Singer Dave
Rubinstein (Dave Insurgent) and
guitarist Paul Bakija (Paul Cripple) met at Forest Hills High
School in Queens, the same school that the Ramones
attended. With two other fellow students, the duo formed a band that would
become Reagan Youth in 1980, during
the first wave of hardcore punk. Ronald
Reagan was about to become America's president, and the musicians adapted
his name for the band's name, employing a play on words with Hitler Youth. Reagan
Youth incorporated political messages in its songs, and as committed political
anarchists, the musicians became poster leaders of the anarcho-punk movement. The
songs decried the evils of society and parodied Reagan's policies, the Republican
party, the Religious Right and racism. Reagan Youth was among the most
successful in the original hardcore scene, but by the late 1980s the extensive
touring had taken its toll on the group. Despite the many shows played and the
relatively large album sales for a hardcore punk band, they continually found
themselves broke. When Reagan left the presidency in 1989, the band split up,
and a series of tragic events led Rubinstein to commit suicide three years
later. Beginning in 2006, Bakija reformed the band several times. The present
configuration, Bakija with Trey Oswald
on vocals, Tibbie X on bass and Stig Whisper on drums, has been
together less than one year. Reagan Youth recorded only one album in its
lifetime, 1984's Youth Anthems for the
New Order, although several compilations and live bootlegs circulated
during the band's years of inactivity.
Reagan Youth is living in a new era. At the Bowery Electric tonight, Bakija spoke
frequently between songs on political themes, but these spontaneous rants on
fracking and other issues were more incoherent outbursts than rallying cries. The
audience was there for hard and heavy music, which the band provided. Years
ago, the band's core fans sometimes expressed opposition to the band moving in
a more heavy metal direction, but this continues to be part of the band's
sound. The music was loud, fast and aggressive, occasionally sounding more Black Sabbath than Agnostic Front. Perhaps this inclination was necessary for the new
lineup to remain relevant in today's music scene. Bakija played many more
stinging lead guitar riffs than commonly found in the punk scene, while Oswald screamed,
howled and maintained an urgent dynamic by singing most of the set from the
mosh pit, often kneeling on his knees and leaning his sweaty bare back onto the
floor. Reagan Youth's trademark anarchic vision struggled for air, however; the
band's eponymous song, "Reagan Youth," which used a tongue-in-cheek
rhetoric to draw parallels between Young Republicans who rallied to the cause
of Ronald Reagan and the Hitler Youth during the Third Reich, was enjoyable sonically
but the lyrics were less biting now in the Obama years. The small audience
indicated that Reagan Youth has the potential to be a flagship for a marginal
Occupy Wall Street remnant but may have to continue to reinvent itself to reach
a larger audience.
Visit Reagan Youth at www.reagan-youth.com.
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