Eastside Suicides profile picture

Eastside Suicides

I Took A Twenty Dollar Hellride....

About Me

Little Dolls: Austin band dies wanting to be the best dog in your show- "Solidly in the tradition of Stooges/NY Dolls rock" . . . wait, wait, all the red lights in the universe flashed on the nanosecond my internal fact checkers saw that phrase. So I asked around..as in, I queried some rock experts whose music collections/accumulations are even twice the size of mine. It's now official. Here's the grand total of American groups who have recorded/issued outstanding versions of identikit Stooges- or NY Dolls-style whateveryouwannacallit: zero. This would make Austin's recently defunct East Side Suicides an anomaly, because their twin-guitar attack traffics in only those two styles, and a good 60 percent of the riffs/songs catch fire even by strict "Shake Appeal"/"Trash" standards. The 14 originals at hand are spread between two different self-titled attempts at an "official album" recorded/issued a year apart (seven tunes duplicated, seven that aren't), with the contrasting merits/demerits of the two collections a standoff. Lead singer Frankie Nowhere's vocals intentionally tilt throughout between faux-Iggy or faux-Dolls as the riffs or words dictate, fittingly enough.Gold stars for the strongest tunes would include "Don't Kiss" and "Justa Lookin," a duo that would've upped Raw Power's historical rating. And seriously, ditto, the four-minute live-set-closer, moody mid-tempo throb of "Black Leather Boots" would have made for a far more effective final Funhouse track than endless random sax honking.The practical inference would be that, if you have ever gleaned listening enjoyment from any of the failed (according to me and above experts) 6,034,572 wannabe Stooges/ Dolls outfits of the past near 30 years, these two sets are probably the best-of-show stateside and should be tracked down . . . I certainly wouldn't wait another three decades to see if anyone else in our colonies gets it even half right. by Metal Mike Saunders/ Angry Samoans December 21st, 2004 1:09 PM Layout made by |E|M|O|L|O|V|E|

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 10/1/2006
Band Website: theeastsidesuicides.com
Band Members: Frankie Nowhere/Vox Kan/GuitarFastTammy/Guitar BJ/Bass Tom Laundry/Drums
Influences: The Stooges, The New York Dolls, The Dead Boys, The Rolling Stones, T-Rex, Slade, The Sweet, The Ramones, The Damned
Sounds Like: (Super Secret) If Iggy Pop can reform the Stooges after 30-some odd years, it stands to reason that plenty of younger musicians are still enthralled with tweaking Pop's patented formula of runway poses and raw power. Although the debut from Austin's Eastside Suicides is more Max's Kansas City than Motor City mayhem, this 10-song LP still radiates enough lowbrow druggy splendor to turn your neighborhood shooting gallery into a roomful of junkies doing the mashed potato. Credit goes to singer Frankie Nowhere, who delivers his lines in a blunt, flouncy sneer perfectly positioned between Mick Jagger and Joey Ramone. He's like the psychotically leering doorman beckoning you into an after-hours bar, or as on "Booker T. Projects," the slightly unbalanced friend who somehow always talks you into giving him a ride to the 'hood. Then there's Kan and Fast Tammy, whose twin-guitar attack is equally capable of power-chord carpet-bombing and leads that work their way under your skin like a homemade shiv. Bassist B.J. and drummer Tom Laundry, meanwhile, keep the 40-minute disc from bogging down by not overplaying; their restraint acts as fog lights cutting through the haze of guitars and Nowhere's wild-eyed antics. Still, the most remarkable thing about Eastside Suicides is its unbridled enthusiasm for good old-fashioned rock & roll, the kind you can dance to, that so pervades the album it no longer seems that important to wonder what a "$20 hell ride" might mean. Christopher Gray/ The Austin Chronicle
Record Label: unsigned
Type of Label: None