Poetry Written
In Gasoline > A restrospective
look
into
the scene shaping work of the seminal Swedish band.
In
1998 a Swedish hardcore band called Refused released their third and what
was to prove their final studio album The
Shape of Punk to Come.
Despite being lavished with praise amongst circles in the punk underground,
the album largely slipped unnoticed, underneath the radar of the mainstream
music press at a time when the nu-metal behemoth was beginning its ominous
rise, and was dismissed on the underground scene by some purists for straying
too far from the strict hardcore rulebook. After close to seven years of
increasing inner tension and ideological conflict, after touring the album
the band called it quits. The music world barely batted an eye-lid at the
announcement.
Fast-forward
to 2005 and Refused songs are played every weekend in rock clubs the length
and breadth of the country, The Shape of Punk to Come is
widely heralded as one of the most important punk-rock albums ever recorded.
A veritable who's who of rock music today are lining up to name drop them;
from stadium giants Metallica, Foo Fighters and Sum 41,
to the UK's very own Muse, Hell Is For Heroes and the recently
departed Million Dead, who even named themselves after a Refused
lyric. It seems everybody who is anybody is going out of their way to pay
tribute to the band.
2004
saw their record label Burning Heart re-release three of their albums and
soon their long delayed retrospective DVD
Refused are F*cking Dead will
be upon us. So let�s look at the legacy they left us and examine what's
exactly happened in the last seven years to lift a group of disbanded far-left
leaning Swedes from relative obscurity to being one of the most influential
bands on modern rock music.
'Sitting
up all night planning my revolution with a catchy phrase. A shitty band
with an awesome plan.' Refused, 'Coup d´Etat'
Firm
followers of the straight edge ethic, Refused formed in early 1992 on the
north-east coast of Sweden, in the city of Umeå. Rising from the
ashes of Step Forward, godfathers of the local hardcore scene,
the band was the brainchild of drummer David
Sandström and vocalist Dennis
Lyxzén. The formative years
of the band's life were marked with a host of line up changes as the band
strived to find the perfect chemistry. Despite the revolving doors their
recorded output never faltered, in 1993 they released their The
Is The New Deal EP, and later
in that year they recorded their debut full length This
Just Might Be... The Truth, while
1994 saw the emergence of their Everlasting
seven track. The band themselves readily admit how much US hardcore standard
bearers like Youth of Today and Gorilla Biscuits influenced
their early sound. Much like Nirvana with Bleach and At
The Drive-In's Acrobatic Tenement, their earlier recordings,
while definitely worth investigating, only really show fleeting glimpses
of what the band were truly capable of at a later date.
'Forget
about your self-pity, forget about your petty problems, forget about your
small world' Refused, 'Crusader of Hopelessness'
Listening
back to these tracks today, one of the most interesting and significant
aspects of their evolution at this time is the shift in lyrical content,
with Lyxzén abandoning more personal themes and moving towards the
political. From seething anti-capitalist rhetoric to venomous tirades on
social oppression, it's territory that in time would come to define the
band to many, and open the minds of many a young person around the globe.
With
the finally settled line up of David Sandström, Dennis Lyxzén,
Kristofer
Steen and Jon
Brännström, 1996's Songs
to Fan The Flames of Discontent
was where Refused fully began to craft their own distinctive sound, and
in turn, to catch the attention of punk, hardcore and metal fans across
the UK and mainland Europe. Many consider the album to be Refused's year
zero, given it was the first time the "classic" line up had written together,
with David Sandström himself admitting that the group almost consider
this as their first album.
In
late 2005 we're swamped week in, week out with identikit hardcore bands
blatantly pillaging the latter day Refused sound, using the album as a
blueprint to success. So it's a testament to its quality that despite its
many imitators, nine years on from its initial release Songs to Fan
The Flames of Discontent still sounds like such a remarkable, pure
and vital album. Undoubtedly Refused's most aggressive and metallic material,
it's the sound of protest music at its very fiercest.
'They
say the classics never go out of style, but they do... they do. Somehow
baby, I never thought we'd do, too.' Refused,
'Worms of the Senses'
After
a heavy bout of touring, the band became increasingly frustrated and tired
of the insular thinking and hypocritical actions of the punk scene. In
late 1997 Refused decamped for eight months with the now renowned producers
Pelle
Henricsson and Eskil Lövström, to begin working on
what was to become their definitive release.
"We
made this album wanting to challenge people's preconceptions of what a
Punk band could be and what it could play, because Punk is the most conservative
musical form there is. Even in Hardcore, there are so many rules about
what is and what is not acceptable, and that completely negates the whole
spirit of the original idea." Dennis Lyxzén,
Refused.
The
fact that the inlay sleeve of The Shape of Punk to Come contained
an introductory essay attempting to explain their evolution should go some
way to illustrating the full extent to which the band so daringly overhauled
their sound. Explosive opening track 'Worms of the Senses/Faculties of
the Skull' sums up everything that's both stunning and yet utterly bewildering
about the album. Mixing spoken word, hardcore, traffic and radio samples,
electronica and techno; on paper these components appear to make a complete
mess, but in reality when it's pumping out of your speakers at full volume,
it works magnificently, augmenting as many ideas into one song as many
bands manage in their entire career.
Every
one of following 11 tracks are equally spectacular, all offering something
totally unique from the others, each a piece that complete the overall
jigsaw. Similar in one sense to Radiohead's opus OK Computer,
what are stunning tracks individually combine and sound even more compelling
when heard in their full context. From the freefall jazz drop outs of 'The
Deadly Rhythm' to the quiet / loud floorfilling perfection of 'New Noise'
to the string soaked 'Tannhäuser/Derivé', the eight minute
long eastern-tinged soundtrack to the most epic Ang Lee movie never made.
Very few bands have attempted to utterly smash boundaries as Refused did
and as a result The Shape of Punk to Come genuinely stands
out as one of the 1990's most pioneering and challenging records. Quite
simply, in a genre that is constantly evolving and re-inventing itself,
The
Shape of Punk to Come has no equals.
'I'd
rather be dead than alive by your design' Refused,
'Rather Be Dead'
Inner
tensions were perpetually hinted at, especially within the inlay of The
Shape of Punk to Come and in the midst of a seven week US tour,
the band cancelled the remaining shows and announced their split. To this
day the band members have rejected all the offers to speak to "disgusting
journalists whose only aim is the selling of issues and the cashing in
of paychecks", having turning down the cover in Alternative Press
(The biggest rock magazine in the US) last year, and have gone on to in
all intents and purposes, disown their swansong release.
Officially
their last statement claims that Refused broke up because of their disgust
of how music is always categorised, dumbed down and turned into commodity,
going on to claim that with four separate projects they would be able to
reach more people than one single entity ever could. Of course such a statement
was always going to raise a few eyebrows, and in this day and age, where
internet messageboard help spread rumours around the world at the click
of a mouse button, the reasons behind their demise certainly didn't avoid
speculation. From certain band members having difficulty keeping up the
with increasingly complex nature of the music to a widening void in their
political philosophies; no stone was left unturned by people wildly speculating
from the safe faceless anonymity that the internet provides. Certainly
the fact that, without their lead singer, Sandström, Steen and Brännström
went on to release an extremely experimental album together under the moniker
of TEXT, comprised of post The Shape of Punk to Come
material before disbanding completely, certainly does little to quell these
rumours.
'So
where do we go from here? Just about anywhere. Disorientated but alive'
Refused,
'Tannhäuser/Derivé'
Today
David Sandström has released two solo-albums under the name David
Sandström Overdrive; Kristofer Steen has been heavily involved
over the last couple of years in the development of the aforementioned
DVD; Jon Brännström is working on a project called Jon
F Kennedy; meanwhile Dennis Lyxzén greatly divides fans
opinions by fronting the decidedly more commercial sounding garage-punks
The
(International) Noise Conspiracy and has also released a trio of
solo albums under the guise of The Lost Patrol, renamed The
Lost Patrol Band earlier this year.
There's
no denying the fact that Refused have undoubtedly become something they'd
always have hated, a seminal band much like Fugazi, who due to their
fabled ethics and sub-cultural significance have become a credible name
to drop by musicians, lazy journalists and scensters. As they so eloquently
in their final press statement,
"When people are being praised as geniuses
and idols just because they play music... We will never play together again
and we will never try to glorify or celebrate what was. All that we have
to say has been said in our music/manifestos/lyrics and if that is not
enough you are not likely to get it anyway." Elaborating at the end
of the statement that they would no longer give interviews "...So that
we will no longer be tortured with memories of a time gone by and the mythmaking
that single-minded and incompetent journalism offers us."
Even
though other great acts like Botch, Husker Du, and Drive
Like Jehu have similarly gone on to receive substantially more critical
acclaim, and not to mention, commercial recognition since their demise,
Refused's rise to prominence is something else, on several grounds. While
it's been proven time and time again that it's difficult, if not impossible
to be sufficiently subjective about an album when it has only been released
relatively recently (just take a look at every music poll the great British
public are ever responsible in voting for) but with The Shape Of
Punk To Come Refused made an album much like The Beatles and Nirvana
were famed for producing; an album that will continue to be discovered
by younger and younger fans as time goes by. Music is seldom if ever truly
timeless but there's the simple undeniable fact that at the time of its
release The Shape Of Punk To Come was a criminally overlooked record.
Now, at a time when hardcore has never been so synonymous with the mainstream,
it's able to reach so many more people than it ever could at the time of
it release. With image driven bands like Atreyu, Avenged Sevenfold
and Eighteen Visions taking both their running mascara and the rather
loosely attached tag of hardcore to a new MTV generation, a fresh audience
has emerged, eager to follow the latest in musical fashion.
One
final reason as to why Refused stand out is the rather simple fact that
they appeared to split, somewhat unusually in the music world, at their
artistic peak. It could be argued that along with the likes of At The
Drive-In, Jeff Buckley and Nirvana, they ended at the
very top of their game (though the latter two for much more tragic reasons
altogether). While other acts such as Metallica continue to grind
out albums, tarnishing their once great legend in the process, these acts
never got the opportunity to disappoint fans by playing past their musical
"best before date" or releasing a disappointing record.
'Rather
be forgotten than remembered for giving in'
Refused,
'Summer Holidays vs. Punk Routine'
>
By Daniel Jones | www.rockmidgets.com
    
          
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