Nomeansno

Nomeansno

Nomeansno live in Tampere, Finland in 2007
Background information
Origin Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Genres Punk rock, punk jazz, post-hardcore,[1][2] hardcore punk, noise rock
Years active 1979–2016
Labels Wrong, Alternative Tentacles, AntAcidAudio, Southern
Associated acts The Hanson Brothers, Showbusiness Giants
Website nomeanswhatever.com
Past members

Nomeansno (sometimes stylized as NoMeansNo or spelled No Means No) was a Canadian punk rock band formed in Victoria, British Columbia and later relocated to Vancouver. They issued 11 LPs, one collaborative LP, and numerous EPs and singles, and gained an international audience following extensive touring. Their distinct hardcore punk sound, complex instrumentation,[3] and dark, "savagely intelligent" lyrics inspired subsequent musicians. Critic Martin Popoff described their music as "the mightiest merger between the hateful aggression of punk and the discipline of heavy metal,"[4] and they have elsewhere been cited as an influence on the math rock and emo genres.[5]

Formed in 1979 by two brothers, bassist Rob Wright and drummer John Wright, the group began as a two-piece punk band influenced by jazz and progressive rock.[6] They self-released their debut Mama LP in 1982. Adding guitarist Andy Kerr in 1983, the group signed with the Alternative Tentacles imprint. Kerr departed in 1992 after five LPs with the band, and the group returned to its two-piece formation for the Why Do They Call Me Mr. Happy? album.

Guitarist Tom Holliston, and briefly second drummer Ken Kempster, joined in 1993, and Nomeansno continued touring and recording extensively while operating their own Wrong Records label. After three more LPs, they left Alternative Tentacles and issued their final album, All Roads Lead to Ausfahrt, in 2006.

The band received critical praise throughout its career, culminating in their 2015 induction into the Western Canadian Music Hall of Fame.[7] They announced their retirement the following year.

History

Early years as two-piece (1979–1982)

In 1979 and at age 25, Rob Wright returned to his family's home in Victoria after studying in Calgary, inspired to form a punk rock band.[8] His younger brother John, eight years his junior, played drums in the school jazz band, and himself became inspired to play punk rock after seeing D.O.A. perform at the University of Victoria.[9] The two began rehearsing in their parents' basement in 1979,[8] and took the name Nomeansno from an anti-date rape slogan.[9] They also briefly gigged as the rhythm section for the local cover band Castle.[8]

Nomeansno recorded its earliest material in the months that followed on a TASCAM four-track recorder, with Rob playing electric guitar and bass, John playing keyboards and drums, and both brothers singing. Some of these recordings were issued as their first two self-released 7"s, the "Look, Here Come the Wormies" single (a 1980 split with another short-lived Wright brothers project, Mass Appeal), and the Betrayal, Fear, Anger, Hatred EP of 1981.

In the early 1980s, the duo began performing live as a bass-and-drums duo. Their sound developed without a guitar, and John Wright later reflected on these developments:

...without a guitar player you can’t rely on the standard hooks that punk rock and rock n' roll in general relies on. The guitar player – the guitar god quote unquote – was such a focus for so long that by the nature of not having a guitar player, the bass and the drums have to do a lot more. It also makes the vocals more important, or at least it makes a lot more room for the vocals. You don't have guitar solos, you don't have the wash of high end. And the things you do on the drums are different, if you just did a straight four beat on the drums it would get kinda dull after awhile. It isn't as though bass guitar hasn't been a prominent instrument at times in other bands but it made us approach things differently, our song structure couldn't just be verse-chorus-verse. It had everything to do with how our sound got off to a unique start.[10]

Some of the songs they played in this period were released on the Mama LP of 1982, which was self-released in a limited pressing. Writing for Trouser Press, critic Ira Robbins described Mama and the early 7"s as "Devo on a jazz trip, Motörhead after art school, or Wire on psychotic steroids."[11] This same year, John Wright also joined the Victoria punk band The Infamous Scientists.[8]

With Andy Kerr (1983–1992)

The Infamous Scientists disbanded, and their guitarist and vocalist Andy Kerr joined Nomeansno in 1983.[9][12][8] Kerr brought a distinct hardcore punk edge to Nomeansno's sound, creating a buzz-saw guitar tone by playing through a Fender Bassman amplifier and a P.A. speaker. Nomeansno became a fixture in the British Columbia punk scene despite playing music which did not always conform to punk rock standards. The You Kill Me EP in 1985 on the Undergrowth Records imprint exhibited their experimental sound on dark and ponderous songs like "Body Bag" and a "tuneless"[11] cover of "Manic Depression" by Jimi Hendrix. The three also began performing Ramones covers and more traditional punk music as The Hanson Brothers, a side project which would later receive more of their attention.

Issued initially by the Montreal punk label Psyche Industry,[8] the band released Sex Mad, their second LP and first with Kerr. The album further expanded the band's experimental and progressive punk sound, yielding the single "Dad." The song was a minor college radio hit, which All Music reviewer Adam Bregman called "a bit chilling, even though it's spit out at slam-pit's pace".[13] Kerr, the song's lead vocalist, increasingly became responsible for lead vocals as Rob Wright suffered from nodules on his vocal chords. They soon signed with the seminal punk rock label Alternative Tentacles, run by Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys. This, along with frequent touring in North America and Europe, allowed the band to garner a larger audience.

In 1988, the group issued two releases which were recorded with producer Cecil English: The Day Everything Became Nothing, an EP, and the Small Parts Isolated and Destroyed album. Alternative Tentacles compiled the two together on a single CD, The Day Everything Became Isolated and Destroyed. All Music reviewer Sean Carruthers called the experimental recordings "less aggressive" than, but nonetheless worthy of, the band's previous efforts.[14]

The band's logo from Wrong

Rob Wright's vocal chords began to heal, and he again began taking many of the lead vocal duties. In 1989, the band issued their fourth album, Wrong, to wide critical acclaim.[8] For All Music, Carruthers wrote that "[t]he playing is incredibly skilled;"[3] critic Martin Popoff in writing for the The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal called Wrong the band's best album and rated the album 10 out of 10 points.[4] The band's extensive touring in support of the record is documented in part on the Live + Cuddly live album, recorded in Holland in 1990.

The band released a collaborative LP with Biafra, The Sky Is Falling and I Want My Mommy, in 1991. Shortly thereafter, they issued 0 + 2 = 1, their final album with Kerr. In a mixed review, All Music critic Adam Bregman praised 0 + 2 = 1 for its finer moments, but was concerned by its overall length and ponderousness.[15]

Kerr departed the band after touring in support of the record and emigrated to the Netherlands. He went on to release two LPs with Hissanol (a collaboration with Scott Henderson of Shovelhed) and a solo album in 1997, and formed the duo Two Pin Din with Wilf Plum of Dog Faced Hermans in 2005.

Side projects, return to two-piece lineup (1992–1993)

The Wright brothers had begun to focus on their side project, The Hanson Brothers. Dressing as a mock group of backward Canadian ice hockey players and fans, they derived the band's name and personae from a group of characters in the 1977 George Roy Hill film Slap Shot starring Paul Newman. With John acting as lead vocalist, the Wright brothers were joined by guitarist Tom Holliston of the Showbusiness Giants and drummer Ken Jensen of D.O.A. With encouragement from Alternative Tentacles to record an LP,[8] The Hanson Brothers issued the Gross Misconduct album in 1992.

The Wright brothers also remained active with other endeavors. Rob Wright began performing as a solo artist under the name Mr. Wrong, appearing as a character dressed as an authoritarian priest. John Wright became a member of D.O.A. for several years. The brothers also continued to expand Wrong Records, their own imprint.

In 1993, the brothers assembled material for a seventh Nomeansno LP and recorded Why Do They Call Me Mr. Happy? as a duo. All Music critic Ned Raggett later praised the album's balance, arguing that it reached dark and sinister depths while also exhibiting subtler and more introspective moments.[16] The Wrights also compiled the collection Mr. Right & Mr. Wrong: One Down & Two to Go, comprising early demos, studio outtakes, and additional material, which was released on Wrong the following year.

Addition of Tom Holliston (1993–2006)

For touring in support of Why Do They Call Me Mr. Happy?, Nomeansno assembled their first four-piece lineup, completed by Hanson Brothers guitarist Holliston and second drummer Ken Kempster. Holliston replaced Kerr as their full-time guitarist, while Kempster went on to tour sporadically with Nomeansno over the next four years.

The first Nomeansno album to feature Holliston was The Worldhood of the World (As Such), released in 1995. Receiving its title from philosopher Martin Heidegger's seminal text Being and Time, the album exhibited a deeper "embrace of poppiness" than its predecessors[17] while nonetheless retaining the band's "taste for blood and gristle."[11] After focusing briefly on the Hanson Brothers and releasing their second LP, Sudden Death, Nomeansno followed with the EPs Would We Be Alive? and In the Fishtank Volume 1, each featuring a cover of "Would We Be Alive?" by The Residents. Their ninth studio album, the double LP Dance of the Headless Bourgeoisie, was released in 1998.

The band was a three-piece featuring (from left to right) Tom Holliston, John Wright, and Rob Wright in its final two decades.

The band issued its final Alternative Tentacles album, One, in 2000. Featuring a slow stoner rock cover of The Ramones' "Beat on the Brat" and a fifteen-minute version of Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew" with electric piano and congas, the album was well received. All Music critic Tom Schulte praised its "intense and heavy collegiate punk" as the band's finest effort since Wrong.[18] Three outtakes from the album were also issued as the Generic Shame EP on Wrong.

The band left Alternative Tentacles in 2002, and began slowly reissuing their back catalogue through Wrong and distributors Southern Records. With new drummer Ernie Hawkins, The Hanson Brothers released their third album, My Game, later that year. Nomeansno continued touring extensively, but ultimately took six years to release their next album. In the meantime, they issued the best-of compilation The People's Choice.

Their eleventh studio album, All Roads Lead to Ausfahrt, was released on August 22, 2006 by AntAcidAudio in the United States and Southern in Europe. All Music critic Jo-Ann Greene praised the album's exhausting diversity as befitting of the band's legacy and career-spanning accomplishments.[19] Greene wrote that with the record Nomeansno travel "yet again through the undergrowth and underbelly of the rock realm, and with all the piss and vinegar that they started out with a quarter century ago."[19]

Later years, hiatus, retirement (2007–2016)

The band toured frequently in the years that followed, but ceased recording albums. Fang drummer Mike Branum joined The Hanson Brothers in 2008.[8] In 2010, Nomeansno issued two four-track EPs, Tour EP 1 (alternately known as Old) and Tour EP 2 (alternately Jubilation). Later that year, they digitally released outtakes from 0 + 2 = 1 as 0 + 2 = 1 ½. They continued performing live through 2013, and toured as The Hanson Brothers in the following year with Byron Slack on drums, but entered a hiatus thereafter.

Holliston continued to perform with The Showbusiness Giants and release solo albums, while John Wright later began working as musical director for the all-robot rock band Compressorhead. In 2015, Nomeansno was inducted into the Western Canadian Music Hall of Fame.[7] They played an acoustic set at the awards ceremony, and a Ramones cover set (with Slack on drums) on New Year's Eve, which would prove to be their final public appearances. Holliston announced his departure from the band in August 2016. One month later, on September 24, John Wright announced the band's official retirement.[20]

Band members

Timeline

Discography

Studio LPs
EPs
Singles
  • "Look, Here Come the Wormies" (split with Mass Appeal) (1980)
  • "Dad" (1987)
  • "Oh, Canaduh" (1991)
  • Chaotic Soup (split with Ultra-Bide) (1996)

Live albums
Compilations
Bootlegs
  • Live at the Paradiso Amsterdam - bootleg - VPRO Radio station recording (1988)
  • Live in Warsaw – bootleg cassette (1990)
  • Sasquatch - The Man, The Myth, The Compilation - includes cover tracks "I Don't Care" and "Glad All Over" (1991)
  • "The Infamous Scientist 45" - bootleg 7" (1993)
  • "Leave the Seaside" – live bootleg 7" (1994)
Compilation appearances
  • It Came from the Pit (1986)
  • Random Thought: A Victoria Sampler (Volumes 1 & 2) - includes, "Getting Colder", "Burn" and "Love Thang" (1986)
  • Oops! Wrong Stereotype (Alternative Tentacles compilation) (1988)
  • Terminal City Ricochet (soundtrack Terminal City Ricochet movie) (1990)
  • Clam Chowder & Ice Vs. Big Macs and Bombers (1992)
  • Virus 100 (a cappella version of Dead Kennedys song, "Forward to Death") (1992)
  • Over a Century of Vivisection and Anti-Vivisection (How Much Longer?) - Includes the 1981 Mama outtake, "No Means No" (1992)
  • The Making of Allied One Two Three (1995)
  • Basement Tapes: A KSPC Compilation of Live Recordings - includes "I Don't Want To Go Down To The Basement" (1995)
  • Short Music for Short People (1999)
  • Sex With Nothing (2002)
  • Fubar: The Album (2002)
  • All Your Ears Can Hear (2007)

Videography

See also

References

  1. Gold, Jonathan (1996). "Spins: Platter Du Jour - 7 - NOFX - Heavy Petting Zoo". Spin. Camouflage Associates. 12 (1): 113.
  2. Mosurock, Doug (August 3, 2006). "Dusted Reviews: Nomeansno - All Roads Lead to Ausfahrt". Dusted Magazine. Retrieved 25 October 2010. [...] Something broke within Nomeansno following their masterstroke some 17 years ago (and it is that, one of the most aggressive and powerful opuses in post-hardcore ever made), and it hasn’t properly healed. [...]
  3. 1 2 Carruthers, Sean. "Wrong Review". Allmusic. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
  4. 1 2 Popoff, Martin: "The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal", page 316. CG Publishing, 1997
  5. "Live & Cuddly Review". AllMusic.
  6. Burian, Al (1 October 2012). "Going Gray with Nomeansno". Vice. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  7. 1 2 "Nomeansno to Be Inducted into Western Canadian Music Hall of Fame". Exclaim!. June 10, 2015. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Black, Mark; (2012) NoMeansNo: Going Nowhere, Invisible Press, ISBN 978-1926743271
  9. 1 2 3 Barclay, Michael; Jack, Ian A. D.; Schneider, Jason (2011) Have Not Been the Same: The CanRock Renaissance 1985*1995, ECW Press, ISBN 978-1550229929
  10. Nielson, Jeff (November 2010). "I Am Wrong: An interview with NoMeansNo's John Wright". The Big Takeover. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
  11. 1 2 3 "Nomeansno". TrouserPress.com. Retrieved 2007-01-07.
  12. Earles, Andrew (2014) Gimme Indie Rock: 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996, Voyageur Press, ISBN 978-0760346488
  13. "Sex Mad/You Kill Me Review". Allmusic.
  14. Carruthers, Sean. "Small Parts Isolated and Destroyed - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  15. Bregman, Adam. "0 + 2 = 1 - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  16. Raggett, Ned. "Why Do They Call Me Mr. Happy? - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  17. Raggett, Ned. "Why Do They Call Me Mr. Happy? - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  18. Schulte, Tom. "One - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  19. 1 2 Greene, Jo-Ann. "All Roads Lead to Ausfahrt - NoMeansNo". AllMusic. Retrieved September 28, 2016.
  20. "Victoria Band No Means No No More, Announces Retirement". Times Colonist. September 24, 2016. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
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