The Rocking Magpie
One man's views on the world of Americana, Blues, Country, Ska, Alt. Country & Folk music
Spitfire Bullets – New York City
OCTOBER 29, 2015
Music lands on my desk from a variety of countries; yet very
little from my own doorstep in the NE of England. Who knows why; possibly
because I don’t belong to any of the cliques that tends to spawn musical
cultures; possibly because these bands and singers don’t think I’m any good!
Which brings us the Spitfire Bullets; whose name popped up
on a friend’s Twitter timeline and the name attracted me; so I got in touch
even though I knew exactly nothing about them.
Before these two discs arrived I tried to research the band;
but they remain mysterious and something of an enigma; although a bizarre event
on my own Twitter feed unknowingly did bring them to my attention; but I wasn’t
to know that at the time!
Spitfire Bullets
New York City (Single)
self-released
The Spirit of ’77 is Alive and Well.
The bands second single opens with the chorus driven New
York City; instantly evoking memories of the first Damned LP and too many Toy
Dolls gigs. The (unnamed) singer has a raspy voice; which is perfect for
breakneck songs like this. The immediate difference between bands like Spitfire
Bullets and the Punk originators is that the modern bands can play their
instruments and understand the concept of production.
That last sentence gets thrown right out of the toilet
window with second song Psycho Girl! Recorded ‘live’ at the CBGB’s of Wearside,
Farringdon WMC this track is 110mph Stella Artois fuelled spittle enhanced
Punk; with added whistles and feedback.
New York City re-enters the frey with a live version
recorded at the same prestigious venue and is virtually unrecognisable as it
sounds like it was recorded on a Casio Cassette Recorder just before the
batteries died.
These two tracks are as awfully authentic as any Punk gig I
ever attended; but not something you want to play on a first date.
Spitfire Bullets
Spitfire
self-released
Pure Fire & Brimstone Punk!
It was the cool band name Spitfire Bullets that first caught
my attention; and this their debut single sounds exactly like what you would
expect of a band with that moniker.
The title track Spitfire! crashes out of the speakers with
some of the dirtiest guitar that I’ve heard in ages; then the singer attempts
to swallow the microphone in his attempt to get his message across. The bass
and drums hold the show together with gaffer tape and luck; but the end result
is a doozy.
Psycho Girl starts with the traditional 1-2-3-4 and you can
sense the veins popping out of the singers neck as he screams his love for two
skull crushing minutes of scorching Metalic-Punk.
Head in the toilet starts with some deliberate feedback; and
the tale of teenage angst wouldn’t have been out of place on a Dogs D’Amour or
even those old romantics the Angelic Upstarts; but it’s unlikely to ever get
played on BBC Radio2.
Then we finally arrive at the best of the bunch – She’s a
Punk! The obligatory crashing guitars get the show on the road; but the
produced judiciously uses his fader to allow a good song to be heard as the
band get faded down when the singer sings and back up to 11 at other times.
‘Back in the day’ an observational song like this would
actually have been played on Radio 1; certainly by John Peel; and possibly by
the likes of Kid Jensen; but today? Highly unlikely; which is a damn shame.
So, there you have it The Spitfire Bullets keeping the Punk
flag flying high in a time when the world needs more shouty music.
https://www.facebook.com/spitfirebulletsband
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