Local Live
Vio-Lence
420 Musik Conspiracy
Festival, Pound S.F., April 19
THE NIGHT OF April 19 was bittersweet for fans of Vio-Lence.
San Francisco's thrash metal veterans announced Easter weekend that their
recent resurrection would be short-lived and pivotal player Phil Demmel
would soon be taking his guitar elsewhere and joining former Vio-Lence
guitarist Robb Flynn in Machine Head. "It has been my pride to play
in this band for the past 18 years," Demmel declared during the band's
hour-and-a-half set at the Pound S.F.
It was a night of freewheeling dedications and send-ups to band members
and their friends, including a brief round of "Kumbaya" led
by bassist Deen Dell in honor of Demmel. The band's shenanigans prompted
sporadic apologies throughout the night from Vio-Lence members, with declarations
like "This has got to be the ugliest you people have seen us."
But family reunions are not always pretty, and this was definitely a
Vio-Lence reunion. Flynn joined the gang on guitar for the first time
since his 1992 departure to form Machine Head. Troy Fua, who had replaced
Flynn when he first departed, also stepped in. Ironically, it was Flynn
who replaced Fua in an earlier incarnation of the band.
The rest of the band was from the original lineup Dell, vocalist
Sean Killian, and drummer Perry Strickland. Killian broke the news first.
"This is our last show tonight. I got other shit to do than to make
you guys happy," he shouted to the crowd, a mix of barely twentysomethings
and old-time fans who traversed bridges and tunnels from Bay Area suburbs
for the event. Many of the long-time fans donned old Sepultura and Pantera
T-shirts, an homage to thrash metal's 1980s glory days.
Never quite equaling the success of Bay Area metal peers like Testament,
Metallica, and Death Angel, Vio-Lence gained a reputation for their pummeling
live gigs. The band, which disintegrated soon after recording the 1993
album Nothing to Gain, only to re-form a couple of years ago, have
earned respect from old and new metalheads alike by staying true to their
visceral thrash roots rather than commercializing their sound in the vein
of Metallica or Megadeth. For one final time, the band put on a show to
remember if not for its technical savvy then for its entertainment
value.
Several hundred fans withstood a typical San Francisco deep freeze, some
huddled under heat lamps in front of the stage erected outside the club
just for this event. There was plenty of elbow room for the small group
of moshers up front. The band ripped through its entire 1988 debut, Eternal
Nightmare, including the crowd-rousing "Serial Killer,"
during which Killian attempted his best Gene Simmons tongue gymnastics.
The boys also dug into their second release, 1990's Oppressing the
Masses, with tracks like "World in a World" and the show-opening
"Liquid Courage." This was not a night for the politically correct,
as the band hawked its "Fuck Peace" T-shirts and dedicated the
track "Gutterslut" to "your girlfriend, wife, your mom
... there are no boundaries."
Despite the rough edges, Vio-Lence proved they still have their chops
and even aired out some new tracks, such as "The Literal Dissection
of Christ," during the encore. Aside from a new album, Vio-Lence
announced a forthcoming DVD of the band's performance last December at
Slim's, a live album, and the reissue of the long out-of-print Eternal
Nightmare.
For a finale, the group invited fans onstage during "T.D.S. Take
It As You Will," and a small rush ensued, including one groupie who
showed 'em her tits without much prompting.
Vio-Lence were Saturday's main draw, but overall it was just one segment
of the 420 Musik Conspiracy festival. Vendors were all 420-friendly, including
Skanky Danky, which sold 420-celebratory T-shirts, and Chronic Candy Corp.,
which provided pot-flavored lollipops. The weekend celebration of local
thrash and alternative music scenes featured about 50 bands and started
with a Friday night pre-party. Saturday was devoted mostly to metal, thrash,
and hardcore a testosterone-injected bonanza that included local
acts 40 Grit and the Sick. Hard-edged punk bands like Angry Amputees performed
on the indoor stage. Alternative as well as stoner rock bands such as
Planting Seeds, who were more in line with your typical 420 vibe, played
outdoors. Sunday's crowd did not nearly equal Saturday's, partly due to
the Easter holiday, so sadly few were left to witness the Dickies' prop-filled,
energized stage show.
The irony of the event was best summed up Sunday by Angry Amputees' fingerless
and legless bassist, Dalty. He started the show with a salutary, "Happy
420-Hitler's birthday-Columbine anniversary-Easter party."
After surviving the blast of nearly 50 bands, it all seemed to make sense.
(Marlene Goldman)