I'm sorry, but we're going to have to cancel the show. Now... I liked your set, but The Owner was kind of put off by the fact that you only played for an hour. Don't get me wrong, I dug it, but The Owner wants to get a full night's worth of music. Learn a few covers, you know, just 10 or so covers, and we'll talk. Now, you can always play another Tuesday night for free and we'll see how this goes. It really left a bad taste in our mouths. Don't get me wrong, I like originals, I love music, that's why I opened this place, but The Owner says that covers bring people in the door. Cover songs keep this place open. Now, I like music, and I opened this place so that (your town here) would have a good venue, but I also have to pay the bills. Besides, The Owner really is the final say, so I'm not trying to be a dick here. I'm just a pawn, man... you know?

Yes, I know. I think I get it better than you do and, no, we don't want to play your shitty little hick bar again. Oh, and that disassociative Owner/Subordinate mumbo jumbo is transparent like glass. It doesn't take a middle school dropout to "dig" the real "gist," "man." Transparent, dude. Transparent, man. You and your buddy bought in, you saw this folded club and bought it. You changed a light fixture or two and called it the New Shit. You told your friends, your bar skanks, your illegitimate children, that you would be opening the only "decent" club in town, the only place to see a "real band." You would know, as you have a vague understanding of the music industry and occasionally watch a Behind the Music on VH1. Don't lie, man, you can save a sinking music industry. You own an Epiphone Les Paul and a Crate Half Stack, you and Jerry and Steve and Randall used to be in a ripping band back in the 80s. Shit, man, you played EVERYTHING. Twisted Sister, Firehouse, Thin Lizzie. You used to rip all over Deep Purple. You still have that Metallica shirt, you're going to break it out... beer stains and all! Now you have the power and the will, man! You have a fucking club, man! That same band it out there now, covering Nickelback and Staind and dying... dying... to be discovered! Shit, if they could just write three or four originals they'd be huge, man! They've proven their worth to the world, they can play those trite radio hits without even trying... and did you see those drunk sorority girls making out to "Hotel California?" This was the best idea we ever had. Let's have another Busch Light and yell for "Free Bird" because, unlike that uppity little band that played a short set of their own songs ("What the fuck? When was that?" "Don't worry about it, no one came out."), these guys will actually play it! Oo-hoo! Can you believe it! They've been playing for THREE FUCKING HOURS and show no signs of quitting! What a blistering rendition of that God Smack song that was so big three years ago... or was that Alice in Chains? No, they just said it's an original. FUCK! THESE GUYS ARE SO GOOD! They can write their own songs (unlike that pesky original band) and I can sing along with them because they sound so familiar! Let's book these guys every Saturday of the fucking year. Let's give these guys a $500 guarantee just to plug in. Goddamn, this is so much safer than running a risk or two. Never mind the talk of house shows and underground forces of nature, threatening the very fabric of our sterile and predictable downtown scene. This is (your town here), not (some larger or supposedly "more hip" town here)!

***

I hope you know you sold your soul to a monster. I hope you go home and listen to Real Music and feel the cold pain of a darkened universe, knowing that you could never pull from the aether such beauty. I hope you meet an underground musician someday, shit broke but with a fulfilled soul, and wonder where you went wrong to deny yourself such pureness. Broke, but free. The cliche and bumper sticker say "independents do it without chains."

You really did, you sold your soul to a monster... and for what? You didn't quit your landscaping job or your electrician job or your job as a cable guy or whatever the fuck you do. This place will fold in six months, returning to the festering bog of which lousy venues are born. Now here you are, telling lies to a struggling musician who may or may not be more talented than you for the simple fact that he has the cajones to write his own music.

It's not about skill. It's about being in the Phylum Chordata. Someday you might join us.

9/30/07

Salvation by Lunacy (or: Revenge of the Instrumetal Divebombers)

It was 1:00 in the afternoon when I realized I was the only person in Jacksonville dressed like a rock musician. Jarheads were giving my bumper stickers murderous looks at stoplights before rocketing away in their Iroc-Zs. People were blasting squirrels with high powered rifles in the parking lot of the Arby's on Lejeune Boulevard and my loyal assistant was in South Dakota, picking through a junkyard.

It hadn't always been like this. I watched constantly over my shoulder as I nursed my semi-warm domestic beer. These guys are three times my size, I could be taken apart like they regularly dismember their dates and wives. It was Custer's last stand in reverse, and I was trying my hardest to get back to my lodge.

A few nights prior I had seen Irata and The Bronzed Chorus up in Greensboro. They were to be joined by Talons, who are like Pelican with a good drummer, but it was not to be so. The audience was a bizarre mix of music and art nerds and pregnant homeless women smoking cigarettes. Irata blasted the walls of the building apart. The Bronzed Chorus leveled everything on the block. It was so much like the episode of the Simpsons where U2 plays on top of the Springfield wall. It would have been too much if it had been anything but music, but I relished in it and felt my tinnitus worsen.

I was playing the Bronzed Chorus's CD in traffic, my windows open and my sunglasses barely keeping blindness away. The sun is closer to Jacksonville than any other part of the state save Fayettenam. So far, neither have been burned away, but not for lack of trying. "People are staring!" had hissed my assistant, minutes before being whisked away by private helicopter. I don't know how he hires these fucking things.

But people were staring, and he was in the shadow of the Black Hills searching for a 1992 Chevy Cavalier (powder blue) that had been buried, some say, under tons of Ford trucks and wrecked Hondas with Montezuma's gold hidden where the engine block should have been. I'd be getting a call on my cel phone when, and if, he found it.

I was playing with the cracked parts of a broken iPod I'd found outside this shit bar, behaviour like a wildebeest among Nile River crocs. No eye contact, just get through the water. My destination was still Wilmington, my goal was to crash the set of the first movie or TV show I came across. I had a cooler full of PBR tall boys, a 1996 Dodge Caravan retrofitted for silent running, and a foot locker full of paintball guns. I had come to Jacksonville to recruit soldiers, people to man the cannons in my Dodge War Machine, but ended up way over my head. My undersized shirt and sissied up tattoos made me stand out worse than a dreadlocked hippie at an ROTC rally. I was humming a Preacher's Gun song to myself when my phone rang. I stepped out to back door, setting off all number of alarms and abandoning my tab, and hit the talk button.

"I found the car," said my assistant, out of breath. I could hear the barking of large dogs, "But it's not a chunk of gold under the hood. Just a dinged up old engine. Somebody left a Harmony acoustic guitar with a broken neck in the back seat, though."

"Listen," I said, "I need you to get back here before I get rammed through a wall by one of these Neandertals. They've already slashed all four tires on the War Machine and I want to still be alive when Pinback comes to the Cat's Cradle."

"Use the War Machine's self destruct," said my assistant. "Anyway, man, I'm on a chartered flight back to the state. I'll be touching down in Wilkesboro at 3am. Can you come and get me?"

"What in?" I shrieked. I could already hear the bar's patrons, getting louder and louder, having realized that the strange little guy who had set off their emergency exit alarm had walked on his tab.

"Whatever. I know you'll figure something out," and he hung up.

I knew what to do. I took out my keys and pressed the Fear button, which I had wired myself between the Panic button and the Lock/Unlock button. The War Machine exploded, spraying an entire parking lot full of 23 year old soldier types with orange paint.

9/27/07

the Parable of the Moron in the Michael Vick Jersey

The moron is proud.

The moron parades up and down sidestreets in Charlotte in a Michael Vick jersey.

The moron argues with his friend on the shitty side of Durham in a Michael Vick jersey.

The moron checks his email in a computer lab at ECU in a Michael Vick jersey.

The moron is proud, the moron thinks he has achieved something.

Another moron, passing nearby, shakes her head at the obvious buffoonery of someone who would casually walk around in a Michael Vick jersey. Occasional famous morons defend Vick's sick actions, citing their bullheaded beliefs that dogfighting is "a sport" or "cultural" or "not that different from hunting." This is wrong, wrong, wrong and dumb, dumb, dumb, but that is all another argument. Dogfighting is a fashionable crime on both sides of the fence... it is fashionable to those who partake for the same vile/bloodthirsty/abusive reasons it always has been. It is currently fashionable to hate and speak out against the sick crime.

I've taken down actual dogfighters, and they are no joke. They're meth heads and they are notoriously hard to destroy, but when set alight will illuminate the night like the olympic flame. Few of those currently speaking against dogfighting would have the sand to take to the frontlines and actually bring these fuckers to the ground where they belong.

I digress.

The moron watching the moron in the Michael Vick jersey is herself wearing a shirt that says "Support Local Music" that she got at Hot Topic. She feels very good about herself when she walks around, her money going to a publicly traded megacorporation instead of actual independent music, while the great Spazzatorium of Greenville slips underwater like a sinking U-boat.

The Hurculean efforts of Jeff Blinder, the Spazz's everything guy since the Legion of Supervillains faded, are not going to be enough to keep the Spazz afloat much longer. Unless people come out with money in their hands this Cathedral of independent talent will be gone to time, much like the Library at Alexandria. Here it is in Jeff's own words.

THE SPAZZ IS CLOSING IN ONE MONTH...

Unless we can perpetrate a change.


Fellow Greenville residents and patrons of our space,

Our efforts to keep The Spazz going are becoming harder and harder to realize. This semester has been brutally harsh to us so far. All of the shows for the past few weeks have brought in nothing for the space itself. The few that have we were forced to out-of-pocket that excess. The last 4 shows had us out-of-pocketing close to $300 so we are at the point where we need your help in keeping The Spazz alive. At this rate come Oct. we will be unable to operate (Any bands reading this worry not, all shows scheduled after that will be honored but no new shows will be added.)

Ideas that might help us stay alive:

FIRST, AND FOREMOST, JUST COMING OUT TO OUR EVENTS

Without you we wither and die. Please understand The Spazz exists to bring together everyone and to have a creative outlet for local and travelling artists to showcase their talents. We are far from perfect and not all shows are gonna be your preference but we go way out of the way to book bands of all styles and genres and do so to branch everyone together and not just have a punk space...or an indie space..we're an every space!

Yes, shows will fall on nights where you have to study/work/want-to-drink, but making that extra effort is all we need from you. When deciding what to do with your night check out if we've got a show scheduled, listen to the bands when the bulletins are posted, and at least make that effort to care. The artists coming through need us and we in turn need you to support them.

Most shows we're ready to go by 8PM If enough of you come out we can be done by 11PM every time. This is ,of course, wishful thinking but even if we can get just 10 people out earlier enough we can kick things off!


SPREAD THE WORD

Most of you have classes and have met new folks this semester. How about a bring-a-friend-to-The-Spazz night! In all seriousness, spreading the word about us is so important. We cannot use the regular means of getting the word out about our events so it's up to you to let folks know what's going on. There is is quality live music and creativity happening in Greenville, it's just under-the-radar! If you spot someone wearing a rad band t-shirt, as profiling as it is, chances are they'd probably dig The Spazz so let them know about us!

ART MAJORS?

Any art majors interested in making up flyers for our space that we can hand out on campus or strategically place at designated shops? We could definately use your expertise in the matter. I do have access to printers (color even!) so even if one design is made I can reproduce the shit out of it. We could definately use your talent and it'd probably look good in your portfolio to boot!


COOL NERDS?

Any knowledgeable individuals that understand website creation that might be able to design us a site outside of myspace? As convenient as myspace is for information our dear Tom seems to have those bulletins go down at the most inopportune times. We need a website that has our information and show dates 24-7. Plus think how easy it would be to tell people to check out www.spazzgallery.com instead of googling us. Not to mention some folks don't have a myspace account (gasp!)


HELP!!!

Any more ideas please let us know! Hit us up with a message or post under the comments here. We need everyone to pitch in their ideas. This is crucial folks. Think of The Spazz as a friend in need. Motivate yourselves into caring and participating because we're dying here. Think of Greenville without The Spazz. I've been there and it's way lame.

STARTING TODAY ANYONE WHO WANTS TO MAKE A DONATION TO OUR SPACE CAN NOW DO SO VIA THE LINK (WELL, BUTTON) LOCATED ON The SPAZZATORIUMS PROFILE PAGE. ALL YOU FOLKS WHO JOKINGLY ASK IF WE TAKE CREDIT CARDS AND BREEZE RIGHT THROUGH W/OUT A DONATION. WELL NOW WE'VE GOT YOU COVERED! ANYONE WITH EXTRA FINANCIAL SECURITY PLEASE HELP OUR WORTHY CAUSE. NONE OF YOUR DONATIONS WILL GO TO ANYTHING BESIDES THE SPACE ITSELF. WE DO NOT PROFIT AT ALL FROM THE SPAZZ. WE'VE GIVEN ALL WE CAN AND YET IT ISN'T ENOUGH SO WE TURN TO YOU IN OUR TIME OF NEED. DO NOT LET THIS DREAM DIE. WE ARE FIGHTING THE GOOD FIGHT BUT ARE NEARING ROUND 7 AND OUR KNEES ARE WOBBLY. HELP US!

This is nothing new in my field. Asheville's Akumi and El Nuevo suffered this exact fate, though Akumi was pushed out of existence by the Asheville Cops (pig demon bastards). Westville Pub had a very brief spurt as the home of unknown badass bands and was an O.K. tour spot for a few months in 2006, until it sputtered and died from lack of interest or effort. Raleigh's scene has witnessed the death and changing hands of more venues than I can list, and Greenville's attic has gone to a bizarre afterlife hell in which it is a floundering club that has turned to underground pro wrestling to try and score a crowd. Most of Charlotte's clubs (the Milestone, Tremont Music Hall) are too weird and violent for anything but the most savage audience.

The moron in the Michael Vick jersey is more obvious in their criminal idiocy, but is the ideological cousin of the hypocrite in the "Support Local Music" shirt.

9/26/07

Laptop Killed the Video Star Killed the Radio Star Killed the Vinyl Star (or: Hounded by a Freak. Asheville, 2003.)

Four years ago, in 2003, I left one of the few Orange Peel shows I've been to. It was Junior Brown, and I'd left my cel phone at home (I wanted to prove that it was possible). Even in those pre-technological days, when camera phones were the new shit and there was no such iPhone, if it can even be imagined, I had to prove it to myself.

Instead, the opposite was proven. Somewhere on Smoky Park Bridge heading into West Asheville some goon with South Carolina plates in an Asian two door coupe (one of those fast and whiny little Hondas, I believe) the color of dried wasabi started following me. At first it was casual, he was just behind me at all times on a deserted three lane road. After probably two miles of this I got the Fear. It was 1:00 in the morning and I was in no mood to be pistol raped by some lunatic from the Rabies State.

It got weird and Fear was in full swing when I tried to pull into a gas station... somewhere reasonably public where I would at least have the option of an impromptu posse should my pursuer want blood. The station was closed, and the mystery honda of Death and Fear pulled in behind me, hovering with great malevolence as I circled the parking lot and then drove away from town, to the dark hills I knew so well. I'm not tough, but I trusted my ability to lose this bastard somewhere in the strange and twisting roads away from town, if not run him off the road into some creek.

He followed me, I could almost see the grille and lights of his car as red demon eyes and tusked pig mouth, through every turn of the backcountry roads. I flew around curves, my pickup behaving like a Boxster, and ran stop signs. The pursuing minion changed into the left lane several times, trying to match my speed, which I did not let him do. We were locked, he and I, in a bizarre automotive mortal combat. I was not prepared to be rammed into a tree at 50mph by some sadistic yokel.

I ran a few red lights, in full and unabashed animal flight from danger, headed back from the hills to town. I lost him when he turned onto I-40, presumably to find and devour the soul of an easier target, but I didn't stop until I saw my first cop.

I didn't have his tag number, or anything, but I have never been happier to see a cop. I spewed some gibberish all over his shoes, something about ohmygodohmyfuckingod I just got chased by this IDIOT FREAK WEIRDO WHAT THE FUCK fromsouthcarolinaandididntgethistagnumber but it was GREEN FUCKING HONDA FUCK WHAT THE FUCK. Some wide eyed gibberish, but nothing could be done. The cop and his friend cop were very nice to me about it, but we knew the doomed nature of whatever manhunt I had in mind. I wanted helicopters with missiles and machine guns and crazed bastards with sniper rifles combing the highways with a thirst for asshole blood.

I went home and didn't turn on my lights. I locked every door and closed the blinds and found my bed in the darkness, occasionally creeping to the window with dread, anticipating satanic cackles as a possessed car crept up my long drive. After some time I fell asleep, and with further time this panic-ridden night chase faded among all my other bizarre stories of life and near death.

***

Asheville has since been conquered by a stranger thing. Dancepop. The Morrissey fans, in their eternal paleness, have hopped the fence and now shake their malnourished hips to boomchick boomchick from the Northeast. New Wavers parade up and down Broadway like so many Attilas the Hun. It's because Greenville beat them to the dancepop fad. Asheville is stunned that such a shit town (as Greenville is viewed by anyone ignorant to the quality of their underground) would beat them to the next Big Thing. Asheville has always been the state's arrogant talent sniffer, and to have been beaten by Greenville... to even have bands PREFER Greenville? They are not amused.

The Spazzatorium Galleria, more a legend around the country than any stage or restaurant corner in Asheville, has been shaking its collective booty to laptop beatz and pink shirted howlings, yo, for a very long time. The latest recycling is huge. The uniform is almost the same, only more pastels and shorter shorts than before, as gutterpunk bands. Implicitly, these bands are not wanting for money. Generally people who are broke enough to be expected to dress gutter make every effort to not appear to be that gutter. Uniform, uniform, uniform.


***

If I had been carrying my phone that dark and instinct-driven night four years ago, I would have probably felt a lot more secure. However, brushes with death and extreme violence have always been spiritual growth spurts. I know the value of my life. I know the soundtrack I want, and the soundtrack that the underground is pushing right now is not always to my standards.

Imperial Battlesnake is descending upon North Carolina right now, blowing through in two days and two shows like a pack of enraged Mako Sharks being chased by a herd of snowblind Bison. Maybe I'll drop these memory demons off at the sitter for the evening and let them deafen me into a lighter mood.

They are quite good, after all.

9/23/07

Hawk Season (the skirmish/battle/war metaphor)

War has been declared on creativity. Thousands already have died, perished in the flames of perdition, while the endless tide of myspace bands creeps across the land. Apartment dwelling twenty-somethings with Fender Standard Stratocasters and Marshall Half Stacks roam the woods, killing the innocent and skinning their carcasses, while trust fund babies in their post-hippie stages slay the unwilling in back alleys by bashing their heads soft with their drum machines and Korg single octave synths. These are dark times, with a dark focus.

It is a dark lack of focus, rather, reminiscient of the dreaded eighties. I was alive and cognizant in the eighties, I remember what a dark and braindead time it was. New Wave, relatively fresh and brought to life by advances in synthesizer technology, battled Dumbass Metal and Cock Rock for the adulation of the hordes. The underground was one of righteous indignation, the shouts and howls of the Hard Core army. Indestructible motherfuckers, not even twenty years old, changed the world from the invisible shadows. The Guerrilla victory was so complete that by the early 90s decent music was available to the mainstream. Without the DC Hard Core scene there would have been no stage set for the 1989/90/91 explosion of good music through mainstream avenues. Over the first half of this sacred decade were more geniuses per capita than any Renaissance city.

We all rode around in dirigibles eating caviar from platinum dishes, wiping our chins with thousand dollar bills until there were none left. These sacred years shall never be forgot.

Regardless, the underground has become confused. Things are very, very backwards now that the major record labels have gone over completely into the Prince of Darkness's camp. Now battles that would have been waged upon the radio waves are waged underground, pushing the less accessible (and generally more musically adept) acts even farther into obscurity.

Now we approach an international situation that makes the Reaganomic Nightmare of the eighties seem like a methodist dinner party. Now we need the smart music the most, the vindicated protest songs, the twin blades of screaming guitar and fuzz bass slicing to the central nervous center. Instead, we drown in self-righteous moron metal and smilingly oblivious dance pop. There are rare venues scattered around the state and nation where one can go to have their face melted by real music, but they are often either so far underground that you will only hear about them after the fact or they are shut down within the span of months for lack of interest (read: profit).

Raleigh has house shows, a few bars that occasionally will put an incredible band in front of five or six barflies, and several major venues. The house shows are almost too underground, and tend to be of the "invite only" category. If you don't know about them, you probably won't. Good luck getting booked to one, too. As for the major and semi-major venues, occasionally there is a decent band, but more often than not the acts are either has-beens or the latest one hit wonders. Disco Rodeo (previously the Ritz) averages two or three decent bands a year, but is a pretty lousy venue. It's evidently a booty club that either folded or changed hands. Generally, acts worth catching bypass Raleigh for the next town listed...

Chapel Hill keeps hope alive better than most places in the state. I'm woefully uninformed on their house show situation, but only because I can catch really good music at their clubs and haven't had to look for the showhouses. Local 506 brought Red Sparowes and William Eliot Whitmore IN THE SAME NIGHT, the Black Angels, all kinds of mindblowing sound comes through that club. On the same strip are several more holes in the wall of note, such as the Cave, where local acts dominate. Not as much of the idiotheque here, Chapel Hill tends to hold up their end of the bargain. Carrboro I include here, too, for the simple fact of the legendary Cat's Cradle.

Asheville has the Grey Eagle, but the catch is that it's damn near impossible for local acts to get in there. Only common members of a few bands, specifically the elitist alumni of Piedmont Charisma, are ever invited. They do not accept press kits. They bring the best independent label music to town, giving people a righteous alternative to the bloodsuckers at the Orange Peel. Pelican, Dungen, Mono, Explosions in the Sky, Akron/Family... all kinds of future music. This would be the best venue in the state if only they would acknowledge the quality of their local scene.

Gushing about the Grey Eagle aside, the rest of Asheville has been effectively hijacked by the same braindead dancepop that's been shaking Greenville for so long. The only difference here is that Asheville has undergone a kind of self-lobotomy and now drools helplessly on the floor as rich kids from Philadelphia and Baltimore gyrate over them in pink tube tops, screeching over a deafening wall of laptop beatz and prerecorded synth loops. This was the New French Bar's fate, turning it from the best place in town to get cheap visibility to a useless supplicant to the synthbeast (666). Fred's Speakeasy was once the home of the best unknown rock music (and rock crowds) but has been bought out three times since the days of Mary and Kristen, who would bite the cap off a PBR and dance on the bar, and is now the sterile graveyard where bands who used to fill Akumi now go to die.

Greenville would not belong on this list if not for the tenacity of the local musical elite. A rare creature has power here and few other places. See, there are no real venues in town. The downtown exists only to pay talentless cover bands thousands of dollars per gig to fill idiotic ears with poorly delivered versions of radio hits. Occasionally there will be a momentary hiccup, during which a venue will appear and promise original music. However, the Greenville mainstream is several years behind the rest of the world, and this "original music" venue will only feature either heavy metal or meandering jam bands that no other city will book any more.

Greenville's underground, though, is anchored as far in the future as the mainstream is in the past. Where Asheville has gone braindead for dancepop, all for jealousy of Greenville for finding it first, Greenville approaches it intelligently. A dancepop act from the Northeast will share the stage with a three hour old local noise band, an independent rap duo from Wilmington, and a prog rock band from Texas all in the same night... and each act will receive appropriate attention per their level of radness. The Spazzatorium Galleria and 21 Eleven Beer & Wine are the two best places in town to see music. Whereas occasionally a crappy act will slip through the cracks, the quality control tends to be spectacular. Media coverage of these venues is terrible at best, but word of mouth is unstoppable.

Wilmington doesn't always export the best music, originality tends to be a little wanting, but they have a surprising score on the import board. Lake Trout has come through the Soapbox a few times, though they've only attracted an Asheville-esque wallsnob crowd, as well as the Avett Brothers. The Soapbox is like a more successfully executed version of Asheville's Stella Blue, in that both have an upstairs venue for better known acts coupled with a downstairs venue for local or up & coming acts. One of the weirder venues in the state (though nowhere near as weird as Murfreesboro's Zakk's Coffeehouse) is Lucky's Pub. It's on the way out of town, in a stripmall opposite a CVS. Their average night consists of three or four poorly rehearsed acts deafening ten or fifteen drunken ska fans who are still trapped in a Monday night in Boston, somewhere in early 1993. However, several times a month this sad little venue brings national ska and punk acts. I want to say Mustard Plug has played here, as well as other bands of the same caliber.

Greensboro, and her neighbor Winston-Salem, have been off and on import/export towns. In the early 2000s it was hard to find decent bands from either. It was not that they did not exist, just that they were a bit invisible. Recently, though, a few righteous bands have made themselves visible statewide. Greensboro is one of the first places in the state to have a self-actualized post rock/post metal scene exist independently of semimajor independent label instrumental music. Find these towns' instrumental bands and go see them play, you will love them. Also, there are decent venues springing up or in development. For years these have been "We can't stop here! This is bat country!" towns for me, but my mind is rapidly changing due to the quality of their export. Badass badass badass.

Charlotte really doesn't feel like part of NC to people who don't live there. It's kind of like the Cincinatti of NC. That said, it's really the place to go for intense Hard Core or evil ghetto death rap (nothing like the brainiac stuff coming out of Wilmington or parts of Greenville these days).

***

There is the army of Righteousness and Creativity and there is the army of Wickedness and Radio Friendliness. You must choose for yourself which one to join, if you aim to be a discriminating consumer of independent music. Avoid those who are DIY because they can afford to be (financially) and not because it is burned into their soul by the desire to be pure, spurn and destroy those who flaunt the underground because they think it gives them the right to make others feel like shit, and above all, turn up your CD player.

It's going to get louder before it gets quieter.