San Jose street punks the Forgotten remember the English class of
late-'70s troublemakers as well as anyone. Their last album, Keep the
Corpses Quiet (TKO Records), came straight from the same gutter that
spawned Rancid's Let's Go -- snotty, class-conflict punk as practiced by
Sham 69 and the Exploited. (As it happens, guitarist Craig moonlights with Lars
Frederiksen's Bastards.) In advance of a new album, Control Me, that's
due this summer on Youth Brigade's BYO Records, the Forgotten are at the
Century Lounge (401-751-2255) in Providence on Saturday with the Ducky Boys
and the Midnight Creeps. On Sunday, they're at the Middle East
(617-864-EAST) in Cambridge with Crash and Burn, the Losing Kind,
and the painfully mismatched Okkervil River, a group of native New
Englanders now living in Texas who have to their credit a couple albums' worth
of shambolic but precious singer-songwriterly roots pop. You can also catch
Okkervil River on Friday at AS220 (401-831-9327) in Providence and on Saturday
at the Free Street Taverna (207-775-3380) in Portland.
Just when you thought emo's pop jones had permanently replaced the lexicon of
deconstructivist post-hardcore that seemed so promising back in the mid '90s,
along comes a wave of bands who forgot to remember to forget Fugazi. From
Chicago, Haymarket Riot make grown-up, melodic indie punk you won't feel
stupid shouting along to; from Washington, DC, scurrilous agit-punks Black
Eyes (featuring members of the Rapture, with a new single produced by Ian
MacKaye) and Early Humans make short, dynamic bursts of rhythmic noise
you can study to. The paths of these three groups cross this weekend. Haymarket
Riot play Charlie's Kitchen (617-492-9646) in Cambridge on Monday; on Tuesday
they join Black Eyes and Early Humans for a gig at Flywheel (413-527-9800) in
Easthampton. On Wednesday, Black Eyes and Early Humans play the Middle East.
Elliott are natives of Louisville, and a bit of that town's studious
post-hardcore lineage (Slint, Rodan) has rubbed off on them. But at heart
they've always been guileless sentimentalists, and so their albums come off as
the missing link between the old emo (Braid, Jawbox) and the new (Saves the
Day, New Found Glory). On Sunday they're at the El-N-Gee (860-437-3800) in New
London; on Monday they're at the Middle East. Both shows include fellow
Louisville natives Christiansen, whose new Revelation EP Forensics
Brothers and Sisters is a promising update of the quaking progressive
hardcore practiced by Quicksand, Jawbox, and Shudder To Think.
Come Memorial Day weekend, the Wellfleet Beachcomber (508-349-6055), the Cape's
unofficial summer home of Boston rock and roll, opens for the season. And in
lieu of Helios comes ageless surf deity Dick Dale, a weariless sun god
bearing good tides and timeless tunes. The author of "Miserlou" hits the Middle
East on Saturday and the Higher Ground (802-654-8888) in Winooski, Vermont, on
Sunday before arriving at the Beachcomber on Monday
Issue Date: May 24 - 30, 2002
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