Capturing the New York punk scene better than anyone since
the death of Lester Bangs is The New York Waste, and
picking up the Waste is a must. When I first started reading it almost two
decades ago, it introduced me to the best punk rock bands on the scene at the
time. It featured cool photos of the Lunachicks and the Toilet Boys and the
Bullys, awesome mention of The Spunk Lads and others. Paging a little farther,
what did I find but ‘Last in Line for the Gang Bang, a comic biography of G.G.
Allin.’
For those unaware, G.G. Allin was a
punk rock musician infamous for his violent and obscene performances. He may be
better known today as his legend has grown with retellings of his stories and
the admiration of musicians who have broken into the mainstream. But in the
early 2000s, only a select and disturbed few were allied in their admiration of
the late self-described “scumfuck.” (Insider’s note: despite his violent
habits, G.G. Allin was a gifted songwriter who left a prolific legacy of
excellent punk rock and country music
before his untimely end at age 36 in 1993.)
So the fact that someone was producing a comic strip serial biography
of G.G. Allin bowled me over. That such an awesome artistic
endeavor was underway and had an audience getting it free through the New York
Waste made me realize I had found a great home in the punk scene of New York.
The Big Apple became a little less lonely knowing that there were other sickos
out there.
Discreetly inked into the margins of every comic strip was a
web site address for a local punk rock band, World War IX.
The band’s guitar player, Justin Melkmann, was the talented cartoonist
documenting G.G. Allin’s life.
At the same time, I began looking to start my own punk rock
band, and was soon working on original songs with, as the luck of the Internet
would have it, Bruce Steinert from the band Buzzkill.
We needed a singer.
“I’m friends with a guy who our band would play with back in
the day in New Jersey. He used to do things like take bloody meat out of his
pants and throw it at the audience,” Bruce mentioned at rehearsal, speaking of
the New Jersey band Daisycutter.
“That sounds like our guy,” I said. “Call that guy.”
Soon afterwards, Seth Amphetamines entered the picture and
became the singer of what would be Blackout Shoppers.
There are not too many people who can command a stage and make the entire venue
the center of punk rock chaos in the way that Seth can, and that’s a good
thing. It’s an acquired skill to engage with the audience in a mosh pit with
great passion without creating lasting hostility or becoming one of the bogus
tough-guy copycats that have created so many boring hardcore bands over the
last few decades.
Seth is the only singer I’ve seen who has gotten members of
the audience angry enough to throw beer cans at him only to have them share
beers afterwards. Whatever violence he dishes out is in without hate or malice,
and in sincere appreciation of old school hardcore punk.
I went to see World War IX at CB’s basement, which was part
of a still-existent CBGBs at the time (where Blackout Shoppers would play its
first show in a complete fluke later that year), and introduced myself to Justin.
He was glad to meet someone who enjoyed his comic and we vowed to stay in
touch.
Not soon afterwards, World War IX and Blackout Shoppers
played the first of many shows together. It’s an alliance that has lasted about
a decade and a half. We’ve put out a split seven-inch record together. Blackout
Shoppers’ guitar player Mike Moosehead now plays in World War IX, and World War
IX’s drummer Johnny Special K has filled in on drums for Blackout Shoppers.
Blackout Shoppers came back from an official hiatus at a show where World War
IX bid farewell to its singer PhilthyPhill. It’s an incestuous bouillabaisse that only works in punk
rock or among inbred Mormon fanatics, and we love it.
This month, both Justin and Seth turn 50, and the bands are
celebrating with a show together
at Otto’s Shrunken Head,
one of our favorite places to play. It will be an evening filled with alcohol,
music and good times. Please join us.
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