Thursday, November 27, 2008

Rites Of Spring - End On End



So I learnt recently this is the germ, the patient zero of "emo." I don't really know what emo is so I had to wikiwiki it. I know this record is a boiling, tons of heart and spit, rip your guts out and roll around the floor in some intangible psychic angst type awesome. So I guess, yes, it's emotional, so does that make it emo? Isn't all music emotional (Kraftwerk excluded)? And I always thought "emo" was a haircut and a white belt.


So their first one has been in heavy rotation for about 20 years and now, based on this recent "emo" discovery I'm a wee bit embarrassed to admit how comfy I feel with this long player. Where else was a hardcore kid sposed to go? Metal? Pshaw!


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Allmusic: Because the term emo has come to define a sensibility more than a particular sound, it can be difficult to pin down even if you're not an outsider. Yet there's a general consensus — by no means universal, but fairly solid — that Washington, D.C.'s Rites of Spring were the first true emo band. Their music epitomized emo (or emocore, as it was then more often referred to) in the original sense of the term: an emotionally charged brand of hardcore punk marked by introspective, personal lyrics and intense catharsis.





While Rites of Spring strayed from hardcore's typically external concerns of the time — namely, social and political dissent — their musical attack was no less blistering, and in fact a good deal more challenging and nuanced than the average three-chord speed-blur. Although they didn't exist for long or record that much (two releases in just under two years), and didn't attract much attention outside of D.C. during that time, their influence was tremendous and far-reaching. Not only did they map out a new direction for hardcore that built on the innovations of Hüsker Dü's Zen Arcade, they spawned a host of imitators, first locally, then elsewhere; these descendants in turn gradually brought emocore to a wider underground audience, from which point it mutated into varying strands that often bore no surface resemblance to Rites of Spring, but owed them a great debt nonetheless. Additionally, half of the band went on to join Fugazi, whose status as punk icons helped shed light on Rites of Spring's small but still-potent recorded legacy.Rites of Spring were formed in March 1984, with a lineup of lead vocalist/guitarist Guy Picciotto, guitarist Eddie Janney, bassist Mike Fellows, and drummer Brendan Canty. Canty had played in the local hardcore band Deadline from 1981-1982, while Janney was a seasoned veteran of the D.C. scene, having been a member of the Untouchables (1979-1981), the short-lived, Ian MacKaye-led Skewbald/Grand Union (1981), and the Faith (1981-1983), which some credit with laying the groundwork for the early emo sound. Breaking free from hardcore's stylistic straitjacket, their music was powered by melody, tuneful (if hoarse) singing, guitar solos, and compelling instrumental interplay. Frontman Picciotto's lyrics were by turns nostalgic, heartbroken, confused, and desperately searching, expanding hardcore's range of subject matter into territory rarely covered (save for Hüsker Dü). Owing in part to the draining intensity of their shows, Rites of Spring didn't play live very often, but when they did, their gigs were full-fledged events, inspiring fierce devotion among fans and usually ending with the stage covered in flowers and smashed instruments. Rites of Spring signed with Ian MacKaye's Dischord label and recorded their self-titled debut album in early 1985. Eventually hailed as a landmark in some quarters, at the time it didn't receive the kind of widespread critical attention that Zen Arcade had the year before.





In January 1986, the band returned to the studio and cut a four-song EP, upon which point they disbanded; the EP was released posthumously the following year as All Through a Life. Picciotto, Janney, and Canty promptly regrouped as One Last Wish, which moved Janney to bass and put ex-Faith member Michael Hampton on guitar. They disbanded by the end of the year, and in 1987, the entire original lineup of Rites of Spring reunited under a new name, Happy Go Licky, and played a more experimental brand of post-punk influenced by Gang of Four and Mission of Burma. Again short-lived, the group's only recordings were live, but gave Canty the connections to join up with Ian MacKaye in Fugazi later that year; Picciotto would follow him several months later. Mike Fellows, meanwhile, formed Little Baby with ex-members of Soulside, and went on to play with Government Issue and Royal Trux. In 1991, Dischord compiled all of Rites of Spring's recorded output — the Rites of Spring album, one unreleased song left over from the sessions, and the All Through a Life EP — onto the CD release End on End, which was remastered in 2001.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

No offense or nothing, but I HATE THIS RECORD! Always have and always will. Doesn't the fact that is considered emo "ground zero" tell anyone anything? I do still love and respect Dischord and am totally in love with Forest Roxx, I just had to get that off my chest for some reason.

Anonymous said...

True, hardcore needed a little (a lot) demacho-ization but c'mon. I really wanted to like this record, does that count? Besides, the typo in my comment ruins my case anyway...

p. s. My name is Anne and I am totally digging the Forest Roxx in the city of brotherly love.

stupid.and.dumb said...

...i recently heard about this band while looking at the dischord catalogue. i really like it! i don't see how someone could really hate it. if you don't like the lyrics, the music alone should satisfy! classic hardcore.

anyway, here's a wikipedia quote from the lead singer which i thought was cool.

"I've never recognized "emo" as a genre of music. I always thought it was the most retarded term ever. I know there is this generic commonplace that every band that gets labeled with that term hates it. They feel scandalized by it. But honestly, I just thought that all the bands I played in were punk rock bands. The reason I think it's so stupid is that - what, like the Bad Brains weren't emotional? What - they were robots or something? It just doesn't make any sense to me."

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