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7 SECONDS
When he first started out Kevin Seconds spewed
the immortal line, "I'm
gonna stay young until I die." And two decades later, he's
still practicing what he preaches, as evidenced by Take It
Back, Take It On, Take It Over the bands upcoming SIDEONEDUMMY
release due out in January 25, 2005, the audaciously titled 13th
long-player by his legendary punk band, 7Seconds a band considered
by many that came after as pioneers in the movement.
Perhaps no modern-day rock record so eloquently, aggressively,
and unapologetically tackles the topic of growing up and growing
older as does Take It Back, Take It On, Take It Over.
Note the old-school anthem "Your Parents' Hardcore" (in
which Kevin declares, "Others have given up the life/Hey,
that's OK/'Cause here we are, we're here for good, we're here to
stay"), or "Where Is The Danger?," a delightfully
scathing attack on today's truly blank generation of punk posers
(sample lyric: "All of the promise but minus the knowledge/Why
bother now that they teach punk rock in college?/Co-opted culture,
misguided intention/Hardcore's extinction almost guaranteed/So
gifted and smart, everyone looks so pretty/But where is the danger
in Hot Topic city?"). Other Take It Back manifestos — "Still
On It," "My Band, Our Crew," "Say My Thanks," "Big
Hardcore Mystery," "Our Core" — also explore
what Kevin confirms is "the main theme of the new album: the
battle to feel valid and relevant as veteran punk-rock 'wise old
men' in a scene that is overwhelmingly dominated by younger, cuter,
more fashionable boys."
7Seconds' validity and relevance is already unquestionable. Since
Kevin and his brother Steve Youth formed the group in 1979 in the
unlikely hardcore hub of Reno, Nevada (before eventually relocating
to Sacramento and becoming an integral part of the original Cali-punk
explosion), they've seen countless musical trends come and go,
and they've easily outlasted them all. (They even got swept up
in the 1990s' alt-rock boom and ensuing major-label feeding frenzy,
but eventually emerged from their short-lived Epic Records deal
unscathed.) So it goes without saying that 7Seconds are well aware
that pop-punk is just another passing fad bearing little resemblance
to the meaningful music they'll still be cranking out long after
the fickle TRL crowd has moved on to the next big thing.
"As happy as I am about the concept of
punk getting out to the masses, I have a big problem with some
of these boy bands masquerading as punk rock or hardcore and
creating this whole new meaningless, sub-genre/culture that has
absolutely nothing to do with
rebellion, creativity, originality, and sincerity," Kevin
states. "Nowadays, anyone can be 'punk rock'; you
don't have to work for it or pay any dues. All you have to do is
go down to your local mall and buy everything at Hot Topic, and
you're good to go. Most of these bands sound exactly the same and
have no balls, soul, or heart — but naturally, they sell
20 times the amount of records that I ever will, so they seem
to be the smart guys. What do I know?
"I realize this attitude makes me sound like the crabby old
man that I am," he adds with a laugh, "but what can I
say? At least we're up for the challenge of getting our asses out
there and rocking people the way we like to rock people. I know
that there are kids out there who absolutely hate the mainstream-y
shit that is being labeled 'punk' or 'hardcore' these days, and
they're looking for something with a little more perspective and
meaning, with some connection and lineage to where it all started."
Certainly fans of all ages hungry for punk with substance will
not be disappointed by Take It Back, Take It On, Take It Over — 17
sweaty, steely tracks of what Kevin proudly describes as "super-fast,
back-to-basics, melodic hardcore...real hardcore, not
the metal or emo shit." The album fittingly takes its title
from a line in "Our Core," a track named after the new
term 7Seconds recently coined to describe their music (incidentally,
7Seconds were also one of the first bands, along with Black Flag
and D.O.A., to adopt the term "hardcore" nearly a quarter-century
ago). Explains Kevin: "Let's face it, when someone like me
says 'hardcore band' and some 17-year-old kid says it, chances
are we're talking about something completely different. So I just
liked the idea of coming up with 'our core' — something that
kind of describes us and other old-school-sounding hardcore bands
who are bitter and fed-up!"
Although Take It Back boasts a rare
melodicism and musicality that stems from Kevin's various side
projects (the psych-rock power trio Drop Acid, the indie-garage
group Go National, his lo-fi singer-songwriter solo work under
the moniker Ghetto Moments) and the band's willingness to experiment
("We're all huge music geeks influenced
by bands and artists we love, and we've never had a problem trying
to do different things"), it's still straight-up punk rock,
pure and simple — unlike some of the poppier mid-period 7Seconds
efforts that alienated close-minded, punk-purist fans. "The
funny thing is how so many people have come around to really appreciating
those quieter records over the past few years," Kevin muses. "But
in all honestly, the harder, faster stuff is what we do best. We've
loved every song and album we've ever put out, but strip away everything
and we're just an old-fashioned hardcore punk band from Reno."
And in true punk tradition, Take It Back is
a total D.I.Y. affair: The basic tracks were laid down during
two breathless days at 7Seconds' regular recording haunt, Sacramento's
Hangar Studio; the lead vocals were done at Kevin's own Joyous
Pitch Invasion Studio; and the backing vocals were recorded with
friends on a small mobile system at the coffeehouse Kevin owns
with his wife Allyson, the True Love Cafe. Kevin also took on
all the engineering work himself — a first in 7Seconds history — before
handing over mixing duties to Descendents/Black Flag legend Bill
Stevenson, whose production credits include All, Anti-Flag, Good
Riddance, Lagwagon, MxPx, Season To Risk, Shades Apart, and the
Suicide Machines.
The intense, uncompromising new disc (the band's
first in five years) is sure to help expand the enthusiastic
all-ages audience that keeps turning up to see 7Seconds on the
Warped Tour or at the band's own legendary club gigs. "We're shocked to see
the amount of really young kids who come out to our shows year
after year," Kevin marvels. "It's strange, but also really
great. If we were like some of the old punk bands out touring right
now, who draw nothing but 35-plus-year-old guys who just got out
of prison or who haven't been to a punk show in 20 years and decided
to come check out the 'dinosaurs,' we would have called it quits
years ago."
With a new album brimming with more pure punk
passion than could ever be mustered by most bands half their
age (not to mention with half the talent), 7Seconds obviously
have no intention of calling it quits. "There's a genuine love and respect that the members
have for one another, and that most definitely carries over to
our supporters," says Kevin. "I believe that connection
has created an energy that has lasted for years and is the biggest
reason why we are able to keep the shows fun and intense — and
chaotic! Not many bands last this long, let alone punk bands, and
we're just happy that this still manages to be amazing, fresh,
and fun."
In 7Seconds' aforementioned unofficial theme
song, "Our Core," Kevin
sings, "Who'll make the comeback record/Who's going to be
the one to make it all as great as it once was?" But it's
completely rhetorical question: After one listen, it's clear that
7Seconds are that band, and that Take It Back, Take It On,
Take It Over is that record.
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