
The Victims: S/T 12"
âPunk music, at its most effective, its most important, exists at a nexus of a few simple but important ideas. Punk needs to be youthful, it needs to be reactionary, it needs to be short-lived and it needs to be controversial. So for a group of twenty-something Australians, excitable as the frontline first wave of kids responding to both the Ramones and the Sex Pistols (yet still influenced by the New York Dolls and Stooges and Flaminâ Groovies), who existed for but barely for a year from 1977-1978 and wrote songs about serial killers, high school girls and hating discoâŠwell, Iâd argue they are the most perfect punk band ever.
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âThe band was Dave Flick (aka Dave Faulkner later of the Hoodoo Gurus) on guitar and vocals, Rudolph V (Dave Cardwell) on bass and James Baker on drums. Best known for their classic âTelevision Addictâ, that song is but the tip of the iceberg of the bandâs powers. Having self-released two godhead 7-inches during their brief existence, the seven songs on those singles are absolute cannon at this point. Quintessential, pure, unfuckwithable. And all that is just side one of the LP.
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âSide two contains a bounty of unreleased-for-decades demos of nine otherwise undocumented Victims originals. Demos in name alone, these properly recorded songs brim with all the identifying marks of the known Victims classicsâŠirreverence, taking the piss, murderers and an invigorating youthful attitude.
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âThe last thing to remember about punk as a theory, an aesthetic, is that its âideasâ are all bullshit anyway. Thatâs easily proved by the 7-inch EP released alongside this release of new recordings of âCharlieâ, âHorror Smashâ, âI Wanna Be With Youâ and âEveryniteâ which proves that the Victims now (featuring Ray Ahn from the Hard-Ons on bass), some 40 years after their heyday, could still easily take on any au courant band half their age.â â Ben Blackwell
âPunk music, at its most effective, its most important, exists at a nexus of a few simple but important ideas. Punk needs to be youthful, it needs to be reactionary, it needs to be short-lived and it needs to be controversial. So for a group of twenty-something Australians, excitable as the frontline first wave of kids responding to both the Ramones and the Sex Pistols (yet still influenced by the New York Dolls and Stooges and Flaminâ Groovies), who existed for but barely for a year from 1977-1978 and wrote songs about serial killers, high school girls and hating discoâŠwell, Iâd argue they are the most perfect punk band ever.
Â
âThe band was Dave Flick (aka Dave Faulkner later of the Hoodoo Gurus) on guitar and vocals, Rudolph V (Dave Cardwell) on bass and James Baker on drums. Best known for their classic âTelevision Addictâ, that song is but the tip of the iceberg of the bandâs powers. Having self-released two godhead 7-inches during their brief existence, the seven songs on those singles are absolute cannon at this point. Quintessential, pure, unfuckwithable. And all that is just side one of the LP.
Â
âSide two contains a bounty of unreleased-for-decades demos of nine otherwise undocumented Victims originals. Demos in name alone, these properly recorded songs brim with all the identifying marks of the known Victims classicsâŠirreverence, taking the piss, murderers and an invigorating youthful attitude.
Â
âThe last thing to remember about punk as a theory, an aesthetic, is that its âideasâ are all bullshit anyway. Thatâs easily proved by the 7-inch EP released alongside this release of new recordings of âCharlieâ, âHorror Smashâ, âI Wanna Be With Youâ and âEveryniteâ which proves that the Victims now (featuring Ray Ahn from the Hard-Ons on bass), some 40 years after their heyday, could still easily take on any au courant band half their age.â â Ben Blackwell
Original: $3,700.00
-70%$3,700.00
$1,110.00Description
âPunk music, at its most effective, its most important, exists at a nexus of a few simple but important ideas. Punk needs to be youthful, it needs to be reactionary, it needs to be short-lived and it needs to be controversial. So for a group of twenty-something Australians, excitable as the frontline first wave of kids responding to both the Ramones and the Sex Pistols (yet still influenced by the New York Dolls and Stooges and Flaminâ Groovies), who existed for but barely for a year from 1977-1978 and wrote songs about serial killers, high school girls and hating discoâŠwell, Iâd argue they are the most perfect punk band ever.
Â
âThe band was Dave Flick (aka Dave Faulkner later of the Hoodoo Gurus) on guitar and vocals, Rudolph V (Dave Cardwell) on bass and James Baker on drums. Best known for their classic âTelevision Addictâ, that song is but the tip of the iceberg of the bandâs powers. Having self-released two godhead 7-inches during their brief existence, the seven songs on those singles are absolute cannon at this point. Quintessential, pure, unfuckwithable. And all that is just side one of the LP.
Â
âSide two contains a bounty of unreleased-for-decades demos of nine otherwise undocumented Victims originals. Demos in name alone, these properly recorded songs brim with all the identifying marks of the known Victims classicsâŠirreverence, taking the piss, murderers and an invigorating youthful attitude.
Â
âThe last thing to remember about punk as a theory, an aesthetic, is that its âideasâ are all bullshit anyway. Thatâs easily proved by the 7-inch EP released alongside this release of new recordings of âCharlieâ, âHorror Smashâ, âI Wanna Be With Youâ and âEveryniteâ which proves that the Victims now (featuring Ray Ahn from the Hard-Ons on bass), some 40 years after their heyday, could still easily take on any au courant band half their age.â â Ben Blackwell












