Posts Tagged rock

Top 10 Rock Albums of the Late 90s

There is a narrative of the 90s now that after the death of Kurt Cobain, Rock fans’ only options were to either jump ship and get into Hip-hop and Dance music, accept whatever watered-down garbage-grunge, or sink into premature old-man nostalgia. This happened for many, and in my 2013 year-end post I felt the need to attack late 90s rock while making back-handed compliments towards Tricky. This might have been funny if you know I was in a rock band at the time and find self-deprecation amusing. But I’ve been thinking about it. I liked the idea of rewriting that period with me totally not even caring about Rock at that point because it makes the band’s complete failure seem like not a big deal. However, me care(d) a lot.

The big (non-fatal) disapointments of the late 90s were by the big alt-rock bands. Faith No More, Smashing Pumpkins, Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Helmet, all took a nose dive. Even Sonic Youth starting phoning it in. There was still Radiohead, I guess. I like Radiohead. (Sorry?) But there’s no reason to tell you OK Computer is a good one. It’s great. But it’s not making my list. Neither is Stereolab, one of my favorite bands at that time, but there’s no reason to reach even slightly into hyphenated compoundword quasi-genres or even any band with a keyboard player or DJ. There were still great rock bands, they just didn’t become household names. And yet, it was—and is—still possible to enjoy. Imagine listening to music your parents have never, and will never hear, or even hear of. This happened, to me.

(Also, I listened to all that other stuff at the same time. And there was some Metal but I feel like that's another list. Almost everyone I knew listned to all of that. I'm just saying, I accept that people born during or after the late 90s could be reading this, and: you did not invent that. That's all I'm saying. But hopefully we can still be friends because if not I am doomed.)


  1. Jon Spencer Blues Explosion | Now I Got Worry


    Some people don’t “get” JSBX. But some people’s favorite Nirvana album is Unplugged. I don’t get those people. The medium is the goddamn message and the medium is Rock. The Beat. The Guitar. The…Other Guitar. That’s pretty much it. Except that’s not really “it”. It’s the energy of the performance. I think an amp blows up in one of the songs. The followup to this was the more subdued and soulful Acme which is alright in my book, and technically more “late 90s” since it was ’98 and this one was early ’97 but was recorded in ’96 so it’s kinda on the borderline of being mid-90s, and I think there’s a distiction to be made in the general mood or trend of rock that is perhaps exemplified with those two albums, BUTT, when anyone says Rock died with Cobain this is the first thing I think of, played the hell out of this thing. Parts of it still give me the feeling of not caring if the world is about to end or whatever. Maybe I’m dumb.


  2. Sleater-Kinney | The Hot Rock


    I couldn’t possibly take a list like this seriously that did not include stone cold ’97 classic Dig Me Out. Yet, I didn’t have that record myself until post-2000. Many probably equate this release with Spencer’s Acme (The two groups also share the minimal drums&guitars setup.); there’s a few high-energy numbers, but the focus is on songwriting and those quaint pre-millennial themes like “questioning”, “introspection”, “ethics”, all those things that immediately became obsolete. Really it’s mostly about relationships like most of their stuff, but does it really matter what it’s about when the music is this great? The most original stance most bands took in the 90s was ripping off a different decade than everyone else, but there’s nothing retro about this stuff: mostly clean, linear, interlocking drum, guitar and vocal melodies in the style of no one before or since.


  3. Shonen Knife | Happy Hour


    Altho it starts off with an unecessary (but fun) psudo-rap number (a throwback to an earlier one, on 712, I’m guessing Tom Tom Club-inspired), this is mostly straight up pop-punk, the only such album that makes this list. I liked a lot of those bands like The Queers and Mr. T Experience but I feel the albums had a similar drop-off as the big Alternative bands. One reason this holds up over the intentionally funny or clever stuff can be found in the insanely hyper Ska of Cookie Day, charmingly years after anyone gave a shit about Ska with zero irony, and unlike some other of their songs, unambiguously literal: finishing off one of the simplest, happiest songs ever made with a truck driver’s key change, there is no implied wink, no hint of, “can you believe this?” You simply don’t. (And I can't belive it's not on youtube. I do believe this song begins with the offering a cookie to a dog, which I have never questioned until now. Get it.)


  4. Shellac | Terraform


    People seem to skip over this record when they talk about Shellac, maybe it’s just my experience. I think it’s just the name and artwork are kinda generic for the 90s. The songwriting is consistant, they have no hits and sound exactly the same on every record. They are beholden to no trend. But they happened to record and release a record in this time period so here they are. Starts with a long slow-burner you might skip but I don’t.


  5. Guitar Wolf | Planet of the Wolves


    I don’t even need to comment on this except that I didn’t think about the order of this list too much. If you don’t have this your situation is fucked and/or you don’t like Rock’n’Roll.


  6. Sebadoh | The Sebadoh


    There were very few rock records in the 90s you could have sex to cause everyone was on heroin or aggro or ironic or straightedge or some combination of those. You can only listen to the first side of Little Earthquakes so many times. (That doesn’t sound like an undersell, does it?) All Uncle Loobie is about is pot and lovin’. And maybe some speed. And co-dependency. Emotional turmoil. Which is all very sexy, with the right person. Until it isn’t. But then it is again, until it isn’t again. But then it really, really is, better than it’s ever been…until it really, really isn’t. But a record can always start over, which is why we love records. This record stands out as being somewhat “produced”, which somehow did not bother me at the time, and it still doesn’t, unlike other things which have bothered me quite a bit. On most days, I would prefer Bakesale or Harmacy, but haven’t had sex to either, so it’s hard to make a side-by-side comparison.


  7. Cramps | Big Beat from Badsville


    On a really good day the band I was in was mostly like the Cramps, if the Cramps were boring, depressed weirdos who couldn’t be bothered to come up with a gimmick. (We mostly had bad days.) I had to look this one up to make sure it was really a late 90s record. Feels like these songs have always existed. Actually better than their early 90s records if you ask me.


  8. Cake Like | Goodbye, So What


    I really had a thing for this band. Partly because I had a crush on Kerri Kenney from The State, and partly because I had not heard Dig Me Out. But I think they were good, all the albums. This one they get into harmonies. Maybe it’s hard to make them out to be “important” as a band that you need to listen to, but I guess this album in particular was a big deal (to me, I got it in the cutout bin). The emotion of this album is closure. It was something I wished I felt more than felt directly. Like listening to happy music when you want to kill yourself. You know. Right? Uh. They come up with some pretty original stuff musically if you haven’t listened to a whole lot of post-hardcore and indie pop stuff yet but I bet you have. The worst tho is if 90s bands comes up in some casual conversation and I mention this band and I get, “Oh, I love Cake!” Because, FUCCCKKKK YOOOUUUUU.


  9. Modest Mouse | Lonesome Crowded West


    Not my favorite album by them and no special memories attached, but it has some pretty killer songs. I guess I didn’t get into them until this record came out but I listened to the earliest stuff more, where it sounds like it’s barely hanging together. Hard to believe they eventually went more Pop. Good production does Issac Brock no favors, I mean, Lou Barlow actually has a nice voice. But the way he bends strings was crazy. Of course his hand is fucked up now. That was part of the appeal at the time, listening to it like, “He’s gonna totally fuck up his hand! That’s awesome!” We were sick fucks.


  10. Blonde Redhead | In an Expression of the Inexpressible


    To be honest, after I eliminated all of the records that were definitely in my heavy rotation at the time but that I felt could not really count, I had trouble coming up with a tenth record. So we have this. A great record, a Rock record (BR are now decidedly much more post-rock), a record I didn’t own until relatively recently, but which was played a lot on college radio. (In my memory, much earlier, like early-90s, but it turns out not.) There’s some pretty hard tunes on here but ironically, the song that got the most airplay was actually the least rocking. (Even a flute on that track, ye gods.) The vocal is so alien, and the way it’s produced, I guess it reminded me of went I first heard indie music on the radio, like Slint and Rapeman, it just overturns and upsets your expectations of what music could sound like or be about, but still be made by a rock band.

%

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

2 Comments

Trail of Dead | So Divided

so-divided Before I saw this band a couple weeks ago at Maxwell’s, I had only heard their one record Source Codes & Tags from 2002. After I bought the ticket online, I figured I should listen to it a little. I mean I had listened to it but not in years. Why go to that show then? Just seemed like the kind of show I would see at Maxwell’s; a semi-obscure new(ish) band I wasn’t even sure I liked. I’ve just never been into seeing the same few bands over and over, that was not really my scene. I’ll miss it the same but let’s keep moving in the direction of new bands, right. Anyway, turns out I no longer had a copy of any of their albums. I must have deleted the folder one day sorting things and I just couldn’t get over the full name of the band messing up my alphabetization. (The same fate has befallen “!!!”.) I guess I didn’t feel they were good enough to make an exception and I didn’t think of just using the shorter version. This was during my drinking period when I just made these kind of decisions easily. I got angry that they had this outlandish name and yet somehow did not really back it up on record. Wasn’t the hype with this band how crazy they were live? I made a mental note to just see them live one day because I was not getting it. The record is not crazy enough.

This record is much, much less crazy. Now that I have seen them live, I get the hype. Ten years later, they must have mellowed out a little as no one in the band went to the hospital that night, which was supposedly a regular occurrence in the past. I can only imagine what they were like then, but it was still pretty great. Super high-energy, noisy guitars, switching out of instruments, leaving the stage with extended guitar solos in the middle of the pit, it was like anything could happen. They even had multiple problems with the sound cutting out on the PA and various amps and it didn’t even slow them down. With no intention of doing so, I got really into it. More than any other Maxwell’s show I think. It was not even like going back to a typical early 00s show for me, it was like a 90s show with a full pogo-skank mosh thing going on.

A couple days later I got my paycheck so I thought of buying a Maxwell’s shirt online since I didn’t have any money at the show for one. (Didn’t even get a last meal or beer there, had barely enough to even get there. Sucks but what can you do. I was glad to go at all.) Then I thought that was dumb. I’m not carrying the torch for this place that’s voluntarily gone under, lemme actually buy this band’s records instead. That’s what I’m supporting. Stick to yr guns, man.

So…I figure I almost can’t go wrong here with albums. I pick this one because the cover is so weird it doesn’t seem to match what the band is about at all, looks like a CGI anime soundtrack. Yeah, the sound of the record doesn’t seem to match what the band is about at all either. Doesn’t quite sound literately like an anime soundtrack, but doesn’t sound like the band I just saw. This is kinda interesting actually, to me, and I don’t hate it. I just don’t get it. Like there’s so many keyboards and layered harmonies. I don’t expect a band to sound exactly like a record, like I don’t think you should hold back on a record just because you’re not going to able to replicate whatever exactly. But live they have no keys of any kind and mostly yell everything. Not terribly, but nothing remotely smooth or Beatle-esqe like on this thing. I think the title track has some representative moments that really capture the band, but no one has posted that anywhere. Here’s the single from this album:

Pretty decent to me. Not anything like them but it’s a good tune. Ends with what might be a rousing audience sing along if they ever played it live which they do not of course. Because live they do not have acoustic guitars and keyboards and six bongo players. And an accordion. One of the opening bands at that show, The Red Paintings, actually had an accordion player and a violin player. This just seemed random and weird at the time, but I would have seen it as an awful tease if I knew. (Also the band Ume played who are like noisy-period Blonde Redhead, which I like. Did I mention there were girls at this show? Much higher percentage than an average metal show. That was nice.)

Anyway, I like the album, but I think this type material should be under a different name tho, it’s more like a side project of the singer(s). And again, the name of the band is goddamn ridiculous so how could they even think of crossing over? No one is going for that.

Oh but why not buy it?

%

, , , , ,

No Comments

White Stripes | De Stijl

De Stijl back cover & insert
Since Maxwell’s announced it was closing I’ve been thinking about great shows I seen there. Seems like everyone is talking about having seen R.E.M. or Nirvana playing there when they first started out even tho there can’t have been that many people there at the time. When I saw the White Stripes there, it was a packed house. Maybe that makes it not that special. It was pretty much the point when this record hit; they might even have booked this gig last-minute after selling out a bigger NYC venue, I don’t remember. Everybody knew they were going up from there, and they got pretty big for quite a while, uh, remember? But they didn’t Change Rock Forever or whatever you’re supposed to do to be remembered a couple years after your band breaks up. Maybe it’s a relatability thing. People like the music of the White Stripes, but they don’t seem like your buddies. They did not start doing this for fun one day and become successful in spite of themselves. Everything they did was calculated and intentional. Despite the simplicity of their early work, the commitment to their singular aesthetic seemed bizarre. Even the Ramones gave you the impression that they just dressed like that all the time. These two clearly did not; it was impossible. They were spotless.

I want to say that I bought this record at the show, because that justifies telling this whole story. I may have already had it. Because it was definitely in stores and I was spending a lot of time on stores then (this was like summer or fall of 2000). I remember I bought their first record at that show because it was harder to find. I also painfully remember not buying any of the 7-inches they were selling that are now worth hundreds at least. Didn’t have a record player at the time. And it wasn’t worth carrying more than a couple CDs the 12 blocks to the PATH station. (CDs fit nicely into a back pocket.) Anyway, I hardly ever listen to that first record anymore so I guess I’m not reviewing it. Good record, like all their records, but I like this one best.

When I first heard the White Stripes, it was on the radio, WFMU. I thought it was a rare Led Zep outtake:

I was dumbfounded to learn this was a new band and that no one was even making the comparison at the time. (Also, I was drunk.) Hello Operator was also in heavy rotation then. The stripped-down nature of the band is much more obvious on this track. But the band was first popular not with fans of classic rock, but with underground garage rock scene out of Detroit. All of these bands are very blues-based, but mostly filtered through the Stooges, not Zep.

But I don’t need to tell you all that, somebody else could do it better. This was just my first impression from where I was coming from at the time. This band paralleled a dovetail of several interests and ideas I was having then, as I had just left art school to play in a garage rock band which almost immediately broke up as soon as we were all fully committed to it, right before these types of bands were getting popular. I don’t need to go into that (“we were almost laughingstock also-rans!” it’s kinda funny, the turmoil in hindsight), but these ideas were all still on the surface of my brain. I was also obsessed with female drummers.

Being a drummer, I have thought a lot about what it takes to be good. Possibly more than I have practiced being good. My theory is that the female drummer is superior for a certain type of rock music because she is less concerned about showing off and more about complimenting the feel of the song. It’s a weird, sexist but positivist theory that girls can rock harder inherently because guys have confused rocking to be a macho thing, which it really isn’t. They (we) will build up these bullshit arm muscles to hit the drum harder. For a girl to play hard, she’s going to put her whole body into it, which is going to give the music a better feel. Meg White is the coincidental embodiment of this idea. Some people think she’s a shitty drummer, but put Jack in front of a human metronome and you’d have a band no one would give a shit about. He’s great as player and songwriter, but you need the feel and the push of that not-giving-a-fuck style. That was what elevated the group into something original. (Which is apparently why the group broke up, she really didn’t care, it was not a put-on. How long is rock group supposed to last, so what.)

THE REST OF THE SONGS: Besides the heavy early blues influence (up to and including straight covering early blues songs) that is simply something shared with Zeppelin (if you ignore the Robert Plant-ish delivery) that rules most of the album, you’ve got the song I’m Bound to Pack It Up which is soo Zeppelin III. I love it tho. But there’s also a few songs with piano that really stand out, if that’s a direct homage to someone else I can’t place it. I bet someone else has. How about that triple tremolo? Did he even use that? The guitar seems pretty straight up. The visuals and text of the booklet really seem designed to throw you off. It’s pretty pretentious but they didn’t have the budget yet to make it seamless and really cool. It’s exactly as silly as it should be. Maybe that’s that why I like it best. Maybe not I just need a way to wrap this thing up already.

Oh, you can buy it online. %

, , , , , , , , ,

6 Comments

Shonen Knife | Top 10 Michie Songs

Happy Shonen Knife Day. It’s great that Shonen Knife has kept going for 30+ years and that is all due to main member and primary songwriter Naoko Yamano. Obvs. But for new fans of the band, and for those who don’t read liner notes, it may have been possible that the contributions of former member Michie Nakatani has been overlooked. She’s the George Harrison of the group. Not only because she only had a few songs per album, but she was also important as a player. Although not exactly a prodigy as a bass player or a singer, the group is structured so that the bass is almaboost equal to the guitar. (She also sometimes played keyboard.)

So she was a big part of most of the songs, but some more than others. Thus shall these songs be named “the Michie Songs”.

712_michie
I trust you, reader. I know if you give a shit you can find whatever album. I’m also tired of putting a bunch of links that no one clicks on. So I’m just going to put one big Amazon link HERE

And heeere’s the top songs that are pretty much all Michie (written and sung):

  1. Banana Fish


    Shonen Knife are famously thought of as being a mostly Ramones-punk band which has in turn inspired other similar bands, but early songs show influences from other girl post-punk bands of the late 70s/early 80s. (Find out more that here.) This song however, comes out of nowhere. As far as I know it has no influence and has influenced no one. Also, the lyrics, unlike Naoko’s which are mostly wonderfully devoid of metaphor, are based partly on the story within a story by J.D. Salinger about a guy that’s kills himself because people are horrible. (That’s what you get with Michie songs. There’s a hidden darkness and ironic self-awareness. Sometimes.

  2. Catnip Dream


    This is the song has some interesting things going on. The chorus has been described as 15/8 but it sounds like alternating bars of 7/4 and 8/4 to me. The harmonized guitar is great and Michie plays the mellotron. And it’s about drugs. Cats talking drugs, right? Ok. There was supposedly another Michie song that was more explicitly about pot that got banned, but I have never been able to find out more about it. Maybe it was just a rumor. This song does seem very free of judgement of the “cat” in question, who unlike most “cats” takes “puffs” of this substance. He is even called “very smart”. Hmm. No, wait, there some cat sounds. Only about cats.

  3. Animal Song


    The is another one that sounds very happy and bouncy but is also weirdly creepy. The refrain “what is this?” perfectly captures the feeling of the listener. There’s a version all in English on the Get the Wow EP. But the lyrics are basically nonsense. She may have been messing with Naoko from the very beginning. Pure speculation.

  4. Devil House


    Altho never mentioned by name, this song retells the plot of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. At least the first half of it. A lesser songwriter would have tried to take you through the whole thing. I like the original Japanese version a little better, but you’d never believe it was literally scene by scene. There’s that generic horror movie soundtrack intro just to throw you offfff…ahg! I just spent an hour trying to look up what that is. Wasn’t it used in a Bugs Bunny cartoon? I can’t find anyone that even mentions that this song contains contains an exact quote of another song, but a million that think it kinda sounds like a Buzzcocks song. Right, the Buzzcocks song that quotes the Bugs Bunny Haunted House episode. One reviewer said that like 20 years ago, it’s not that close. Please leave a comment if you know what I’m talking about.

  5. Butterfly Boy


    Yeah, Thurston Moore plays some guitar on this one. It’s easy to forget because he’s pretty subdued in the final mix. The solo is Michie on keys. It’s sounds a little like she’s saying “Butt Fly”, so what, grow up.

  6. Fish Eyes


    If this song isn’t about eyelid surgery…there’s not really an if. But framed in a Kafkaesque fantasy about literally waking up with giant fish-like eyes and the ensuing internal torment, of course. The kind of Kafkaesque parable of modern angst you expect from…Shonen Knife. I like the old locomotive rhythm. And there’s a nice bridge.

  7. Johnny, Johnny, Johnny


    I used to like how this song came after the Very Metal “Cobra vs. Mongoose”; it’s just gratuitously cheery. But it’s also a pretty good song on it’s own. It’s just so goofy it’s genius. Even if you were fully accepting the whole Shonen Knife package when you put this record on, when you get to this song it’s like you can’t believe what you’re listening to. Shonen Knife is still good and all, but with two writers pushing each other like this it reached amazing levels or ridiculousness in the best way possible. Naoko’s really playing with that guitar line, bending it around like that. But I’m going on.

  8. Another Day


    This is the first attempt at a serious ballad. It must have been someone at the label’s idea to have some serious songs. I believe it was Page Porrazzo who thought he was Phil Spector with this group. Some people must hate it, but I thought it came out great. It’s not that far off from early ballad(ish) song “Bye Bye”, just a little lot more straight lyrically, and almost guitar at all. I remember when I first heard this song and feeling very nostalgic, which is the intention of the song of course. I used to feel a lot more nostalgic about stuff when I was younger. It’s weird. Anyway, I like how certain words like “bottle” and “shadows” kinda fall out of her mouth, she has this same way with pronunciation in Japanese too, some syllables are almost spit out or rushed, or she picks words with certain combinations of consonants that are odd. Maybe it’s an Osakan thing, but Naoko doesn’t do the same thing at all.

  9. Ice Cream City


    This song is another one that has a version on the Get the Wow EP. I guess the label was still hoping to sell some copies of that when it put out the Birds and the B-Sides comp, which has this live version. There’s nothing wrong with the live version I’m just telling you that’s how it went down. (The comp was also not approved by the band according the their book Shonen Knife Land but that’s a little off topic.) The original Japanese version of this one is not as good because Michie could not quite pronounce “city” correctly yet. Some mispronunciations you can ignore, but that one’s pretty tough. I’m not trying to laugh at them. The English lyrics are pretty good: funny-weird and abstract, not anything dark here. Except the Soft Serve King is “melting with happiness”. He gonna die. Too far? Well maybe the whole thing is hallucination someone is having while they during a heatstroke on the beach. Makes sense.

  10. The Perfect World

    Judging by the lack of availability of this song on youtube, I would say it’s one of the least popular Shonen Knife songs. Which is a shame because it’s one of my favorite but it also makes sense because it in no way resembles anything like a Shonen Knife song. This is an unabashed love song. There’s not even any other subject matter that you can pretend it’s about. And it’s not even the “yay, I’m in love, I’m happy” type of thing which itself is barely mentioned (closest to that is their cover of “Top of the World”), no, this song is languid, even sultry. This is not just a song about love, but sex:

    Over my head, really
    Never felt like this before, maybe
    Can’t say the reason clearly
    the rhythm beats me

    And this is from the 1997 album Brand New Knife, which looks like this. It features Michie on droning mellotron and an eye-rolling solo from Naoko who does not know what to do in this situation. It’s not a bad or mocking solo, but you can sense the awkwardness. (Naoko is on record as being “embarrassed” by love songs, altho she is married and has kids.) Michie only stayed with the group one more year after this and it was shocking when she left but looking back, I kinda get it.

✿✿✿✿✿

    Honorable Mentions:

    In the course of making this list, I have gone through the original liner notes for each album (it’s been a draft for over a year). So I might as well list every single song Michie wrote or sang:

  • Cycling Is Fun (would have made top 10 at one point but doesn’t hold up as well as the others)
  • An Angel has Come (Such a weird song, I really like it, but it’s pretty similar to Animal Song)
  • Catch Your Bus (corny but genuinely uplifting, I’m a little angry no one uploaded it)
  • Jackalope (half-dumb, half-brilliant)

    UPDATE: I forgot 3 songs from Yama no Attchan, which are pretty good but apparently forgettable:

  • Chinese Song (totally odd)
  • Cannibal Papaya (bass drops! one of the best choruses)
  • Dali’s Sunflower (one of their ‘most punk’ songs)

    2ND UPDATE: I forgot another one, thanks, eris.

  • Merman (b-side on the the Wonder Wine single, which never had a physical copy of. Has a pretty cool underwater psyche vibe. I’m just now listening to it more than once I think and it’s growing on me. That’s a really forgotten one. A not quite fully polished gem.)

    Semi-Honorable Mention:

  • The Moon World (just an ok one)
  • Frogphobia (something bugs me about this one)
  • Gomi Day (cute idea, not that great a song)
  • Planet X (a demo they never finished)

    Most Honorable Mention:

  • Miracles and Watchin’ Girl are probably my two favorite SK songs. I have to fit that in while preserving the integrity of the list format. Carry on.

    Songs written by Michie, sung by Naoko (or both):

  • Miracles (Naoko verses)
  • Watchin’ Girl (Naoko verses)
  • Summertime Boogie (Michie verses)

    Songs written by Michie, sung by Atsuko:

  • Fruits & Vegetables
  • Neon Zebra
    Atsuko did not sing lead on Neon Zebra. I don’t know why I thought that.

    Co-written songs: [sung by Michie]

  • Neon Zebra (w/ Pat Fear)
    Couldn’t find either studio version, but here’s a live video of it from ’91. It’s a little rough! They were only a band at this point for…10 years? You’ve gotta appreciate the tenacity.

  • White Flag (w/ Steve Davis)
  • Expo ’90 (w/ Steve Davis)
    I like these two songs (esp. the fuzz bass) but have never been able to find out who this “Steve Davis” is. Maybe she was dating this session dude and he was down for whatever. Little much to give him writing credit. But if it’s this guy that had nothing to do with punk maybe that made sense to him. It’s weird. The two songs have nothing to do with each other. Maybe he helped with the lyrics, but the lyrics are not even very good English. Bah! Expo ’90 is not even as good as The Moon World, which now I’m thinking was pretty good. White Flag, tho. Pretty hardcore. Doesn’t really make any sense but whatever.

  • Loop-Di-Loop (w/ Naoko & Atsuko)
    This was the only SK song ever credited to the group as a whole and the result was kinda meh.

    UPDATE 2015.01.20:

  • Mysterious Drugstore (w/ Naoko)
    B-side of the quite difficult to find It’s a New Find EP. Only found out about this from the defunct (but informative) Rock of Japan as it appeared on the mostly needless comp Millennium Edition. Not exactly a classic, but there it is.

    Written by Naoko, sung by Michie:

  • I Am a Cat
    Could be a mistake in the credits since it’s the only song like that.

    Covers:

  • Saboten
    It’s Delta 5’s “You” with Japanese lyrics

  • Hokey Pokey
    You might like to forget that SK did a completely faithful version of the Hokey Pokey, what with the legitimacy and the post-punk and the mellotrons and the time signatures and the adult(ish) themes and whatnot. But it happened. (Personally I think she was messing with the audience at this point.)

%

, , , , , , , ,

33 Comments