Anti-Matter Anthology:

So anybody familiar with how amazing underground music was in the early nineties will tell you that the anti-matter comps werethe best way to get familiar with the newest and best in post hardcore. The music on these records set the stage for what would later become the emo scene of the late 90’s. There was the big buy up the major labels attempted to get some relevance by signing bands like Samiam, Orange 9mm, and Quicksand but of course that shit failed as an experiment to capitalize on something that wasn’t really ‘grunge’ but had all the trappings of a living scene while Nirvana ruled the air waves. Basically the second wave of emo being Sunny Day Realestate, Promise Ring, Jimmy Eat World. I guess the first wave would have been Embrace, Rites of Spring and uh – The Replacements? Whatever, I don’t have a degree in scene-musicology. Anti-matter is where i discovered Split Lip/Chamberlain, Shelter, 108, Snapcase, Texas is the Reason and probably one of the best songs Quicksand ever released. Lots of amazing bands laid the groundwork of lots of shitty ass bands from this era. Sure its not hardcore from the salad days, it was music made by people that lived through Gulf War I. Here is the latest on what will most definitely be one of those documents of note like Our Band Could Be Your Life.  Thanks to author Norman Brannon for taking the time to put all the pieces of my youth together.

For those who don’t know, Anti-Matter was a fanzine published between 1993 and 1996 from a bedroom on the corner of East 10th Street and First Avenue in New York City. Anti-Matter was also a compilation album, released in 1996, that documented sixteen hardcore, post-punk, and indie bands who weaved the fabric of the music that featured prominently in the fanzine. On November 6, 2007, for the first time ever, Anti-Matter will become a book: The Anti-Matter Anthology: A 1990s Post-Punk & Hardcore Reader will be issued by Revelation Publishing, the literary sister of Revelation Records.

On this site, you’ll find updates on the book’s release schedule, a weblog with practical announcements and random stories from the era, related event schedules, and a safe place to debate the important things — like Split Lip vs. Chamberlain. Or “Can We Win” vs. “Give It Up.”

Anti-Matter was conceived and created by Norman Brannon — in 1993, a former guitarist for Ressurection, 108, and Shelter. Upon its demise, Brannon went on to form Texas Is The Reason and New End Original, in addition to working as a DJ and running an independent dance label called Primal Records. His work has been published in Alternative Press, Punk Planet, Ego Trip, Soma, and VIBE, among others. Brannon is currently working on new music, as well as a second book of short-story nonfiction. He lives in Brooklyn, New York, and online at Nervous Acid. Also, he apologizes to anyone who bought Fuzzy or Inch records at his behest.


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FOREWORD BY AARON BURGESS

One of the first rules you’re taught in journalism school is objectivity. One of the first things you learn as a rock writer, and one of the only truths that torments you throughout your career as such, is that objectivity stinks. I mean, who besides the most reactionary, humorless fanatic really wants to read an “objective” record review? (You know: “Band X has been making music for Y years. Band X’s new release, Really Important Record, does this and that. It also does this and this and this…”) What rock writer with real human emotions — and not the High Fidelity-sort of pseudo-emotions one gets from memorizing album credits — has ever conducted an objective interview?

These are rhetorical questions, of course. You need only look as far as the rock magazines on your shelves, the rock sites in your Web browser, to find page after page of mannered, noncommittal stories about nothing: Puff pieces exalting the “kewl” new sounds of rock’s flavor of the minute. Illiterate rants penned by sycophants who think all a critic needs are ears, a press release, and a PC (the music’s always secondary, of course). Very rarely today do you find a rock writer whose work tears into the guts of the matter, whose questions get beyond the music’s surface to examine the real human issues lying underneath. Not the well-worn issues of personality and decadence, either, but The Big Issue of what it means to be a frightened human being truly living on this big, lonely planet.

I know what you’re thinking, and you’re right — sort of. Most modern rock bands don’t examine these kinds of issues, so most rock writers don’t have to dig deeply to get the story. But in hardcore and punk rock, the genres on which Norman Brannon’s fanzine Anti-Matter was built, thousands of intelligent, motivated musicians have long been examining the kinds of existential issues others have put on the backburner. True, a lot of punk musicians are young, and young people by nature are bound to have stupid existential crises. In this area Norm was no different. But there is one crucial area in which Norm broke from his peers in the punk zine community, an issue around which he lives even now that his tastes have shifted toward pop and electronic music: Norm was, and is, a seeker. He interviewed bands for Anti-Matter not because he liked their music (although he did), but because he found something intangible in their music that described how he was feeling, and he wanted their help in understanding just what that “something” was.

Norm wrote what he did in Anti-Matter because he had to; the fanzine’s contents reflected the conflict that was unfolding inside the writer. He often asked questions that were embarrassing to read (many of which are reprinted in this book); but even in his most naïve line of questioning he could articulate the issues that he — and, invariably, his readership — was facing at that point. There’s something beautiful and natural about even the most earnest writing in Norm’s old interviews. When today’s younger punk writers adopt similar styles, their work seems forced. Even at its most amateurish, Norm’s writing never had that quality.

Which isn’t to say that Norm launched Anti-Matter because he wanted to be regarded as “seminal” in the field of punk fanzine editing. The zine’s content flowed naturally, innocently, and it mirrored the direct links between the music, Norm’s heart, and Norm’s head. The hype about Norm’s being “seminal” would come later, much to his dismay, from the author’s admirers — most of whom, unfortunately, would continue to miss the point in their own work.

Norm once said of Anti-Matter, “I was basically trying to get [my interview subjects] to say the things I was thinking in my head — partially because I just wanted to know that I wasn’t a freak, and partially because I wanted other people to know they weren’t freaks, either.” With that noted, I think there’s just one reason why Anti-Matter is no longer publishing — and it has nothing to do with music, advertising concerns, or scene politics. Norm found the truth he was seeking, and he learned to take that crucial next step.

News from former Bear Vs Shark members

Its true. I think Bear vs Shark was the best band ever to grace the roster at Equal Vision Records. Even more so than 108 and the handful of bands that were on that label in the early 90, including Snapcase and any other band that might have been on an Anti-matter comp. Any way, I was taking a trip down ‘wish-that-band-hadn’t-broken-up’ lane and caught this post on the BvS myspace.

the first ‘official’ new project from the members of bvs…

“[former members of BvS]…have now made things ‘official’ and created a myspace page for their new project ‘CANNONS’. they have two rough demos posted, and john would like it to be known that mike had nothing to do with them, so all genius should be accredited to mark and himself.

the first song, ‘perennials’ is a folky, bluesy sort of balad that makes creative use of that ‘clicky’ kind of sound that you get from cd’s sometimes after they’ve become scratched. the entire second half of my jay-z ‘blueprint’ cd suffers from this problem (as does my copy of white zombies ‘la sexercism’ – which is a really good record if you didn’t already know that, which you probably didn’t, because you were 6 when it came out.)

the second track, ‘cicada song’ is also a rather folksy, bluesy number, but it takes a dramatically electric turn at the 3:32 mark. keep an eye on this one, as it goes from soulful folk ballad to barn burner in the blink of an eye. think muddy waters meets april wine.

while the project is obviously still in it’s infancy, it’s already caught the ear of such celebrities as the ever wily ted danson, and the boyishly hansom stephen dorf. if this is any indication of things to come, ‘smashing fucking success’ may be the myspace blog understatement of the year.

Please go check them out at myspace.com/cannonstheband

In unrelated news, Junior Kimbrough is fucking awesome. As are the black keys. You should check out both of them if youre not familiar. Oh, and so is Avail. Avail will probably never not be good.

Lastly, our friends in the Uncut have been busy recording some new shit and should have an album out in the next couple months. You should check them out (theyre in our top 8) if you havent already.”

Godspeed mi’boys, Godspeed!