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February
2, 1991 |
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A few of these groups lasted longer than a single night and lived long enough to play shows. Kill The Man With The Ball was one, Shovel was another, and so was 7 More Seconds. The idea of the band had been a joke for several months before a practice actually materialized. From the beginning, there was no doubt that Lee would sing. And Chad Castetter was an obvious shoo-in for guitar. I was also a big 7 Seconds fan, but didn’t have the necessary guitar skill. On early 7 Seconds albums, before every song became a Steve Youth bass solo, the bass was more straight forward. So I took the bass position. Duncan Barlow walked into the room and instantly picked up another guitar. Thus, one night in November 1990, 7 More Seconds was born. I stopped by Endpoint practice one night in December to record their “Endpoint Outro” for the 1990 Christmas tape. After practice, it was quickly decided that with the DAT recorder set up, this was 7 More Seconds’ opportunity to actually become reality. A few times through the 7 Seconds classic “In Your Face” from Walk Together Rock Together, and it was recorded for posterity. The following week, Lee and Duncan visited my apartment to add vocals to the recording. And a couple weeks after that, it appeared on the Christmas tape. The inclusion of the 7 More Seconds song on the Christmas tape seemed to light the fuse. After that it was only a matter of time before the band would begin practicing on a regular basis, learn an entire set of classic 7 Seconds material, and play a show. Since Lee couldn’t play drums and be the front man at a live show as he could on tape, the drumming of another 7 Seconds connoisseur, Will Chatham, was enlisted. And Duncan dropped out, making it a four piece. As you might have guessed, it happened on a Slamdek Nite at the Zodiac, January 30, 1991. Crain and the God Bullies were scheduled to play, though the latter didn’t make it due to van problems. It was a typical Slamdek Nite, about forty people showed up and had a really good time. Since the God Bullies cancelled, there was a lot of time to goof off. During this time, sound men David Taylor and Cary connected my DAT recorder to the mixing board. The full sets of both bands were recorded. 7 More Seconds opened the show and it was everything it was supposed to be. The
recording is frenzied, hilarious, and nothing short of brilliant (on opposite
day). One of the highlights is the very end when Will Chatham stands up,
throws his drum sticks into the crowd, grabs the microphone and shouts,
in a voice that implies his certainty that the audience got double their
money’s worth, “Thank you very much!” Crain followed
with a phenomenal set. Christi Canfield, a friend of nearly everyone, was a huge 7 Seconds fan as well. A stock joke at the time was comparing things to Christi. As in, “Wow, that girl over there is really hot... compared to Christi!” or “That food smells really good... compared to Christi!” So, as a special tribute not only to 7 Seconds, but also to their biggest fan, the 7 More Seconds cassette was “co-released” on Compared To Christi Records. The catalog number was also a tribute, SDK-7 & CTC-1. It was actually Slamdek’s twentieth release. The band members also paid further tribute in the credits by taking the last names of the members of 7 Seconds who played on The Crew. 7 More Seconds only played this one show. |
| LINER NOTES: Side one:
[recorded after show] Side two:
[live] Lee Seconds
(Fetzer), vocals Produced by Cary Zodiac. Special thanks to the Zodiac, Compared To Christi Records, Crain, and Slamdek. Dedicated to Hardcore, the Kids, and 7 Seconds. Compared
To Christi Records, a Fuckyougoddammit Communications Company, generously
dispensed to the people of the world by SLAMDEK/Scramdown. |
| The
Slamdek Record Company | slamdek.com
| We welcome your questions and comments ©1986-2003 K Composite Media, Box 43551, Louisville KY 40253. See individual pages for additional copyright information. |