Nausea (band)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2010) |
Nausea | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | New York City, U.S. |
Genres | Crust punk |
Years active | 1985–1992 |
Past members | Al Long Amy Miret Victor Venom John John Jesse Roy Mayorga Neil Robinson (early) Pablo Jacobson Jimmy Williams |
Nausea was an American punk rock band from New York City, active from 1985 to 1992. They are cited as a notable band in the style of crust punk.[citation needed]
Like many anarcho-punk bands of the period, Nausea incorporated both male and female vocalists. They were involved in the New York City Lower East Side squatting community.[citation needed] Their earlier sound with singers Amy Miret and Neil Robinson was in the vein of hardcore punk.[citation needed] After Robinson's departure, he was replaced by Al Long and the band began to experiment with darker, metal influences.[citation needed] Robinson went on to form the bands Jesus Crust and Final Warning, as well as start Tribal War Records.
Lyrics and musical style
Nausea's apocalyptic lyrics and artwork were influenced by the sociopolitical issues of the day, such as the Reagan Administration, the US-USSR Cold War, and threats of nuclear war with the USSR. Nausea focused on topics such as environmentalism, human extinction, pollution, and animal rights.[1]
Nausea progressed from a metallic hardcore punk band to being more of a thrash metal band during its later years with new singer Al Long. The band broke new ground for the emerging crust punk genre,[2] flirting with doom metal, d-beat, noise rock and sludge.[3] Band member John John Jesse describes their music by citing bands such as Discharge, Black Sabbath, Slayer, and Pink Floyd.[4] In their formative years, the founding members were compelled by the political and social messages that the band Crass would use to drive their music; their lyrics reflected their views on feminism, anti-racism, class conflict, and the opposition against war. [4]
Later line-up
Nausea's final line-up was: John John Jesse (bass), Victor Venom (guitar, ex-Reagan Youth), Amy Miret (vocals), Al Long (vocals), and Roy Mayorga (drums). John John Jesse has gone on to become an artist, as well as joining with members of Choking Victim in the band Morning Glory. Roy Mayorga went on to play with Shelter, Soulfly, Maggott SS (featuring members of Electric Frankenstein and Degeneration), ABLOOM, Stone Sour, filling in for Igor Cavalera with Sepultura in 2006, and drumming for the reunited Amebix. Roy is currently on tour in 2016 with Ministry (band).
Popular culture
In Jackie Chan's film, Rumble in the Bronx, there is a punk seen wearing a leather jacket with 'Nausea' spray painted on the back.
Members
- Al – vocals (1988–1992)
- Amy Miret – vocals
- Victor – guitar
- John – bass
- Roy Mayorga – drums (1989–1992)
Previous members
- Neil – vocals (1985–1988)
- Pablo Jacobson – drums (1985–1987)
- Jimmy Williams – drums (1987–1988)
Discography
Official releases
- Nausea demo (self released, 1988)
- Extinction LP/Cassette (1990, Profane Existence/Meantime Records)
- Cybergod 7" (Allied Recordings, 1991)
- Lie Cycle 7" (Graven Image Records/ Skuld Records, 1992)
- Alive in Holland VHS (Channel Zero Reality/Profane Existence, 1993)
- Extinction: The Second Coming CD (Selfless Records, 1993)
- The Punk Terrorist Anthology Vol. 1 2xLP/CD (2004, Alternative Tentacles/Blacknoise Records)
- The Punk Terrorist Anthology Vol. 2 2XLP/CD (2005, Hellbent/Blacknoise)
Compilation appearances
- New York Hardcore: The Way It Is LP (Revelation Records, 1988)
- Squat or Rot Volume. 1 7" (Squat or Rot Records, 1989)
- They Don't Get Paid, They Don't Get Laid, But Boy Do They Work Hard LP (Maximum Rock'n'Roll, 1989)
- Murders Among Us 7" (Vermiform Records, 1990)
- More Songs About Plants and Trees 7" (Allied, 1991)
- Discharged: From Home Front to War Front 7" (Allied, 1992)
See also
References
- ^ "Untitled Document". Nauseapunk.net. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- ^ Nausea "The Punk Terrorists Anthology Vol. 2: '85 - '88" CD - AVERSIONLINE.COM Archived 2008-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Alternative Tentacles - Store". Alternativetentacles.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-02-23. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)