*In stock & available in January 2009!*
JAPANTHER are a two-piece punk rock band but that hardly defines them. having been
playing for around 4 years, the band has released 13 + records, gone on a handful of world
tours, written a sound track and played it live to a puppet show at the 2006 biennale, and
then released a DVD and soundtrack to it. they've played for a synchronized swim team.
have played under bridges, on boats, on street corners, in bedrooms in large festivals.
anywhere you can think of they have played, and play like they are playing to 40,000 people.
review by waterfromt records
Ian Vanek and Matt Reilly were both pratt students when they formed JAPANTHER in 2001,
and have since gone about redefining what one normally expects from a punk rock band.
sure, they've played more than their share of bedrooms, not to mention designing their own
record covers and making zines - typical DIY stuff. but how many groups do you know that
have accompanied synchronized swimming or written a score for - and performed live with -
a puppet show at miami's art basel and the 2006 whitney biennial? so, four albums, a handful
singles and EPs, and hundreds of basement parties later, JAPANTHER releases their fifth
full-length, "skuffed up my huffy", which captures the energy of their spastic live shows in
glorious lo-fi surround sound. you can practically smell the burning of overheated amp
tubes while you listen. their breakneck speed performances can easily be compared to
another duo from the northeast, LIGHTNING BOLT, however, Vanek and Reilly's songs are
steeped in fun, anthemic, hardcore tradition, where political messages are masked with pop
references. but again, not so typical, the band augments their bass and drum arsenal with
telephone mics, thrift store keyboards, drum machines and samples recorded on old
cassettes. and while "skuffed up my huffy" has punk rock flowing through its veins, the
album is sequenced more like a hip-hop record with lots of spoken word dialogue and beat
collages tacked on to the beginnings of the songs. after the motorhead meets suicide opener
"see evil" fades out, we hear a brief manipulated snippet of the "big boys don't cry"
interlude from 10cc's "i'm not in love" and then the ramonesy "summer of 79" kicks in,
complete with lots of ooooohs, and references to gas shortages and Jimmy Carter. a few
tracks later we get to live show favorite "$100 cover" although three minutes long, only a
minute and forty-five seconds is actual song, the rest being a playful montage of toy casios,
hip-hop beats and radio static. still, Vanek and Reilly manage to keep the punk rock torch
burning bright while interjecting some 21st century-styled art school flavor. it's not so far
removed from old DEAD KENNEDYS and GERMS records but thankfully, i don't expect to
see any liberty-spiked kids walking down st. marks place with JAPANTHER´s logos painted
on the backs of their jackets any time soon.
review by other music