Music: Punk
Country: UK
Web site: www.myspace.com/theesubhumans
Cool Songs: Susan, Get out of my Way, Big Brothere
Southern Records presents a sweeping reissue of the hardcore punk group SUBHUMANS early albums. Each release comes in digipack format complete with poster inserts and original artwork. This material, which derived from the 80s, was some of the best hardcore and anarchist punk during the peak of such extreme musical styles.One might ask why Metal Centre.com is covering a punk artist. Well, punk is integral piece of metal history. Without punk and hardcore punk, we wouldnt have thrash, crossover or grind.
Throughout each of the six re-releases one will find plenty of fast, heavy, angry numbers well capable of instigating slam dancing and circle pits. Time Flies + Rats has many songs of such a nature. Consisting of the Rats EP and the Time Flies LP, the said album is a history lesson on vintage 80s hardcore.
Get out of my Way has classic punk attitude and rapid vocal rhythms. Although containing poor, distant production values, I Dont Want to Die exudes the type of flair for speed displayed by MISFITS Green Hell or fellow countrymen THE EXPLOITED. SUBHUMANS slow the pace on Susan and the ska-based number When the Bomb Drops. In addition to narrating the tragic tale of Susan Strange, Dick Lucas produces teary piano notes on Susan.
1983s From the Cradle to the Grave opens with furious drum rolls on the albums intro. Forget keeps the rocking pace complete with a soaring solo. Adversity is full of heavy but thinly produced distant guitars. The title track is another speeding hardcore scorcher but alternates with more skanking grooves.
Although played at a slower tempo overall, The Day the Country Died, the groups first full length, includes some of the bands strongest political statements. Tracks such as Til the Pigs Come Around, No, and New Age show the groups ability to question the norm. Big Brother reiterates the ideas found in Orwells dystopic-yet-prophetic novel 1984a concept of particular importance considering modern Englands all-seeing surveillance network. Musical highlights include the rolling drums of Black and White and catching bass lines of Ashtray Dirt.
Appearing as part of the four-EP album EP-LP and taken from the Demolition War EP, Drugs of Youth is a fast and fuzzy-toned number. Whose Gonna fight in the Third World War is an up tempo rant on the military industrial complex, telling the people what they already know but are afraid to admit. Reason for Existence isnt as fast as the prior EP, but still contains heavy guitar tones. If craving speed, check out Its Gonna Get Worse on the following EP Religious War and the final track, Not Me on the Evolution EP.
Worlds Apart, originally released in 1985, highlights the slower, more experimental side of SUBHUMANS. British Disease includes droning guitar passages, atypical guitar rhythms and bouncy yet placid bass lines. Fade Away brings more Jamaican-derived ska rhythms, mixed with spacey guitar lines. Pounding drums and wailing guitar solos move the pace on Cant Hear the Words.
Some of the highlights on the 1986 release, 29:29 Split Vision include Heroes, which reminds us how greed corrupts even our greatest leaders. Worlds Apart contains springy guitar rhythms and more catchy bass lines. The tracks jovial mood reflects the blissful ignorance group perceives its island has for the rest of the world. Although the guitars lack the crunch of classic metal, Time Flies has a trebly NWOBHM rhythm.
During punks greatest yearsthe 1980sthe SUBHUMANS were an essential group. Stylistically, they touched on the various avenues travelled by punk rockhardcore, classic British punk and skaand occasionally threw in a noise rock element. The group was typical of the British sound but its diversity of style separated it from the millions of punk clones. The ska influence foreshadowed members of SUBHUMANS forming the popular ska act, CITIZEN FISH.
The albums mentioned in this review represent the bulk output of the SUBHUMANS. All these albums were recorded in the 1980s, and the group didnt release a studio album until 2007s Internal Riot. These recordings must have proved elusive considering the underground nature and the time that has passed since the first pressings, so Southern Records has done a great service for fans of classic punk in these reissues.
Tracklist
Albums:
The Day the Country Died (1983)
From the Cradle to the Grave (1983)
Worlds Apart (1985)
EP-LP (LP, re-issue of first four EPs (1985)
29:29 Split Vision (1986)
Time Flies + Rats (1990)
Line-up
Dick Lucas ˇ vocals/lyrics/occasional piano
Grant Jackson ˇ bass
Bruce Treasure ˇ guitar/backing vocals/occasional drums
Trotsky ˇ drums