Jello Biafra was one of the guys who
started the San Francisco punk band the Dead Kennedys in 1978. They were one of
the first punk bands in the US to write politically-themed songs, using their
music as a reflection of society's ills and excesses. Among the first punk bands
to incorporate humor, they were known for holding a satirical mirror to the
popular music of the time, and they were a major influence on hardcore & punk
bands that followed. The Dead Kennedys disbanded during an obscenity trial which
took issue with a poster included in their 1986 album Frankenchrist.
Biafra is the owner and co-founder of
the influential independent label Alternative Tentacles, which he created in
1979 when major labels wouldn't sign the Dead Kennedys because they were too
controversial. Since the demise of the band, Biafra has released several
spoken-word albums and performed in numerous projects including two albums with
the Melvins. Recently, he started a new band.
I saw Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo
School of Medicine Friday, March 26, at the Trocadero in Philadelphia. They were
on tour supporting their first album, The Audacity of Hype. The night opened
with New Brunswick locals Mirrors & Wires, who have been garnering attention
with their psychedelic instrumental surf rock, and recently played with Joe Jack
Talcum of the Dead Milkmen. Mirrors & Wires is Patrick Clark on guitar and
Theremin, Ian T. on drums, John Slover on piano/synth and Josh Firedaddy filling
in on bass. The show started early, at 7:30 PM. As the first band on the night's
bill, they played songs including Chiaroscuro, PharmofLove, and Disasternoon to
a slowly building crowd, but by the time their short set ended, they had built
up an appreciative audience. The Troc runs an unusually tight (and strict) ship,
so we didn't wait long for Common Enemy to appear. They were very noisy, and I
took most of their set to locate some replacement earplugs, and to familiarize
myself with the many rules of the Trocadero.
The venue opened in 1870 as the Arch
Street Opera House, and it’s the only 19th century Victorian theater still in
operation in the US, according to the venue's website. Their all-ages shows end
by 11 PM, so they kept the evening moving along at a brisk pace, while the
mildly surly (but can you really blame them?) event staff kept the young 'uns
out of the beer garden, the beer off the floor, and the fans off the stage
(mostly).
The next band, Witch Hunt, features
sisters Janine and Nicole Enriquez, on bass and guitar respectively, Rob
Fitzpatrick on guitar and drummer Vince Klopfenstein. Originally from New Jersey
but now based in Philadelphia, Witch Hunt is currently on tour with Jello Biafra.
(Ian from Mirror's & Wires remembered Witch Hunt used to play in his basement
years ago.) Witch Hunt plays hardcore/progressive punk rock, with male and
female vocals on songs about mostly political topics, including prominently the
war in Iraq. This was especially apropos as representatives from Iraq Veterans
Against the War were tabling in the lobby. Between songs, Janine made some
remarks on the plight of the Palestinian people. When she mentioned how they are
consistently portrayed as terrorists in the media, someone from the crowd
shouted, "Because they are!" to which she politely replied, "Well, I can talk to
you about that after the show," and went on to suggest that if you were getting
bombed regularly, you'd be pretty mad, too. And then they played a song about
it. Because of their hardcore vocal stylings, it was hard to make out a lot of
the words, but they got a good reaction from the crowd, which managed, after a
few tries, to work up a pretty decent circle pit toward the end of the set.
Political themes were readily apparent throughout the evening (as you might
expect from a show headlined by a band called the Guantanamo School of
Medicine...).
Jello Biafra has been known for his
politics since he ran for mayor of San Francisco in 1979 at the age of 21 and
came in fourth on the strength of a platform that was by turns radically liberal
and absurdist. That’s a pretty good description of his music and his
grass-roots, free speech, Green Party, anti-war leanings, which were on display
full-throttle at the show.
The Guantanamo School of Medicine
includes some impressive musical pedigrees, including two New Jersey natives,
Andy and Jon Weiss. Andy, who performs barefoot, plays with Ween and was the
original bassist for the Rollins Band and his brother Jon, on drums, has played
with Sharkbait and Horsey. Ralph Spight and Hawaiian native Kimo Ball both
played for Freak Accident, and both play guitar.
Biafra came on stage in a white lab coat
and surgical gloves covered in red paint (or something similar). With more
costume changes than Whoopi Goldberg at the Oscars, he later took off the coat
to reveal a long-sleeved American flag shirt, under which he had a black Iraq
Veterans Against the War t-shirt, and finally he just went shirtless. He
occasionally stopped to talk about the issues raised in the next song: veterans
issues, the prison-industrial complex, his disappointment in President Obama
(whom he did not vote for), torture, U.S. war criminals, gentrification and his
opposition to San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom. He advocated for Iraq Veterans
Against the War and noted the resurgence of Vietnam Veterans Against the War,
and his own father, “a Korean War vet against all wars”. (Biafra mentioned he
wasn’t allowed to play with guns, and joked that his father wasn’t even too keen
on his son appearing in a GWAR movie.) The band played a few Dead Kennedys
favorites, including “Holiday in Cambodia” and “California Über Alles”, but the
crowd was visibly enthusiastic about the new material as well (Victory Stinks,
Panic Land, Three Strikes, Straight Thru Shopping, Dot Com Monte Carlo), and the
pit was energetic.
Interesting difference between this show
and many others I’ve been to over the last few years: the crowd did not look
like a sea of cell phones. Someone would take out a camera or phone every once
in a while for a picture, but the audience was not spending its time at the show
prepping the facebook update they were planning to post directly afterwards. It
was nice to see people at a show actually just enjoying being at a show.
One of the best things about going to
the punk rock show is the variety of people and the relative harmony with which
they usually get along. One woman, who would not have looked at all out of place
at the fourth grade PTA meeting, was standing right up next to the pit, clearly
having an awesome time and not at all fazed by the giant dudes flying past her.
She was about Jello Biafra’s age; I was imagining her at a show in 1983 looking
exactly like the girl standing next to her, with the spiked hair, black
skinny-jeans and Dead Kennedys t-shirt.
At the end of the show, Biafra exhorted
the audience to, “put down your texting machines and get louder, wilder, nastier
and weirder” in the service of the things they believed in, and not just
sit around waiting. “If we don’t do it, who the f*** will?” They played an
encore and then, with a lovely curtsy, Mr. Biafra was gone.






