Tag Archives: hardcore

two videos- Willful Neglect live at The Upper Deck- Minneapolis, and Castle Greens- North St Paul, 1982

17 Aug

St Paul’s finest. Two minutes total for each clip! This is how they rolled back then.


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Thanks to Roger DeBace for getting these videos together, they give me goosebumps.
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Bio:

Willful Neglect were a band from the East Side of St. Paul, Minnesota. The band was formed in late 1981. In less than a year Willful Neglect had 12 original songs and in the summer of ’82 decided to record at Blackberry Way Studios with Steve Fjelstad, who also recorded many Twin Tone Records acts. The result was the Willful Neglect 12″ EP, released November of 1982 on the band’s Neglected Records. Maximum Rock’n'Roll fanzine called “Abort the Mission” from the EP “one of the best songs of 1982″ on the cover of MRR issue #4.

They were featured on local CBS affiliate WCCO-TV on a “Local Punk” news report, where a show at Castle Greens in North St. Paul was filmed for broadcast. The band also played clubs in St Paul & Minneapolis such as The 7th Street Entry, McCafferty’s, and Goofy’s Upper Deck with bands such as Hüsker Dü, Minor Threat, The Circle Jerks, Loud Fast Rules (who became Soul Asylum), The Effigies, Rifle Sport, Man-Sized Action, Final Conflict, Ground Zero, The Reds, and Civil Defense. They then started to play other Midwestern cities such as Chicago and Milwaukee while becoming friends with The Effigies, Die Kreuzen, Naked Raygun, Articles of Faith, Sacred Order, Rights of the Accused, The Clitboys, and Negative Element.

Willful Neglect recorded their second 12″ EP Justice For No One in early 1983, once again employing Steve Fjelstad at Blackberry Way. The Replacements recorded their EP Stink the very same month in the same studio. Justice For No One was released in the summer of 1983 on Neglected Records. The band then toured the West Coast in August, playing Reno, San Jose, San Francisco, San Fernando Valley, East LA, and Albuquerque. They shared the stage with bands like DRI, SS Decontrol, Government Issue, Agression, Ill Repute, The Fuckups, Los Olvidados, Plain Wrap, and Personality Crisis, and stayed at the BYO house in Hollywood while in southern California.

A third record was recorded but not released “Big Enough to Get It” Six of the tracks from Big Enough… have ended up on 1982-1984, a CD released Fall of 2003 on Neglected Records. This CD contains all 23 tracks from both of the first two EPs with the six bonus tracks.

SS Decontrol – Government Issue – Willful Neglect – Stalag 13- Patriots — 29 YEARS AGO TODAY

9 Aug

In California, a night I will never forget. Thanks for sharing, Roger.

Fresh Air Radio KFAI 90.3 FM “Root of All Evil” show commercial

1 Sep

One minute of forty five seconds of why Earl Root was a genius. If you’ve ever wondered why Earl caused so much ballyhoo around the Twin Cities, check out this short but thorough commercial for his radio show. Thanks to Willie the Lizard for providing me the 1988 cassette that this came from.

Root of All Evil commercial


Sacred Order- Milwaukee’s finest, second demo tape, 1984

28 Aug

Notorious for all the right reasons, Sacred Order were the real deal back in 1984, and judging from recent YouTube clips, they still are. I got to see ‘em live in Minneapolis & Milwaukee back in the day, & have very vivid memories hanging out at a club called Niko’s south of Downtown Milwaukee. Knowing his politics, I got a raised eyebrow & a smirk when I met Tim Yohannon while I was wearing my hand-made Sacred Order t-shirt. This cassette rocks hard, and you should go to myspace & find the band to buy their 25th anniversary CD.  Thanks to Peter Davis for turning me onto these guys, and to Mykel Podolak for allowing me to post these tracks here.

I.H.E. (I call it Everything Dies)


International House of DEATH


Ollie Scooba (I Love Alice Cooper)


Irenic Regime “In the Basement” cassette 1/17/83

19 Aug

Irenic Regime featured John Freeman, post-Outpatience & pre-Magnolias. I saw ‘em play a couple of times, coincidentally onetime was  in a basement at one of those hardcore parties in Minneapolis oh so long ago. I’ve played this cassette many times, and I’ve always loved it. It is the one tape I’ve got to so far in my 2010 excavation that isn’t doing too well, so I’ve put a call out to a few folks (perhaps you yourself can help?) to see if they have a healthier cassette copy of this . I did get three songs to play pretty well off of my well-worn tape, if I get a batter copy, I’ll replace these postings. These songs still sound fresh, and they’re going on 28 years old. Wow. Thanks to John Freeman for allowing me to post these tracks- I’ve been a fan of his songs since the beginning of time it seems.

Marching Feet


Stop The Bombs


Dead End Street


The Burger Corpse cassette Twin Cities’ underground 1983

15 Aug

The Burger Corpse cassette was an important link in the chain of punk-new wave-underground-indie compilations that came out of Minnesota. It fits neatly between Kitten & Hypnotic Tornado time-wise, and also matched those two early 80s tapes in format- the cassette. Interesting tidbit: Ed Ackerson is behind 33% of the songs contained on this tape. Thanks to Lee Engele for giving me persmission to put this up to hear- she’s working on a CD re-release that’ll have some special packaging, and she’s working with original cover artist Mike Etoll again. Here’s a few tracks until the CD is available:

Church Picnic “Did You Hear/ What the Heck”


Boy Elroy “Punk Rock, Man’


Steve McQueen & The Good Brains “Dub Monster”


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