Pure Hell

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Pure Hell is a punk rock band, established in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1974, [1] during the high point of punk culture in New York City, London and Los Angeles. [2] [3] It has been cited by Bad Brains "as an early influence".

Contents

Career

Among the pioneers of the post-garage rock, post-acid rock, glam-theater era of the late 1960s and early 1970s, Pure Hell was among the first of its kind, comparable to the MC5, Sex Pistols, and Dead Boys. Commercially, the band had little success and only released one single, "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" backed with "No Rules") [4] and one album, Noise Addiction, which was unreleased for 28 years. [1] Founding member writer/vocalist Kenny Gordon and drummer Spider of Pure Hell also have an unreleased album produced in the mid-1990s by former members of L.A. Guns, Nine Inch Nails and Lemmy Kilmister of Motörhead, entitled The Black Box. This album has Kilmister singing background vocals in a rare song titled "The Call". In 2012, Pure Hell reformed to play their first gig since 1979 at the Rebellion Festival at the Empress Ballroom in Blackpool alongside Rancid, Buzzcocks, Public Image Ltd and Social Distortion.

One of the first African-American proto-punk bands, Pure Hell formed in Philadelphia in 1974 and spent time playing in New York City too, eventually becoming friendly with the New York Dolls and even playing with Sid Vicious in 1978 when he moved to New York City. Curtis Knight, former R&B singer in the Squires, which also featured a young Jimi Hendrix on guitar, became their manager and oversaw their career. In addition to managing the band, he also produced one of the two sessions the band made – the other at the end of 1978 in London was amazingly recorded by the Groundhogs main man Tony McPhee. This London jaunt turned out to be the last hurrah for Pure Hell as Knight fell out badly with them and refused to release their album. Even a well-received UK tour and an appearance alongside the ascendant Subs at the Lyceum couldn't stop them splitting on their return stateside.

All they left behind was one single, a cover of the Nancy Sinatra song “These Boots Are Made For Walking”/”No Rules”,. [5] They played a high power, energy-driven Punk Rock with more than a slight Hendrix-influenced guitar at some points. Some of their tracks, particularly “The Girl With The Hungry Eyes”, (about Nancy Spungen, who charismatic lead singer Kenny Gordon knew from his schooldays) verge on proto-hardcore punk. The band proved influential on the emerging CBGB-based New York punk scene.

In 2016, an acetate record with two of their songs, "Wild One" and "Courageous Cat" went for sale on eBay, where it was purchased by Henry Rollins and released on his label. [6]

Kenny has since stated that he doesn't want to be "remembered just because we were black,” and sees the band as being a part of the first tier of punk in the '70s. Most recent live performances include select venues and events on the East Coast, including the Brooklyn Academy of Music Festival, WFMU radio in Jersey City, New Jersey and the Brighton Bar in Long Branch, New Jersey.

Members

Alternate Players

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References

  1. 1 2 "Swindle - Self-Improvement is a Lifestyle". swindlemagazine.com. Archived from the original on December 10, 2008.
  2. A.D. Amorosi, "Along Came a Spider" Archived 2006-06-14 at the Wayback Machine , Philadelphia City Paper, April 25-May 1, 2002
  3. MTV: "Afro-Punk: Five Years Of Rebellion"
  4. James Porter and Jake Austen, "Black Punk Time: Blacks in Punk, New Wave and Hardcore 1976-1984 (Part 3)", from Roctober #32, 2002
  5. "Pure Hell - These Boots Are Made For Walking / No Rules". Discogs. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  6. "PURE HELL". In the Red Records. Retrieved 2018-10-04.

External sources