Fu Manchu is one of my favorite present day bands, and their backstory is filled with tons of ties to the 80's California HC/punk scene (something I'm not sure is that well known, but I could be wrong). Singer/Guitarist Scott Hill is a long time major HC/punk fan, and it's evident in his answers. Check out their new LP, "Signs Of Infinite Power," on Century Media if you want to hear some Dan Armstrong fuzz riffs that will BL'AST! your brains out. Much more to come from Scott! -Gordo DCXX
What was your first punk/HC show and how did you end up there? What type of an impact did it have and what are the specifics you can recall?
My first punk show was seeing the Circle Jerks / Shattered Faith in February 1981 at a club in Riverside, CA. A friend of mine had played me some Black Flag, Circle Jerks (live), and The Weirdos. I remember we had a "punk" day in elementary school. This must of been 1979. Some kid had a homemade shirt with "punk is bunk" written on it. I would love to have that shirt now. I had been listening to Kiss / Deep Purple / Ted Nugent up until that point.
When I heard Black Flag / Circle Jerks I was hooked. I tried to get my hands on everything punk/hardcore that I could. Me and my friend took all his Judas Priest, Maiden, Sabbath, Kiss records and skipped them down the street. I was a little smarter and put my rock records in the back of my closet.
Scott with Virulence, 1987
Anyway, I was a young kid and I wanted to go see the Circle Jerks so I got a ride with some older friends and snuck out of the house. Thought I was going to get my ass kicked at some point that night but I didn't really care. I was on my way. Seeing the Circle Jerks was insane. They were sooooo fast and the crowd was going crazy. Picked up my first flyer at that show and started collecting them every week at the local record stores.
Seeing Greg Hetson from the Circle Jerks play guitar was amazing. Their set was over in about 30 minutes. He was jumping around playing fast. I wanted to buy a guitar and start a band the next day. Shaved my head a few weeks later. My parents made a deal with me that if I got good grades I could go see shows during the week. I didn't care about school, but I got almost straight As just so I could go to shows. That was my first live show ever.
Here is another major show for me:
The Faction were supposed to play instead of BL'AST!. We had picked up the original flyer with the faction on it. I really liked The Faction so I was looking forward to the show. I dug JFA and Die Kreuzen as well! We would go to a record store called Toxic Shock out in Pomona, CA to buy records every few weeks and we picked up this flyer with BL'AST! on it instead of The Faction. We were bummed. Bill Tuck (Pillsbury Hardcore) tells us that if we like SSD and Black Flag we should check out BL'AST!. Well, those are two of my favorite bands so hell yes we will check them out!
We are at the show and we see two full stacks being set up, a big drum set and both guitarist have clear Dan Armstrong guitars. Cool. Then we hear them make some noise and...BOOM, they start their set. Holy shit!!!!! We were floored. LOUD, fast, slow, tweaked breaks in the songs and everyone in the band moving around. I believe Pat Dubar from Uniform Choice sang "12XU" with them that night. This was at a point when the band I was in, Virulence, was starting to play at early Gang Green / Jerry's Kids / early DRI speed. Well, that changed after that night. UNREAL show. Still have the set on cassette and Steve, one of the original BL'AST! guitar players, said he would hook me up with a video of the show. This was in 1985 and I still listen to and reference BL'AST! all the time!!!!!!!!
Another huge show was seeing Government Issue in a small room with about 70 other people there. "Joyride" by Government Issue is a top ten record for me and they played almost all of it that night. They wouldn't stop playing that night thank God. Sound was perfect.
Here's another. Huge fan of the first Suicidal Tendencies record and Discharge was the heaviest!
Circle Jerks and Dead Kennedys...two of the best.
CH3 / Fear / The Stains...that Stains record is sooooo good. FEAR!
The list of shows could go on and on and on...everyone of them contributed to me starting a band.
Fu Manchu is clearly a California band. Tell us about where you grew up and how California shaped you as a person and within the realm of music. How did the landscaping of California (sun, cars, motorcycles, surfing, skating) play into being into punk at an early age?
I have lived by the beach in Southern California all my life. Surfing/skateboarding is still a huge part of my life. Kind of something you did living at the beach. Still surf everyday.
Hanging out at the beach as a young kid, I got to see some gnarly stuff. Got to hear cool music at a young age. Blue Cheer, Sabbath, Zeppelin when I was waaay young. Saw every cool muscle car you can think of. The cover to our "California Crossing" record is something I remember seeing from when I was a young kid. I remember seeing a 1968 Chevy El Camino with surfboards hanging out the back and two girls talking to the guy driving it. I wanted an El Camino from then on. Might have been too young to bother with the girls at that point but...we did our cover art with that exact scene that I saw.
Ok, back to punk rock. Then in 1980 I started to see punks hanging out surfing, skating, getting into fights with the hippies. Things just got more aggressive. That faster music just fit in with skateboarding/surfing. Got you very amped up to go skate or surf. I think growing up in Southern California by the beach I was exposed to soooo much good local music.
Seemed like there were 2 or 3 great shows every week. When I noticed punk rock happening in 1980 there were a lot of great local bands. TSOL / Circle Jerks / Black Flag / Germs / Shattered Faith / Descendents / Adolescents / Hated. I would buy any record from a band that I saw on a flyer that was playing a show. Then I started buying zines and would read about bands from other parts of the country. So I would buy Minor Threat / SSD / DYS / FU's / GI / AOF / DRI / Gang Green / Agnostic Front / Poison Idea...a lot of great record stores that would carry everything.
Now with Fu Manchu I think we combine early 80's punk/hardcore with raw 70's fucked up rock.
When did you decide you wanted to play music and who were your main influences for wanting to pick up a guitar? Who continue to be your top influences? As a gearhead, tell us about your set-up and love for Dan Armstrongs.
Seeing Greg Hetson from the Circle Jerks play guitar at my first show and hearing what Greg Ginn from Black Flag was doing were the two major reasons why I picked up a guitar. I didn't see Black Flag until 1983 so I only saw pictures of Flag and they looked heavy!!!
Going to shows and watching the bands play is a main reason why I started a band. It just looked like so much fun. Get 3 or 4 of your friends to make noise together. Black Flag's "Damaged" is the heaviest record that I've ever heard and they remain a major influence! I learned to play guitar by watching the guitarist play at the shows. I would watch how they would tune their guitar, how they made chords with their hands how they set up their gear.
As far as my gear. Well, Greg Ginn is my favorite guitar player so I wanted a clear Dan Armstrong guitar. Then seeing the guitar player from Wasted Youth play one and finally BL'AST! use them...fuck, I wanted one. I finally saved up enough dough and bought one. They are fun as hell to play. Got lucky enough to be sponsored by Ampeg / Dan Armstrong so I have enough back-ups now.
Here's what I'm playing:
Amp wise, I plug into a Superfuzz pedal and run that into a splitter then into a Peavey P.A. head and Marshall TSL 2000. One head goes into each cab. I like a very fuzzy, fucked up tone.
Here's my amp setup:
There are so many great guitar tones / sounds form all those early punk / hardcore records. Black Flag / SSD / VOID / Minor Threat / Circle Jerks / DRI. I always thought each band had their own sound and didn't understand when people would say that all punk sounded the same. CRAZY.
Scott with Fu Manchu, 2007
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Scott Hill - FU MANCHU
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Thanx, cool read!
ReplyDeleteWay cool quiver of Armstrongs! Great flyers! I remember those shows. Great read Scott! Good times!
ReplyDeleteVery cool. Scott's always been very up front about his love of old LA punk and hardcore. Think they even cover SSD on some record. Not to mention that fact that the first 7" came out on Slap-A-Ham, home of Infest, No Comment, Crossed Out, etc. You find a fair number of former hardcore kids in that scene actually.
ReplyDeleteha ha, fuckin bad ass! Hill rips! I remember seeing scott play w/ Virulence and it was insane , just thick and heavy radness. Then evolving into Fu Manchu and hearing that for the first time was a stoke. The mix of hardcore, tuned down guitars, w/ the heaviest riffs that crushed, and to carry it through and through out is impressive to say the least! Great interview.
ReplyDeleteMike Neider
oh,C.O.C. animosity has that little extra just slight more radness to it.
ReplyDeleteor not... Its all great to.
mike neider
awesome band, every album is great, sick live show...total power. bow down to the FU.
ReplyDeleteI think Billy reviewed the Blast /Uniform Choice show at the Balboa in his Think fanzine. Wasn't the encore described as Steve Garvey and the Blasters covering 12xu? Perfect.
ReplyDeletegreat stuff!!! hope to read more. scott is rad and fu manchu are unstoppable. some of the best riffs ever.
ReplyDeleteJust reading that makes me want to skate a concrete wave through a brick wall while blasting some Flag, Sabbath, DRI, and Circle Jerks. Get radical!
ReplyDeleteFantastic interview, lads! Lovin' SoIP. Can't wait til they hit the ATL.
ReplyDeleteblakesjourney / backpackerdaily.com
Steve Garvey and the Blasters...I forgot I wrote that. That is actually funny.
ReplyDeleteAWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteBack from skating. I needed that.
ReplyDeleteGreat read! I remember seeing The Toxic Avenger for the first time at Scott's place in, San Clemente, was it? With Banks and some other peeps.
ReplyDeleteFu Manchu is great, but Virulence was really great emotionally-wise. Good memories practicing at Stompbox. No For An Answer would be practicing in one room, No Doubt (pre Gwen) would be practicing in another, and Virulence shredding over EVERYONE and 49% LOUDER in another room.
This article just about as good as it gets. So was this time in alot of peoples lives.
Good to hear from you Scott.
the stompbox. holy shit. lots of very loud practices happened there. i do remember when we would play "my rules" by VOID at practice, everone there would run into our room. we all should of just been playing mini shows there every night.
ReplyDeletei do remember watching toxic avenger at our place. what happened to sterling wilson? very cool dude.
half off / insted / NFAA. we liked those bands and the people in them! i just pulled out the video of virulence / half off / youth of today playing live in vadims garage. it sounds and looks good. that was a fun one.
i dig this site. thanks for the nice words about virulence. yes, that still remains a great time in my life.
scott / fu - virulence
Cool interview, love Fu Manchu. Saw them only live once, they rocked the place and were heavy as fuck. Though, I can't stand shows longer than one hour and I think they played for almost two hours. I left after one hour. The venue was hot as hell, so maybe that was one of the reasons to leave early as well.
ReplyDeleteListening to The Action Is Go now.
MORE FU MANCHU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteVIRULENCE was amazing! Got to see them live twice and funny about the STOMPBOX Rehearsal studios. Good friend of mine played trumpet in NO DOUBT and I used to go to their practices from time to time and remember VIRULENCE there as well. Great Memories and the re-issue rules!
ReplyDeleteI am really amazed to see that you have done a lot of work on this sector. Great work I must say.
ReplyDeleteThis was at a point when the band was incredible...:)
ReplyDeleteIt was a nice composition either. Its just a magical flavor and that is all I can say about it.
ReplyDeleteScott with his guitar,Loved that pic as I love his performance..He is craziest performer ever.
ReplyDeleteThis must of been 1979. Some kid had a homemade shirt with "punk is bunk" written on it.
ReplyDeleteMy first punk show was seeing the Circle Jerks / Shattered Faith in February 1981 at a club in Riverside.
ReplyDeleteyeahhhhhh! awesome :D we want more
ReplyDeleteit is just so amazing that i can describe anything properly.i am so glad to find this blog.this is another excellent work of yours.i really like topic based on music.you have given good information and good pictures.thank you for sharing.keep posting.
ReplyDeleteIn an era when everyone was playing increasingly metallic revenge core, Krakdown reminded us that hardcore was hardcore punk...
ReplyDeleteOh yeah! I remember Scott Hill. I had such a crash back there and hope that i will see him soon after reading your article today.
ReplyDelete