
In any case, from 1977 to about 1983, quality D.I.Y. punk records flowed out at a regular clip from the bigger coastal cities and sizeable college towns across the country. Looking back at this magical, aberrant collaboration of self-directed art and rhythm some 25 to 30 years later, though, one finds that almost every decently sizeable town has a legacy of at least one or two blistering 45s from the late Carter and early Reagan eras. Never really a big punk town and always a little behind the times, Cincinnati’s contribution as far as early-days punk singles go is a blip on the screen compared to the in-total massive amount of killer singles churned out by Cleveland bands like Electric Eels, Pagans, Killers and so on. But our city’s few brave punk pioneers and their output are at least worth noting and celebrating.
Thanks to those awesome aforementioned rabid collectors and the majestic glory of the internet, many of the most obscure little pieces of vinyl have been converted to downloadable digital format, chronicled and made available online by blog-fueled sites like kbdrecords.com, 7inchpunk.com and plenty more.
Probably the most interesting Cincinnati single I’ve dug up thus far is 1978’s “Keith Richards’ Dead” b/w “Asshole” by the proletarian art people known as the Ed Davis Band. (No real Ed Davis exists in the band, by the way.) Really “Keith Richards’ Dead” is where it’s at. The angular riffing, slacker vocal delivery, and fantastical lyrics about the untimely yet fictitious death of a Stone combine to offer the listener a uniquely fantastic example of Midwestern sarcasm and bad attitude at its finest. And seriously, where did that guitar riff come from? It barely even sounds like punk. These guys just sound loud and pissed. Download the single here and read the band’s and see some vintage video clips here.
Skip
ahead a couple years to Newport’s the Edge and their eponymous 1984
single, a more up-tempo, high-energy punk pop type thing led by a Cuban-American
nomad. Two of the three jaunty songs deal with parochial matters such
as WEBN’s suckiness (“Death to A.O.R.”) and Northern Kentucky
cops (“Newport Gestapo”) but do so in an endearing enough way as
to be only slightly annoying. Download it.
Finally, what kind of city would we have been without our own hardcore punk band? Sluggo was Cincinnati’s answer to Minor Threat, a group of short-haired louder-fasters who released one straight-up EP in 1983 called “Contradiction.” While they might not be masters of creativity or anything, they definitely knew how to bang out a couple scorchers. Hear their archived tunes here.
There are a couple others floating around out there… Dennis the Menace, the Customs and SS-20 a bit later on were the only other Cincinnati punk bands who released singles from the era that my research could uncover. If anyone wants to correct me, knows of more, or just wants to reminisce, leave a comment below.
I am the Cuban nomad [not Cuban-American, I was born in Cuba. Though Cuba is part of the continent of America]. The Edge single actually came out at the tail end of 1983. And we will reunite to play some endearing if slightly annoying noise at the Jockey Club reunion show at Southgate House on November 12th, 2011.