Thursday, June 10, 2010

"We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988-2001" continues music book series

We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988–2001 is the first and only book on the last great wave of down-and-dirty rock’n’roll, one whose hangover can still be felt in bars and clubs across the globe. The book is the next chapter in the Please Kill Me/American Hardcore/Our Band Could Be Your Life succession.

Musician and journalist Eric Davidson (Village Voice, CMJ, SF Bay Guardian) was there as this scene unfolded as the frontman for Ohio punks the New Bomb Turks, and he tracks the roots and history of this largely undocumented movement. This is the last generation of punks and rockers to conquer city after city without the diluting force of the Internet.

The Black Lips, the late Jay Reatard, The Dirtbombs, The White Stripes, The Reigning Sound, The Hives–success stories who all sprang from an underground music scene where similarly raw bands, enjoying various degrees of success and hard luck, played in venues ranging from dive bars to massive festivals, but were mostly ignored by a music industry focused on mega-bands and shiny pop stars. These bands weren’t swept up in the “alternative rock explosion.” They played and acted like a bunch of punks, yawned at the Green Days and Offsprings of the world who were supposedly bringing “punk” to the masses, played Sonics bootlegs in their tour vans as much as Iggy Pop, the Ramones or Black Flag, and had soaked up just enough of music biz history to know that they would never be welcomed—even through the servant’s entrance. They reveled in ’50s rock’n’roll and ’60s garage rock while creating their own wave of gut-busting riffs and rhythm.

The bands that populate this book–The Dwarves, Gories, Supersuckers, Mummies, Oblivians, Billy Childish, Rocket From The Crypt, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Cheater Slicks, Teengenerate among them–gained little long-term reward from their nonstop touring and brain-slapping records. What they did have was free liquor, good drugs, guilt-free sex, and a crazy good time, all the while building a dedicated fan base that extends across America, Europe, and Japan.

Truly, this is the last great wave of down-and-dirty rock’n’roll, one whose hangover can still be felt in bars and clubs everywhere in the world.

About The Author:
Eric Davidson (Brooklyn, NY) had his share of good times as the singer of the Columbus,Ohio punk band New Bomb Turks, who have played hundreds of gigs in dozens of countries on three continents (and countless labels), but has retained enough brain cells to recall the lurid details of a scene as sprawling and multicolored as any in the history of rock’n’roll.

Publication Information:
For Immediate Release; ISBN: 978-0-87930-972-5; Paperback; 351 pgs with index; Includes twenty song MP3 download; $19.99.

AUTHOR APPEARENCES
Brooklyn, NY Friday, June 11 Academy Record Annex 96 North 6th Street Reading and pre-Nobunny/Spits soiree! 7 PM
Brooklyn, NY Saturday, June 26 The Bell House 149 7th Street
Launch party!!! NEW BOMB TURKS reunion gig plus Livefastdie! Reading at 6 PM; bands start at 8, $12
Seattle, WA Tuesday, June 29 Easy Street Records 20 Mercer Street reading/book signing, 3pm
Seattle, WA Tuesday, June 29 Snoose Part Deux 10406 Holman Rd. reading/DVD showing, 9pm
San Francisco, CA Thursday, July 1 Hemlock Tavern 1131 Polk Street
Happy hour pre-Eddy Current Suppression Ring/Thee Oh Sees party, 6:30 PM, FREE
Los Angeles, CA Wednesday, July 7 Stories 1716 Sunset Blvd.
Columbus, OH Friday, July 9 Wexner Center 1871 North High Street reading/DVD; 9pm www.wexarts.org After-party at Café Bourbon St.
Columbus, OH Saturday, July 10 Surly Girl Parking Lot Blow-Out 1126 North High Street
New Bomb Turks gig plus – get this – the Gibson Bros. and Scrawl!!! 8 PM
Chicago, IL Tuesday, July 13 Museum of Contemporary Art 220 East Chicago Avenue reading/DVD; 9pm

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