The Dead Kennedys - Mutiny On The Bay (2001)
The Dead Kennedys never released a live album during their brief yet notorious career as America's favorite hardcore bad boys. The legendary punk outfit's incendiary live performances have nevertheless been well represented by a handful of bootleg albums and videos, the best of which is probably Jello's Revenge (Armed Response Records), culled from San Francisco club shows in 1979 and 1985. Mutiny On The Bay is the first “authorized” Dead Kennedys live disc, part of Manifesto's reissuing of the band's catalog under the aegis of members East Bay Ray, D.H. Peligro and Klaus Flouride and against the wishes of vocalist/songwriter Jello Biafra, who has disavowed the entire series of reissues.Mutiny On The Bay presents not a single entire performance but rather pieces of four different shows that date from 1982 and 1986. The original soundboard tapes have been digitally remastered but manage to retain a fair degree of their original energy and grunge. I hate to disagree with my old buddy Jello, who has publicly dissed Mutiny On The Bay, but this is a hell of a collection. A veritable “who's who” of the DK's greatest hits, this fourteen song set offers those of us who never got to witness the band live (i.e. most punk fans who didn't live within a day's drive of the west coast) a taste of what bootleg videos only hinted at.
Almost all the great DK songs are here, from “Police Truck” and “Kill The Poor” to “Hell Nation” and “MTV - Get Off The Air.” The energy in these tracks is undeniable; Biafra's warbling, operatic vocals jumping out of the speakers above East Bay Ray's slashing six-string work. One of the band's signature songs, “Holiday In Cambodia,” offers some fiery fretwork courtesy of East Bay Ray while the Flouride/Peligro rhythmic assault that opens “California Uber Alles” provides powerful punctuation to Biafra's angry vocals. The production seamlessly stitches together the performances; tying songs together with Biafra's onstage comments and smoothing out the rough edges so that the entire collection sounds like one lengthy performance. Perhaps some of the spontaneity is lost in this digital translation, but the quality of these performances shine through nonetheless and there is plenty of feedback and stage noise present for the purist.
There are some good Dead Kennedys' bootlegs still circulating around in trading circles, but Mutiny On The Bay puts most, if not all of them to shame. If all you know of the Dead Kennedys is their reputation, then Mutiny On The Bay, coupled with the band's incredible debut, Fresh Fruit For Rotting Vegetables, are perfect introductions to the band's legacy. Let's hope that Manifesto has some other live material of this quality stashed away in the vault for future release. The Dead Kennedys were one of the most influential hardcore punk bands of the eighties; their importance based on live performances like those captured by Mutiny On The Bay. Let's hear some more! (Manifesto Records)
(Click on the CD cover to buy Mutiny On The Bay from Amazon.com)
Labels: Dead Kennedys, Jello Biafra, punk rock






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