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DEEP WOUND WERE NOT A SKI BAND
Although it has a legendary reek is some circles, the actuality
of the Western Mass Hardcore scene is really kinda gloopy.
I mean, for all extents and purposes, the Pajama Slave Dancers
were the kings of the Valley. And there's just no
way that a milieu dominated by a goddamn funny punk band
can really be maxist. But it's worth bearing in mind
that Hardcore was a predominantly suburban artform. Even
the bands that became associated with certain cities were
usually from the environs, rather than any downtown you'd
recognize.
Because of this, Hardcore was one of the first underground
musical movements that was instigated by teens themselves
(rather than culturally-aware chickenhawks), and it was
also a pit of anguished non-erotic-male-bonding. Drinking,
drugs, wanton sex, none of these timeless topics was celebrated
inside the Hardcore vortex. If these guys shared any Dionysian
impulses they were directed towards record collecting, skateboarding
and dancing around in weird tribal circles.
Which is not to say these bands didn't rip; they did. They
created a crashing, post-glottal tongue-universe inside
the heart of the Reagan Era, and destroyed (once and for
all) the idea that it was necessary to maintain any real
barrier between the audience and the band.
That said, Deep Wound, was a strange and powerful unit inside
the doctrinaire confines of Hardcore. Although they were
all kinda nerdy (excepting secret weapon Charlie Nakajima),
they shredded in a very explicit
way. There were some obvious structural debts to the Oi!
Bands in their compositions, but they approached the exterior
textures with stylistic nuances that were distinctly North
American. As the Neos did on their Hassiban Gets the Martian
Brain Squeeze EP, Deep Wound compressed time in ways that
were extreme, and way outside the standard Square Dance
beat that had been defined by Robo's drumming for Black
Flag.
But Deep Wound's actual story is nothing out of the ordinary.
It is but a minor variation on a thousand others.
J Mascis lived in Amherst. There was one punk at his high
school and it wasn't Uma Thurman, it was Charlie. They were
fortunate to have Ken Reed's great store, Main Street Records,
in nearby Northampton. And they could get almost any American
or UK punk stuff they needed from the racks or by special
order.
One day in early '82, J met a Dee Dee Ramone lookalike at
the Oi! singles bin. This was bassist Scott Helland. Scott
posted a flier soon after looking for musicians into Anti-Pasti,
Discharge and the like. J called to audition and had his
dad drive him and his drums over to guitarist Lou Barlow's
place in Westfield. They had a singer already, but J got
them to replace him with Charlie, and Deep Wound was there.
They made a cassette, got a few gigs in Boston with the
X-Claim bands (SSD, FU's, Jerry's Kids, etc.) and became
the Western Mass band most likely to open for Hardcore visitors.
They cut an EP, had tracks on Gerard Colsoy's Bands That
Would Be God comp and even did a late-period session with
Gerard singing that has disappeared into nada.
And every day they vowed to play faster. And they did, eventually
developing a blur that could verge on experimental noise.
Finally they burned as fast as they could, and realizing
that was the case, they stopped. It was 1984.
The rest of the story is well known: Dinosaur, the Outpatients,
Sebadoh, Gobblehoof, etc. Most of what Deep Wound recorded
is on this disk, and it still sounds pretty choice the hundredth
time through (believe me, I know). Like many of their suburban
kith, there are huge swathes of Xeroxed style and content,
but these patches are obliterated by an underlying fascination
with the reckless potential of absolute speed, and an intellectual
overlay (albeit in a nascent state) that would blossom more
fully in the bands that would follow.
But y'know, Hardcore was a really fucking good scene. And
Deep Wound were a really fucking good Hardcore band. Living
in this society has left a DEEP WOUND. Get used to it.
Byron Coley
Florence MA 2005
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