Spray Paint the Walls: The Story of Black Flag

$18.99
by Stevie Chick

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Black Flag were the pioneers of American Hardcore, and this is their blood-spattered story. Formed in Hermosa Beach, California, in 1978, for eight brutal years they made and played brilliant, ugly, no-holds-barred music on a self-appointed touring circuit of America’s clubs, squats, and community halls. They fought with everybody: the police, the record industry and even their own fans. They toured overseas on pennies a day and did it in beat-up trucks and vans. Spray Paint the Walls tells Black Flag’s story from the inside, drawing on exclusive interviews with the group’s members, their contemporaries, and the bands they inspired. It’s the story of Henry Rollins, and his journey from fan to iconic frontman. And it’s the story of Greg Ginn, who turned his electronics company into one of the world’s most influential independent record labels while leading Black Flag from punk’s three-chord frenzy into heavy metal and free-jazz. Featuring over 30 photos of the band from Glen E. Friedman, Edward Colver, and others. “Neither Greg Ginn nor Henry Rollins sat for interviews but their voices are included from earlier interviews, and more importantly Chuck Dukowski spoke to Chick—a first I believe. The story, laid out from the band’s earliest practices in 1976 to its end ten years later, makes a far more dramatic book than the usual shelf-fillers with their stretch to make the empty stories of various chart-toppers sound exciting and crucial and against the odds.” —Joe Carducci, formerly of SST Records “Here is an exhaustive prequel to, followed by a more balanced re-telling of, Rollins’ Get in the Van journal, chronicling Flag’s emergence in suburban Hermosa Beach, far from the trendy Hollywood scene (Germs, X, etc.) and how their ultra-harsh, hi-speed riffage sparked moshpit violence—initially fun, but soon aggravated by jocks and riot police. Greg Ginn, their aloof guitarist/slave-driver/ideologue dominates in absentia. Gradually, he fires everyone but Rollins, yet, his pan-American shoestring SST empire is relentlessly inspirational. A gory, gobsmacking read.” —Andrew Perry, MOJO “Chick’s analytical and in-depth biography of the progenitors of SoCal Hardcore builds up to a page-turning, scene-setting climax… Chick does a fine job of detailing the importance, influence and dedicated touring ethic of the band. Not to mention finally laying to rest the ludicrous but long-running Stalinesque punk rock opinion that of all Flag’s diverse career output, only the material before Rollins joined was of any value.” —Alex Burrows, Classic Rock “Chick’s well-researched and readable book immerses the reader in Black Flag’s world, recreating the violent yet creative atmosphere of the early Hardcore scene through new interviews with the band and their peers.” —Mat Croft, Record Collector Stevie Chick has been writing about music for more than ten years, contributing to such titles as MOJO , The Guardian , Kerrang! , NME , Melody Maker and Careless Talk Costs Lives and editing underground rock magazine Loose Lips Sink Ships with photographer Steve Gullick. He is the author of Psychic Confusion: The Sonic Youth Story . He lives in South London. Spray Paint the Walls The Story of Black Flag By Stevie Chick PM Press Copyright © 2009 Stevie Chick All rights reserved. ISBN: 978-1-60486-418-2 Contents Introduction – 'They paved paradise and put up a parking lot', Chapter One – 'Rise Above', Chapter Two – 'Louie Louie', Chapter Three – 'Spray Paint The Walls', Chapter Four – 'Nervous Breakdown', Chapter Five – 'No Values', Chapter Six – 'Police Story', Chapter Seven – 'Damaged', Chapter Eight – 'Everything Went Black', Chapter Nine – 'My War', Chapter Ten – 'Slip It In', Chapter Eleven – 'The Process Of Weeding Out', Chapter Twelve – 'Wasted Again', Acknowledgements, Bibliography, Selected Discography, CHAPTER 1 'Rise Above' "We regard punk rock as a very English kind of thing, because it seems to us that in Los Angeles you can't possibly have the kind of problems that we have ... Los Angeles doesn't seem the right place for punks to exist, you know?" - Unidentified host, UK radio interview with Black Flag, 1981 "The general attitude is one of mild and mellow hedonism (although there are outbreaks of mass murder). The economy is still comparatively healthy, though the price of this continuing prosperity and the affluent Californian lifestyle is that the air in this paradise is poisoned." - Mick Farren, New Musical Express, 11 April 1981 "We're out here having fun / In the warm California sun" -'California Sun', The Rivieras California has long been the stuff of dreams - of the American Dream, in particular - even before Hollywood established itself as the world's grandest, slickest and most efficient manufacturer of such things. Its very name - derived in the early 16th century from that of a mythic island in Spanish author Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo's contemporary

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