Who better to wrap up our BL'AST! Album poll results than guitarist Mike Neider himself. My personal vote went to The Power Of Expression for it's crazy rawness and I know Tim voted the same, but each BL'AST album is an in-your-face wall of sound that never subsides. -Gordo DCXX
The Power Of Expression was our first experience with recording, spending time in the studio, listening to it from the studio, etc. So, we were learning as we went. When we wrote the songs it was not clear who was going to be in the band and we had no idea these songs would actually be a record. It just happened. When we wrote that record we were real young and green in the studio. Putting us in the studio was always awkward, we were such a live band it was kind of like putting a Sunday suit on a kid that didnt like to go to church, haha. That's why we recorded The Power Of Expression three different times - it took that many times to even get a little satisfied or to try to capture what we wanted. We never even got close to what we wanted or the way we felt live.
The Power Of Expression had three chances. The first POE recording was eye opening. It was kinda like, "whoa this is what we sound like...trip. We can do better." So the second time we recorded after a show on the graveyard shift in 8 hours. It turned out good but it was real slow. The third time is what we released and still would have liked to do it over but we had no dough and did not want to put any more into it. Times were a bit different back then in the studio at least for us. It was rare and expensive to record. It's In My Blood and Manic Ride have their own story but we did not get a chance to really capture once again what we wanted.
A raging Mike Neider, photo from Take The Manic Ride
For It's In My Blood, we were able to do a little more of what we wanted to do and after we made a ghetto box recording we let Greg Ginn hear it and we played him the songs "Sshhhh" and "It's In My Blood" and he signed us after hearing those songs and seeing " It's In My Blood" live. So that was a great thing to us and one of many reasons why I dig this record. Again, there was little time and not much studio experience to capture what it sounded like live. But it sounds rad!
Take The Manic Ride was us falling even more so into our own again, and we got kinda fucked in the studio. We had a small budget and when it was all said and done and ready to mix we realized some messed up compressors and a couple of other things were on while we recorded so we had to release it how it is now. Folks may be tripped out by this, because it a bit cuz its different, but then again thats what BL'AST! liked. But it would be great to re-record that album again and put it out the way it should sound.
Classic Clifford Dinsmore and Dave Cooper with BL'AST!, Photo from POE
After that we recorded some demos post-Manic Ride that took BL'AST! even further into sounds and tunes that we really were into. Never released any yet!
As far as the poll goes that you were doing, for me it would be the opposite of the way they were released. Although I like them all, I would say my favorite is Manic, followed by Blood, followed by Power (although "Nightmare" for me was a rad thing). In terms of album sales, in order from most to least, it was Blood, Power, Manic.
Thanks a lot. -MN
The Power Of Expression - 119
It's In my Blood - 65
Take The Manic Ride - 17
Clifford says, "Ask me why I care, in a world where no one cares...", Photo from POE
Monday, January 4, 2010
Mike Neider on his BL'AST! recording memories, plus poll wrap up
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I saw BL'AST! so many times and they always raged. Great memories. Thanks for the share Mike.
ReplyDeleteyeah, I've said it before, as powerful as Bl'ast! is on record, it never comes close to the real deal live. I'm not even sure its possible to capture a band like that on record, it really had to be experienced.
ReplyDeleteGREAT band, thanks for the read.
aweeeeesome
ReplyDeleteI love reading this BL'AST! content. I voted for It's In My Blood because it was the first one I bought and I wore it out before I even heard the others. It took me a while before I appreciated how wild the songs were and especially how tweaked out a lot of the changes and progressions were. Call me crazy, but I still listen to BL'AST! more than I listed to Flag - and I love Black Flag.
ReplyDeleteI also thought they got their name from The Blasting Concept comp - I know that came up here before.
I voted for It's In My Blood, because the rhythm is a lot tighter (they redid some songs from the first album and they came out better the second time), and as an after-thought because of the cover. I don't believe in religion (I have no idea if the band members do either), but from an aesthetic standpoint, it's a powerful image and makes a great record cover.
ReplyDeleteOMG! BL'AST live in Santa Cruz! Front St Cafe, the Blue Lagoon, the Warehouse shows, they OWNED Santa Cruz!
ReplyDeleteBL'AST in SJ or SF was equally good, but in Santa Cruz in the mid 80's......Wow!
mike neider: please keep contributing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANKS!
ReplyDeleteI didn't vote on this because I couldn't pick a favorite album.If the production didn't suck on Manic ride that would be my pick. The band just flat out rules. Since Power of..
ReplyDeletecame out I've always listened to Blast more than Flag .
Maybe that should be a poll question.
How about a cover band BlastFlag
I almost voted for Take the Manic Ride, but went with Power of Expression because that was my first taste of the greatness that is Blast!.
ReplyDeleteOne of the best live bands I've ever seen. The only time I got a chance to see them was at the Anthrax. They were opening for The Descendants but their van broke down,they got there late and had to play after the headliner. The club, which had been completely packed, had only about 30-40 people in it by the time Bl'ast played. Didn't matter, they KILLED it. Learned a valuable lesson, that a great band will put on a great show whether there are 5 or 5000 people in the audience. Bl'ast probably were just as intense when they practiced.
ReplyDeleteWay too late to vote, but I would have voted for PoE. That album literally opened my mind. The first time I listened to it, I hated it. I really came down on them hard for sounding so much like Flag. Aside from that, the song structures were just too much for me. In 1986, I had never heard such chaos. The riffs and the beats sounded like something only a total psychotic could come up with. It was too much for me. But somehow it took hold of me, and before long PoE was one of my favorite albums, and it still is to this day. I go on a Blast kick at least once a year, where all I do is listen to the 3 albums and 4 demos. I interviewed Blast for Flipside in 1989 at the Reseda Country Club, right after Manic came out. The thing I remember most about Mike from that night is that I'd never seen anyone put so much chew in their mouth at one time.
ReplyDelete