Damaged (Black Flag album)
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| Damaged | |||||
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| Studio album by Black Flag | |||||
| Released | December 1981 | ||||
| Recorded | Unicorn Studios, August 1981 | ||||
| Genre | Hardcore punk | ||||
| Length | 34:56 | ||||
| Label | SST | ||||
| Producer | Black Flag, Spot | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Black Flag chronology | |||||
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Damaged is a 1981 hardcore punk album released by Black Flag on SST Records, their first full-length LP. It is widely considered both a classic of the era and the peak of Black Flag's career. In 2003, the album was ranked number 340 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
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[edit] Album history
Black Flag had made at least two aborted attempts to record a full-length album since the release of their first EP Nervous Breakdown, with singers Keith Morris, Chavo Pederast and Dez Cadena; some of the Pederast sessions became the Jealous Again EP, while selections from two of many Cadena sessions became the Six Pack EP and the "Louie Louie"/"Damaged I" single; other session outtakes would later comprise the Everything Went Black double album.[1] At the time of the recording, Cadena had moved to rhythm guitar (a position he had initially intended to take when Pederast was still in the band)[1] and 20-year-old Washington, DC expatriate Henry Rollins had become the band's new lead singer weeks before the sessions occurred.[2] Unlike Pederast, who had never sung in a studio before[1] and Cadena, who hadn't even sung before joining the band,[1] Rollins already had one recording credit to his name with the short-lived DC hardcore punk band State of Alert, who recorded No Policy, an EP released earlier in the year on Dischord Records.[3][4]
The band recorded their backing tracks without Rollins, who overdubbed vocals with band leaders Greg Ginn (guitar) and Chuck Dukowski (bass) coaching him afterward.[2] The most complicated vocal tracks ended up being Dukowski's "What I See", which was supposed to have an improvised speech in the song's bridge but ended up having one written out by Dukowski when Rollins could not come up with anything that he was satisfied with, and "T.V. Party", which featured backing vocals from the entire band.
The studio they used, Unicorn Studios, was owned by the record company SST Records had made a distribution deal with, and the band was actually living in another part of the building prior to the sessions.[2]
Drummer ROBO was wearing bracelets on his left wrist that rattled when he played; the rattling, whenever he would hit his snare drum, especially when he hit downbeats on it, became part of the sound.[2]
The version of "Rise Above" on the album was actually recorded for a single release at an earlier session with Rollins; another version was recorded during the album sessions but the band decided to include the version intended for the single instead.[2]
The closing track, "Damaged I", is technically Rollins' first writing credit with the band. In his book Get In The Van, Rollins reports that he used to improvise the lyrics every night when the song was performed live. Two takes of the vocal were done, and the first was used.[2]
[edit] The album cover
The album cover, shot by punk photographer Ed Colver, features Rollins putting his fist through a mirror. The effect was made by cracking the mirror with a hammer, while the "blood" on Rollins' wrist is a mixture of red ink and coffee[5].
[edit] Business disputes with Unicorn
Aided by their distribution deal with Unicorn, which was associated with MCA Records, an initial pressing of 25,000 copies was made. Prior to the album being released, MCA Records president Al Bergamo listened to the album and claimed for some unknown reason that the record was "anti-parent", although he did not (or could not) cite a lyric that led him to make such a claim.[6] As a result, MCA refused to distribute the already-pressed-and-packaged album which bore an MCA Distributing Corp. logo on the lower right corner of the back cover; Black Flag members had to visit the pressing plant and apply a label over the MCA Distributing Corp. logo which read, "As a parent... I found it an anti-parent record"[7][3][2] -- thus essentially throwing Bergamo's words back in his face.
Longtime SST employee Joe Carducci has reported that the "anti parent" statement was a red herring. In fact, according to Carducci, Unicorn Records was so poorly managed and so deeply in debt that MCA would lose money in distributing Damaged, regardless of its content, and was eager to sever its relationship with Unicorn by any possible pretext.[8]
SST ended up distributing Damaged on its own; as a result, Unicorn filed suit against Black Flag and SST, claiming breach of contract. Black Flag were suddenly enjoined from recording any more records under their own name[3], although SST were able to continue with its own release schedule, releasing The Minutemen's The Punch Line and the debuts of Meat Puppets and Saccharine Trust[5]. However, Unicorn would release a single of an updated "T.V. Party" before the legal trouble started, a recording (just as ironically) commissioned by MCA for the soundtrack to the movie Repo Man[9].
The legal dispute between Black Flag and Unicorn tied the band up for almost two years, during which time they released Everything Went Black, a double album of pre-Rollins outtakes, under the names of the individual musicians and vocalists on the record[10]. Unicorn ended up filing even more legal briefs, claiming that Black Flag had violated a court injunction against releasing new records. Ginn and Dukowski ended up doing several days in Los Angeles County Jail for contempt of court, but the case fizzled out soon afterward when Unicorn went out of business, thus freeing Black Flag of any further obligation to the label.[3][2][5]
[edit] Known outtakes and alternate versions
In addition to the known unissued version of "Rise Above" recorded during the album sessions and the alternate take of "Damaged I", a version of Black Flag's arrangement of "Louie Louie" was also recorded. According to Rollins in Get In The Van, this version featured the band going into "a strange jam at the end until the tape ran out;" It was never mixed down in any form[2]. As of July 2006, it was unknown if the master tapes to these outtakes were still in existence. Henry Rollins later stated on his radio show's blog that alternate versions of "What I See" and "at least one other song that I can't remember" also came out of the Damaged sessions, and that other outtakes from Black Flag's other albums also exist.[11]
A version of "Depression" was recorded to be the B-side of the shelved "Rise Above" single.[2]
[edit] Release variations
- A 1982 European release issued by Roadrunner Records' RoadRacer imprint substitutes the later single version of "T.V. Party" for the album version on side one, and adds the Dez Cadena-led single version of "Louie Louie" to the end of side two[12].
- The initial CD reissue of Damaged, for some unknown reason, appended the Jealous Again EP. All subsequent versions contain the original album only[13][10].
[edit] Influence
- The descending chromatic guitar riff that opens "Rise Above" has been sampled (frequently over James Brown's "Funky Drummer" breakbeat) by Public Enemy (for the song "Buck Whylin'", credited to Terminator X), X-Clan (for "Holy Rum Swig" on Xodus), and the Beastie Boys (for "What You Give Is What You Get" on the Shadrach 12" single).
- A Perfect Circle covered "Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" on their 2004 album eMOTIVe.
- Pennywise covered "Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" for the Fearless Records Punk Bites 2 compilation and the Australian tour CD of Vans Warped Tour.
- Saint Vitus covered "Thirsty and Miserable" on their 1987 EP of the same name.
- Dirty Projectors front man Dave Longstreth re-wrote a large part of the album from memory for his 2007 album Rise Above.
- Colin of Arabia covered "Nervous Breakdown" on their Four Scenes, One Family split.
- For the West Memphis 3 benefit album, Rise Above, which featured various artists covering Black Flag's songs, prolific vocalist Mike Patton (formerly of Mr. Bungle and Faith No More, to name two more well-known examples) covered "Six Pack."
[edit] Track listing
[edit] Side one
- "Rise Above" (Ginn) – 2:26
- "Spray Paint (The Walls)" (Dukowski, Ginn) – 0:33
- "Six Pack" (Ginn) – 2:20
- "What I See" (Dukowski) – 1:55
- "T.V. Party" (Ginn) – 3:31
- "Thirsty and Miserable" (Cadena, Medea, ROBO) – 2:05
- "Police Story" (Ginn) – 1:32
- "Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" (Ginn) – 1:47
[edit] Side two
- "Depression" (Ginn) – 2:28
- "Room 13" (Ginn, Medea) – 2:04
- "Damaged II" (Ginn) – 3:23
- "No More" (Dukowski) – 2:25
- "Padded Cell" (Dukowski, Ginn) – 1:47
- "Life of Pain" (Ginn) – 2:50
- "Damaged I" (Ginn, Rollins) – 3:50
[edit] Personnel
- Henry Rollins – lead vocals
- Greg Ginn – lead guitar, backing vocals
- Dez Cadena – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
- Charles Dukowski – bass, backing vocals
- ROBO – drums, backing vocals
- Mugger – backing vocals
- Spot – producer, engineer
- Francis Buckley – mixer
- Ed Colver – artwork
[edit] References and footnotes
- ^ a b c d Spot with Chuck Dukowski, Liner notes of Everything Went Black, SST Records, 1983
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Henry Rollins, Get In The Van: On The Road With Black Flag, 2.13.61 Publications, 1994
- ^ a b c d Michael Azzerad, Our Band Could Be Your Life, Little Brown, 2001
- ^ Henry Rollins, Unwanted Songs 1981–1991, 2.13.61 Publications, 2002
- ^ a b c James Parker, Henry Rollins: Turned On, Orion Books, 2001
- ^ Coincidentally, one of Rollins' ad-libbed lyrics on "Damaged I" seems to refer to some rather hardcore military-like discipline that he had endured from his estranged ultra-conservative father.
- ^ Al Bergamo (uncredited), sticker applied to back cover of original pressing of Damaged, SST Records/Unicorn Records, 1981
- ^ Joe Carducci, Rock and the Pop Narcotic, 2.13.61 Publications, 1993
- ^ Henry Rollins, Broken Summers, 2.13.61 Publications, 2003
- ^ a b Black Flag entry on Trouser Press Online Record Guide
- ^ Henry Rollins, HarmonyInMyHead.com, annotated playlist for July 11, 2006 show, accessed July 17, 2006.
- ^ Liner notes of European release of Damaged, RoadRacer/Roadrunner Records, 1982
- ^ SST Records mail order catalog, 1990
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