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    #21
    Old volume 605016 has a size of 1799497
    1,374,960,455 bytes
    New volume 402424 has a size of 1793930
    1,370,655,479 bytes

    Old volume 600000 has a size of 1605177
    1,236,672,528 bytes
    New volume 402481 has a size of 1590204
    1,225,169,712 bytes

    Old volume 600869 has a size of 565174
    372,506,772 bytes
    New volume 402483 has a size of 585713
    388,314,564 bytes

    Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

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      #22
      This is an interview I did with Jello Biafra - Jan. '81
      TC - When did the band form?
      JB - We formed in San Francisco although we don't originally come
      from there and we played our first gig on July 19th 1978, after
      being together a week.
      TC - What was that like?
      JB - It was great fun. Because of the name a few people turned up to see
      just what the bottom of the bill support band would be like. We were
      the first band in San Francisco to cause a lot of chaos for quite a
      while. In those days there were so few people at the gigs you could
      jump through them. You could run past the people at the front to the
      people who were drinking at the back, sitting at tables and you
      could knock over the tables and shampoo them with cigarette butts
      and things, pour beer over them. Oh, those were the days...
      TC - Who first influenced you to form a band?
      JB - A lot of things. Walter Mitty, if you know who he is?
      TC - No.
      JB - He's a fictitious character from America who spends all of his time
      dreaming about things he wishes he was. He's a fighter plane pilot,
      at another point he's a surgeon, things like that. Well, we've all
      got a Walter Mitty influence. Plus the Ramones. They played this
      Country and Western club in Denver, and the audience were scared
      tulipless. I loved every minute of it. It was in Jan. '77. I loved
      all the energy they had and there weren't any guitar solos. It
      sort of hit me, I should do this, I could do this. I don't have
      to lock myself in a closet for 10 years and then come out and
      imitate Jimi Hendrix after all. I went to England that summer and
      saw some more bands, came back and I was in California and going
      to San Francisco at weekends to see punk bands. They were about 6
      months behind the English bands. I could see bands picking up
      instruments for the first time and learning to play in public. I
      thought this would be a good place to form a band. So I quit school
      and went back to Balder where my parents lived, worked in a nursing
      home and washed very dirty linen, got some money and went back,
      slowly and surely help put the band together. It was actually
      Ray, the guitarist who put the band together. He put a little ad
      in a store "Guitarist wants to form punk band" so I rang him up,
      we got some songs together in the garage. Then we got this guy
      called Klaus to play bass and eventually, a week before our first
      gig we got a guitarist who called himself 6025 and he left about
      6 months later.
      TC - How do American audiences differ to British ones?
      JB - Lets see...For the audiences I saw over here I think, at times
      the American ones are wilder. Which is good and bad because some-
      times they're into the bad side of violence instead of the good
      way, in that they're into kicking tulip out of each other. They get
      bopped around like human pinballs. That's great fun. It's the
      difference between pogoing and fighting I guess.
      TC - You've had some trouble with your name over here, is it worse in
      America?
      JB - Quite a bit. Our album hasn't even come out over there. We played
      on the 15th anniversary of John F. Kennedys murder and the local
      paper turned up and had an outcry.
      TC - How did you first get your records out over here?
      JB - There was a few of the original 'California Uber Alles' that got
      shipped over here and somehow John Peel gotta hold of it and he
      played it a bit and Bob Last from Fast was staying at this guys
      house who he knew in New York and he just happened to put Dead
      Kennedys on the turntable and he liked it, so he called us up and
      wanted to put us out on Fast. That was really lucky. A fluke! It
      could have been 1 of 50 bands from America who were equally
      deserving. We're very grateful to Bob Last. We would have stayed
      with them but we wanted to do an album rather than keep releasing
      singles and E.P's. Cherry Red were the only label in the world
      willing to give us enough money even to put out a low budget album.
      TC - Are there many punk bands starting up in America?
      JB - There's lots of them. I would say since '77 there's been about 150
      good punk singles or like good art singles as opposed to tulipty ones
      Oh well, let's reel of some names...ones that are together, that are
      real good are...Flipper from S.F., who basically sound like Lou
      Reed's 'Metal Machine Music' album with vocals and a beat and they
      drive people to the same sort of mania as punk bands, but they call
      themselves pet rock instead of punk rock. There's 2 more pet rock
      bands called the Wounds and the Animal Things. The Wounds are
      really good but I've not seen the Animal Things which is embarrassing
      as I know every one in the band.
      TC - Are there many places to play?
      JB - A few. There's a lot of clubs that call themselves new wave skinny
      tie pop bands. I'll just mention a few more names of bands, Black
      Flag who have a single and a 12" ep, D.O.A. from Vancouver who are
      great. They have two 4 track ep's, 2 singles and an album out at
      this point. Subhumans also from Vancouver, the Government from
      Terado, the Misfits, the Mad and 8 Eyed Spy from New York. No
      Alternative from S.F., the Mutants, the Contractions, the Units are
      a really good electronic band. The Circle Jerks, you'd love them.
      They pay as much attention to commercial slickness as Discharge.
      There's a lot of bands that have a lot of trash appeal like
      Discharge. I like Discharge a lot. They reminded me of the Germs.
      The Plugs, The Go-Go's.
      TC - They're a ska band, aren't they?
      JB - No, they aren't ska. They're a type of 60's influenced pop rock
      but not like whimpo Elvis Costello type pop. They write real good
      songs.
      TC - Do you get much trouble from the police at your gigs?
      JB - Yes. It just happens to depend on the venue and who are playing
      when the police shut it down. Most venue's, especially rented halls
      have trouble staying open for more then 4 or 5 months because of
      the cops.
      TC - Is it as hard over here?
      JB - So I've heard.
      TC - Have you had any of your gigs stopped?
      JB - Paris, they pulled the plug on us both nights at 10 because the
      cops came around. There's going to be more trouble because of
      Reagen. If our album hasn't even come out over there and if it don't
      come out before Reagen takes office, it never will.
      TC - Would you rather live in England then America?
      JB - It all depends. There's some things I like about America better and
      some things are worse than over here. America is less crowded, which
      is a good thing and there's more of an extreme change of scenery.
      If you ever run into mountains, they're gonna be big mountains. You
      never know, we might have to live over here if Reagen goes too far,
      but if he starts a war I guess you guys will get dragged into it,
      lucky you.
      TC - Uuuuggg, run out of questions, do you want to rabbit on?
      JB - What should I say...there is nowhere as near as many fanzines in
      America as there are in England, but there's this guy who lives
      just below me and he does this fanzine called Creep. It covers
      bands and deals with political scenes. It covers what's happening
      rather than the theory. It covered the riots at city hall, San
      Francisco, after this gay politician was let off with man slaughter
      even though he'd shot the S.F. mayor and a gay politician. He shot
      them dead. But he was an ex-cop, a hero. His defence was that he had
      eaten too many pinkies, which is an American pastry, therefore he
      was temporarily insane and the jury believed him, so that night the
      gay community and a lot of punks, went down to city hall, broke a
      load of windows and burnt a lot of cop cars, and our album cover
      is from the riots and shows the cars burning.
      TC - What are your political views?
      JB - Well, lets nummerize the B volume of the encyclopaedia in 2 sentences
      Well I guess I'm closest to an anarchist. I basically try to take
      the issues as they come. The Indians are real close to an anarchist
      society being able to make it work. It would be hard to make it
      work in an area as large as England. Let's see what else I can
      talk about...One of the nicest things about being in a band is that
      you can shout your mouth off and complain about things for a living.
      One of the reasons we're in the band is that we're mentally unfit
      for work.
      Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

      Comment


        #23
        The male chromosone is an incomplete female chromosone. In other words
        the male is a walking abortion; aborted at the gene stage. To be male
        is to be deficient, emotionally; maleness is a deficiency disease and
        males are emotional cripples.
        Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
          I'm using the 'how to keep idiots in suspense' approach.
          Have you got a piece of paper in front of you with "PTO" on both sides?
          "Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny. "


          Thomas Jefferson

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