Label: Bootleg
Year: 1982
As Gray and I were growing up as young punk rockers in sprawling
Winston-Salem, NC, most of our record shopping was confined to either Friday
nights trolling Hanes Mall or flipping through bins at the local Record
Exchange. In the late 1980s, Hanes Mall housed both Camelot Music and the
Record Bar, both chain establishments. I think I bought a third press copy of
Die Die My Darling (which I still have) at the Record Bar, while Camelot I
remember most for its tape game. I’m pretty sure I remember picking up Legacy
of Brutality and Collection I (which blew my mind at the time—where did these songs come from??) cassettes
at the Camelot Music on the lower level of the mall.
The Record Exchange was the first used record store I knew
of, and they had lots of punk stuff—in part due to the Let’s Active/Echo and
the Bunnymen-ish indie/punker who worked there. I got a ghoul hair error Earth
A.D. there, along with many other Circle Jerks, Dead Kennedys and 7 Seconds
classics. Sadly, none of these stores exist now.
Today’s Danzig memory, however, takes me back to a day when
Gray and I veered slightly off the beaten path. I don’t know why we were out in
this neighborhood (perhaps visiting local scene legend Rob R-Rock, who lived
nearby), but something made us stick our heads in the Mighty Quinn music shop
on the northwest outskirts of Winston-Salem. Mighty Quinn was an old school, dirty
and dusty record store. I don’t recall him stocking anything of interest to us
punkers … except a motherlode of overpriced Misfits bootlegs.
I’ll never know where this fellow got the records, as they
were hardly in line with the rest of his stock, but somehow Mr. Quinn had
gotten his hands on a handful of Misfits boots. He had the Spook City
USA 7”, I think maybe 4 Hits
From Hell, the Hittsville,
NJ 12” and today’s choice, Al’s
Bar 1982.
Labeled as a Fiend Club (the Misfits fan club that I’d only
vaguely heard of at the time) release, in actuality it was a decent-sounding but
unofficially released recording of the Misfits’ April 17, 1982 set at Al’s Bar
in Los Angeles.
Don’t get me wrong, I would have given a kidney to have been
a few years older and seen the Misfits live, but the truth is their live shows
were a mixed bag. The experience itself must have been unbelievable. I can only
imagine beer bottles and fists flying, Doyle taking people’s heads off with his
guitar and Danzig challenging the entire audience to fight him as they played.
Musically, however, they were out of tune, played a little too fast and largely
shed the 1950s-doo-wop-meets-Ramones catchiness that made their studio
recordings so unique.
Still, I snatched the record up and have the red
vinyl/blank-labeled platter in my collection to this day. This is actually a
really good setlist, ranging from Bullet-era material to songs from Earth A.D.,
which had yet to be released. The between-song banter is fun too, as it
captures a looser, much more frenzied Glenn Danzig than the metal god he would
evolve into years later.
Sound quality on this one isn’t quite as good as the officially
released Evilive, but it’s plenty passable and you get twice as many songs.
Enjoy!
- Jeff Simms
DL
1 comment:
Can You re upload This please...
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