Mutations – The Many Strange Faces of Hardcore Punk : Sam McPheeters 2020

The last time I wrote about a book, when I covered Arab on Radar memoir Psychiatric Tissues by Jeff Schneider, one of my oldest friends said that he had to read over halfway through the piece before he realized it was a review. This was my fault and this time around I think I’ll drop the review pretense entirely. That doesn’t mean that I won’t be saying anything about what I thought of this book on a qualitative level, as I’d need to deliberately go out of my way to avoid doing so, but rather that I won’t be particularly going out of my way to do so either. All of this exposition might be unnecessary for my longtime readers but on the off chance anybody found this essay expecting a quick summary of the book’s virtues and a mandative statement about whether they should buy it or not this is your quick warning that these aren’t the droids you’re looking for.

I first became aware of this book when I was talking to Dan St. Jacque of Landed about a legendary 1997 show where he set himself on fire and the members of FORCEFIELD used a hose to baste the audience in the exhaust fumes of an idling moped. I wasn’t at this show, my own pilgrimage to Providence and Fort Thunder happened three years later, but I have spent an inordinate amount of time thinking about it. The only other shows I wasn’t at that have received comparable helpings of my mental energy are Woodstock ‘99, Bob Dylan at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival and The Rolling Stones concert at the Altamont Speedway where the Hell’s Angels stabbed an audience member to death – vital myths on a national scale.

There is a video on YouTube of the first ten seconds when Dan runs out on fire but as it doesn’t include him being rapidly extinguished and then doing vocals for the entire Landed set I won’t be embedding it here. I was going to try to write an entire essay about this night but I haven’t succeeded in getting anyone who was in FORCEFIELD at this show to talk to me so I’ll just unload what I have here. If I was as organized as Sam is in Mutations this could have all been a footnote but I’m not so you’ll have to either follow my muddy footprints where they take you or skip ahead.

In my personal headcanon I had built this night up to be an analogue of the murders and church arsons surrounding the early nineties Norwegian Black Metal scene – I assumed that a culture of one-up-manship regarding extreme performances had led to this singular outlier of an evening where the health of performer and audience alike became secondary to the pursuit of spectacle. According to St. Jacques they just really didn’t like the venue, a downtown space called Met Cafe, and were hoping to either get the space shut down or be blacklisted from performing there in the future.

Neither panned out and Landed was back at Met Cafe a few months later but Dan toned things down and only set off a brick of firecrackers in the crotch of his jeans. While the member of FORCEFIELD I did talk to joined some time after this show his answer seems definitive:

…to have to answer questions as a human being went counter to the ‘narrative space’ inhabited by [FORCEFIELD]”

In retrospect I think my attempts to get anyone from the group to talk to me about this show were as unreasonable as knocking on the door of 109 Minna Street when I first moved to the Bay Area and expecting to find one of The Residents. I had already been blessed to receive a direct communique from FORCEFIELD in the form of a VHS of their videos and when I popped it into a Chicago VCR and saw a shrouded figure address the camera in a distorted alien tongue I should have accepted it for the comprehensive and conclusive Artist’s Statement it was.

Anyway Sam had been at the 1997 show, performing in Men’s Recovery Project, and does a much better job couching the events of the night in descriptive language in his book. For this reason St. Jacques sent me an image of the two page spread and as I read onwards to a description of Fort Thunder I had an unexpected reaction and became incongruously territorial over the word “warren”. I have only been seriously writing for two years and this was the first time I had seen another writer use the exact same mildly esoteric word to describe the exact same mildly esoteric thing – in this case the conjoined tunnels that comprise a rabbit colony as metaphor for the chaotic system of interconnected living spaces that made up the backend of Fort Thunder.

You can look me up on Facebook and go spelunking through my last year’s status updates to read the tantrum in real time but I quickly ascertained that Mutations was published two years before my own account and charted a surprisingly accurate shared literary roadmap (Watership Down and The Martian Chronicles) to account for two entirely distinct brains landing on this particular and precise descriptor. Then I sent Sam McPheeters a letter.

Sam is a year and a decade older than me but I am still old enough to remember when physical letters were the primary medium for communicating with people who lived in different cities than you. My first chat room was on a BBS and my first year of college netted me an .edu e-mail address but most of my friends and underground peers held fast to the hand written missive rather than immediately embracing emergent technology. I have to salute Sam for his curmudgeonly insistence on only proffering a physical address to those wishing to contact him as it’s been a long time since I stamped an envelope for a stranger and variety in daily experiences makes for a pleasant lifetime.

I probably wouldn’t have bothered with a letter at all if the only purpose was to share my internal hysterics over the word “warren” but it just so happened there was something else I wanted to ask him about. I’ve written about this before but in 2003 I was on tour with Friends Forever when they played a small festival in the courtyard of the Hollywood ArcLight cinema that was supposed to culminate in a screening of a rare original print of Penelope Spheeris’s Decline of Western Civilization 3. I heard about these things second hand as I spent the set inside the Volkswagen Type 2 operating the lights and smoke machines but apparently one of the Nerf footballs used in the band’s Killball live show struck the SNL fake news comedian Kevin Nealon, angering him, and then the screening was cancelled because some enterprising scamp had stolen the film canisters from the lobby.

Wrangler Brutes, the last of Sam McPheeters’ bands, also played this festival and as none of the people I’m still in contact with from this show remember any additional details I was banking on Sam filling some in. This stemmed from a presumption that he had a comparable obsession with underground music history, a thing I now know to be true from his book, and a similar photographic memory to my own, a thing I now know to be false. Nonetheless he did have something and while the letter was addressed to me personally I imagine he won’t mind me reproducing the following paragraph:

While I was hoping for corroborating details on the Spheeris heist his anecdote is even better and, combined with the bit I already had, makes for a moralist fable about moderately famous actors going to watch a punk history documentary but being unwilling to experience the physical reality of an actual punk show. I got excited when I saw the letters Wrbr, thinking it might be the initials of a radio station that put on the festival, but then I remembered the Mississippi River K-W radio call sign divide and realized it was merely an abbreviation for Wrangler Brutes.

It is exciting to have the exact date but I’ve discovered an odd paradox where underground shows from 1998 to 2001 generally have some form of online footprint but later shows usually do not. Typing “8/16/03 Friends Forever Wrangler Brutes” into Google only turns up this strange FAQ with questions about Quakers, clit piercings and skanking and, in a manner that feels oddly cyclical regarding the history of the written word, the complete text of Beowulf.

If you’ve read my piece on Jeff Schneider’s Psychiatric Tissues you’d know from the introduction that the book ignited in me a strong ambition to take on the task of penning a more cohesive history of turn of the millennium experimental punk or “weird DIY” music. I have to credit Schneider for facilitating this mental breakthrough as even though I’ve spent the last two years thinking about the best way to document this scene and era, it was only after reading his book that I thought of specifically focusing on bands. As long as I’m crediting him I may as well write out some of my other evolving thoughts on his memoir.

After talking to some other members of the Providence, Rhode Island experimental scene I’ve come to realize that the idea of a “townie vs art school” divide is less a concrete reality of that town’s underground and more a specific myopia on the part of Schneider himself. I may as well address another question that arises in the text – Schneider writes of a “feud” between Arab on Radar and Olympia experimental metal band The Need that was kindled by the former band drawing Hitler mustaches on the latter’s tour posters. Now that I’ve spoken to a source close to The Need I know that the offending graffiti was not the iconic fascist facial hair but rather crude representations of penises going into the two female band members’ mouths.

This revelation certainly adds perspective to the passage where Schneider ponders whether the Riot Grrl movement was based on legitimate grievances and the scene was truly sexist or every single female voice in underground music was exaggerating and the scene was not. Considering that he goes with the second option I have to wonder if he deliberately misrepresented the defacing of the posters with a less blatantly misogynist version or his own memory has distorted this detail. I’ve written in other places about the humbling power of confirmation basis to bend and reshape reality and the two conflicting anecdotes could be yet another example of this.

I’ve just started working on my own music history book and I don’t want to jinx it by revealing too many details but it should be relatively safe to list some of the things I won’t be writing about. I’ve been consciously shying away from covering genres that were especially popular in the underground music of the nineties – particularly mathrock, Emo and hardcore. When I saw the title of Sam’s book I assumed it would be a straightforward history of the experimental side of hardcore and take on bands I’d already decided to omit like The Locust, An Albatross and Cerberus Shoal.

To be completely transparent I actually breathed a small sigh of relief with the assumption that someone else was chronicling this side of “weird DIY” music as I thought it would relieve me of any sense of responsibility to do so myself. I also imagined that Mutations would explain all of the new revisionist terms that are being applied to this music like Chain and Egg, Whitebelt and Sasscore. It actually turns out that if something neither resonates with truth or beauty you don’t necessarily have to write about it and as Sam was either unaware of these newer terms or chose not to write about them due to lack of interest my own disinterest is more than adequate cause for me not to write about them myself.

It also seems like my presumption that Mutations would be essential research for my own book turned out to be incorrect and it is less of a cohesive history and more of a collection of related essays. None of this means that I am disappointed in my decision to acquire and read the book and I am grateful for the things it did choose to shine a light on: early hardcore, a historical sampling of more “arty” bands and, most importantly, what it was like to be an older and completely different person than me while interacting with underground music.

Whether this is factually true or not I have always self-identified as a person who “doesn’t care about hardcore”. The detail that my sparse discography of recorded music includes a Youth of Today cover may make the categorization suspect but in my defense I’ve never heard most of the other hardcore bands Sam writes about and the book has only inspired me to listen to Doc Dart’s post-Crucifucks output and Discharge’s Grave New World – the one deemed “unlistenable” by fans of their earlier albums for morphing into hair metal.

The main reason I keep awkwardly referring to Sam McPheeters as Sam even though we don’t really know each other is that when I first moved to Chicago all my hardcore friends would refer to other people in the scene by their last names (McPheeters et al.) as if they were all undercover spies working for the British government and, while I admire this from an aesthetic angle, I can’t seem to feel naturally included in it.

NYHC in particular is a giant blind spot for me and the only group I even ironically listen to is 25 Ta Life – beyond them it all seems like a blur of neon signs in tattoo shop windows, baseball bats, suspenders and older sunburned muscular men with raspy voices. Sam gives a great account of when Born Against, his own NYHC band, debated Sick Of It All on the radio and, as a result, became pariahs in the NYHC scene. The audio document is readily available and I will probably be listening to it before any albums by old guard NYHC bands. (unless Chain of Strength is from New York, I literally don’t know these things)

Not the complete sequence but Murphy’s Law and Agnostic Front are here

I also don’t know if Sick Of It All is in any way related to Murphy’s Law or Agnostic Front but I’ll be telling my own story that tangentially involves these two bands. Matthew Barney, best known as Bjork’s ex-husband for those who don’t follow contemporary art, included both groups in a sequence called The Order from his Cremaster 3 film. The segment shows Barney as a highlander with a smashed in face free climbing up the central ramp of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and facing five challenges intended to symbolize the five stages of Masonic Initiation.

Murphy’s Law and Agnostic Front perform special songs with Freemasonry themed lyrics in white gloves while Barney completes simple puzzles involving Masonic symbols beneath the feet of moshing fans – also outfitted in white gloves.

I probably just said a bunch of words that are extremely uninteresting to the average NYHC fan but this is the artifact of that music most interesting to me. For a brief period of time I was even financially interested – a mysterious string of consequences had deposited a large cache of The Order promotional DVDs at the Skyline Amvet’s Thrift Store and I bought them all to unload on Amazon and eBay for the going rate of thirty dollars. Not long after LaPorsha and I moved down to Tijuana and while I initially left the stack of DVDs at my mother’s house I soon carried them all over the border so subsequent sales could be dropped in a San Ysidro mailbox without adding a four hour round trip to Spring Valley on public transit.

It was a bizarre time – I was using a strange form of heroin I’ve never seen anywhere else in the world and my only sources of income were selling these obscure art DVDs and moving cartons of duty free USA Gold cigarettes in and out of Mexico for a meager profit of ten dollars a carton. I was also writing songs in Spanish and booking shows for my friends which slightly bolstered my profits when I required every band member and friends in entourage to mule an extra carton for me as we passed back into the States.

If I’m going to be completely exhaustive I did also sell marijuana chocolate chip cookies in Mexico for 50 pesos apiece and a few hard boiled eggs for 10 pesos but the first of those things was the result of accidentally crossing the border with the contraband pastries and the second one was an abject failure. The important part of the story, and one I’ve likely already written about, came when I decided to stop living in Tijuana and had to attempt to carry the Cremaster DVDs back into their country of origin. A Customs and Border Patrol agent, in black gloves this time around, saw the words “PROMOTIONAL – NOT FOR RESALE” emblazoned across the top of each jewel case and, as I didn’t have a believable explanation as to why I had these objects that didn’t include selling them for illegal profits, forced me to leave them sitting on the sidewalk in Mexico.

The most painful part of this story to me has always been that the equivalent of several hundred dollar bills was entirely wasted but for the first time I’m realizing that this conclusion may be unnecessarily pessimistic. On average Mexico is less wasteful than the United States and as a DVD is a well known unit of value any person could have done a short internet search and seen the potential profits in following in my footsteps of international traffic. In a worst case scenario the DVDs may have sat on a blanket at either the Spring Valley or Coahuila Swap Meet until a pair of eyes as informed as mine came along.

Any way there was a plausible bluff I could have potentially used to hang onto them if I’d only thought of it in time: Murphy’s Law and Agnostic Front are underground music bands and I’m the kind of person who looks like I could be in an underground music band. I should have said that I was in one of these groups, listed on the back of the jewel case, and gave the DVDs away in the process of promoting my band. It’s not entirely implausible that a Customs and Border Patrol agent would be a well informed fan of NYHC, and such an agent would have easily called my bluff, but the odds seem much higher that I would have gotten by on a thing called “outgroup homogeneity”.

This is just a fancy way of saying that while someone within the hardcore milieux could instantly tell the difference between a scrawny junkie who screams over a drum machine and a member of a foundational NYHC group, to someone outside the hardcore milieux such categorical differences would not be apparent. I certainly would have failed the most basic of trivia checks – I know the names of no members of either group but if pressed I would probably guess “Sully” which I’m hoping will be slightly amusing to the better informed based on how accurate it is or isn’t.

Anyway the main reason I bring this up is that one of the major themes of Mutations is the concepts of authenticity and ethics as they relate to hardcore but I have no idea how to classify this hypothetical situation in regards to these two values. Clearly it would be a lapse of authenticity for me to present myself as a member of either of these well respected and dues-paying bands but would doing so for the express purpose of deceiving a representative of the United States Government be acceptable? Similarly it would be a lapse in ethics to profiteer off bootleg merchandise that could plausibly divert funds away from the legitimate enterprises of either group but something tells me neither does a brisk trade in Cremaster DVDs.

Somewhere in the footnotes Sam talks about two of his friends being confronted by the members of SS Decontrol for buying bootleg copies of their out of print debut record. If I was confronted by a member of Murphy’s Law or Agnostic Front, and had succeeded in the hypothetical ruse in the previous paragraphs, would I also have some ‘splaining to do? Would pretending to be in either band be preferable to pretending to be in the other one for any plausible reason?

I’d really like to know – the specific morality of small underground scenes is an exciting topic and it’s genuinely disorienting not knowing if this particular hypothetical behavior would be classified as reprehensible, permissible or even admirable. If you are a member of Murphy’s Law or Agnostic Front and have strong opinions on this subject please reach out and let me know. I’ve added lots of details, like the fact that the profits went directly to buying heroin, to make the process as easy and unambiguous as possible.

I’m getting toward the conclusion of this piece so here’s a final thought: it was making me feel morally uncomfortable that I’m not particularly excited by the music of Born Against or Men’s Recovery Project. I’m not a huge hardcore fan so the Born Against thing wasn’t bothering me that much but I did feel especially guilty about MRP as reading about Lightning Bolt in a Load Records promotional insert in an early MRP record was the genesis of my eventual pilgrimage to Fort Thunder.

I know that I don’t consciously choose the music I am or am not excited by but the fact that I am excited by so much music that occupies similar artistic space to Men’s Recovery Project made me feel like I was maliciously doing something to not be excited by it even though I would have no reason to do so and this obviously isn’t the case. Anyway deep in the footnotes about a disastrous crowded Dystopia show at The Smell I somehow missed (I do like Dystopia) I saw one small detail that salved my conscience. Apparently Sam’s wife plays in Amps for Christ.

I only started listening to Amps for Christ this year when my friend Ben Jovi sent me some video links but their music is a thing I’m excited by, have listened to multiple times and plan to listen to again. I’m well aware that none of this makes sense: neither my crisis of conscience nor the fact that I felt relief from it from the thing I felt relief from it from. I don’t even know Sam’s wife’s name.

The only explanation I can think of stinks of disingenuous outgroup homogeneity: I’m weird.

Buy Mutations here

Tijuana 2014 : “Amor es Palabra”

I caught a ride down to Tijuana with Griffin because he was going to be playing a Sewn Leather show. He said there wasn’t enough room in his tiny RV for LaPorsha but that obviously wasn’t true. I understood. He needed my undivided attention to help calm him down as he drove the RV. It wasn’t even a big big one – it was like a Dolphin, one of the ones you drop in the back of a pickup truck. But Griffin was a high strung little guy – the polar opposite of the terminally placid bearded pot bellied dudes that usually pilot vehicles of that weight class.

Every missed turn triggered a minor meltdown, let alone the whole logistics of crossing an international border, and he needed me to bounce off and redirect the nervous energy. It might not seem like it but I can be pretty Zen in the right interpersonal combinations.

The show was at a gallery called Otras Obras, another TODDPNYC joint. Todd is a bit like Jeffrey Deitch – I’m not sure if I like either of them as people or the changes they create in the art communities I am emotionally invested in but there’s no arguing with their taste. They know what’s cool a hell of a lot faster that any other curators or promoters punching in their weight class. I just don’t love watching the fights. I’m a Benny “The Jet” Urquidez type of guy – I love me an underdog.

I don’t know if it was Griffin or Todd P that got El Muertho de Tijuana on the show but I never would have moved to Tijuana if he hadn’t played that night. Balthazar is an incredible artist who should be world famous but I don’t think he can legally travel to other countries. I made the mistake of believing his goth tinged cumbia was more representative of what was happening in Tijuana’s hipster youth culture than it actually was.

My dream was to start a No-teño band – a portmanteau of No Wave and Norteño. My vision was a mariachi version of jazz influenced bands like The Contortions. In my fantasy I would immediately meet young, disenfranchised brass and bajo sexto players who were just itching to let me croon over a darker slowed down version of the oompah music they’d been raised with. The reality was that the kids were into indie rock and electronic dance music. People were friendly, welcoming and receptive enough to my increasingly-theatrical-while-musically-minimal style but writing songs in Spanish didn’t magically transform me into the flavor of the moment.

We ended up getting a cheap balcony apartment right next to Parque Teniente Guerrero where El Muertho would play almost daily for adoring crowds of working class families. His KISS style make-up and obvious unapologetic homosexuality gave him unquestionable populist appeal but he wasn’t headlining the bars and galleries I was managing to book shows at. I recorded myself playing La Bamba at a viscerally uncomfortable tempo on my mother’s piano but for most of my new songs I just pulled random instrumentals off of YouTube because I hadn’t found a band. If I had been smarter I would have taught myself guitar or keyboard and taken songs, like the one I’m about to type and translate, straight to the park:

Amor es palabra, es solo palabra

Pero Amar es trabajo

A la comida no tiene sabor

Sin una poca cebolla y ajo

Porque Estás llorando mi corazon mi vida

Este vez eres cebolla o cuchillo?

Es nuestra amor cierto como una gran cena

O solo es un bocadillo?

(Love is a word, only a word. But to love is work. Concerning food, it has no flavor without a bit of onion and garlic. Why are you crying my heart, my life? This time are you the onion or the knife? Is our love true like a grand banquet or is it only a snack?)

I was super obsessed with main stream Latin stars like José José and Juan Gabriel but unfortunately I never learned basic musicianship and I’m not much of a singer. I do still feel that writing in Spanish set off something special in me musically even if I never learned to speak it properly. Who knows? – maybe my dream No-teño band lives in the forests of Northern California and is just waiting to read these words and e-mail me.

Me and LaPorsha got into the comfortable rhythms of living on the Mexican side of the border. We lived above a water purification store where we could refill our five gallon bottles but really they were on every corner. I combed the Coahuila Flea Market for an empty propane canister for the water heater and walked ours down there to sell it when we were ready to leave. It’s an unwritten law of Mexican tenant culture that you don’t just leave it for the next person unless they are a particular friend of yours. They’re worth too much money. Once every couple months we would endure a day or two of cold showers until I heard the distinctive jingle of a passing Z Gas truck and ran the empty cylinder down to exchange it.

Our Flame-Point Siamese named Catrick made the move down with us and seemed to take to the Mexican Street Cat life right off the bat. He had already been going to parties around Los Angeles with a stylish blue leather harness from one of the souvenir shops and riding buses and trains with us. We left the window open a crack for him behind the security bars and he got used to coming and going as he pleased. Before long we had to go to Los Angeles for a little longer than usual to perform a series of pieces based on the Planets of Classical Astrology at Human Resources.

We left out lots of food and water but Catrick was pissed at us for not bringing him. There was an ancient mansion surrounded by overgrown weeds, palms and fruit trees at the center of our block – it had an old model white Cadillac sitting in its yard that Catrick must have felt drawn to because it was the same color as him. He decided to flaunt his independence by moving underneath it and sleeping in its shadow. He pretended not to hear me calling him, I knew because I saw his ears twitch, and I had to put food through the bars of the fence to lure him and quickly snatch him home. It became a ritual we would have to repeat every time we left for even a single night from then on out.

There was a family of pigeons living in the outside of the north facing stucco wall, the window looked toward the border and was covered in chicken wire so they wouldn’t move all the way in between human tenants. I watched a few dawns through that window but nearly every dusk. The only way I know how to explain it is that darkness fell differently on the Mexican side of the border – like I could look North and see the exact gradation where it shifted. Something about the way the shadows would stretch out and devour the spaces between buildings. Maybe it’s something as mundane as different styles of architecture and urban planning or maybe it was all in my head.

There was a really nice silver decal of the Seal of Solomon I had bought from Mercado Sonora in Mexico City on the glass – we left it behind when we moved and I’m sure the next tenants hated it if the realtors didn’t just peel it off themselves before showing it to anybody. On hot days the pigeons would stink through the wall and I’d worry that they were giving us little red bird mites. One of them got in one day and Catrick made a desperate NBA leap for it in the stairwell but barely brushed the tips of its feathers with his claws. I let it out and he was furious with me. The next week he dragged in a flattened one from the street as if he’d killed it and I made fun of him:

You’re such a loser dude, everybody knows you’re not a car!”

There was a homeless guy on our block we called Jack Sparrow – he had dark skin and matted black dreads and dressed in layers of grime encrusted rags and old puffy winter jackets worn flat with age. I never saw him speak – not even to himself and never in any language. He had developed a particularly unsavory defense tactic – he would pull down his pants and thrust his filthy, unwashed ass outward while walking backwards like a crab. Everybody instinctually recoiled from it in horror; you always knew he was coming because pedestrian crowds visibly parted on the sidewalk.

One night we were walking on the side of town near the Cultural Center when a tiny striped female cat came darting from behind a book store and urgently cried for our attention. I saw her again on a walk I was taking on my own about a week later and carried her home. We called her Tabby. Of course she was pregnant. She ballooned up like a watermelon and LaPorsha tried to wake me up in excitement the night she had her kittens but I was dead to the world.

I should have woken up.

Tabby’s instincts hadn’t fully kicked in and her babies were tangled up in a mess of umbilical cords she had neglected to sever with her teeth. I was able to cut four of them free but a fifth one had been strangled to death when his writhing siblings accidentally tangled the cords around his neck. Tabby lay next to the haphazard knot of infants purring contentedly in blissful ignorance that she had just decisively fucked up the delivery. Without my intervention they would have all died or at the very least lost limbs.

I put the dead kitten in a plastic bag and walked downtown to throw it away as far from the apartment as possible. I went to Speedy’s to buy some Oxymorphone, often referred to as the Cadillac of opiates, and Smart & Final to buy some Glorias from the small batch Las Sevillanas brand. I was looking for anything that could help us feel better or at least feel shitty less conspicuously.

Catrick had been neutered young but really stepped up to the plate for the foster father role. He played with the kittens without ever getting too rough and used to sit with his paw resting on top of Tabby’s like a sweet Captain Save-a-Hoe. I gave some of the kittens names but nothing permanent – things like Isaiah and other ones from the Bible I wouldn’t even remember. It was fun for a while but the kittens got old and Tabby started acting feral again – everybody was done with everything.

Catrick climbed onto the spot where our shoulders met in the bed and pissed so it would get on both of us. He was trying to tell us he was ready to be the only cat in the house again. I put Tabby and her kittens in a box and walked to the Park to start giving them away. The first tuxedo boy went with this young guy with a Faux Hawk whose printed polo shirt showed he had one of the better-paying-than-average cell phone store jobs. The kitten dug its claws in and buried its face in his chest and he said “Vamanos” and walked off into the sunset. I think they were probably quite happy together.

I ended up by the big Cathedral where rows of faith healer’s stalls sold dried herbs, medals of the Saints and pieces of rattlesnake skin. Men who appeared to be disabled walked around wearing laminated signs advertising acupressure and miraculous touch. I was able to find what seemed like good homes for all of the kittens but everybody declined to take Tabby with them even though she was still affectionate with her offspring. Finally I just had an adult female cat in a box and that isn’t the sort of thing you can give away on the streets of Tijuana – not even outside the biggest Cathedral. I slowly walked away from the box – it’s not like she was peeking over the side and watching me. I felt bad but there wasn’t really anything else I could do – at least there was more street food on that block than the one by a bookstore I had found her on.

Perhaps just setting her on the ground so she could run off would have been more honest – and by extension more kind. There’s a lot of things I’m still figuring out.

LaPorsha had a gig where she would commute to Los Angeles to work in a BDSM Dungeon but she wasn’t guaranteed sessions, the only thing that made money, every time she made the trip and Black sex workers are just generally undervalued outside of niche situations so it was pretty much a waste of time. I made little scraps of money bringing cartons of duty free USA Gold cigarettes into Mexico then back into the United States. We only smoked them if we were desperate – we liked the Lucky Strikes with a picture of a dead rat on the box. When friends came down to play shows I would make sure that everybody muled the maximum two cartons for me in both directions. I kept them in my kitchen cabinet and made sure to never cross in either direction without moving and selling cigarettes.

We could have lived down there forever if it wasn’t for the constant police harassment. LaPorsha wouldn’t get it when she was alone because they just assumed she was Haitian but she didn’t like going anywhere alone and I got it constantly. The cops acted like dogs who are only interested in a stick the moment another dog picks it up. We walked Catrick in the park and they came up and accused us of stealing a cat. I carried an old karaoke machine down the street and they accused me of stealing that. It didn’t help that we were on drugs and all of our dreams about Tijuana having a thriving Downtown 81 style Arts scene weren’t working out anyway.

We gathered all of the stuff from our apartment and put Catrick into a carrier and walked back into the United States. I had another side hustle selling promotional copies of the The Order DVD from Matthew Barney’s Cremaster 3 because I had found a huge cache of them at the Amvets in Skyline Hills. I never should have brought them all into Mexico but it saved me a few bus rides when I had to cross over and drop one in the mail.

The Customs guys told me that I couldn’t have them because I was obviously selling them which was illegal and I couldn’t think of a convincing lie. They told me to go back into Mexico and come back without them and I didn’t have any friends by the border to go give them to. There was this new art space that had just popped up in the row of border storefronts. It was closed but I left them in front of it in the hope that somebody who knew what they were might find them and it wouldn’t be a complete waste.

They sold slowly over eBay and Amazon but it still felt like setting several hundred dollars on the sidewalk.

It wasn’t until I was already back in the United States that the idea hit me. I should have said that I played in either Murphy’s Law or Agnostic Front and gave the DVDs away to promote my band because both groups are referenced on the packaging.

Maybe I should explain this more for anyone who might be interested. Both of these classic NYHC bands play special songs created for the art film as Matthew Barney’s character free climbs up the sloping ramp of the Guggenheim Museum in a special section intended to symbolize the five stages of initiation into Freemasonry. The short section on the DVD was the only part of Cremaster 3 made commercially available but the full three hour film is now on archive.org.

All of the Customs Agents looked like skinheads anyway but it’s probably like 100 to 1 that they wouldn’t know I was lying. They’d have had to have been into early hardcore and known enough about both bands to realize I couldn’t possibly be even a temporary member of either one.

It doesn’t matter anyway, whatever I didn’t lose then I would just end up losing later.

Even the cat.

[photo from El Muertho de Tijuana Instagram]