Propagandhi - Less Talk, More Rock (1996) [MP3]
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- Type MP3
- Language English
- Total size 50.5 MB
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Infohash : 1217B358F188733E78C818E0B002A9510E2BF5AE
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1,885 miles away from their home in Winnipeg, Manitoba, three pale and skinny men in their early twenties find themselves amidst the punk rock proving ground in Berkeley, California located at 924 Gilman Street. For many, it is a holy placeāa spot for young (and old) punks to see the newest local bands and witness out-of-towners for the first time. Though Berkeley has a liberal reputation, these three outsiders receive a bit of a shock when they arrive. The mostly white male audience waiting for this band from Canada to get going, combatively chide the three-piece as they set up, demanding āentertainment.ā
When Propagandhi takes the stage, they are confused as to what has brought such a crowd to witness them. The entire purpose of their performance is to educate, communicate, and engage. However, they see something in the Gilman crowd that obscures understanding of Propagandhiās message. They resign themselves to the fact that this audience is not going to get it. And therefore, the confrontation on behalf of the band usurps any desire to āget over.ā
Guitarist and vocalist Chris Hannah baits the crowd, at one point stepping into the audience with a microphone before being forced back onstage by the DIY security. Promising to play songs the crowd will neither like nor recognize, the band recklessly tear through ten songs, over half of which have yet to appear on an album. John K. Samson, Propagandhiās bassist and future leader of The Weakerthans, remarks quite presciently for the time that the ratio of women to men in the room is wildly skewed, and that until punk rock presents āa policy of inclusion, it will remain an ineffective little boysā club.ā
Chris Hannah, speaking to me from his home in Winnipeg, doesnāt recall much about this show. āI can barely remember. I was probably so excited to play Gilmanāthis legendary place, a haven for the punk rock scene I was interested in. Progressively minded, do-it-yourself. Whatever happened, I was trying to provoke, regardless. Back in that era, I was looking for any kind of conflict I could findāI walked out into the crowd to escalate the situationā¦and Gilman became concerned for our safety and the safety of the people in the building because of my behavior.ā
āIām getting flashbacks as we played there a few times,ā drummer Jord Samolesky says, his shock of grey hair glowing in windowlight behind him as we chat via Zoom. Jord occasionally smirks as he recounts the early days. āThe last time we played Gilman, across the street had been so developed it was like an entirely different place. That first time there was pushing and pulling and Chris down in the crowd. We are there a few years into the MTV factor and the influence of the mainstream on punk cultureā¦a lot of just people into macho, white male, mosh pits. Silly āparticipation.ā It was not the kind of environment weād grown up calling āDIY.āā
This is a band that isnāt looking to sell out their merchandise and pander to the crowdāthis is a band that believes that the message is crucial to the songwriting, more important than selling merchandise, and the driving force that has landed them at Gilmanā36 hours and across the border from home. Propagandhi exist to present their politics to a scene that desperately needs to hear it.
Early versions of these Gilman songs will become future classics after the release of Less Talk, More Rockāa watershed moment for not only the trio, but the scene at large. But that night at Gilman still bothers Chris, who talks about having such an attitude with some regret, but also relatable honesty. āI was trying to antagonize peopleā¦it wasnāt some āhey, I have this idea about society, do you want to hear about it?ā It was more āfuck you, fuck your society, fuck your beliefs, whatever they are.ā Even though I say that it came from a good placeāI felt right about the values, but I was probably grappling with lifelong issues of contempt for humanity. I was too old to be behaving that way. Itās the behavior of a 13-year-old. But thatās where I was.ā
To understand the fury of these twenty-somethings in 1995-1996, you must first understand the genesis. Propagandhi was never the type of band who would seek out spots on Warped Tour or attempt to pander to an audience that didnāt share their core beliefs. Perhaps that is why theyāve remained one of the most important punk rock bands throughout their career. Often looked up to as a ābandās bandā for their lack of compromise, willingness to challenge their contemporaries, and for their ferocious discography. Each of Propagandhiās records is reflective of its time, and the mindset of its creators when produced. Less Talk, More Rock, Chris and Jord agree, is the first time they were able to put their theory into action.
Jord Samolesky talks at length with great fondness about meeting Chris in a Grade 10 class in 1986 and discovering bands like Millions of Dead Cops and the Dead Kennedys together. Jord remarks, āWe were subjected to the same kind of cultural trappings and social limitations of any isolated kids. The aesthetic of doing things on your own was what we embraced the mostāpunk hadnāt exploded yet, but we were inspired to learn our instruments and write some songsā¦and before we knew it, it was 1991.ā
Despite having no aspirations beyond playing shows in Winnipeg, Propagandhi managed to get on the bill opening for NOFX, back before theyād become one of the most infamous punk rock bands of all time. Fat Mike, liking what he heard on Propagandhiās demo tape, offered to fly the band to California for a couple days to record their first album. Propagandhi released How to Clean Everything to positive reviews in 1993 on Fat Wreck Chords. It was the third record to be released on the label which is now a taste-making powerhouse but was then still very much in its infancy. What Fat Mike did was deliver a polished productāunlike many of the other independent labels of the time, that though releasing seminal albums, seemed to have little concern for sonics, content, or presentation. Fatās albums were polished enough to be palatable for a wider audience.
Just two months before the suicide of Kurt Cobain in 1994, Green Day-former Gilman Street darlings-released Dookie on major label Reprise. Just like they mined the fallout of the grunge explosion, greedy A&R reps from corporate labels rushed around to find the next big punk band. Though some scene giants did defect to majors, Fat Wreck Chords and Epitaph Records had established themselves enough to start seeing increases in their own sales. The two indies ensured that their releases could be found in more conventional outletsānot just at the merch table of local shows.
Instead of a mass exodus of talent, Fat and Epitaph grew their ranks, and some of their bands were able to live off music for the first time without any commercial compromise. In 1994 alone, Epitaph would release NOFXās Punk in Drublic, Rancidās Letās Go, and The Offspringās Smashāstill the best-selling independent record of all-time.
Propagandhi benefitted from this explosion, but still stuck to their core beliefsāeven though with every show, they saw fewer likeminded comrades and more people just attending because they were a āFat band.ā Instead of rushing a followup, Propagandhi released a split with Regina band I-Spy, featuring Todd Kowalski who would later become Propagandhiās permanent bassist. The title of the split? Iād Rather Be Flag-Burning. Its label? The tiny Recess Records, run by Todd Congelliere of F.Y.P and later Toys That Kill, based out of his apartment. Both I-Spy and Propagandhi handled the CDs while Recess Records released the vinylāeach band packaging their CDs and folding their sleeves as they drove West through Canada, playing small all ages venues in remote locales that were starved for new musicā¦and new ideas.
Chris, Jord, and John told Fat Mike they had another record in them at the end of 1995 and traveled down to Motor Studios to work with Ryan Greene. After a few days and only four songs, the band decided to go home. These four songs appear on the compilation album Where Quantity is Job #1. Though the fidelity is sound and the performances are adequate, they are merely a glimpse at the change of pace Propagandhi would be undertaking on their sophomore effort. Fat Mike and Ryan Greene were more bemused than disappointed as the band trekked back to Winnipeg to work the songs under more comfortable conditions.
āI heard other bands just finished their songs in the studio, and I thought Iād just be hyper-motivated to finish these,ā Chris says. āThen the clock is ticking. Eventually I told Jord and John we need to just cut and try this again.ā Jord recalls the difficulty they were having writing in the studio as well, even though theyād booked more time than they ever had before to make the record. Through this incident, Chris Hannah learns a valuable lesson. āBeing at home on my own and taking my timeā¦thatās when I learned itās just how I work. I donāt jam, I donāt come in and come up with lyrics on the spot. Itās never going to happen.ā
Five months after their failed session, Propagandhi went back to California and recorded the album. They also planned the extensive layout, having learned their lesson after their first album. On HTCE, the label bugged the band for months for cover artāHannah submitted black-and-white art he thought was comparable to the Venom records he grew up loving. Instead, Fat Mike chose the cover art himselfābaby blue with yellow lettering and cartoon cleaning devices. The band had waited too long. This time, on Less Talk, More Rock, the band would go all in.
When I asked if Fat Wreck objected to any of the decisions the band made on the record, Chris notes that the only sticking point was not having a UPC code on the sleeve.
āAt the time, it was seen as a certain level of commitment to commerceāthey were emblematic of commercial aspirations.ā Though Mike objected, he respected the bandās wishes. Almost immediately, the band noticed that their sales compared to How to Clean Everything dropped by almost half. āAnd I still donāt know if thatās because you couldnāt get it in a conventional store in the Midwest without the code, or because it said āGay-Positiveā on the cover, or a combo of both those things. Thinking from my own perspective growing up in a rural part of North America, thereās no way Iād have left a record store with an album that said āGay-Positiveā on the cover in the early eighties.ā
When Less Talk, More Rock was released on April 23, 1996, it came with a cover photo ripped from a flyer for the 1984 Calgary Stampede. The title is a tongue-in-cheek reference to a criticism of some of the bandās shows where the explanation of what a song was about ran longer than the song itself. And to open the jewel case, you are greeted on the CD face by a neatly circled āAā and the bandās core ideals: āpro-feminist/animal-friendly/anti-fascist/gay-positive.ā
The CD/LP insert contained long, well-written essays about veganism, capitalism, and other such leftist preoccupations for the group. On the flip side of that, along with the lyrics, were lists of resources where one could go to and further research progressive ideas. Propagandhi had just placed both the roadmap and the key in the listenerās hands, should they be brave (or curious) enough to explore.
The album itself retains the intensity of the bandās debut but slows the tempos and pushes the vocals out front. On the verbosely titled opener āApparently, Iām a āP.C. Fascistā (Because I Care About Both Human and Non-Human Animals),ā Chris delivers a searing indictment of his āso-called productive friendsā who still consume animal products while spouting other liberal ideas. As the song ends, the theme of the album is revealedāāIāll call you on your shit/please call me on mine.ā
In the title track, Chris Hannah challenges all the homophobic fans of the band by bluntly mentioning his own sexual experimentation and daring those who might object to such behavior to sing along. āCuz if you dance to this, then you drink to me and my sexuality. With your hands down my pants by transitive property.ā
Later, Chris notes his own privilege and how it is his (and the listenerās) duty to āwhine and kick and scream/until everyone has everything they need.ā John K. Samsonās contributions are melodic, personal songs with profound lyrics that sometimes rub against the more out-front and aggressive tendencies of Chrisās songsāthough they still share a sonic space, just not a lyrical one.
I relay to Chris that every song on the album has an āIā and āyou.ā Was this a challenge to the listener? āIt was as much a challenge to the listener as it was me challenging myself, and what I believed,ā he replies. The content of each subsequent song grows more intense as the band digs in their heels, creating catchy choruses out of objections to capitalism and refusals to conform to strictly male and female gender roles.
āI didnāt think we were doing anything that much different than the first record as we were making it but I remember Fat Mike commenting on the vocals, saying āyouāre trying to sing.ā I didnāt really understand at the time but I guess I was just being gun-shy since I hated what happened on the first record so muchā¦I was being encouraged to sneer and sing in this nasally way. On Less Talk I was avoiding that but I didnāt know what to do so I was just kind of talking in key.ā
When asked how he feels 25 years on from the album, Chris remembers, āIt was an interesting moment and itās relevantāthough in terms of ideas, itās been lapped by society, but thereās stuff in there thatās interesting.ā Jord shares a similar sentiment, saying, āIt was half of my lifetime ago, but just looking back at the idea that we were putting our theory into action with the songs and the liner notes and other mediaāin lieu of corporate sponsors or instrument sponsors, we found a sponsor in AK Press, who brought a book table to almost every one of our U.S. shows.ā āI have a soft spot for the record and I think it was important for us,ā Chris admits. āItās only How to Clean⦠that is an albatross for me. And nothingās going to change that.ā
After Less Talk, More Rock was put out at the end of April 1996, a schism developedāor perhaps itād been there all along and was just now being noticed. Not only was there a minor backlash from fans who expected more of the same songs at the same pace theyād come to expect from Propagandhiās first album, but the band itself was dealing with divergent interests among their lean ranks.
āI always wanted more out of John,ā Chris says. āAt the time, even Jord was still doing schoolā¦and Johnās journey in the world was not necessarily 100% written in stone that he was going to continue with our band. I guess I just wanted somebody the whole time that was as interested in the endeavor as I was. John and Jord were both more passiveā¦Jord was really into it, but I just wanted more out of John. When the album came out, at some point I just realized weād be better off with someone a little more on our wavelength and heād be better off having people on his wavelength. I loved when John would come in with a little acoustic thing and weād work on it, and I loved having Johnās songs on the record, but I didnāt see much of a future for it. I was thinking, āis the novelty wearing off? Should he fully investigate that while we fully investigate this?āā
āI was finishing a four-year degree in Sociology around that time,ā Jord says. āI was getting ready to send out applications for to get my Masterāsā¦and then I just never sent them.ā
In the exquisite Exclaim! profile from 2012 which exhaustively covers the entire history of Propagandhi up to that point, Chris notes: āI was so excited to [read in that article] John mentioning that moment where we were trying to play [Venomās] āStand Up and Be Counted,ā and say he was having trouble with it. I thought then, āheās not having trouble with it because itās too hard, heās having trouble because heās not into it.ā Can I in good conscience be in a band with someone who doesnāt see this as important? And I was just so glad he identified the same momentā¦so, thanks Venom.ā
I mention to Jord that I saw John Samson playing the two songs he penned for Less Talk, More Rock at a show in 2012. āDid he do the upbeat versions?ā Jord asks with a tinge of excit. I confirm with a nod, and Jordās smile broadens.
Todd Kowalski, an accomplished visual artist in his own right, recalls being asked by Chris if heād join Propagandhi while they were both eating vegan ice cream sandwiches. Considering what Chris had told me about wanting someone all-in on the band, Todd responds, āI wake up at like 8:30 or 9:00 and just start playingā¦even though I do different things, Iām still dedicated to playing music. I try not to think in terms of a career in either discipline, I just think about the songs and the art separately. Iām dedicated to the work and not the commerceā¦if I produce good work, itāll take care of itself and take care of me.ā
Fans note that, like Samson, Kowalski writes very differently than Hannahāoften penning each albumās fastest or most explosive track. Chris notes the irony but says āeven though Toddās songs are vastly different than mine [much in the way Johnās were], thereās more of a spirit connecting us.ā Todd mentions the same bands getting him into punk rock as Jord and Chris did in their separate interviews, convincing me of their kinship. I asked Todd if the transition from playing with I-Spy was at all difficult for him, considering that I-Spy didnāt have the consistent backing of a growing independent label like Fat Wreck Chords behind them like Propagandhi did at the time.
āI didnāt really notice. It felt like I was just switching and didnāt realize the difference. Propagandhi then was still purposely playing these kinds of basement shows just like I-Spy was, so it just felt like now Iām onstage playing Propagandhi songs instead of I-Spy songs.ā
āIn the mid ā90s we played all ages shows,ā Jord adds. āI only remember playing a couple shows otherwise because thereād be a place where we couldnāt bend on that. A huge amount of our crowd was under 20, so the whole rule of that seemed against the DIY thing. That scene was full of people trying to keep all-ages venues open. Volunteers, doing it for the sake of keeping it special. It was a unique time. I remember one of the last times we stuck to a real kind of all-ages commitmentā¦we discovered there was only one person that was underage. And the DIY jointāthe club option that everyone wanted to go to anyways just sounded so much better, and people were just getting hammered in the parking lot and pissing off the owner of the DIY place. We thought maybe itās time to throw in the towel on this, but that was many years later.ā
In the years following Less Talk, More Rockās release, the band would commit to a number of tours while Chris and Jord founded their own record label under co-op principles, G-7 Welcoming Committee, to distribute spoken word CDs, books, and releases by likeminded bands (including the first two Weakerthans albums). A diligent keeper of records, Jord remarks, ālooking over my old day planners, it was just a decade of way too much shit going on. And we overextended ourselves so fucking far, working at this label all day and then squeezing in practices right after. But we were committed to both.ā
As I talked with Chris about the impact Less Talk, More Rock had on me, I wanted to see how he felt as a father of two about the album, and his bandās place, in the frightening and chaotic world of 2021.
āI think itās more urgent than it was in 1996,ā Chris says. āAnd not just because of the kids, but because of the dangerous trajectory that hasnāt gotten better in many important ways. Things are far more complex than things were in my early twenties, and things seem more daunting. So, things are more urgent, but the prospect of the urgency being attended to are more daunting than they were. I took inspiration from Black Lives Matterā¦there are good things happening but at the same time the world-destroying things are happening at a faster pace.ā He adds, āRather than involving myself in explicitly activist kinds of things, Iāve worked in the past ten years to contribute to my immediate community and demonstrate the kinds of values that make for a better kind of neighborhood, which will spill over into a city. I donāt know if itās a solution but it feels rewarding and as a community, we are imparting important values into this next generation thatās coming up.ā
In many ways, Propagandhi continues shading the blueprint put forth so boldly on Less Talk, More Rock with each new release. In 2001, Propagandhiās Todayās Empires, Tomorrowās Ashes would come with an enhanced CD and large LP booklet that brought things like COINTELPRO and East Timor genocide up for the first time to many fans. Propagandhiās music, ideas, and dedication inspires the kind of grassroots action for changing oneās immediate surroundings to be more inclusive, accepting, and conscious of the perils ahead while warning the listener that if you ignore oppression or remain idle in progressive endeavors, the path to correcting wrongs will continue to be daunting until it becomes insurmountable.
It is an intense feeling to be introduced and then challenged by new ideas. One need look no further than the newspaper than to recognize there must come a change. But first, how and why it needs to change must be understood. The soil needs its seed. For me, punk rock, Propagandhi, and Less Talk, More Rock proposed a challenge: do you want to see a better world? Because even if youāre born head-first and brought up ankle deepā¦you can either swim for shore or drown.
Donāt let the fuckers drag you down.
TRACKLIST
01 Apparently, I'm a "P.C. Fascist"
1 min 47 s - 268 kb/s
02 Nailing Descartes to the Wall / (Liquid) Meat Is Still Murder
1 min 4 s - 275 kb/s
03 Less Talk, More Rock
1 min 37 s - 273 kb/s
04 Anchorless
1 min 39 s - 279 kb/s
05 Rido De San Atlanta, Manitoba
39 s 967 ms - 277 kb/s
06 A Public Dis-Service Announcement from Shell
1 min 26 s - 230 kb/s
07 ...And We Thought That Nation-States Were a Bad Idea
2 min 25 s - 261 kb/s
08 I Was a Pre-Teen Mccarthyist
2 min 33 s - 270 kb/s
09 Resisting Tyrannical Government
2 min 15 s - 276 kb/s
10 Gifts
2 min 3 s - 277 kb/s
11 The Only Good Fascist Is a Very Dead Fascist
1 min 10 s - 266 kb/s
12 A People's History of the World
2 min 21 s - 275 kb/s
13 The State-Lottery
2 min 13 s - 259 kb/s
14 Refusing to Be a Man
2 min 40 s - 270 kb/s
---
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Files:
Propagandhi - Less Talk, More Rock (1996) [MP3]- 01 - Apparently, I'm a -P.C. Fascist-.mp3 (3.4 MB)
- 02 - Nailing Descartes to the Wall - (Liquid) Meat Is Still Murder.mp3 (2.1 MB)
- 03 - Less Talk, More Rock.mp3 (3.2 MB)
- 04 - Anchorless.mp3 (3.3 MB)
- 05 - Rido De San Atlanta, Manitoba.mp3 (1.3 MB)
- 06 - A Public Dis-Service Announcement from Shell.mp3 (2.4 MB)
- 07 - ...And We Thought That Nation-States Were a Bad Idea.mp3 (4.5 MB)
- 08 - I Was a Pre-Teen Mccarthyist.mp3 (4.9 MB)
- 09 - Resisting Tyrannical Government.mp3 (4.5 MB)
- 10 - Gifts.mp3 (4.1 MB)
- 11 - The Only Good Fascist Is a Very Dead Fascist.mp3 (2.2 MB)
- 12 - A People's History of the World.mp3 (4.6 MB)
- 13 - The State-Lottery.mp3 (4.1 MB)
- 14 - Refusing to Be a Man.mp3 (5.1 MB)
- cover.jpg (623.5 KB)
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