Note - if you’re a little uptight about your hardcore, and don’t wanna get kinda touchy feely, DO NOT READ THIS POST. Instead, look at this: CLICK
Some of the most intense and difficult conversations I’ve had about punk and hardcore and other signifiers like “post” and “emo” have stemmed from Moss Icon. They were a great band in their day. I know because they have one of the telling marks of great bands: that all of their imitators horribly SUCK. It’s not that you can never imitate great bands. The number of wonderful Discharge or Minor Threat imitations that the years have given us aer numerous, and plentiful. But sometimes there are bands that no matter how many people attempt to liberally borrow from them, are always done no justice by the gesture.
Case In Point = Moss Icon. This is probably one of the first bands that you could classify as “emo-core”, they have a lot of sonic similarities to groups like Rites Of Spring & Ignition, later Articles Of Faith even. They grew up and entered the scene in Annapolis Maryland, near Washington DC, but removed far enough that at best you could call it a satellite. Annapolis is a weird town I visited a few times growing up. It’s home to the Naval Academy, and by my personal recollection, numerous antique shops. There’s something positively isolated about the approach to their music and delivery, and I think it coresponds in some way to the fact that they were an Annapolis band. I can’t explain it but I sense it there. Maybe I only feel this way because I know more about the band and their location. In interviews members talk about their lack of interest in many of the DC bands. They liked Void, and Beefeater, but felt indifferent towards Embrace and Marginal Man.
One reason Moss Icon has proven so inimitable for this might be that vocalist John Vance was a perma-stoned literature/poetry freak, and while his stream of consciousness yell/talk/shout style was earnest, and has been imitated by boatloads of horrible “emo” and “screamo” bands, he seemed to have some place in an actual literary and philosophical tradition. I feel kind of stupid bringing this up because:
However, I think that this is important to understanding why Moss Icon worked, and above all they were a good hardcore band on this record. Whereas your average band imitating this style of vocal basically delivered a high school/coffee house level poetry reading riddled with disjointed imagery about ex girlfriends and distant parents, Vance was able to evoke imagery of solitude and nature. He is probably one of the only singers I’ve ever heard that could effectively empathize with, ahem, The Plight of the Native American. He could also relate, brilliantly, feelings of suburban anomie, and anxiety like no other. He quoted Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a distinguished philosopher and poet whom I know nothing about.
In some ways Vance is an American/Americanized answer to Ian Curtis. It’s filtering the same kind of sentiments of disconnection and melancholy through a different but similar cultural starting point. As a band Moss Icon has similarities to Joy Division too. While they don’t particularly sound alike, and are coming from different moments in history there’s a connection, especially as Moss Icon developed an approach of dirging, echoy repetition in their career. The first real example of that comes on this record, with the song “I’m Back Sleeping Or Fucking Or Something”. As the bass drones on one riff and the drums skitter and bang behind it, Vance rants a semi abstract tale of childhood, painful and agonizing in his delivery. Guitarist Tonie Joy squalls feedback between massive power chords and has a pretty good sense of when to play and when to hang back. You know that pretentious ol’ “he knows what NOT to play”. It’s a panic attack with a drum beat maybe.
Elsewhere the record finds the band less chaotic, but just as effective. The other 3 songs, all have a more typically hardcore tempos and composition, but with more intricate guitar playing, which is why they often get compared to the Rites Of Spring lp, although Joy is adamant that he had not really listened to them at the time. Some of the influence then, can at least be pinned on their peers The Hated, who in turn were sort of what would happen if Husker Du weren’t popular nationally, and got really into Simon and Garfunkel. Back to Moss Icon though, what sets this apart and makes it superior from Rites Of Spring to me, is that there’s still the anger and frustration of Hardcore’s past noticeable in the music (at least at this stage of the Moss Icon catalog). Rites Of Spring spent so much of themselves trying to escape the machismo that they felt was “ruining the scene”, that I believe they lost a lot of the anger too.
Moss Icon eventually took a more reserved approach, but never lost any of their emotional complexity. This 7″ though, often referred to as “Gretta Garbo” for the photo on the cover of the early movie star, or as Hate In Me for the first song on it, is still my favorite. It’s a clash of sloppy hardcore anger, and subtle melody, hoarse screaming, and thoughtful poetry…or something. Look I just think if you ever feel like listening to “emo-core”, this record beats them all. A scant few have been able to tread the line like Moss Icon did. There’s only 500 copies of this record pressed on the band’s own Vermin Scum label, and I suspect it may go for a lower price (under $40) because it has a high starting bid. Usually these top out at $60.
Also I have to give some credit to Zac and Bobby Busch, as the observations in this post are at least partially inspired by a long Moss Icon thread we participated in on a message board.
I’ll try and post about something pertaining to skinheads tomorrow to make up for this.
I agree with this post completely. I’ve always felt that Jonathan Vance was one of the best punk lyricists, because pretty much all of his lyrics were intelligent, thoughtful, and meaningful, but it rarely seemed like he was trying to prove how much he knew, or that he was “correct.” I can’t really think of many bands off the top of my head whose political lyrics had the same personal approach. Whether he was talking about Native Americans, war, racism, or a creaky dock, it all came across very sincere and honest. Out of curiousity, what are some of the other emo bands/records you appreciate? I’m glad you mentioned the Hated; I love them, and wonder if they had been in DC and been on Dischord, might they have been as legendary as, say, Rites of Spring. So much weird shit going on in Hated songs. Anyway, kudos for shouting out this record!
I do really dig the Rites Of Spring lp still. The playing is so loose and the singing is so bad. It’s really corny but it’s really honest too, I can dig that. I like that some of the songs are still kind of hardcore too. I emailed Guy once about an Insurrection live set I had and he was cool, we chatted a couple lines about Discharge.
I like some of the Hated’s stuff but I actually think they have a lot of misses, and there’s so many Husker Du songs I can listen to instead. I do think “Hey Mister” is a really well written song that shows they were capable of great things. I’m also not really down with the “folk” aspect of their sound, and sometimes they just wail and wail off key, and I get annoyed. Still wish that dork at Troubleman would put out their discography. I like the band Heroin a lot. All their records are still really angry and powerful but they get tossed in with “emo”. Does the last Articles Of Faith lp count? Other than that there isn’t much else I’m interested in. It’s really complicated to start disecting all the different strands of what gets cataloged under “emo/emo-core” and it’s SO unrewarding, and there are SO many total cringe moments and bands. So much of it, especially anything from the 90s, is like highschool poetry magazines set to music.
I hear what you’re saying about the Hated. I like the folk influence though, and actually some of my favorite songs by them (”them” really being Dan and, I think, Colin) are all the unreleased acoustic jams. Anyway, I was on songmeanings.net to re-read the lyrics to Moss Icon’s “As Afterwards the Words Still Ring,” the one about the escaped slave, and apparently their original drummer made a comment in reply to a previous comment I had made, adding that Jonathan Vance is a descendent of Edgar Allen Poe. Who would’ve thought!
http://www.songmeanings.net/lyric.php?lid=3530822107858480862