• The Bags “All Bagged Up”

    June 5, 2026 | Sarah Filzen

    The Bags “All Bagged Up” the collected works 1977-1980. Artifix Records. Last night we had the immense pleasure of seeing the Alice Bag Band at Anodyne Coffee here in Milwaukee – omg she is still so fantastic: vibrant, intelligent, a great storyteller, lovely but still a pissed off punk at heart. A US punk pioneer, Alice Bag led The Bags, a first-wave L.A. punk band that didn’t really receive the national (underground) attention as they’re LA contemporaries like the Germs and Black Flag. All Bagged Up is a compilation of original Bags that Artifix says is “After years (Literally) of hunting, researching, tracking down and finageling, Artifix is proud to present ALL BAGGED UP…the collected works 1977-1980. This 12″ LP represents everything we could dig up by L.A.’s infamous BAGS.” (from Artifix’s website). On it are The Bags first single “Survive” and “Babylonian Gorgon” which, along with “We Don’t Need the English” and “We Will Bury You” were recorded in 1978 at the Dangerhouse recording studio. Last night “Survive” was the encore (video Joe recorded below) and Alice told a delightful story to introduce “We Don’t Need the English” – former Bags bassist Patricia Rainone (Pat Bag) had married The Damned’s Dave Vanian and while the song was not written about him, the band decided it would be funnier to introduce the song saying it was definitely about him. Four tracks were recorded live at The Masque on February 24th, 1978 – this show just 2 weeks after their debut performance at the Masque (at which The Germs Darby Crash – then going by Bobby Pyn – was there and rushed the stage yanking off the bags from The Bags’ heads). Recorded live in 1979 in Oregon are the songs “7 and 7 is” – a Love cover, “1, 2, 3,” “Gluttony” (which Alice played last night, introducing it as a song written by an original Bags member who suffered from an eating disorder – can’t remember if she said which one but it was one of the guys; this song also appears in The Bags appearance in the 1981 Penelope Spheeris directed concert/documentary film Decline of Western Civilization)  plus “In Love with Romance” and “Survive.” There’s also a few studio rehearsal recordings and their first demo “Bag Bondage.” Finding any Bags on vinyl has always been a challenge so having some of their classic tracks compiled in one place has been a long time in coming.

     

     

     

  • Drakulas “Midnight City”

    June 3, 2026 | Sarah Filzen

    Drakulas “Midnight City” 2026. Dirtnap Records. Green Noise Records red vinyl exclusive. DRAKULAS! I love these guys: their performance was amazing, hysterical and ass-shaking when we caught their set at last year’s Dirtnap Records fest. Midnight City is the side project of the super group’s third full length release…so not really a side project at this point. Composed of Riverboat Gamblers Savage Lord Mic (aka Mike Wiebe) and Sam Fransisco (aka Sam Keir) plus Rise Against and GWAR’s Pink Rick (aka Zach Blair), Midnight City is a rocking, tightly wound good time that mixes hard garage rock, dance rock, indie rock and new wave synthpop. The first tracks on both Side A (“Going Going Gone Gone“) and Side B (“Sex“) have shimmering synths for an updated new wave sound, the latter with a stomping early aughts indie rock beat. Other tracks rock harder, and those are my top picks: the infectious “Singin’ With My Tongue Cut Out,” the garagey “Head in the Clouds,” “Is it Enough” and the hand-clappy dancey “White Off Your Nose.” Wacky describes their live performances (well, I’ve only seen them once but guessing eccentric is generally the vibe for all shows) and that offbeat impulse appears on songs like “Morning/Night” and the insane, wild and high energy “FAFO” (another fave that also has some bleep-bloop action). The whole record is fantastic and I hope a tour is on the horizon.

    There aren’t any videos for any of the tracks on Midnight City nor could I find any recent live footage so here’s a link to their set in Dallas, 2025. DRAKULAS!

  • Jerry Garcia “Garcia”

    June 1, 2026 | Sarah Filzen

    Jerry Garcia “Garcia” 1972. Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia’s first solo album, some record store or distributer put a hype sticker over the not-at-all offensive breast. I spent a full day in Madison this past weekend; my time at the university there in the late 80’s/early 90’s was heavily soundtracked by the Dead so today I’m taking an aural trip to those hazy college days. While Garcia sings and plays all the instruments – except drums played by the Dead’s Bill Kreutzmann – the LP is full of classic tracks that the full Grateful Dead band would go on to perform in their non-stop touring for the subsequent 20+ years including the single “Sugaree” which went to #94 on the US charts in April 1972; it was Garcia’s only chart single. He also released “The Wheel” as a single but I’m not sure that charted – it’s a really catchy folk/country track. Other Dead show classics include the Americana styled opener “Deal” (one of my old-time faves) and “Loser.” The country twinged lament “To Lay Me Down” shows off both Garcia’s steel guitar and piano talents; I think this one was played somewhat frequently on the road as well. Other tracks have a trippier, psychedelic bent to them like “Bird Song” which was a tribute to the recently-ish deceased Janis Joplin (and was another Dead show staple) and the cosmic freakout weird “Late for Supper,” “Spidergawd” and “Eep Hour” (like during “Space/Drums” I would be taking a bathroom break if they were played at a concert).

Daily (maybe) pulls from the vault: 33-1/3, 45, 78, old, older, classic, new, good, bad. Subjective. Autobiographical. Occasionally putting a record up for sale.

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