Obits – “I Blame You”

obits-i-blame-you

Obits
“I Blame You”
Sub Pop

Salutations, Buddyhead readers! I’m the new guy. You can call me “Tall Pat.” You can think of me as the head of Buddyhead Midwest. Mostly cuz no one else lives in Chicago. Anyhow, fucking Chip Norman stole my review for Chicago’s favored sons’, The Smith Westerns, new record, which by the way is a fucking amazing record, made only better by their mind-blowing live show. I’ll fight with Chip over this later. Anyhow, let’s talk about Obits.

One of the world’s great tragedies was the breakup of both Drive Like Jehu and then Hot Snakes — two of the finest bands to ever walk the Earth, as far as I’m concerned. The one-two punch of Rick Froberg and John Reis is perhaps the most powerful in music. Starting with Pitchfork, the duo’s high school band, they have consistently played angular, no-frills post-punk. Even their pre-Eucalyptus demo tape, which features a prepubescent John Reis on vocals, blows the pants off your standard Fugazi-ripoff band. The demo tape is oddly telling of the pair’s career. It’s rough and formative, but you can hear everything that is to come. “It’s A Nice Day” foretells early Rocket From the Crypt’s anthem. “Caretaker” sounds like a rough demo of something off the first Drive Like Jehu album. “Cut and Dry” sounds like it could have been a Hot Snakes song. Important for this review, the opening track, “Sucked In Spit Out,” and Mr. Froberg’s guitar foretell of Obits. I must warn anyone seeking out the demo tape: it’s good only as a pure academic exercise.

Obits, like Pitchfork, Drive Like Jehu, and Hot Snakes before them, rock. With the demise of Hot Snakes due to Mr. Reis and Mr. Rubalcaba leaving to start families, followed by the break up of the Sultans and of the world’s greatest band, Rocket From the Crypt, and Beehive and the Barracudas going on a long hiatus, I’ve been in need of some real, pure San Diego punk rock. This past year, the rock’n’roll gods have given us Mr. Reis’s (and the rest of the Hot Snakes’ first line up), Night Marchers, a band whose sound draws dramatically from 1950s and early 60s rock’n’roll. The gods have also given us Mr. Froberg’s Obits, a band that continues in line with the duo’s early projects.

They, Obits, are a pure, solid blues-punk rock band. Think Jon Spencer Blues Explosion plus, well, Rick Froberg. The band’s defining characteristic is as you would expect — the vocals of Mr. Froberg. I have long felt that his voice is, without exception, the best in rock’n’roll. Its tonality is perfect for the music. His yelps match up to guitars better than anyone else’s. Not even Greg Sage can hold a candle to the voice of Mr. Froberg, and Obits is built around those vocals. The guitars scream with a treble on par with D. Boon. It’s a ringing endorsement of what works in the genre, and done in a way like no one else. Just listen to “Fake Kinkade.”

Obits are part of a border movement of people to reclaim the good name of rock’n’roll. They, as so many bands here in Chicago, have taken an old, used up style, and with the greatest of joy, breathed new life into it. No one is fucking around here, this ain’t some ironic hipster bullshit, this is real punk rock music.

Every track from “Widow of my Dreams,” to “Talking to the Dog,” to “Lilies in the Street” brings forth a level of quality that’s almost unseen on other records. This is no solo record; Sohrab Habibion, Greg Simpson, and Scott Gursky, although minor players in the grand world of Swami Pat, clearly bring a lot to the table. You can hear it from the first note of the “Live at the Cake Shop” bootleg made by Swami Ivan on “New Western Anthem” (which became “I Cant Loose”) that Obits are a tight unit. Every gear is working perfectly, turning the band into a steamroller of sound. It’s not as hard as the Hot Snakes, nor as complex as Drive Like Jehu, but it’s right where Mr. Froberg should be.

As Ian MacKaye once said, “You don’t grow out of Punk Rock, you grow up with Punk Rock.” With many of the 1990s luminaries pushing past 40 (or long past it), it’s a credit to MacKaye’s line that Mr. Froberg and crew have put out a record just as effective and powerful as anything they produced in their younger days. Only now they have an agenda that goes beyond just rocking. This record, and their live shows, feature a band that is out to remind the world that just because Grizzly Bear, Vampire Weekend, and tons of shitty bands come from New York, it does not mean that the city forgot how to rock; Obits are out to remind everyone that New York City is gonna be OK.

And that’s just the record. The band’s B-sides are something else. Why anything was left off the record is beyond me.  “I Cant Loose” is a revelation and perhaps their finest work. “Put It In Writing,” “One Cross Apiece,” and “Military Madness” are just as strong. The B-sides are of a quality one would expect from a band like this.

Obits’ “I Blame You” is the record you expect it to be. From “Widow Of My Dreams” to “Back and Forth,” it’s a solid record that does what so few bands can — create a brilliant front-to-back punk rock album.

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20 Responses to “ Obits – “I Blame You” ”


  • it’s rad, but not worth losin Hot Snakes. sorry.

  • gonna have to agree with seaN on that one…

  • I miss Hot Snakes. I cant argue with you guys on that one

  • hells yeah.

    also, i’m very glad to know that someone out here in chi actually knows about buddyhead too.

  • You want some?

  • o its on chip. that smith westerns record is way solid!

  • saw these guys last night. it started off really strong, but the songs became pretty monotonous as their set progressed. maybe i was just tired, though. or maybe it was the band that played before them that really wore me out.

  • buddyhead is cool again, congrats.

  • damn, you beat me to this review, pat! love that you wrote about froberg’s voice, which is something i was writing about, too. one of the best, unconventionally cool voices in music, in both tone and delivery.

  • C’mon! Don’t fanboy me over this. I gave them a very positive review.

    It’s a rock solid record with a couple suspicious Nobunny covers. I honestly think that their next one is gonna straight rule.

    Obits, is rad, too. You have good taste. Welcome aboard.

  • i’m just giving you a hard time chip. and its not so much fanboy as those dudes are my mates. you should check out their first 7″ if you can get your hands on it, way killer.

    ted: chip beat me to smith westerns, i beat you to obits, who are you gonna beat out?

    ryan r: you were tired, i saw them in chicago last week and they end of the set they killed it!

    anyhow thanks everyone for the nice words. i got a bunch more stuff up my sleeve for the next few days.

  • Saw them in San Diego this past May and they kicked ass. Nice review.

  • it sucks that I was blacked out when the obits played the Bottle last weekend , how I wish I could remember…..I blame you

  • i need to see this band. two-headed coin is such a badass song.

  • It’s better than the Dead Weather, but The Night Marchers kicks everyone asses! Go John Reis!

  • I live in Chicago too in other news this band is real good

  • Obits are a great band, but live they come across as sorta dull. They played 2-3 hours after Night Marchers ( who played earlier the same night at wicker park fest last week) and in comparison (which may not be fair) they weren’t in the same solar system in terms of passion and energy. J. Reis and the other ex-hot snakes guys just BRING IT!

    I LOVE the Obits record, but live was a real downer.

    Gotta say though, his voice cuts through like a motherfucker. You could take Froberg and any 2-3 other people in the audience and get a damn commendable band from that.

  • Good to see Buddyhead bringing in someone from The Go! Tall Pat, let’s nerd out at Permanent mang!!

  • Nice review Pat! Congrats on the new gig. This review takes what you were doing on the blog and really expands on it. To the people missing Hot Snakes, yeah we all do but it’s not like Rick broke up the band to start Obits. They ran their course, gave us 3 of the greatest albums of all time and now are doing new things. Give it up to the Obits, great record, great 7″ songs, and great live shows. I got a chance to talk to Rick before their show in SD and he seemed extremely happy and proud of the new band, it’s breathed new life into him since I talked to him last.
    Thanks Pat.

  • i dig this

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