
Steve Hammond: Nuclear Winter, 1999
‘”I share the view that most of today’s best music is never heard or is pushed back and written off for a dime a dozen top 40, FCC and MTV sanctioned bullshit,” declares Hammond. “I hope your ear for undiscovered music will spread back to the other mediums of exposure one day after the general public realizes what kind of crap has been spoon fed to them for so long now.” As if! The follow-up to 1998’s scuzzy but wonderful The Bug That Bored Into Stevie’s Brain benefits from a drum machine (never thought I’d say that) that helped Steve clean up his sound without losing the urgency of his emotionally raw but tuneful music. As before, Steve’s guitar is the star: By turns a rusty knife cutting his own throat, a dull needle sliding into a resentful vein, a crystal trinket glimmering through a soot-stained window, the instrument in Hammond’s hands does more for the cause with six strings and a few amps of bedroom socket juice than a thousand megapixels of obscure web ramblings.’ — Demo Universe, 1999
PERSONNEL: Steve Hammond, vocals, guitars, drum machine
TRACK LISTING:
Side 1
1. Cankersore
2. Train From 91
3. Un-dub
4. Russian Textbook
5. Adhere
6. Kill It
Side 2
1. The Space Between (four songs, untitled)
I do not know for certain what Steve Hammond is up to these days, but there is evidence he moved from Manhattan, Kansas, to Albuquerque and now plays in a band named Leeches Of Lore. To whit, this tape came out on Flying Midget Music, and the New Mexico band, whose members include a Steve Hammond, released on Flying Midget Records. There are similarities in style, as well. If anyone can confirm this, I’d appreciate it!
3 thoughts on “Steve Hammond: Nuclear Winter, 1999”
A gem of a tape. It’s got everything I love about the 90s underground/4-track movement: no uniform sound, kitchen-sink instrumentals, other-than-love lyrics, and usually undertaken with the conviction that these songs will never crack America’s Top-40. Great stuff.
Hey Jim! Thanks for posting this! Do you happen to have the review of “The Bug That Bored Into Stevie’s Brain” somewhere? I am releasing the original version of it “Stereo Cassette” and would love to include your review on the release page.
Cheers!
Steve
Hey Steve, I sure do!
“I generally classify all my shit as punk,” writes 20-year-old Steve Hammond, but don’t expect no Rancid Green Spring here. This is deep stuff, as diverse as Hammond’s tastes — “from Fugazi to Zeppelin to the Clash, from Guided by Voices to Dick Dale to the Melvins, Sonic Youth, Devo, Hendrix, Cure, etc., etc.” Noise, dissonance and harsh vocal distortion are key elements of Steve’s sound, but there’s always a song in the eye of the storm, and often a lovely melody (“It’s Mine” is a brilliant blend of beauty and beast). Guitar fans will appreciate Hammond’s inventive, ferocious fretwork and his gnarly singing is memorable. The recording’s majorly murky but the scuzzy sonic patina suits the music’s raw nature. “This is really the first time I’ve ever sent any of my shit anywhere,” writes Steve. Hope it’s not the last!
— Demo Universe, March 13, 1999 (received November 6, 1998)