Recent Blog Posts
Fri Nov 21, 11:44 PM
Fri Nov 21, 9:09 PM
Fri Nov 21, 2:49 PM
Thu Nov 20, 11:51 AM
Sat Nov 22, 11:41 AM
Fri Nov 21, 5:34 PM
Fri Nov 21, 4:54 PM
Fri Nov 21, 8:00 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Mark Keresman
Car Alarm
(Thrill Jockey)
City of Refuge
(Asthmatic Kitty)
Put another dime in the Jookabox baby
Slow Burning Lights
(Babygrande)
Related Articles
Mesa venue bucks the nightlife odds
Valley music celebs go write for the jugular in Eighties free-for-all
Live music in Phoenix is there if you want it -- whatever it is you want
National Features >
SF Weekly
You won't believe the California wine industry's latest new-age craze.
By Joe Eskenazi
Westword
They lived for excitement, but the FBI got the final thrill.
By Joel Warner
Seattle Weekly
Chuck Bundrant built an unlikely seafood empire--with a little help from Alaska Senator Ted Stevens.
By Laura Onstot
Village Voice
How a benevolent billionaire mayor ended up owning us all.
By Wayne Barrett
The Brother Unconnected: A Tribute to Sun City Girls
Published on May 20, 2008 at 4:56pm
For many, punk rock was/is an end in itself, an opportunity to rock fast 'n' loud and/or dress up funny. For others, punk was a door to limitless cultural possibilities, a way of denying obstacles to artistic expression. The UK's Pop Group and the Raincoats embraced, to varying degrees, the avant-garde (both jazz and classical), reggae (and its cousin, dub), and global folk sounds — consequently, their catalogs have stood the test of time better than, say, Generation X or the Runaways. Incubated in Phoenix during the 1981 punk scene, the Sun City Girls were possessed of a similarly feral yet sun-parched scope — free improvisation, surf music, indigenous sounds of South America, the Middle East, and South Asia, beat poetry, and kabuki-like makeup were merely a few hallmarks of their approach. Comprised of brothers Alan and "Sir" Richard Bishop and Charles Gocher, Sun City Girls toured the world with more than 75 releases in assorted formats to their credit, finally dissolving when Gocher passed away from cancer in '07. This year finds the brothers paying homage to him and the quarter-century legacy of which he was a part: a national tour featuring the Bishops performing SCG songs acoustically and Gocher's experimental films.