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| Pink Eyes, aka Damian Abraham |
Fucked Up formed
as a hardcore punk band in 2001 in Toronto, Canada, by high-school friends who
were inspired by first- and second-wave hardcore bands. Fucked Up recorded dozens
of releases, and despite having a name that cannot be printed in the New York Times and other media, won Canada's
2009 Polaris Music Prize for the band's second album The Chemistry of Common Life. The moniker is not the only
controversy associated with the band, however. Several critics denounced the
band's cryptic lyrics as flirting with fascist ideology. During concert
appearances on MTV, the musicians and their fans tore apart a studio in 2007
and, given a second chance, did it again in 2008. Fucked Up lost a lawsuit against Rolling Stone and Camel in 2008 regarding an advertisement
that implied that the band was promoting the tobacco product. A chaotic
performance on a pedestrian bridge at South by Southwest in 2008 resulted in
police action -- some called it a riot. The band has survived it all, and Fucked
Up's present lineup consists of Pink
Eyes (Damian Abraham, also known
as Mr. Damian, vocals) 10,000 Marbles (Mike Haliechuk, lead guitar), Concentration
Camp (Josh Zucker, rhythm
guitar), Young Governor (Ben
Cook, also known as Bad Kid or Lil' Bitey,
rhythm guitar), Mustard Gas (Sandy Miranda, bass) and Mr. Jo (Jonah Falco, also credited as G.
Beat or J. Falco, drums). Fucked Up's fourth album, Glass Boys,
was released on June 3, 2014.
While Fucked Up has experimented often in the recording
studio, multi-layering guitar tracks to absurd excess, recording a 17-minute song
that included five minutes of whistling, incorporating traditional instruments
(flute) and female backing vocals, and recording a "rock opera" set
in Margaret Thatcher's Great Britain. Nevertheless, tonight's performance at
the Bowery Ballroom showed that the
band is first and foremost an outstanding hardcore punk band. Abraham was a commanding
and burly front man -- towering, bald, bearded, hairy, sweaty and half naked
for most of the show (watch out below when he dives into the audience!). He
aggressively growled the lyrics while constantly moving and grooving across the
stage to the frantic music, frequently sharing the microphone with fans at the
edge of the stage. The band's triple-thick wash of guitars was an incendiary and
sometimes discordant wall-of-sound assault, with Haliechuk ripping leads that
were sometimes more psychedelic than punk. The songs on the albums touch on
political commentary, rants about organized religion, rebirth, and Tibetan mysticism,
but in concert, who knew? The gruff, abrasive roar of the gravel-throated vocals,
the massive guitar attack, the pummeling, tribal percussion and the "tension
and release" energy were a thick, raw, messy and jarring locomotive.
Forget the odd flourishes on the band's recordings; onstage, Fucked Up was
straight forward hardcore punk at its nadir.
Fucked Up does not seem to have its own website. Visit
Fucked Up through its record company website, www.matadorrecords.com/fucked_up,
or the band's FaceBook page.

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