Punknews.orgPunknews.org Logo
Review Navigator

BackForward

Features

 

Contests

 




Reviews

Bad Religion - New Maps of Hell (Deluxe)
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Credo Mobile

Not being from New York it often feels like I'm the only person in existence aware of the Unsacred Hearts and, by extension, Man In Gray. The Hearts released a jumpin' little self-titled EP in 2004, completely restoring my faith that unsolicited, unknown promo mailings may conceal gems. Across seven tracks they proved themselves star students of their `70s forbearers, channelling Richard Hell, the Heartbreakers and others in a collection of tightly wound garage songs about nothing more or less than the subject of rock'n'roll itself. The band's tour dates, never much more than local, indicate a group that's on top of the world in their own region and doomed to obscurity the next town over: Guys with day jobs and so much potential.

Check the Unsacred Hearts' show dates, website, label or anything else for more than a few seconds and you'll stumble across Man In Gray. From my outsider perspective, it really does look like they're each other's biggest fans. Of course, I've skewered things, as Man In Gray comes armed with more than the usual amount of press buzz. It's well founded, too. The female-fronted band calls to mind Call The Doctor-era Sleater-Kinney crossed with some New York no-wave, particularly on their stomping opener "Thirty-Six." "Hoboken" takes a more traditional punk rock approach and it proves how closely aligned these two bands are in spirit.

The Unsacred Hearts ask "Do You Like Spy Movies?" on their opener, a lyrically odd track that's one of the more swaggering, attitude-driven tunes they've ever put together. "The End Is Near" seems to follow the instrumental pattern established with "I Was Born To Be Polite & Kind," the lead track from their prior EP. While it's too early to say if this is the band's "standard" song type (and if it is, it's a good standard), it does show that they're playing to their strengths.

Here you find two young, lively bands well schooled in some quality influences. That they happen to have gestated in the same scene makes this a great little artefact of what will one day be seen as "the early years." I expect, no, demand that we see celebrated full-lengths from both these bands in the next year. I'll be very surprised otherwise.



People who liked this also liked:
The Clash - Sandinista!Weezer - PinkertonPixies - DoolittleTelevision - Marquee MoonSex Pistols - Never Mind the BollocksRamones - RamonesThe Clash - The ClashThe Weakerthans - Reconstruction SiteThe Hives - Veni Vidi ViciousX-Ray Spex - Germ Free Adolescents [expanded]



Please login or register to post comments.
What are the benefits of having a Punknews.org account?
  • Share your opinion by posting comments on the stories that interest you
  • Rate music and bands and help shape the weekly top ten
  • Let Punknews.org use your ratings to help you find bands and albums you might like
  • Customize features on the site to get the news the way you want.

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 9, 2005 at 11:06 PM (EDT)

    Ron Howard is a doof. But he's hilarious on Simpsons.

    -Will

    Posted by stevejonestherealbones on 2005-09-09 22:48:52

    willow was an awesome movie

    - jones

    Posted by fistchode on 2005-09-09 21:19:16

    Oh, well I guess I shouldn't have left this window open for longer than 10 minutes, and then decided to reply.

    Posted by fistchode on 2005-09-09 21:18:27

    I'm fairly sure our buddy Willo has doing a "funny" impression of the person who posted similar sounding message in all the recent reviews.

    jackman.

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 9, 2005 at 9:08 PM (EDT)

    I was just making fun of the SERIOUSLY guy, who I hope becomes a regular commentor in the vain of the AKAs' street team, or perhaps www.myspace.com/blacktiebombers.

    -Will

    Posted by shindo on 2005-09-09 20:45:40

    Hey, I like Will.

    -adam

    Posted by maverick on 2005-09-09 20:27:51

    Please, don't ever feel like you have to justify yourself to Will.

    -Scott

    Posted by shindo on 2005-09-09 17:48:10

    This is my first review after a few months of nothing (for various reasons) so it (and a bunch of reviews to come) are going to be a bit late.

    -adam

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 9, 2005 at 5:09 PM (EDT)

    Adam,

    WHAT were you thinking? This is GREAT release that came out WEEKS ago, and you just NOW reviewed it.

    These bands are pretty cool. I found a Heartbreakers Live in '75 disc at Half Price Books last night. YEAH!

    -Will

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 9, 2005 at 9:55 AM (EDT)

    Every Time I Die came out a few weeks back. Not atrocious enough to get worked up about, but still pretty bad.

    Posted by AlmostPunkEnough on 2005-09-09 04:27:39

    "can we ban the fucker who keeps posting that in every review"

    i'm against censorship of any kind on this site, but i pretty much second that motion. at the very least can you post his IP so someone who lives near him can kick him in the chest?

    Posted by fistchode on 2005-09-09 03:59:08

    Didn't some band with "dying" in the title release a record or something? As I Lay Dying? Every Time I Die? Or maybe it was something with "bleeding" in the title. I forget. Maybe he's whining about that.

    Posted by thefirstfive on 2005-09-09 02:46:20

    can we ban the fucker who keeps posting that in every review