Dwarves are going to release a new four track EP. It's called Sunshine, Lollipops, and Churros and it's a companion to the Record Store Day release Sunshine, Lollipops, and Rainbows. That's out in September via Ghost Highway. You can see the cover below.
<p>A Galaxy Far, Far Away – Galactic Empire, the galaxy’s favorite metal band, has announced their new album Cinemetal, out October 24th via Pure Noise Records. The upcoming release sees the band journeying to other universes as they put their signature metal twist on songs…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.purenoise.net/2025/galactic-empire-announces-new-album-cinemetal/">GALACTIC EMPIRE Announces New Album Cinemetal</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.purenoise.net">Pure Noise Records</a>.</p>
Throw have released their first new song in six years. It is called “Complaining” and is available digitally now via Sad Times Productions. Throw released their split with Se Vende, Get Better, in 2019. Listen to the song below.
Heavy Petter and The Highdives have announced that they will be releasing a split album together. The record is called Come Back, Kelly and will feature 4 new tracks plus two covers – The Highdives will be covering a Heavy Petter track and Heavy Petter will be covering a Highdives track. The album will be out on July 25 via Tarantula Tapes. The art for the album was created by Andrew Wright.
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Prior to this year’s Summer Circus tour, it had been a while since yours truly saw Less Than Jake headline a show. Sure there were Warped Tours and more Warped Tours and even more Warped tours, and a Vans Triple Crown skateboarding thing with Andy MacDonald and Bob Burnquist (and I think Radish also played), […]
Prior to this year’s Summer Circus tour, it had been a while since yours truly saw Less Than Jake headline a show. Sure there were Warped Tours and more Warped Tours and even more Warped tours, and a Vans Triple Crown skateboarding thing with Andy MacDonald and Bob Burnquist (and I think Radish also played), but if memory serves, the last time I saw Less Than Jake headline a club show was the long-since defunct Elvis Room in Portsmouth New Hampshire. So long ago that Jessica and Derron were still in the band and JR was still (Re)Pete from Spring Heeled Jack. I don’t call myself the resident old guy here for nothing…BUT I DIGRESS! The Boston stop on the Summer Circus tour seemed as good a time as any to both return to the House of Blues for only the second time since Covid, and more importantly to check out the Good Ship LTJ again, especially with the dynamite lineup they put together for the early summer festivities.
Bite Me Bambi were first out of the gate for this night, as they were for the entirety of the three-week East Coast run. I was as eager to catch Bite Me Bambi as I was to catch anyone else on this stacked bill, in part because the Orange County-based ska punks don’t make it up to this corner of the globe with any regularity, and also because they’re one of the few modern ska bands that reignited my interest in the genre I first fell in love with three decades ago. Led by the enigmatic Tahlena Chikami, the band kicked off their half-hour spot with “Too Many People” from their most recent release, Eat This. A large portion of the crowd at the 2200 capacity venue had arrived early enough to catch BMB’s high-energy set which included the evening’s first attempt at a circle pit (very much not a Bosotn thing) alongside tracks like “Strippers On A Sunday,” “Gaslighter’s Anthem” and their cover of The Offspring’s “Want You Bad,” a song that is now somehow a quarter-century old and that makes me want to walk into the ocean with rocks in my pockets. Bite Me Bambi’s set was super fun and they sounded super tight, which was especially noteworthy as the touring lineup is a bit of a moving target.
Speaking of bands who feature bold, enigmatic leaders at the front and center, the incomparable Fishbone were up next. Somehow, it was yours truly’s first time shooting Fishbone, and it was every bit as wonderfully chaotic as I’d hoped. Speaking of moving part lineups, the current touring iteration of Fishbone features the iconic Angelo Moore, the return of Tracey “Spacey T” Singleton on guitar, OG trombone/keyboard player Chris Dowd, and newer recruits Hassan Hurd (drums), JS Williams (trumpet/vocals) and James Jones (bass). It also features Moore’s daughter Cheyenne aka Whoop-Dee-Doo, who joined on guest vocals right from jump street on a rousing rendition of the classic “Skankin’ To The Beat.” The stage was constant motion, pure frenetic energy. In addition to lead vocal bandleading duties, Moore oscillated between the theremin and a few different horns (shoutout to Lucero’s longtime stage man Scott for keeping the ship running; not an easy task). The band blitzed through a tight 40 minute set that included classics new and old like “Party At Ground Zero,” “Last Call In America” and of course “Racist Piece Of Shit” before bringing the set to a fun, dancealong close with “Dance To The Music/Everyday Sunshine.”
Suicide Machines occupied the third spot on the four-band bill. My memory from shows from two and three decades ago is more than a little bit foggy, but I do have a vivid recollection of Suicide Machines playing early in the day at my first Warped Tour (Northampton MA 1997 – who was there???) and I definitely remember sneaking my Kodak Fisher Price 110 film camera in and shooting some pictures at that show. I’d never snuck my camera into a show before, and so that means there’s a very distinct possibility that Suicide Machines were the very first band I “shot.” Those pictures may be lost to time, but I should look for them. Anyway, the Detroit four-piece are as good or better now than they ever have been. The always fiercely anti-racist, anti-fascist quartet kicked things off with “Too Good” from their landmark 1996 debut LP Destruction By Definition and never really took their collective feet off the gas pedal. Spearheaded by the dynamic Jason Navarro, the band squeezed fifteen songs into their thirty-five-ish minute set. The bulk of the setlist consisted of songs from Destruction… – an album that they promised to revisit in full on an anniversary tour next year, with a smattering from A Match and Some Gasoline and Battle Hymns and Revolution Spring composing the other half of the set. Brand new standalone single “Never Go Quietly” fit right in as a new classic.
Which brings us to the piece de resistance, the one and only Less Than Jake. With a stage adorned in full Bit Top Circus-esque regalia, the Gainesville-based quintet kicked things off with their ode to their hometown, “Gainesville Rock City,” from 2000’s Borders & Boundaries. “Lie To Me” and “Johnny Quest Thinks We’re Sellouts” followed, with the latter still being one of my favorite songs in the ska/punk world. Pezcore and Losing Streak (and Losers, Kings… and Greased, if I’m being honest) were staple albums in my crew in the days they came out, the soundtrack to endless adventures packed into a friend’s station wagon, singing along at the tops of our lungs while searching for anything at all to do in our corner of suburban New England. I had a moment while standing in the wings, looking at the constant motion on stage – Chris and Roger constantly moving around and playing to the audience when off mic, Buddy never standing still for more than maybe 9 seconds, stage managers endlessly bringing different circus-themed props [rainbow wigs, clown noses, some strange banana-weilding guy in a monkey costume (hi Warren!)] that this is now the fourth decade I’ve seen Less Than Jake in. Sure maybe a little of the hair is greyer (mostly mine) but the band really show no signs of slowing down.
And so, as you might imagine, it was a personal high point of the set when JR’s former Spring Heeled Jack bandmate Chris Rhodes came out for a few songs toward the end of the set. Rhodes and JR occupy a great many memories in my increasingly foggy brain, as Spring Heeled Jack felt like they were one of our bands, even though they were from Connecticut and I was from New Hampshire. Static World View remains one of my favorite albums by anyone, and so it warmed the heart to see two-thirds of SHJ’s OG horn section (RIP Tyler Jones!) side-by-side again. That’s not to say the evening was ALL nostalgia. Less Than Jake played about half of their new EP Uncharted across their set, and the new tracks rock just as hard as ever, especially “Walking Pipebomb.” There have obviously been some weird and misguided jokes about ska and ska punk music for a while now, and I’m not really sure where they come from (sort of like the bad rap emo gets for some reason), but I do believe that bands like Less Than Jake and, really, all four of the bands on the bill for the East Coast leg of the Summer Circus Tour (West Coast gets Catbite and they certainly count too!) demonstrate what is really good and true and positive and celebratory and unifying about the music and the scene, especially given the seemingly neverending shit storm going on outside the venue walls.
The West Coast leg of the Summer Circus tour kicks off July 25th in Phoenix and runs through August 13th in Dallas. Check the full rundown here, and check out more pics below!
Canada's newest punk festival BÜDDIES Fest has arrived. The festival is the creation of baseball enthusiast/punk Jon Snodgrass and Blacktop Record's Ben Andress, whom will be hosting the three day festival held from July 11 to 13th, 2025 in a small town called Tillsonburg, ON. ALL, Dillinger Four, The Flatliners, Drag The River, Lenny Lashley, Greg Norton and much more is set to play the weekend. Punknews Contributing editor Samantha Barrett spoke with Jon Snodgrass and Ben Andress about the festival. Click here to get all the info about the festival and to grab your tickets.
Judas Priest have released a cover of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs”. The song originally appeared on Black Sabbath’s 1970 album Paranoid. The cover comes before Black Sabbath’s final show, which will take place in Birmingham, UK, on July 5. Judas Priest will not be playing the show. Rob Halford has served as the lead vocalist for Black Sabbath on several occasions – twice in 1992 and once in 2004. The released a statement along with the cover which reads, ”WE ARE HONORED TO SHOW OUR LOVE FOR OZZY AND BLACK SABBATH WITH OUR HOMAGE OF 'WAR PIGS' – A SONG WE PLAY AT EVERY SHOW AROUND THE WORLD THAT FANS SING ALONG TO – REINFORCING THEIR LOVE AS WELL FOR THE LEGENDARY PRINCE OF DARKNESS….!! Check out the cover below.
On July 4th, 1995, AFI’s Answer That And Stay Fashionable was released on Wingnut Records. The East Bay Hardcore band was no stranger to being in the studio, having released a handful of EPs previously. However, recording a full-length album was new ground for them, but the risk paid off. It launched AFI into a […]
On July 4th, 1995, AFI’s Answer That And Stay Fashionable was released on Wingnut Records. The East Bay Hardcore band was no stranger to being in the studio, having released a handful of EPs previously. However, recording a full-length album was new ground for them, but the risk paid off. It launched AFI into a career trajectory that has mostly led to success despite the band’s distancing from it’s original sound.
The album itself is the amalgamation of four kids blending their own styles to create a unique-sounding record. While you can say that about many punk rock records, most have not had the lasting power of Answer That And Stay Fashionable. Is it the band’s rabid fanbase that keeps this album alive or the songs themselves? I’d like to think it’s the latter. We sat down with former AFI bass player Geoff Kresge, one of the architects of the album, to talk about the road to making the album and its recording.
Dying Scene (Forrest Gaddis): When did you join AFI?
Geoff Kresge: I want to say they started at the end of the summer of 1991, or maybe the early fall of 1991. Jade, AFI’s current guitar player, and I were in a band together before AFI. I was going to put out a seven-inch by them. They had done a couple of demos that were pretty different from whatever the latest album was that I’ve heard from them. It’s probably more than a few albums ago, but very, very different. At some point, they kind of had a little bit of a shift in sound, where they kind of started getting better at their instruments. I don’t think any of them actually played before they started the band. I think it was just like, “Hey, let’s start a band. Okay, well, I’m going to play this, etc., I’m going to play that, or whatever.”
The difference, however, is that the singer and I had been involved in a couple of jam sessions that a mutual friend had put together when we were in high school. We had a little bit of a history, and that was how I came to say, “Hey, I want to put out a record by you guys.” At some point, they were in the process of recording in the spring or summer of 1992. I happened to bump into one of them and was given a tape. It was a huge improvement on where they had come from before. I definitely wanted to put this record out. Before the end of that summer of 1992, I was asked to come and sit in with them, because they were thinking about changing bass players. So, the original incarnation lasted maybe just under a year, and then that’s when I came in.
Was the tape they gave you the Dork E.P.?
The songs from that were on the tape that I was given. I want to say that there were five or six songs on the tape. I did play on the record after the fact. It had been fully recorded. There was kind of a thing about, well, do you still want to put the record out if you’re in the band? I said, “I do, but since I’m in the band, I also want to re-record the bass tracks so that it’s representative of what we’re going to sound like.”
Halloween Day of 1992 is when I took the bass tracks that are on what has been released and mixed the songs. That was that. I did play on it, but I wasn’t a member of the band while they were recording the drums and guitar.
Your record label was Key Lime Pie Records, right?
They had a song called “Key Lime Pie” from one of their earlier demos that I liked a lot for its simplicity. They were kind of embarrassed by it, but I liked the song. It was my favorite song that they had up until I joined the band. I decided if you guys aren’t going to play the song with me, then I’m just going to use that as the name for the record label.
You guys recorded like four or five EPs before you recorded Answer That and Stay Fashionable, right?
Yeah, we did a handful of EPs. The first three I released on Key Lime Pie Records. I just had those pressed through a couple of different places I used. Then we did the Fly In The Ointment EP, which was on Wedge Records, which was Matt Wedgley’s (The Force, and Viva Hate) label. The way that relationship came together was fairly interesting as part of the story, too. That was how I learned to put out a record on my own.
Paul Thomas put out the Circus Tents seven-inch, Matt’s previous band. Inside the seven-inch, there was a little insert that had a breakdown of all the costs and contact information for different places; resources for pressing plants and for places to have the sleeves printed. It basically said, “Here’s how you do it. Get out there and do it yourself.” That’s what I did. I took that insert and took it to heart. It’s because of having picked up that record that it all happened. The relationship grew from there with Matt, and it led to him asking about putting out a seven-inch by the band. That’s where Fly in the Ointment comes from, before we actually went into Answer That and Stay Fashionable.
“Open Your Eyes,” was recorded for Fly in the Ointment. It was added later when I remixed Answer That and Stay Fashionable for the Nitro Records version. I don’t know how noticeable it is, but if you listen to the original Wingnut Records pressing of Answer That and Stay Fashionable, it’s a different mix than the one that came out on the edition that everybody knows that’s on streaming. I remixed “Open Your Eyes” for that edition also.
How long did it take to record the album?
I want to say that recording and mixing took ten days. It was probably less than that; it’s not coming to me off the top of my head, but it wasn’t terribly long. I want to say it was probably two days of drum tracks, two or three days of guitar and bass, overdubs and fixes, and then two days of lead vocals, maybe three. It was a pretty tight budget from what I recall. When it was probably all said and done, the recording and mixing was probably about a week. It was recorded at a studio called Art of Ears in Hayward, CA by Andy Ernst. Before that, Andy was in the punk rock scene or the underground music scene.
He had done several recordings for some bands on Lookout Records. I can’t remember if he had done a Green Day record, but he had done some really cool records. His recording techniques, I don’t know how they necessarily differed from some of the other studios in the area at the time, but there was just something about the records that he made. We really liked the sounds that he was capturing. He was a cool guy.
When we did the first session there (08/16/1994 – 08/17/1994), it was just a demo. I want to say two of the songs from that demo session, “Half Empty Bottle” and “Your Name Here” are actually on the finished album. We had quite a relationship with him for a couple of years. Everything that we recorded, we did with Andy. Art of Ears felt like a home away from home at some points. It was just a very comfortable environment. I’m sure he probably thought that we were a little crazy or goofballs, but we had a really great working relationship with him. I did a couple of other projects outside of AFI with him at the studio there, too.
Tim Armstrong and Brett Reed of Rancid are listed as producers on “Half Empty Bottle” and “Your Name Here.” Why only those two songs and what did they contribute?
Brett loaned us some drum equipment. They were supposed to produce the demo session; those particular songs on the album are from the demo tape. They were called away on business with their own band before the session actually began, however. We brought Tim back to do some backing vocals the following day. He did a few different takes during the middle section of “Love Is a Many Splendored Thing.” That song went to a compilation EP (This is Berkeley, Not West Bay) instead of Answer That and Stay Fashionable. It would have been another one that I wrote the words and music for. There’s another song from the demo session that Tim had a part on, but the lyrics were changed and the song was renamed “Kung-Fu Devil.”
It was a weird time in the Bay Area for punk rock because there was such a huge interest in bands from the East Bay. Green Day was newly mainstream. This was after Dookie was released. There was a big magnifying glass on the East Bay scene. We didn’t come from the East Bay, but we lived in the East Bay. We started in Ukiah and eventually made Berkeley and Oakland our home base. There were several other interested parties, but we didn’t have enough songs ready to make a full album. At least as far as the game plan that we had in mind, that was still quite a ways off. It wasn’t even really a thought to make a full album.
What happened is we basically had to kick it into high gear and get as many new songs fleshed out as we could. At that point, as far as the musical and lyrical aspects, I was contributing much more than some of the other people bringing in songs. I remember having a phone call with Mark, the guitar player at the time. I said, “Whatever you do, don’t stop writing. Just write as much as you can and let’s see what we can come up with.”
He and I both poured on the steam and tried to get as much new material out as we could. It was kind of like, well, this is on somebody else’s dime, let’s record. Even though in the long run it’s your own dime, it’s just that somebody else is paying for it up front. The thinking was, let’s just record all of this stuff too and see what we think is album-worthy or whatever.
As I say, it was basically everything we had and things that were being finished maybe a week before we went into the studio. It was primarily out of necessity for filling time to honor the contract. As far as I’m concerned, those songs were still worthy of being heard by people outside the four of us in the band at the time.
When torrents were a bigger thing, I had friends that had CDs they made full of the EPs. We loved “Who Said You Can Touch Me?” and “Rolling Balls.” They’re two songs we used to go back to a lot.
“Who Said You Can Touch Me?” was the first song that I brought to the band. Jade and I had played that in the band we had been in together previous to that, but I carried that over and just changed the words.
Was that Loose Change?
No, I did play in Loose Change. I was only in the band for a few months. Not the earliest lineup, maybe the second lineup of Loose Change. The band that we had been in, aside from Loose Change, was called Influence 13. I was in that band for about a year before and during my time in AFI. For Loose Change, I was there for maybe less than a handful of rehearsals. I think maybe there was a drummer change and I didn’t pick it back up when things got going again.
My favorite songs on the album are those kind of goofy ones, “I Wanna Get A Mohawk (But Mom Won’t Let Me Get One)”, “Cereal Wars”, and “NyQuil”. Did those survive the sets later? You mentioned they were a little embarrassed about “Key Lime Pie.” Did they start getting embarrassed about those songs too?
You kind of hit the nail on the head there. It was almost a sense of being embarrassed by those songs or those lyrics. Wanting to be taken more seriously and not be looked at as a novelty or whatever you want to call it. I don’t know if embarrassment is the right word, or if it’s just maturity level changing. The songs that have the silly lyrics like that are largely not from my pen as far as lyrics go. I don’t really know what the mindset is behind that. We did phase a lot of that stuff out of the set as new songs came in.
I always feel that’s part of the charm of that album. You can tell it’s made by a bunch of kids. There are angry songs on it like you would have on a hardcore album, but there are these fun jokey songs, I never thought of them as novelty songs. I thought it was just something kids wrote about.
That’s how I look at it too. Here we are coming up on thirty years and looking back on it myself, I am still really proud of those records, especially the songs on Answer That and Stay Fashionable. As far as being an accomplishment, I have a sense of pride over it, but I don’t share the sentiments of embarrassment or immaturity that’s being cast on it by people other than me. I still think it’s a cool record. I don’t know if landmark is the right word… I don’t want it to be construed as I think it’s some groundbreaking record.
Personally, I feel a huge sense of accomplishment. It was four kids just sort of figuring it out as we went. I think it really comes across in the recordings. It’s the things that kids write about. It’s the energy that kids have. It’s figuring it out as you go, the discovery process of making an album, all of that. I have nothing but great memories of making that record.
Besides being a great song, how did you land on the cover of the Police’s “Man In A Suitcase?”
One of the guys really wanted to do that song. Some of us needed our arm twisted to do it, myself included, because it wasn’t where we were at. I guess you could say that song was a thorn in my side at that age. Those days were about playing fast, about the rush of energy and excitement that comes with faster music. Some of us were not into pumping the brakes.
What was influencing you at the time either musically or otherwise? I mean, clearly, Reservoir Dogs…
The Reservoir Dogs thing was kind of just a fluke, and turned into a thing for a little while. There was a movie theater in Berkeley on University Avenue. I don’t know if you’d call it a second-run theater, but they showed things that were not current. There was a poster for Reservoir Dogs in front of the theater. We were walking past the theater one day, and it was such a striking image. We were probably in the process of discussing what the album cover was going to be, or just coming up with ideas and suggesting things. We passed the theater. I saw that poster and I thought, “Why don’t we do something like this?”
Steve Z, who did the photos for the album, actually referenced some stills and poster art from the movie. He posed us to make it look just like the Reservoir Dogs poster. There’s that aspect of it. It was just a weird timing. Then it turned into wearing the suits that we wear on the album cover on stage. I don’t know where the idea came from to do that, but it did become a thing. That was one of the memorable experiences that stayed with me from that time of making that record, too. We went up and down Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley. If you’re not familiar, it was the happening area. It leads up to the UC Berkeley campus. It’s a largely foot-traveled area.
Here we were dressed in black suits like Reservoir Dogs, carrying around an air pistol that looked like a 1911 model pistol. Steve is there with his camera equipment in the middle of a busy crowd of people, and we stop in the middle of a crosswalk to take photos. I should also mention that in addition to shooting the photos for the album layout, he also accompanied us on our first US tour, selling T-shirts and helping us out with driving. He photographed a lot of that tour, too.
What I personally was listening to at the time, and what was influencing me as far as the musical aspect and whatever lyric content I brought into that record would have been, specifically, the first two DOA albums, Hardcore ‘81 and Something Better Change. GBH has this compilation album of their early EPs, and it’s called Leather, Bristles, Studs, and Acne. Between DOA and GBH, I was heavily influenced by two bands with initials during that process, go figure. I was also listening to the Germs and Negative Approach a lot at that time. It was around that time they had done the Germs anthology called M.I.A. on CD, and they had done the Negative Approach Total Recall CD, which had everything on it. Those were definitely in heavy rotation for me.
That was, sort of my daily stuff that I listened to, and the first Discharge album. A lot of that stuff, if somebody were to listen to it, especially the first Discharge album. I wasn’t imposing any kind of playing style on anybody else. That was kind of the beauty of bringing in something that’s influenced by something that it never could possibly sound like with the four of us doing it. That’s kind of where our sound basically came from, I suppose.
The album has sound clips from movies and shows. I didn’t realize that the title, Answer That and Stay Fashionable, came from the Comic Strip Presents…I thought that it was Monty Python for years.
It’s a pretty obscure reference. They used to show Monty Python’s Flying Circus and The Young Ones on MTV. The “Bad News Tour” episode of the Comic Strip Presents…, is where that sound bite comes from. It’s outrageous. There are so many things that happen in it that so many people in a band can relate to. Going to where there’s supposed to be a gig and it’s news to everybody there. Even though it’s a mock heavy metal band from England, it’s very appropriate for a punk rock band from Mendocino County, California, too. I want to say I had maybe recorded it from the TV. That non-musical influence was that kind of humor and taking bits and pieces from things that we liked, thought were funny, or maybe some of them might be inside jokes.
As far as some of the lyrics go, they were sort of a collective thing. Maybe not among the four of us, but definitely among the majority of us latching onto similar things and becoming a part of the collective persona of the band. Whether it be attitude, sense of humor, or listening tastes, certain things that we would all gravitate toward that made us what we were at that time for that period of time.
What song lyrics did you write?
I wrote lyrics for, “Half Empty Bottle” and “Your Name Here.” I also wrote “The Mother in Me” and “Don’t Make Me Ill.” The vocalist added a few words. “High School Football Hero” is mine. The satirical aspect of it is still relevant, despite some maybe seeing it as jokey.
“Yurf Rendenmein” and “Two Of A Kind” get re-recorded for Very Proud of Ya. Were those the only two songs that stayed over when you guys started writing new songs and making your sets for shows?
No, that was a contractual situation. It wasn’t something that any of the four of us really wanted to do. It was an agreement that we made when we were offered the Nitro Records contract. Sometimes, I forget that that happened. When it comes back to me that we did that, it still kind of rubs me the wrong way. I didn’t like having to redo those two songs, even though we had previously redone other songs. The way that it happened wasn’t cool. I think it shows in the recordings of those two songs.
You did the remix of the album when it went to Nitro. How long did that take?
I think that was two days. That was just me and Andy Ernst again at Art of Ears. I mentioned earlier that there were a couple of tracks that had been from a demo session that we did there. It was a lot of fussing around and a lot of tweaking of knobs to get things to sound a certain way that they weren’t recorded that way. It was sort of like trying to get lemonade out of a lime. When we sold that record to Nitro, part of the agreement was that I wanted to remix the record to the version that everybody now knows.
Basically, what we did between Andy and me is undo a bunch of the overdoing of things with EQ on drums or guitars or whatever it was, and just made it sound a little bit more open and a little more raw. It’s not a raw-sounding record, but it sounds more like a band playing in a room. We were just laboring over it too much. This was like scraping a couple of layers of paint off of it to make it sound more like what the band sounded like.
Do you know if they’ve done another remaster on it since then? Being an album from the 1990s and the technology then compared to the technology they have now, it sounds great.
Thanks. Honestly, I don’t know if anything else was done. I know that it’s the same mix that we sold them, that was the master of that mix. I have some alternate versions, but I am also the owner of the actual tapes. They haven’t had access to the tapes to do anything. They, being the record label, whoever owns the record now, I don’t. I don’t even know who owns Nitro Records now, to be honest.
Nitro changed hands at least once in the last decade or so. I’m not sure what the parent company is now, but I feel like I saw something about it having been released on vinyl earlier this year. Maybe for the first time in a while. Unfortunately, I’m not a part of any of that process. I haven’t listened to either of those records for quite a while, but the last time I did, it brought a smile to my face when I heard it. There are good memories attached to it for me.
My wife and I don’t cross on music very much. She likes the middle era AFI, and I like the early AFI, but we cross on this album.
It’s interesting from my perspective, having been there for five of the first six years, and hearing people say things like that, their connection to Answer That… There’s a big division between the old band and the new band. It’s nice to hear from people thirty years later, “Hey, that’s a cool record, or I like that song on that record,” or wherever it might be. It’s a really cool feeling because who knew at the time we didn’t know that anybody outside of Berkeley was ever going to buy that record, you know? Aside from family members or friends that were still in Ukiah or Sonoma County.
Were only your friends really buying the EPs, or were record labels buying copies?
The EPs I had sent out to a few labels just to see if anybody was interested in doing another seven-inch. I sent out probably ten to twenty copies of each EP to various other small record labels. As far as what went to Nitro, that first Art of Ears demo was specifically recorded to send to them and a couple of other labels. I want to say that the demo got sent out to like fifteen or twenty different labels. That was a specific thing with that session. Let’s do a demo to see if somebody is interested in putting out a record for us that’s not me. It just turned into we’re going to do a full album, but we did not send a demo to Josh Levine at Wingnut Records, who originally put out Answer That and Stay Fashionable. He was local and came to see us many times, and lived down the street from 924 Gilman Street. He was one of the volunteers at the Gilman Street Project, so he was always around. He was the one who took the leap of faith with us.
Nitro came along after the fact. I can’t remember how much time passed between releasing the first pressing on Wingnut and when Nitro got involved off the top of my head. I do have to say that if it had not been for Josh, we wouldn’t be having this conversation right now. There wouldn’t be a thirty-year anniversary of any record that anybody cared about. A very, very large thanks to Josh from Wingnut for taking that chance on potentially losing a lot of money on putting out a record from a band that hadn’t ever really been on the road before.
If its been sometime since you revisited the album, definitely give it a spin. It’s aged very well. Also, please check out Geoff on his instagram here. On top of being a fantastic artist, he tattoos at Secret Kingdom Tattoo in Roseville. If you’re in the area, go in and get some ink.
Kitchen Lover has released a new song. It is called “Oregano Ricardo” and is off their upcoming debut album The Circus Sideshow Dream, which will be out later this year. Kitchen Lover released the first single from the album, “Black Hole Heart”, earlier this year. Check out the song below.