โThis band needs another guitar player,โ says Sunny Beech, drummer for the Flesh Hammers.
โYou need three guitar players?โ responds an incredulous interviewer.
โAt least.โ
โWhatโre you? The Allman Brothers?โ
โYes. Iโm the black one.โ
To set the record straight, Sunny Beech is unmistakably white. And the Flesh Hammers are not, in fact, the Allman Brothers. Actually they play punk rock.
Since itโs impossible to know what it means when a band is referred to as โpunk”โthe term now being applied to pop idols like Good Charlotteโit might be better to say that the Flesh Hammers play guitar-heavy rock that is direct, loud and (usually) fast. They are a band in the tradition of โ70s groups like the Stooges and the Dead Boys.
In other words, this is not your daughterโs punk rock.
โWe start with a โ70s punk, old-school kind of feel and try to take that into the present,โ explains lead singer and bassist Blackie Crabtree.
The band was formed two years ago by Crabtree, who was previously in the Vitriolics, and guitarist Evan Heiser, who previously didnโt play guitar.
โI played classical piano for 12 years and jazz for two. Played recitals and stuff,โ says Heiser.
Later, he played keyboard in a rock band that performed the music of keyboard-heavy 1970s bands like Pink Floyd and Deep Purple, and it wasnโt until the Flesh Hammers formed that Heiser picked up the guitar. He learned the instrument as he and Crabtree worked out songs.
โHe worked his ass off,โ Crabtree says of Heiserโs crash course in guitar.
After only a couple of months, Heiser had become competent enough that the two decided it was time to recruit additional musicians.
Ben Renken, formerly of Jaded, was picked to play lead guitar.
โWhen I met him, I said, โWhat do you sound like?โ and he goes, โSlash,’โ says Crabtree.
โI play a lot of Slash, Ozzy, Guns & Roses, Zakk Wylde, Randy Rhodes,โ says Renken, whose metal-schooled lead playing is one of the more contemporary elements in this old-school punk-based band.
The Flesh Hammers recorded a 10-song CD, titled Riding Dirty, which is available at most local CD stores.
Lyrically, the songs range from the personal to the political.
โLynchburgโ (currently featured on radioactivereno.net) is about the dangers of whiskey. The line โI wish I had stuck with beerโ must surely have resonated with many hung-over listeners.
โItโs 1966 Againโ is about what lyricist Crabtree sees as growing political awareness and willingness to voice dissent.
โIn the Gutterโ is not, as one might hope, a rewrite of the similarly titled Elvis Presley song โIn the Ghettoโ but is instead about being drunk. And in a gutter. Surprisingly, the following track, โInner City,โ mines the same thematic vein as The Kingโs socially conscious hit.
But lyrics aside, itโs the guitars that make the band. Loud, dirty guitars. The Flesh Hammers are always looking for a few moreโif youโre willing to learn.
