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Punk rock explosives specialists The
U.S. Bombs have accepted a new musical assignment for
2003 and it’s called Covert Action. Boasting the head
knockin’ first single “Roll Around,” plus anthems like
“Shot Down” and “Youth Goes,” this disc – their fourth
for Hellcat – instantly yanks you by the collar. Extolling
the virtues of classic punk, where razor sharp riffs
cut ardent rants into little sticks of musical dynamite,
the Duane Peters-steered U.S. Bombs are a boulder of
truth and authenticity in a sea of slick poseur sewage.
“I don’t give two fucks what anybody thinks,” Peters
barks. “We’re real punk rockers.” At a time where the
genre is littered with dumb songs about cars, girls
and bong hits, that declaration is a fact. Politically
informed, the streetwise and outspoken punks in The
U.S. Bombs use their microphones, guitars and drums
like an anti-establishment battering ram. “I choose
not to be asleep,” Duane proclaims. “I’m not content
on trading in my rights as an individual for safety
like the rest of the useless eaters in this country.”
”Framed,” for instance, takes a distinctive look at
the Oklahoma Bombing and points the finger back at the
government. “I’ve done my research,” says Peters, who
thinks outside the box on subjects like Waco, Ruby Ridge
and 9/11. “If people get offended, it just shows how
easily they are manipulated into believing whatever
they’re told.”
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Voicing his disdain for the ruling
class on “John Gotti,” which suggests that the Mob would
have better success running the White House, before
railing against experimental science on “Lab Rats,”
Peters’ penchant for free thought is never alone. Augmenting
such incendiary messages, the rest of the Bombs detonate
in the recording studio. Machine gun guitar chords fire
away in dual attack mode courtesy of founding member
Kerry Martinez and newcomer Curt Gove (on loan from
Les Stitches). In tandem, veteran member Wade Walston
unleashes rock bottom bass lines as fresh faced kit
man Jamie Reidling beats out cracking drum rolls. Not
just politically valiant, The U.S. Bombs exhibit an
impressive musical courage and depth on Covert Action.
Reviving the classic formula of 1980s hardcore on “Art
Kills” and then detouring into the ska-flavored territory
of “The Gow” before assuming a new style with effortless
beauty – as they do on the Latin-flavored instrumental
“Phil Spectator” – these Bombs never fizzle. That spirit
carries over into everything about Duane Peters. A skateboarding
legend and the first man to ever complete a loop in
a full pipe, the singer also finds time to run his own
label, Disaster Records, produce other punk bands and
keep up on history, conspiracies and current events.
“I just stay busy, playing catch up for all the years
I wasted away almost being your standard punk rock statistic,”
he explains. “Remember, the Government wants you strung
out and drunk. The C.I.A. agents all have nice houses
and bank accounts because we need the weed and all the
mind numbing shit they bring in to keep us down and
controllable.” The fuse is lit, Bomb City Rockers! With
Covert Action, The U.S. Bombs are poised to blow their
cover for good. Hit the deck, punk!
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