Rites of Spring

Rites of Spring was an American punk rock band from Washington, D.C., formed in late 1983.[7] Along with Embrace, and Beefeater, they were one of the mainstay acts of the 1985 Revolution Summer movement[8] which took place within the Washington, D.C. hardcore punk scene.

Rites of Spring
Rites of Spring members Guy Picciotto (left) and Mike Fellows (right) performing
Rites of Spring members Guy Picciotto (left) and Mike Fellows (right) performing
Background information
OriginWashington, D.C., U.S.
Genres
Years active1983–1986
LabelsDischord
Past members

Musically, Rites of Spring increased the frenetic violence and visceral passion of hardcore punk while simultaneously experimenting with its compositional rules. Lyrically, they also shifted hardcore into intensely personal realms and, in doing so, are often considered the first emo band,[4] but the band itself rejected any association between themselves and the emo label.[9][1]

The band only performed 19 shows, 16 in the DC area and 3 outside of DC.[10] Vocalist/guitarist Guy Picciotto and drummer Brendan Canty went on to play in Fugazi with producer and former Minor Threat singer Ian MacKaye in the late 1980s, while bassist Mike Fellows formed Miighty Flashlight and has had a solo career.

History

Picciotto, Canty, and Fellows had previously played together in the short-lived hardcore band Insurrection. The trio was joined by guitarist Eddie Janney—formerly of the Faith, Skewbald, and the Untouchables—and began writing music together in December 1983. The band finished several songs during this early period, like "All There Is," "End on End," and "By Design." The group made a demo recording at Inner Ear Studios in April 1984, but Fellows moved to California. "We thought he was leaving forever," Picciotto recalled. "And then we just kept practicing without him, hoping he'd come back. Lo and behold, three months later, he returned."[7]

AllMusic's Matt Kantor described the band's music as being at times "fast and furious" while also being "at other times lush and evocative though always with a sense of drive and melody."[11] Though rooted in the loud-and-fast style of hardcore punk, Rites of Spring is to be among the first bands who played music in the emotional hardcore genre,[12] or what is now commonly and retrospectively called emo-core, a precursor of screamo. Jenny Toomey notes that, "Rites of Spring existed well before the term did and they hated it."[9]

They were influenced by The Faith (Eddie Janney's previous band) and their 1983 EP Subject to Change with their introspective lyrics and angry, melody-tinged songwriting.[13]

The band is named after the symphonic ballet The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky. "We were reading about Stravinsky and the first [performance] where everybody beat each other on the head," Picciotto explained. "Whenever you fuck with someone musically and they take their music really serious, they're gonna fuck with you back."[7] Picciotto also said the band chose the name to reflect their desire to revive the D.C. punk scene. "We were trying to create a rebirth of what's going on here," he said. "It seemed to be stagnating for a long time and we just thought the name kind of fit the way we felt, a springtime type thing."[7]

Recordings

Rites of Spring was the band’s eponymous debut album from 1985. Its twelve songs were recorded at Inner Ear Studios in February 1985, produced by Ian MacKaye of Fugazi and Minor Threat and Michael Hampton of The Faith and SOA. It was released on vinyl in June of that year as Dischord Records No. 16. The album was re-released on CD and cassette in 1987, with an additional track from the same session, "Other Way Around," as well as the four songs from the Rites' follow-up EP, All Through a Life, Dischord No. 22. The CD and cassette originally retained the number "16" while the 1991 repress, as well as the 2001 remastered version of the same seventeen songs, were numbered "16CD" and given the new title End on End. Their first demo of six songs was recorded in April of 1984, almost a year before the sessions that became their debut album. It was released as a CD EP and 10" vinyl record in 2012 on Dischord Records with the catalog number 176. The band broke up in January 1986 soon after the sessions that produced the "All Through A Life" recording.[10]

Post-breakup and musical influence

Picciotto, Janney and Canty formed One Last Wish with Embrace alumnus, guitarist Michael Hampton. They recorded one studio album, entitled 1986, which was released in 1999 due to the band breaking up after mixing was finished.[14]

The Rites of Spring personnel reunited for a quasi-reincarnation called Happy Go Licky, releasing an LP/CD of various live concert recordings though never producing any studio work. The music was much more experimental than Rites of Spring, heavily improvised and featuring tape loop effects.[14]

Picciotto and Canty eventually teamed up with bassist Joe Lally and former Minor Threat, Skewbald/Grand Union, Egg Hunt, and Embrace singer Ian MacKaye (co-owner of the band’s label, Dischord Records) in Fugazi. Mike Fellows went on to do session work for the Drag City label and form Miighty Flashlight, releasing an eponymous album under this name in 2002.[14]

Picciotto himself doesn't recognize the attribution of having "created" emo. When asked about it in an interview his response was, "I've never recognized 'emo' as a genre of music. I always thought it was the most retarded term ever. I know there is this generic commonplace that every band that gets labeled with that term hates it. They feel scandalized by it. But honestly, I just thought that all the bands I played in were punk rock bands. The reason I think it's so stupid is that – what, like the Bad Brains weren't emotional? What – they were robots or something? It just doesn't make any sense to me."[15]

Dischord released the band's only demo, entitled Six Song Demo, in October 2012. All tracks on the demo were previously recorded versions of songs appearing on the Rites of Spring album.[16]

Members

Discography

Studio album

EP

Compilation

Demo

  • Six Song Demo (2012)

See also

References

  1. Huey, Steve. "Rites of Spring". AllMusic. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  2. Pattison, Louis (November 27, 2012). "Rites of Spring and the summer that changed punk rock". The Guardian. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  3. "ites of Spring - Rites of Spring (album review)". Sputnik Music. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  4. DeRogatis, Jim (1999). "Emo (The Genre That Dare Not Speak Its Name)". Guitar World. Future US, Inc. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  5. McCaleb, Ian. "Rites of Spring". Trouser Press. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  6. Jewett, Chad (July 13, 2015). "Jukebox Breakdown: Rites Of Spring – "All Through A Life"". Half Cloth. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  7. Rice, Barbara (1985). "Rites of Spring: From Insurrection to resurrection". Truly Needy. Issue 10: 20–23.
  8. Andersen, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (Soft Skull Press, 2001). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Fourth ed., 2009. Akashic Books. ISBN 9781933354996. p. 193.
  9. Greenwald, Andy (2003). Nothing Feels Good: Punk Rock, Teenagers, and Emo. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. pp. 13–4. ISBN 0312308639.
  10. "Rites Of Spring". Dischord Records Official Website. Dischord Records. 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  11. Kantor, Matt. "End On End - Rites of Spring - Review". AllMusic. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  12. Azerrad, Michael (2001-07-31). Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground, 1981-1991. Little Brown and Company. p. 528. ISBN 0-316-78753-1.
  13. "Subject to Change 12" EP". Kill from the Heart. Archived from the original on 2014-12-17. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
  14. Strong, Martin C. (2003) "Rites of Spring", in The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0
  15. "Guy Picciotto - 2003 Interview" markprindle.com. Retrieved on February 23, 2009.
  16. "Rites of Spring: Six Song Demo". PopMatters. November 2012. Retrieved 2016-04-23.
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