Although
Static Thought don't list them among their myriad hardcore and vintage punk influences, it is the
Dead Boys who spring immediately to mind as "Drug of My Mind," the opening track of the band's debut album
In the Trenches, slams out of the speakers. It is the vehemence with which the band attack their instruments, the blind fury of frontman Eric Urbach's vocals, that raise the
Dead Boys' ghost from the grave. However close they are in spirit, though, musical nods to Cleveland's finest only come in spurts, with occasional
Cheetah Chrome-styled guitar solos, best heard on "Ignorance of the Youth." The
Dead Boys may have their spirit, but it's early British hardcore,
Motörhead, and classic new-school punk bands like
NOFX and
Rancid that fill their soul. The music as salvation "Drug," for example, slams
Motörhead straight into
NOFX. "Social Unrest" puts even the speed metal heroes to shame, and contains some of the quickest guitar picking ever heard in punk, but even faster fingers belong to bassist Mike Have-Not, who positively storms across this number. Have-Not's intricate basslines are oft times modeled after
Rancid's
Matt Freeman, and give the songs a muscle and their sound a touch of ska-core; check out "Trenches" for the former and "Junk, Dope & Speed" for the latter as proof. However, it's the pissed-off paean to Katrina victims, "Dead & Gone," that is an unadulterated tribute to
Freeman's band, alongside "Choice Through Struggle," on which his bandmate
Lars Frederiksen adds his voice to the chorus. As the album progresses, the arrangements get increasingly tougher, reaching Oi! territory on "Infiltrated Minds." However, extremely deft sequencing feeds more melodic numbers in and out of the set, like the solid slab of punk rock-flavored "Religion, Sex & Class" and the anthemic "Trenches."
The no-nonsense lyrics, scalded in vitriol, many tackling important political and social issues, add further flames to the ferocious fire already burning across this set. Which makes the decision to give a pummeling to
the Police's "Next to You" a bit of a shocker. There again, precedent is on their side:
the Lords of the New Church gave
Madonna's "Live a Virgin" a similar thumping, but that was a joke;
Static are dead serious, and turn the wimpy "Next" into a hardcore classic. A spectacular ending to an incendiary set. ~ Jo-Ann Greene