Showing posts with label The Mekons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Mekons. Show all posts

10 June 2025

LIVE MUSIC FROM A DEAD CAMPUS (EVEN MORE LIVE MUSIC FROM WFMU) Various Artists 1998


 

Discogs

 


Bands recorded live on WFMU radio in Jersey City, New Jersey

 

 

Tracklist 

1-12 Foot FlamePeacock Coal
1-2Amoeba (Raft Boy)Karma Bank
1-3Harvey Sid FisherCountry Scat
1-4ÉletfaDance Suite From Szék
1-5Richard Davies (3)Surface Of The Sun
1-6Margaret Leng-Tan*Mirabella (A Tarantella For Toy Piano)
1-7Danielson Family*Like A Vacuum
1-8James Kolchaka Superstar*Show Respect For Michael Jackson
1-9The MekonsBomb
1-10Baby StepsPopular Troublesome Heartache Plan
1-11Vic ChesnuttOld Hotel
1-12Jin Hi KimYellow Seed
1-13Bubble (9)Ladder Of Success
1-14Planet FillyPaper Moon
1-15Pest 5000Crossing Things
1-16Zusaan Kali Fasteau*Rapture
1-17MomusVirtual Valerie
1-18QuintronGhost Rider
1-19Logical NonsenseHypo-Christian
1-20Ronald Thomas Clontel With Tom ScharplingRock, Rot, And Rule (Excerpt)
2-1WFMU*Intro: The Price Is Beans (Excerpt)
2-2SpaceheadsJoyriding
2-3Uz Jsme Doma*Kuzelina
2-4Rancid VatTestify
2-5Chris ButlerCage-ian Disembowlment Of An Acoustic Guitar While Whoring For Marathon Dollars (3rd Movement)
2-6Original Sins*Bethlehem / Shopping Trip To Mercury
2-7Philip Johnston's Transparent QuartetPipeline
2-8Suddenly Tammy!*Beautiful Dream
2-9Loren Mazzacane ConnorsImprovization
2-10Mark EitzelMission Rock Resort
2-11Karen Mantler And Michael Evans (2)My Life Is Hell
2-12The KropotkinsTruck Stop Girls
2-13The FrogsI Only Play For Money
2-14Silver ApplesFractal Flow
2-15Lynnfield Pioneers*Latoya
2-16The RenderersLike A Virus
2-17Untamed YouthMailbox Jamboree
2-18ObliviansPill Popper
2-19Happiest Guys In The World*Free Range Chicken

29 August 2024

THE THREE JOHNS Eat Your Sons 1990


 
Discogs


The Three Johns Biography by John Dougan

A side group started in 1982 by Mekons co-founder Jon Langford, the Three Johns, originally made up of Langford, John Hyatt, Phillip "John" Brennan, and a drum machine, specialized in abrasive, politically charged, danceable rock. Sounding almost nothing like Langford's main band, the Johns were a silly-serious bunch of political and cultural provocateurs. Recording during the height of Margaret Thatcher's ill-conceived Tory rebellion, the Johns were openly antagonistic to this new, conservative vision of Britain's future. And while their elliptical and epigrammatic lyrics might not offer the sloganeering that would easily identify them as lefties, certainly there were enough hints dropped along the way to remove any doubt. Unlike other rock agit-prop, the Johns played a fairly accessible version of polemical post-punk anti-pop that embraced big, messy arena-rock-sounding guitars and hard, repetitive, quasi-hip-hop dance beats. Perhaps the most subversive thing about the Johns is that, despite Langford's and Hyatt's goofy vocals, they were, in their own weird way, pure pop for now people, especially those who hated Thatcher. With collective tongue planted firmly in cheek, the Johns took on British and American obsession with materialism, the diabolical Reagan-Thatcher lovefest, the machinations of the pop music industry, all of it done with a great sense of humor mixed in with genuine fear and horror. Frequently hard to pin down, the Johns reveled in being slippery, exhibiting a love and loathing for pop music. In some respects, the Johns resembled friends and fellow Leeds, England mates the Gang of Four, but where the Gang of Four was dour and serious (bordering on academic), the Johns were loutish and boisterous, which when combining politics and rock & roll can, ultimately, be a good thing. After the release of Eat Your Sons in 1990, Jon Langford turned his attention full-time to the Mekons, putting the Three Johns on what has turned out to be an indefinite sabbatical.



Tracklist

1
Black Heart / Skeleton Man5:33
2
Eat Your Sons4:06
3
Key Largo5:09
4
Smashtime4:40
5
Sometime4:23
6
Toleration2:35
7
Book Of The Dead4:03
8
Jason's Dream2:27
9
Thunder And Rum4:07
10
Desire For Chaos0:53
11
Beat It On A Rock3:40
12
In The Here And High6:09
13
A Very Modern Relationship5:41

05 October 2019

THE MEKONS The Curse of the Mekons 1991

by request
 
 

Tracklist  

1 The Curse 3:45
2 Blue Arse 2:50
3 Wild & Blue 2:54
4 Authority 5:00
5 Secrets 5:20
6 Nocturne 4:57
7 Sorcerer 4:33
8 Brutal 4:35
9 Funeral 3:28
10 Lyric 3:57
11 Waltz 4:25
12 100% Song 5:21
 

20 April 2017

THE MEKONS I ♥ Mekons 1993



Artist Biography by

More than any band that came out of late-'70s England, the Mekons (the name taken from the popular sci-fi comic Dan Dare) have perhaps the most devoted fans of any band even remotely connected to punk rock. And why not? Over the course of several decades, this band, with an ever-shifting lineup (only Jon Langford and Tom Greenhalgh remain from the original), produced some of the best rock & roll on the planet, be it amateurish rock-noise, cool synth-driven pop, guitar rave-ups, or postmodern country & western, the Mekons have done it all and done it with style, grace, and a ribald sense of humor.
Emerging from the same Leeds University "scene" that begot Gang of Four, the Mekons weren't as overtly political as their Marxist-inspired brethren, but their punk rock pedigree and unsubtle anti-Thatcher and -Reaganisms did set them apart from the post-punk world's innumerable careerists and posers. Their early recordings were exceedingly lo-fi affairs that valued emotion and energy over anything that remotely resembled musical proficiency. Songs like "Never Been in a Riot" and "32 Weeks" sound as if the band entered the studio, arbitrarily decided who was going to play what, and started the tapes rolling. It was fun, challenging, and anarchic -- principles to which the band has clung, musical genre notwithstanding, ever since their inception.

The Quality of Mercy Is Not Strnen
From the time of their debut album, The Quality of Mercy Is Not Strnen, the Mekons had turned into a slightly more accomplished post-punk band that, like their pals in Gang of Four, wielded trebly guitars and shouted vocals over semi-funky rhythms tracks. The songs lacked focus, but this was a bizarre record that, for all of its oddly ingratiating music, offered little insight as to whom was making it. This remained true for a couple of years or so as the band (basically Langford, Greenhalgh, Kevin Lycett, and whomever else they could rope into a session) made one exciting, enigmatic, and extremely difficult-to-find record after another.
Fear and Whiskey
In 1985, after it seemed the earth had swallowed them whole, the Mekons released the startling Fear and Whiskey, a ragged country album influenced by the ghosts of Hank Williams and Gram Parsons that was unlike anything they'd ever recorded. Thus began the second coming of the Mekons, who finally began to reach an underground/alternative rock audience that had missed them the first time around. Soon they began touring more frequently, putting on clamorous, exciting shows. Talented new members jumped on board, like violinist Suzie Honeyman and singer Sally Timms, and even former Pretty Thing Dick Taylor was a Mekon for a while; records started coming out with more frequency and, despite considerable trouble from major labels that sent them back to the indies, could be found in nearly any record store. From Fear and Whiskey through subsequent records including The Mekons Rock 'n' Roll, Curse of the Mekons, Retreat from Memphis, and Natural, they continually reinvented themselves: sodden country band, wise-ass folk-rock band, cranked-up guitar band, trouble-making punk band. Whatever the scenario, what has remained consistent throughout the Mekons' existence has been great music. After an extended recording break of four years, and Touch & Go's Quarterstick imprint reissuing key titles in their catalog, the Mekons returned to recording withe same lineup they've employed since the mid-'80s with the concept album Ancient & Modern: 1911-2011 on Bloodshot. The set tracks history -- via the Mekons' deadly sense of humor and politically astute, ironic rock & roll -- from the Edwardian era just before the First World War, to the humanitarian crisis in Sarajevo, to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to surveillance cameras being used in virtually every metropolitain community in Great Britain. 


Tracklist  

1 Millionaire 4:36
2 Wicked Midnite 3:51
3 I Don't Know 4:20
4 Dear Sausage 3:47
5 All I Want 3:48
6 Special 2:30
7 St. Valentine's Day 4:58
8 I ♥ Apple 3:26
9 Love Letter 4:18
10 Honeymoon In Hell 5:33
11 Too Personal 5:54
12 Point Of No Return 3:00