12 03 13 / The Men / Sacred Bones / image / WFMU
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Is it gay to love The Men?
The new track from The Men sounds pretty pop punk, but I’m not complaining. Click the cover to listen.
12 01 27 / The Men / Sacred Bones / record / listen / media / end
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The stage bulged at the Horseshoe. Smash a guitar and pawn the keyboard, then flip a coin to decide if you’ll keep the sax or an extra guitar. A lot of people had fun during Young Guv, and a disproportionate number were holding instruments. The song-writing exists, but the polished pop rock is inefficient, bleaching away any power pop jags in the bloated ensemble. The saxophone added a droning persistence but the keyboard and three guitars only underscored that Young Guv is as inclusive as Toronto is eager to embrace an unspectacular live set from an artist known for solo singles.
Where I stood, The Men were physically painful to listen to. A Confusion is Sex shirt held the bass against an amp until The Men burst into a set of noise screaming in every direction away from hardcore. There might be parameters to their sound but they’re broad enough to sound hardcore playing a catchy song with vibrato arm-manipulated feedback, then dive into a proto-Birthday Party cover. My ears buzzed all Saturday, but I’ll endure it again in a heartbeat.
Release a couple widely-deemed-acceptable records every year for half a decade and see where you are. Thee Oh Sees find themselves in desperate need of an editor. The guy-girl vocals and delayed whoops don’t sound bad, but they aren’t fresh either. Classic garage riffs and Ramones progressions fucked up and affected are pleasant, but when they sprawl outwards six minutes each and the dance floor is balding in front of you maybe playing fast isn’t enough to be exciting. Adjustments begin with expelling the second drummer.
Thee Oh Sees, The Men, and Young Guv at the Legendary Horseshoe Tavern, October 21, 2011.
11 10 25 / Thee Oh Sees / The Men / Young Guv / show / 2011 / Toronto / horseshoe / criticism
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New York’s Nomos snuck out a cassette with The Men last year between their demo and the one-sided purple etched 12” 45 Notes from the Archeron EP. Hanging out at the end of their three songs is this devastating take on the My War side two classic Nothing Left Inside with guest Greg Ginn impressions from some other band. My only dig is that it’s six minutes shorter than Black Flag’s 1982 demo version.
If you’re into noisy hardcore along the lines of Total Abuse (RIP, just waiting for the last PPM EP) or Deep Wound, checkha out their records on Deranged and check them out at Wrong Bar tonight.
Thanks to I Could Die Tomorrow for everything I just got off their site. They have the whole cassette up here.
11 04 08 / Nomos / mp3 / sound / hardcore / Deranged / The Men / listen / end / media
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