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WOMAN



Last Updated: 11/25/2009

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Status: Single
City: BROOKLYN / D.F.
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 4/24/2005

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Thursday, October 08, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music





"NY City, or the megalopolis that Beat poet Ginsberg pointed to as the great Moloch of Amerikkka, just birthed another one of these groups that should better be called "fingers of death", as it emerges from darkness, as the malaise you feel in the throat: WOMAN. Imagine Tex Perkins of the Beasts of Bourbon, copulating with the Grim Reaper, decked out in the mask of Hannibal Lecter, and you get this blues cannibal, you strike a fiery crack of the whip in his face! From memory — save the Birthday Party or the violence of icy Unsane — we have never heard such choking rock, heavy and foaming with the anger of Walpurgis Night, guitar-drone like twisted barbed-wire, lascivious bass and guttural vocals amid corrosive drums . . . "Give me a Woman" belched Lux Interior: his wish is finally fulfilled. The final schism of rock'n'roll in perspective . . . "

- ROCK HARDI (France)
Sunday, September 20, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music
Woman. First album.

On my birthday this year I received a vinyl album in the mail, of a band I'd barely heard but was willing to take a punt on. This was my first sortie thus in a few years. I put it on this morning, and was promptly catapulted back a quarter of a century or more. Somewhere between the Scientists' first 12" EPs and the Primevils (uh, the Adelaide band) I suppose is the first response.

The second is that it is so fucking difficult to gauge a band from an album. Some bands are born to howl at you from the stage. Others make great little records and are just, well, a band pootling through the setlist on stage. You can't tell, not really.

Anyone who saw The Birthday Party in late '81 early '82 will agree; I remember being distinctly disappointed with 'Junkyard' because it didn't capture the band's live sound. On the other hand, Tony Cohen didn't have a lot of time (he came closest, and damn near karked out while doing so, on 'She's Hit'). We discussed this once, and I felt like a real shit when I had to explain that he'd gotten about only a third of the band's live face. Christ, his face fell. On the other hand, I just can't think of anyone else who'd have gotten any closer at the time. Pity I didn't have the presence of mind to mention that to him. Bloody hell.

Anyway. Anyone who saw the Scientists before the record containing 'Rev Head' will know what the absolute highlight of the live set was. So, somehow either there was a whopping argument in the studio, or some sort of fuckup, or someone threw up on the wombat switch, but 'Rev Head' just sounds really pale and distant. Mixed into nothing like what we were expecting.

The reason I say all this is 'cause Woman's first, self-titled album is a blast.

There's a berko guitarist in one corner, another guitar viciously undercutting him, a bass player who seems to have everything turned up to 11, and a drummer who somehow makes sense of it all. And they're tight, at least on record; stop on a crushed midget's toe, turn around and doubleback again.

Several listens later and I know this is music that's always going to bear another listen, there's so much going on between the guitars and the rhythm. The sonics are good. It's not the most expensive recording in the world, but I think you'll find similar comments being made about The Ramones and The New York Dolls, you know?

And the gatefold sleeve, the scrawled thanks list (I particularly like the one to 'everyone who's ever given the Skeleton Boy a bass', which kinda implies it wasn't a loan, and that each bass the Boy is handed gets somehow destroyed or at least crippled) and being able to order and receive the album inside two weeks - no wonder record stores are flailing to make a crust.
Now, they may be total shit live. I've no idea. I doubt it myself, but I can't tell from the album, which begs to be played rather loud, flipping it over and over until you're sick.

While I'm here, a quick and embarassing confession. I got the name of the band wrong first time round. Called 'em 'Mother'. Had the John Lennon song trickling around in my head. Couldn't figure it. Then, suddenly the truth snuck up, as it does sometimes. Way back in '87 I saw X on my birthday too. Rilen busts a string. He's the rather brutal looking little bloke pounding on this beaten up lump of wood to one corner. The man looks so focussed, bestial. Anyway, the roadies scurries out as roadies do, hands Rilen his spare bass and darts to the edge of the stage to restring. Did I mention Rilen has bust the top fucking string? After about three wallops on the replacement bass Rilen unplugs it and hurls the thing at the unfortunate roadie's head. Missed him by that much. Rilen went on to monster the poor bloke until the thing was fixed, all the while the band are banging through an extended intro. X's version of 'Mother' is my favourite X song. So, that's another backhanded compliment if you like.

Sometimes it's good to be reminded of all the great stuff you've seen in the past; even more by idiots like these who know how to put out a killer album and - hopefully - lay waste anyone unfortunate enough to wander into their rehearsal room by mistake.

Woman take no prisoners, but then, they don't have to. If this were 25 years ago I'd say 'if you see this record, you know what to do'. But we're all on the internet now. So you have no excuse if you've read this far.

M U N S T E R A M A
Apdo. 147
Santurtzi 48980 Bizkaia
Basque Country (Spain)

shop@munsterama.com
http://www.munster-records.com/catalogo/enter.html


Do it.

- ROBERT BROKENMOUTH, author of NICK CAVE: THE BIRTHDAY PARTY & OTHER EPIC ADVENTURES (Omnibus Press)
Friday, September 11, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music




Top Ten Songs of the Week 9/7/09



We do this every Tuesday except for when we don’t – for all you Tuesday peeps, we’ll try to get back on schedule next week. This is strictly for fun – it’s Lucid Culture’s tribute to Kasey Kasem and a way to spread the word about some of the great music out there that’s too edgy for the corporate media and their imitators in the blogosphere.

2. Woman – When the Wheel’s Red


Noiserock from their delicious new cd.
Thursday, September 03, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music


CD Review: The Sick Debut Album by Woman


September 3, 2009


There are four people in Woman and they’re all guys. It’s not known what if anything the band name connotes, but it’s definitely not girly. Woman play dark, confrontational, in-your-face noise-rock that sounds straight out of the Lower East Side, 1993. What sets it apart from its antecedents is how tuneful it is. All of the songs here have layers and layers of guitar, howling, screaming, roaring, veering wildly in and out of focus, but the parts all manage to be in the right place at the right time. Since this band is actually very tight, the out-of-control freakouts become all the more intense. This album is like a splatter film that’s at least half suspense: there’s lots of gore, but they save it for when they need it. And then you get buckets. The tunes are always front and center when necessary; ditto the unrestrained savagery. Heavy drums and equally heavy, distorted bass add a shot of molten lead to an already unsteady vehicle.
There are eight tracks on the album to annoy your neighbors with in the wee hours. The first, When The Wheel’s Red layers a firestorm of metallic noise behind a simple catchy warped blues tune, like the Chrome Cranks as done by Sonic Youth circa Daydream Nation with some death metal dude on vocals. Track two, Gaol In My Heart is a stomping dirge, very Honeymoon Killers with a little Syd Barrett thrown in – the band pulses and sputters and finally the flames emerge from within the stinky smoke cloud, then it goes into a circular Doors-ish motif that they run over and over behind the squall. The Perfect Night captures swaying neo-boogie blues through the warped prism of a cheap whiskey bottle and ends cold as if they had to cut something off, or the tape ran out.

The fourth cut, E-A-T-D-N-A picks up the pace with some unhinged chord-chopping and a wicked hook at the end of the verse that sounds a lot like the late great Live Skull (it figures: indie legend Martin Bisi engineered the album, maxing out the menace in his signature style). Like the previous cut, it stops dead in its tracks. After that, Phosphorescent Glow welds a catchy garage rock hook to ugly Melvins stomp and some charbroiled Ron Asheton licks. The most accessible song on the cd, Fall Into The Fall motors along on a catchy, mean chromatic hook with a Silver Rocket vibe, saving most of the guitar torture for the end. Heavy Water is aptly titled, like early Sabbath with a feedback fixation. The cd ends with the sarcastically titled torturefest Icy Drone, which reminds a lot of Live Skull’s classic cover of the Curtis Mayfield hit Pusherman. Damn, there hasn’t been a band this twistedly good around here in a long, long time. Could somebody please get their labelmates the Chrome Cranks together again for another tour and put them on the road with these guys. Woops…with this Woman. As a special bonus, Bang Records has pressed a limited edition run of 500 vinyl albums in addition to the cd.

- LUCID CULTURE
http://lucidculture.wordpress.com/2009/09/03/cd-review-the-sick-debut-album-by-woman/
Monday, August 31, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music




It's a burning debut for these four ugly folks, perverting under a name related to women (as seems to be in fashion, lately).  They are New Yorkers, go out for one of the filthiest labels on the planet (the Basque Bang!), and Martin Bisi sits behind the desk.
 
Have we raised the antennas?
 
Well, you're on the right track to become connoisseurs of the dirty swamp-noise-blues of Brett Schultz (vocals, guitar), Kristian Brenchley (guitar, vocals) Skeleton Boy (bass) and Alex Velasquez (drums), known as Woman.

This Woman is not very feminine.  In fact the definition of "woman" could never be applied to this quartet, according to their sounds:  Entering the record, you get a real feeling of falling into quicksand, sounds mixing as the atmosphere darkens and the air begins to saturate until becoming unbearable.  And it takes you deep down, down to the bottom where slime regurgitates with all the knowledge of NYC noise, near and far: Deformed blues and noise like the cacophony of Pussy Galore, abused rock and existential urban paranoia from the Swans, the rough guitars and taste for the obscene from the Unsane.  But there is not much violence in the strict sense, more like perennial desperation coming from these four obsessives, judging by the remains of the final sludge "Icy Drone" which fuses nuclear waste and scraps of indigestible NY sounds.

Definitely an excellent debut.

(7.0/10)


- SENTIREASCOLTARE (Italy)
http://www.sentireascoltare.com/
 
Wednesday, August 26, 2009 

Current mood:  high
Category: Music

 

Thursday, August 20, 2009 

Current mood:  savage
Category: Music


If it comes to "sick and perverted" noise explosions New York would be the best place to go to. For several days I have had the opportunity to wander through this metropolis and can imagine where these kind of bands get their inspiration from.

This New York tradition fits Woman like a glove. These non-indigenous Newyorkers combine the best of Captain Beefheart, The Birthday Party and Swans (amongst others) with the greatest of ease which results in eight "unhealthy and carved down to the bone" noisetracks.

Woman is not the kind of band to sit back and relax to in order to enjoy an audiophonic experience. On the contrary. The Woman debut record leaves no room for nuance and grabs you by the throat before choking you to death. I am filled with a sense of relief every time I have managed to sit through the entirety of the record and take a mandatory five day break before playing the record again.

But one thing is for certain.  After such a break . . . I WILL play the record again and again.

 

- PLANET TRASH (Netherlands)
http://www.planettrash.nl
Friday, July 10, 2009 

Current mood:  creative
Category: Music
Be the envy of the cell block / psych ward / rehab facility . . .


 



Previously only available from tours and gigs, we have a ltd number of t-shirts for the offering, as evidenced here by Mr. Matty Rue Morgue of The Holy Kiss.

RED or WHITE ink on BLACK shirt

Available for all sizes and deformities.

Injury not included.

$15 bucks + $2.50 for U.S. s/h / Int'l orders email details

PAYPAL: WOMANNYC@​GMAIL.​COM 
Currently listening:
Fun House
By The Stooges
Release date: 2005-08-16
Monday, February 02, 2009 

Current mood:  triumphant
Currently listening:
Fun House
By The Stooges
Release date: 2005-08-16
Monday, October 06, 2008 

Current mood:  smitten
Category: Dreams and the Supernatural

" WOMAN, the last Edward Hopper 's Nightmare painting by an old Drunk Norman Rockwell :

Like the others Songs, Gaol inside My Heart is potent-plowing Dead-Heat excipient - WOMAN is a Death-Squad - WOMAN is the dope-antidote-Gonorrhoea for antechrist humors - Full of elation EvZone Heat- Full of Erogenous Decadence From Ancient Proto-Romantism Bad Apple Souvenir to The New Fall-Krachic-Growing Pale World - Seeking Drive for our Poor Urban Pubic Bone Lost Contemporary Souls' - The Perfect Soundtrack of our Whoopsy Pathos "

Ptosic-Poem Review by Blackbird M. L.
Bone
Currently listening:
Fun House
By The Stooges
Release date: 2005-08-16
Sunday, February 10, 2008 

Current mood:  drunk


. . . will be recording NEW SONGS at Brooklyn's legendary B.C. STUDIOS
this March
with none  other  than  MARTIN BISI - the man responsible for documenting such NYC notables as SONIC  YOUTH,  SWANS,  FOETUS,  LYDIA LUNCH,  COP SHOOT COP, LUBRICATED GOAT, THE RAMONES . . . someone named IGGY POP and many more.
A match made in hell!


. . . head up to BOSTON on FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22nd for a show at the CHURCH with our good  friends  THE  BIG  DISAPPOINTMENTS   and  THALIA  ZEDEK  of  LIVE SKULL. Then the DISAPPOINTMENTS head back to NYC with us for  SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd at LIT with MY HAPPY GUN.

. . . were  shot  live  at  our  recent  Cake Shop  gig  by  Joly  of  PUNKCAST -
watch for footage both here and at PUNKCAST.COM in the very near future!


. . . are featured over at CRACKING-GRAIN MAGAZINE with a four page piece
by  French swamp-poet MERLE LEONCE BONE. Read it here.

. . . are still recovering from last weekend's festivities. FIVE DOLLAR PRIEST were red-hot, JERRY TEEL wasted no time making up for the four years he's been gone from NYC stages, and  DERO / NAPALM / MALAT  were  amazing as well.  The audience festered with both familiar faces and underground luminaries who hadn't surfaced in too long  - Mr. Peter Aaron from The Chrome Cranks, Natz of Black Snakes/Cop Shoot Cop infamy, and tons more. If you missed it, well . . .


Currently listening:
Fun House
By The Stooges
Release date: 25 October, 1990