PILL, THE - Hollywood Smile LP
Desire, an everlasting grip of that youthful energy, that fire and fury
you felt playing a style of music that gives you a lifelong addiction
and appreciation. If you’ve once been part of that certain something,
that became part of your identity, it never lets you go.
Drummer Sascha, bassist Jan, guitarists Philipp and Tobias know how it
is getting older but still feeling the fire. The four friends shook up
the scenes out of Frankfurt in the 90s and 00s. They played in different
bands, they toured Europe and the US of A, they were mods, punks,
hardcore kids. And they never lost their connection and love for their
music. That’s why they got together some years back, rehearsing and
writing songs just for the heck of it.
Out of pure desperation the four of them were thinking about staying a
goddamn instrumental band, maybe working with projections and shit to
fog the fact that there was something initial missing: a singer. The
road was calling their names, and they wanted to play shows and let you
and you and you know what they got… So, they gave it one last try to
find somebody to fill the void behind the mic. What helped was a
platform – basically Tinder for musicians – to find that certain
somebody. They kept it simple and only dropped one thing: #blackflag.
On the other side of the screen there is Sam, a mystical, ghostly
punkrock fairy. Sam shares that same hashtag, and she wants to sing. So,
why not give it a try? Sam takes the offer, shows up in the rehearsal
space, and the rest is history. Sam owns it. Sam is prepared. Sam can
sing, scream, kick ass and has the lyrics to back it all up!
On different occasions they now set stages on fire. They played a sweaty
show in a packed Molotow cellar at Reeperbahn Festival, they joined the
“Female Fronted Is Not A Genre” festival at legendary SO36 in Berlin
and took the place by storm. They are ready. They were born ready. And
they have that record to prove it. As any classic hardcore/punk LP it’s
almost over before it started. Ten songs in twenty minutes. That’s the
way.
I Am A God sets the tone: “You think that I’m a girl?”, Sam asks, “Let
me tell you I am a god/ And you know that I’m heaven sent.” What else
would Sam be? The legendary hashtagged Californian hardcore icons drip
out of every note here. This is old-school knowledge, played today.
Fast, furious, and packed with energy. But it’s way more than just a
bland tribute. It’s a middle-finger that finds its own direction. Salary
Man allows itself a certain amount of melody – also carried by Sam who
obviously can do more than bellow. Or Somewhere that shows that The Pill
is a more dimensional band that can even Hüsker Dü things up if they
are willing to. The Bitter Pill presents itself surprisingly angular and
kind of melancholic. And What’s New almost makes its way into
post-hardcore territory. Inbetween Switch and Off give you all the Greg
Ginn vs. Dez Cadena your damaged souls were desperately striving for.