Post by Kevin on Feb 5, 2003 13:53:45 GMT -5
Band: Milligram
Album: This is Class War
Format: CD
Label: Small Stone
Time: 70 minutes
Year: 2003
Track List:
Let’s Kill
Jeff’s Flag
Let’s Pretend We Don’t Know Each Other
+2 Charisma
Thousands and Thousands and Thousands and Thousands
Get Fucked Again
I Know, I’m Sorry
Summor of Lies
Nice Problem
Winner Versus Loser
Saturation Emission
She’s a Prostitute
The Resentinel
This is Class War
Baikal Depths
Baikal Shallows
A Mess on Strom Thurmond’s Dress
Let’s Kill (Drums/Vocals Only)
Constant Sucking Sensation
Emblematic Sac
Sadegh Hedayat
I Know, I’m Sorry (Drums Only)
A Thousand Cuts
Urdu is an Amalgam
Death to America
My Own Private Altamont
Label Site and Cover Photo: www.smallstone.com/
There’s been a huge buzz in the past few months about the Traktor7 issue of Milligram’s ‘This is Class War.’ Limited to an edition of 300, the lucky owners of this deluxe CD have been throwing around terms like “album of the year” and “classic” and “sought over 20 years from now.” Well, that’s enough to pique anyone’s interest, and yet you have to wonder if this is one of those “instant classics” that end up gathering dust in a couple of years.
My familiarity with Boston’s Milligram has been limited to only a couple of tunes, so I was glad to see Small Stone step up to reissue this bad boy for the rest of us, complete with bonus tracks adding up to over 30 extra minutes of music. And let me tell ya, all the praise for this record is well deserved!! Its brutal, sick, and punishing as hell, combining diverse influences such as Japanese noise, punk, doom, psychedelia, stoner, and even underground pop. The production is startling, with a distorted drum sound that virtually takes over the disc. I doubt if you’ve ever heard anything like it. And lets not forget that delicious tube tone, beloved by all who take sound quality seriously. Yep, ‘This is Class War’ (originally entitled ‘Death to America’) is indeed a classic.
The first half of the record - with a track list highlighted in black on the back of the CD - replicates the Traktor7 issue. ‘Let’s Kill’ starts things off with a damaging early Helmet feel, giving you a taste of those mondo-distorted drums. The following songs are short, punky, and furious, gradually introducing an artier strain; Jonah Jenkins’ remarkable vocals recall David Yow’s work with Jesus Lizard and Scratch Acid. ‘I Know, I’m Sorry’ sounds like it could have been written by ‘Funhouse’-era Iggy, while ‘+2 Charisma’ makes you grind your teeth like the best early 80s west coast punk can do. Gradually, the song lengths increase as the songs themselves become more psychedelic. ‘Summer of Lies’ is spacier, stonier, more melodic, and even introduces a piano! ‘Nice Problem’ sounds like a nastier version of something by Boston stoners Roadsaw; not surprising, considering that guitarist Darryl Sheppard was in that band. By the end things get downright doomy, best exemplified by the instro ‘The Resentinel,’ with its slow tempo and plunging power chords.
The last half of the disc is far more than a collection of second-rate outtakes. ‘Baikal Depths’ and ‘Baikal Shallows’ are ambient and experimental, totally different than anything that’s come so far. Some of the following tunes, with titles like ‘A Mess on Strom Thurmond’s Dress,’ are weird, psychedelic, swirling pieces that recall the Melvins’ more unstructured ramblings. The disc ends with one of their best songs, ‘My Own Private Altamont,’ which trails off into a studio snippet of Milligram screwing around with Pink Floyd’s ‘Money.’<br>
If you want safe and predictable, then you’d better shop elsewhere. This music is like a Cro-Magnon chief blasted out of his head on mushrooms, sucking the marrow out of a femur from the chief of a neighboring clan: brutal, intense, and vision inducing. Sadly, Milligram is no more. Get their swansong and get buzzed.
Kevin McHugh
Album: This is Class War
Format: CD
Label: Small Stone
Time: 70 minutes
Year: 2003
Track List:
Let’s Kill
Jeff’s Flag
Let’s Pretend We Don’t Know Each Other
+2 Charisma
Thousands and Thousands and Thousands and Thousands
Get Fucked Again
I Know, I’m Sorry
Summor of Lies
Nice Problem
Winner Versus Loser
Saturation Emission
She’s a Prostitute
The Resentinel
This is Class War
Baikal Depths
Baikal Shallows
A Mess on Strom Thurmond’s Dress
Let’s Kill (Drums/Vocals Only)
Constant Sucking Sensation
Emblematic Sac
Sadegh Hedayat
I Know, I’m Sorry (Drums Only)
A Thousand Cuts
Urdu is an Amalgam
Death to America
My Own Private Altamont
Label Site and Cover Photo: www.smallstone.com/
There’s been a huge buzz in the past few months about the Traktor7 issue of Milligram’s ‘This is Class War.’ Limited to an edition of 300, the lucky owners of this deluxe CD have been throwing around terms like “album of the year” and “classic” and “sought over 20 years from now.” Well, that’s enough to pique anyone’s interest, and yet you have to wonder if this is one of those “instant classics” that end up gathering dust in a couple of years.
My familiarity with Boston’s Milligram has been limited to only a couple of tunes, so I was glad to see Small Stone step up to reissue this bad boy for the rest of us, complete with bonus tracks adding up to over 30 extra minutes of music. And let me tell ya, all the praise for this record is well deserved!! Its brutal, sick, and punishing as hell, combining diverse influences such as Japanese noise, punk, doom, psychedelia, stoner, and even underground pop. The production is startling, with a distorted drum sound that virtually takes over the disc. I doubt if you’ve ever heard anything like it. And lets not forget that delicious tube tone, beloved by all who take sound quality seriously. Yep, ‘This is Class War’ (originally entitled ‘Death to America’) is indeed a classic.
The first half of the record - with a track list highlighted in black on the back of the CD - replicates the Traktor7 issue. ‘Let’s Kill’ starts things off with a damaging early Helmet feel, giving you a taste of those mondo-distorted drums. The following songs are short, punky, and furious, gradually introducing an artier strain; Jonah Jenkins’ remarkable vocals recall David Yow’s work with Jesus Lizard and Scratch Acid. ‘I Know, I’m Sorry’ sounds like it could have been written by ‘Funhouse’-era Iggy, while ‘+2 Charisma’ makes you grind your teeth like the best early 80s west coast punk can do. Gradually, the song lengths increase as the songs themselves become more psychedelic. ‘Summer of Lies’ is spacier, stonier, more melodic, and even introduces a piano! ‘Nice Problem’ sounds like a nastier version of something by Boston stoners Roadsaw; not surprising, considering that guitarist Darryl Sheppard was in that band. By the end things get downright doomy, best exemplified by the instro ‘The Resentinel,’ with its slow tempo and plunging power chords.
The last half of the disc is far more than a collection of second-rate outtakes. ‘Baikal Depths’ and ‘Baikal Shallows’ are ambient and experimental, totally different than anything that’s come so far. Some of the following tunes, with titles like ‘A Mess on Strom Thurmond’s Dress,’ are weird, psychedelic, swirling pieces that recall the Melvins’ more unstructured ramblings. The disc ends with one of their best songs, ‘My Own Private Altamont,’ which trails off into a studio snippet of Milligram screwing around with Pink Floyd’s ‘Money.’<br>
If you want safe and predictable, then you’d better shop elsewhere. This music is like a Cro-Magnon chief blasted out of his head on mushrooms, sucking the marrow out of a femur from the chief of a neighboring clan: brutal, intense, and vision inducing. Sadly, Milligram is no more. Get their swansong and get buzzed.
Kevin McHugh