In a fit of nostalgia and missing my friends, i threw on Police Teeth's 2009 slab, Real Size Monster Series, on the drive to work the other morning. It was released in February of that year, so it recently just passed its twelfth anniversary, which means i missed the chance to do a ten-year retrospective on it by two years. Which is appropriate, since "just a couple years too late" is probably a good summary for their music, their six-year run as a band, and pretty much the entire grip of loud-ass freewheeling rock 'n' roll bands they associated with. Man, there was a time there when i really thought Police Teeth would be the band that saved us all--not that i really knew what i meant by that, but it had something to do with their unique blend of PacNW Wipers-meets-Superchunk style riffs, their blue-collar everyman roots, and their brutally acerbic laughing-in-the-face-of-despair lyrics. Oh, and our shared amusement at the inherent ridiculousness of the music business.
Thursday, March 4, 2021
A Breakdown in the Discourse: Police Teeth's Real Size Monster Series, 12 Years Later
In a fit of nostalgia and missing my friends, i threw on Police Teeth's 2009 slab, Real Size Monster Series, on the drive to work the other morning. It was released in February of that year, so it recently just passed its twelfth anniversary, which means i missed the chance to do a ten-year retrospective on it by two years. Which is appropriate, since "just a couple years too late" is probably a good summary for their music, their six-year run as a band, and pretty much the entire grip of loud-ass freewheeling rock 'n' roll bands they associated with. Man, there was a time there when i really thought Police Teeth would be the band that saved us all--not that i really knew what i meant by that, but it had something to do with their unique blend of PacNW Wipers-meets-Superchunk style riffs, their blue-collar everyman roots, and their brutally acerbic laughing-in-the-face-of-despair lyrics. Oh, and our shared amusement at the inherent ridiculousness of the music business.
Monday, March 1, 2021
Hugs Via Satellite: PRF Virtual Thundersnow 2021
Banner by Christopher Williams |
I've been trying to get a handle on my thoughts and feelings about how PRF Virtual Thundersnow went down and went over with our PRF family. By any metric, it was a hit: we put together a great mish-mash of musical performances and videos made by our friends, with lots of random nonsense sprinkled into the mix (Japanese rabbit cartoons? Local Escanaba news features about Dobber's Pasties? Sure, let's go nuts), and everything was received warmly, with heart emojis and friendly laughter. On Saturday the Twitch channel for Thundersnow registered almost 600 individual viewers (even assuming on the low end that everyone at some point streamed from multiple sources, that still exceeds the 150-to-200-person average of your standard in-person Thundersnow). New friends were made as several bands and artists made their PRF debuts. It was a good time.
But also, it wasn't Thundersnow. As the next morning reared its head and Dixie and i sloughed off our blankets in anticipation of yet another cookie-cutter pandemic work week, the reminders of that were clear. No Monday morning brunch trip to the Swedish Pantry. No stop at Dobber's to fill up a cooler with pasties to take home to Milwaukee. No three-and-a-half-hour road trip back home. Just the grey promise of cubicle walls. We really should have taken a day to decompress.
Don't get me wrong -- the weekend was lovely, and it was great to see everyone's faces, even if they were in a weekend-long Zoom meeting or on the Twitch feed. But it also served as a stark reminder that it's been almost a year since the last time i hugged someone that wasn't my wife.