Even for someone like myself who gorges himself on "fringe" bands from the last century, even my fringes have fringes, so to speak. I'm not talking about weirdo/outsider purveyors, so much as artists I didn't have an adequate time to investigate due to being so deluged with everything else that dropped onto my plate. I knew of San Fran's
X-tal (by name anyway) when they were still active in the '90s, but didn't hear a note until well into the 2000s. Looks like I neglected on a genuinely talented bunch who emanated shades of the Feelies and Velvets not to mention oodles of other substantive, left-off-the-dial types. The deftly written "The Humboldt Desert" is a near toe-tapping ditty about...deforestation? Strangely enough X-tal's formula works like a charm here, as well as the two songs on the other side of the coin. "More Fun in the New World Order" is
not a sardonic cover of rewrite of the X staple, rather a riveting 86-second original railing against U.S. involvement in the Gulf War.
If anything else, let these three songs be a taster of sorts for the remainder of X-tal's recorded output, now available at your leisure on Bandcamp.
A. The Humboldt Desert
B1. Damp in the Trenches
B2. More Fun in the New World Order
Hear
3 comments:
X-tal this excellent band from S.F. which i have all, except for the first.
Thanks for this, Josef
X-Tal frontman J. Neo Marvin has a great "Punk Rock Scrapbook" with photos of local (Bay Area) and touring punk bands from 1978 onward.
https://jneomarvin.com/scrap.htm
His current duo, the Granite Countertops, made a covers album with some intriguing choices:
https://thegranitecountertops.bandcamp.com/album/new-standards
Oh wow, thanks! Been ages since I've listened to them.
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