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Dead Kennedys
(Formed San Francisco 1978; disbanded, late 1986)
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"Isn't a Dead Kennedys concert on 22 November [anniversary of JFK's assassination] in rather bad taste? |
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Dead Kennedys
(Formed San Francisco 1978; disbanded, late 1986)
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"Isn't a Dead Kennedys concert on 22 November [anniversary of JFK's assassination] in rather bad taste?"
"Of course. But the assassinations weren't too tasteful either."
- East Bay Ray interviewed in 1979 by the Vancouver Sun.
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US punk band which formed a crucial part of the burgeoning American hardcore punk scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Moving to San Francisco after a succession of menial jobs and a half-hearted attempt to pursue an acting career, vocalist Jello Biafra (real name Eric Boucher), answered an advert placed in a music paper by guitarist East Bay Ray. The two were joined by bassist Klaus Fluoride, drummer Bruce Slesinger (aka Ted) and a second guitarist known to posterity simply as 6025. The latter departed in March 1979 whilst Slesinger was replaced in mid-1981 by D.H. Peligro.
In 1978 the full impact of British punk had yet to be felt in America, mainly because the sheer size of the country was such an obstacle for groups with limited financial backing. The Damned had toured in early 77 and The Sex Pistols followed at the end of the year only to implode after a gig at the San Francisco Winterland - with Biafra apparently a witness to the spectacle. Fired by this experience and that of a visit to Britain at the height of punk in 1977, Biafra determined to help create an equivalent American scene. He was not alone; others, who were to become equally as well known, felt a similar urge and the underground culture which these pioneers nurtured was, from the start, radically different from that which developed in Britain. American punk was free from the more ludicrous dictates which restricted many aspects of British punk; there were, for example, few bondage trousers and kilts to be seen at American gigs.
After a brief rehearsal period the Dead Kennedys played their first gig in July 1978; the tension and provocation between band and audience that night set the standard for what was to follow. Initially, the Kennedys' music was a fairly faithful blueprint of orthodox British punk rock, all beefy guitar sound, rumbling bass and enthusiastically-whacked drums. Yet from the start there was obviously more to them than this; there was a musical ability in the band, who were quite clearly playing within themselves, and a depth to the lyrics which raised the group well above the average tub-thumping punk outfit.
Biafra's main lyrical concerns were political and his polemical broadsides attacked any number of easy, but nonetheless deserving targets - big business skulduggery, the American Government under the lunatic control [?] of Ronald Reagan, atrocities perpetrated by the Klan and the feeble-minded response to these problems of American liberals. Dripping with knowing sarcasm, early songs such as "Let's Lynch The Landlord", "I Kill Children", "Chemical Warfare" and "Funland at The Beach" satirised and lampooned the twin elements of extreme violence and extreme conservatism which characterise much of American life. What saved these musical indictments of American society from collapsing under their own ambitious weight was the acute sense of humour which underpinned them and the extraordinary way in which Biafra sang - a unique tremulous roar which none has ever come close to imitating. Also important was the fact that the band were not afraid to back up their political opinions with concerted action. Most memorable among various pranks which were pulled was Biafra's run for Mayor of San Francisco in 1979; he came in fourth, forcing the two main candidates into a runoff.
Obviously, the Dead Kennedys' fundamental raison d'être along with their name was designed to offend many people deeply, and so it proved as, to the delight of the band, they quickly attracted the attention of a number of far-right politico-religious groups. The band's problems with these self-appointed moral guardians were compounded by a relationship with the US authorities which was always confrontational; the norm at most DKs' gigs was an aggressive police presence that indiscriminately targeted audience and band. Such high-profile controversies had the predictable effect of scaring the wits out of major record companies, none of whom would go near the band; their only option was to release records in punk's time-honoured DIY fashion.
The American branch of the Kennedys' own label, Alternative Tentacles, had been set up in 1979, but the British arm was not established until a few years later. In the meantime a string of singles appeared in the early 80s released through the independent labels Fast and Cherry Red. "California Über Alles" (October 1979) was the first - a blistering attack on the Governor of California, Jerry Brown. "Holiday in Cambodia" (June 1980) followed and is perhaps the band's definitive moment; a perfect mix of hilarious yuppie-baiting lyrics and evil-sounding music, it remained a permanent fixture in the top ten of John Peel's Festive Fifty for many years. "Kill The Poor" (October 1980) and "Too Drunk to Fuck" (May 1981) completed a quartet of singles which easily bears comparison with the most important early punk records.
Yet the band's first album, "Fresh Fruit For Rotting Vegetables" (September 1980), is a badly flawed record; totally inadequate production managed to drain virtually all of the power, if not the conviction, from an otherwise excellent set of songs. Had it been handled properly the album would unquestionably have been one of the best punk albums ever recorded; as it was the record fails to convince entirely. Despite this fact, a UK tour in late 1980 firmly established the band as a figurehead for an audience by then long-deprived of The Pistols and affronted by the alleged `sell-out' of The Clash. Biafra also took this opportunity to introduce British audiences to the novel concept of stage-diving, commonplace now but unknown back then.
On each of the band's three visits to the UK a series of eloquent interviews were given to the music press demonstrating that sharp minds lay behind an art form that was intentionally crude and brutal. That crudity and brutality was taken to new extremes with the release of "In God We Trust Inc." (December 1981), an eight track EP the sheer speed an bludgeoning power of which left most reviewers nonplussed and contemporaries trailing. Certainly, the inept bumblings offered by most of the UK's punk bands at this time could not compare. In fact, the focus of articulate and intelligent hardcore was switching to the US; Black Flag, Minor Threat, MDC and Husker Du among many others were busy carving out their own highly individual signatures on the hardcore monolith and to this day the US has remained its most fertile breeding ground.
There was a lengthy wait for the Kennedys' second album. "Plastic Surgery Disasters" (November 1982), is a vast improvement on Fresh Fruit and is the band's finest collection of songs; the savage wit and political satire remained to the fore, but the music, whilst retaining its energy, also included such unexpected moments as Fluoride playing the clarinet. The band continued to gig in the US and also toured Australia and New Zealand, but the years 1983-85 saw something of a hiatus with regard to the UK. This was finally broken with the release of "Frankenchrist" (December 1985), an LP which was indirectly responsible for the eventual fragmentation of the band. It is a far more conventional record in a musical sense than the band's previous efforts; more melodic, but, after five years of Reagan's rule, almost frantic in its sense of desperation at the political direction in which America was moving.
"Frankenchrist" also proved that the group's talent to annoy remained as great as ever; included with the album was the now-notorious poster "Penis Landscape" by the Swiss artist H.R. Giger. Detailing several rows of copulating genitalia, it inevitably attracted the attention of the Californian judicial authorities who in April 1986 launched a legal offensive against the band which ultimately disintegrated under the pressure. As well as having his flat torn apart by the SFPD, Biafra was charged with `Distributing Harmful Matter to Minors'; if convicted he faced a year in jail and a $2000 fine. Added to this were a number of other `nuisance' lawsuits (including one from the Shriners, a Masonic-like group, who appeared on the record cover). Biafra resolved to make a stand against this politically-motivated intimidation on the basis of the First Amendment which guarantees every American citizen the right to free speech.
Astonishingly, given the long and drawn-out nature of the affair, the band was able to take a break from the legal siege to release "Bedtime For Democracy" (December 1986), but their creative relationship had clearly run out of steam. Despite having its moments it is a flatly produced record and sounds anachronistic and thin on musical ideas; Biafra later admitted that he had taken the opportunity deliberately to exhaust this particular side of his songwriting.
Finally, in August 1987 Biafra and four other co-defendants were acquitted by a Judge who overruled a deadlocked jury and declared a mistrial. The whole ugly affair, which apart from a few honourable exceptions had seen a disgraceful lack of support from most of the music business, had broken the Dead Kennedys but ultimately it has led Biafra into a whole new range of projects; these include numerous spoken word performances, musical collaborations with DOA, NoMeansNo, Mojo Nixon, and most effectively as Lard with Al Jourgensen and Paul Barker of Ministry. Klaus Fluoride has released a couple of idiosyncratic, downright bizarre LPs whilst East Bay Ray has a recording project entitled Scrapyard; D.H. Peligro has recently re-emerged with a new band and album simply called Peligro.
A final compilation of Dead Kennedys material - "Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death" (June 1987) - was released and is a good summary of some of the band's early recordings as offering several miscellaneous oddities. The Dead Kennedys had been a crucial stimulant to the US punk scene in its infancy; that scene has had important reverberations down to the present day and for the that reason alone the DKs' place in musical history is assured.
Bio written by: anon |
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Nazi Punks Fuck Off One day my friend went to school with the Nazi Punks Fuck Off picture on his folder, and he god suspended. That's one thing I hate about taking cool looking shit to schoo, the teachers get mad and think it means something racist. Has somthing similar ever happened to any of you?
*BADASS SONG!
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ILoveSidVicious |
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Replys
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Listener
| I had a Joe Strummer is God collage on my binder and was told to remove it...never did...
next year me and this girl are making giant posters that say JOE STRUMMER IS GOD and posting them around the school. | lobotomyactivist-II | that's pretty stupid. teachers/school is screwed up. yeah that song is freaking awesome.
yeah i had some artwork that included the lyrics to too drunk to fuck and my teacher told me to rip it up and throw it away. hah, that thing took me like a few days to think up of and actually draw..
but anyways
i don't care. dead kennedys still kick ass.
but its | yellow_my_card | I've come to the conclusion that teachers hate punk rock. they let this girl keep 50 Cent lyrics, much more explicit than my Clash or Dead Kennedys stuff, on her binder but "he who fucks nuns will later join the church" and "kill kill kill kill kill the poor!" were too offensive. | lobotomyactivist-II | | Yeah, school sucks! | ILoveSidVicious | the stupidest thing in the world is when teachers or authority figures take offense by what we like or repersent it's gay any way Dead Kennedys Rock!! | youniqueRose | That's a story that really pisses me off to no end. It's probably more because it said "fuck off" on it than the swastika thing. Anyways...yes, it is a fucking awesome song, too. I posted up "One Term President" flyers (about George W. Bush) at my school once, and people vandalized them...even though they were on my own binders. | outofstep23x | yeah, a teacher yelled at me once for wearing a Suicide Machines sweat shirt. | rancidfreak99 | I never had this kind of problem here in Brazil.....but I think here schools are more open to what the kids like, of course there are some schools that ask us to dont wear(?) some thing that can be ofensive, but that just happens sometimes....in university is better(?)...you can do what you want... | yeahyeahyeah | Life isn't fair. School is fucked. Live with it. The music helps you cope.
- Candace | RainbowsAreRad | Ha I got yelled at about a Suicide Machienes shirt too :-/
Wose yet, I had this friend in 9th grade and he was running for class president. And he was uber gay, so he decorated his signs all "pretty" and such. He thought his stars looked "naked" so he put circles around them. So some girl went to the office and said they were pentagrams. He got suspended for that. Even though the school had approved the signs that morning. Whatever. Shit happens. We'll be out of school soon... | SyntheticxDreams | Oh boo fuckin' hoo to all of you who are complaining about school. Its a free education if they want you to conform then you do it. Anyway my teacher made me wear my "Kill the Poor" shirt inside out, which wasn't so bad. You just have to think of it from their perspective | GASPATCHO | I'm wearing their t-shirt right now,cool.It says DK in big letters in the front and it says Dead Kennedys in the back.
| -s-aint347 | I think I'm a bit late, but whatever.
"Ha I got yelled at about a Suicide Machienes shirt too"
That happened to me, as well.
I also get in trouble for a Vandals t-shirt and my friends get shit for Sex Pistols shirts, because sex is bad....
| insertname | I went to a Lutheran school from kindergarten to eighth grade, so to wear a Sex Pistols shirt or something like that would be to expel my own ass... hell, this one boy wore a fucking Creed shirt and got in trouble... Erm, aren't Creed Christian? | losersalwayswin | "I'm wearing their t-shirt right
now,cool.It says DK in big letters in the
front and it says Dead Kennedys in the
back."
It is sweet, but bittersweet now, considering they will sell that same shit at Hot Topic for like twenty bucks. This one girl got one of their shirts from there a year back, you know, when "punk" was the thing and not fucking "emo," and she didn't even know who they were. Sadder yet, the next day she wore a Good Charlotte shirt. I mean, I appreciate variety, but God.
Is that even possible? | losersalwayswin | Dead Kennedys is legend. Of course they will be at Hot Topic, and of course anyone with the slightest knowledge of punk or underground genres will know their name. Even being Manson or Casualties fans.
What "underground" band shirts do they have there? The ones that aren't really underground because they became too popular. DK. Black Flag. Sex Pistols. Clash. Siouxsie. Bauhaus. The Cure.
The day you will have to worry about Hot Topic harming true punk/emo/goth is when you see Proletariat, Navio Forge, and Specimen shirts. Which you won't there has never and will never be enough demand for those bands. | SyntheticxDreams | "Dead Kennedys is legend. Of course they will
be at Hot Topic, and of course anyone with
the slightest knowledge of punk or
underground genres will know their name."
It's not that that bothers me, it's that I don't understand when it became acceptable to wear a shirt if you don't listen to the band? It's not that they're "punk" or whatever, it's just... lying. If I wore a Seether shirt it would be just as bad. | losersalwayswin | Hot Topic has... Bauhaus shirts?
Oh.
My.
God.
THE WORLD IS ENDING!!!!!! GRAB THE CHILDREN AND RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!!!!!! | losersalwayswin | Exploiting Siouxsie is just fine with me... in fact, I endorse it. Exploiting DK isn't so bad, I don't care...
Exploiting the Sex Pistols... they exploited themselves... BUT BAUHAUS??????!!!!!! What they do to deserve this! | losersalwayswin | damn right dude. the teachers need to fuck off and mind there own damn business if i got suspended for some bullshit like that i would just go straight back to school with it again and hope to get suspended a second time | somedude | you guys know how too sotp this trubbel shit telll them you dont giv a fuck and that it dosent matter if you get suspended theyl suspend you once or twice but after that they will learn you dont give a fuck | krazy_killin_matafaku | yep. of course. i have this tshirt with a dead people hanging from ropes and they didnt like that, i have a sweatshirt that says fuck really big across it and i have lots of shirts that have guns and knives too. they dont like them but they dont do anything. im friends with the administrators soo there cool with me. | aboislove | | |  |
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