Extreme Noise Records Presents:
Zero Boys, Sick Thoughts, Long Knife, Color TV, and Citric Dummies
Saturday, November 16, 2024/ Doors: 6:30 PM / Show: 7:00 PM
All Ages
Standing
$30 Advance, $35 Day of Show
This is a standing show with an open floor. To request seating or other access accommodations, please go to our Access Page.
For Cedar presented shows, online ticket sales typically end one hour before the door time, and then, based on availability, tickets will be available at the door.
LISTEN
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Extreme Noise Records Presents the last show of their 30th anniversary series here at The Cedar with this November 16th offering of Zero Boys, Sick Thoughts, Long Knife, Color TV, and Citric Dummies.
Happy Anniversary, Extreme Noise!
Extreme Noise Records, located at 407 W. Lake St. in Minneapolis is a collectively owned and operated punk record store since 1994.
To learn more about Extreme Noise Records:
Zero Boys
Zero Boys are a hardcore punk quartet from Indianapolis formed in 1979. The band is fronted by singer Paul Mahern. Mark Cutsinger (drums), Scott Kellogg (bass), and Dave Lawson (guitar) complete the lineup. Zero Boys' first release, Livin' in the '80s, was a 7" EP released by the band on their home-brew Z-Disc label. But it's the vivid yellow followup LP, Vicious Circle, that cemented the band's legacy in the halls of punk rock greatness.
Many punk fans nationwide expressed surprise that a band like the Zero Boys originated in the Midwest. Their polished intensity suggested larger and more established scenes in Los Angeles, Washington DC, New York City, and elsewhere. Indeed, their 1982 "Hell Tour" appearance at The Barn in Torrance, CA (with roadies Gary X Indiana and Marvin Goldstein in tow), on a bill with the Dead Kennedys and Minor Threat, demonstrated that Zero Boys were a Midwestern punk rock force to be reckoned with.
Not content to rest on their laurels, Zero Boys released Monkey in 2014, their first LP in over twenty years. Shortly after that, they released an EP, Hollywood, a tribute to the original Zero Boys guitar genius Terry "Hollywood" Howe, who passed in 2000. Here's what singer Paul Mahern said about Terry:
"On the night of Terry’s death, I woke to the sound of a buzz saw in my living room. I rushed to see what was going on and realized I was hearing the opening chords of 'Vicious Circle' coming from my stereo speakers. I examined the CD player and realized it was not turned on. I knew without a doubt Terry was saying goodbye and telling me to never stop believing in the energy of Rock ’n’ Roll.”
Zero Boys take this message to heart, and bring high-intensity rock and roll to audiences worldwide.
To learn more about Zero Boys:
Sick Thoughts
If you don’t know Sick Thoughts, you don’t know punk. The band is the mighty Drew Owen. Baltimore born and bred, he then up and moved to the swamps of New Orleans while still a teenager. The general consensus was he’d be another casualty of The Big Easy decadence, and would soon be seen hitting up tourists for money on Bourbon Street with a dog on a rope. But somehow he got hooked up with the best (worst?) folks in the city and kept making great music. That, and the fact that forty-ounce bottles just bounce off his head, have kept him alive. Rock and roll romance and the promise of socialized health care sent him to the (imaginary?) home of Killed By Death punk, Helsinki, Finland. Which makes perfect sense—this album is like the perfect KBD record, full of buzzsaw guitars, machine gun drums and hooks that hit like a tire iron. Owen’s brand of aural early-20s angst, with doses of Zero Boys, Reatards, and early Crüe, mixed with the stench of the streets, has never sounded better. This album clearly puts Sick Thoughts on top of the punk heap. It’s Owen’s world—get in it!
To learn more about Sick Thoughts:
Long Knife
"Grounding themselves in early 80s American hardcore, Long Knife is not afraid to delve into moments that could almost be classified as classic rock. Imagine Kiss playing Poison Idea, with a healthy amount of Japanese hardcore and even some British hardcore thrown in. It’s this unique mix that makes Long Knife one of the best current hardcore acts."
To learn more about Long Knife:
Color TV
Color TV brings speedy punk rock that slaps with tight bursts of melody and quirks with sardonic musings of living in the sci-fi dystopian hellscape that is the now. Heavily influenced by early UK punk and USHC with subtle underpinnings of bands like Sparks and Ultravox, this is punk music clearly made by lifers obsessed with the underground counter-culture. Come, children, time to gather around and drink the electric Kool-Aide of C-TV!
To learn more about Color TV:
Citric Dummies
Bursting out of a burning trash heap like some mutated, blitzed skeleton in a leather jacket, Citric Dummies thrash their listeners with a heavy dose of pulverizing punk madness on their latest LP Zen and The Arcade of Beating Your Ass. The Minneapolis based trio have previously released a handful of endlessly infectious records on US and Euro labels like Erste Theke Tonträger, Fashionable Idiots, and Another Label- luring in unsuspecting punks with their aberrant, tuneful noise. Citric Dummies rip turbocharged, catchy songs riddled with big hooks that are inhaled like paint fumes by fans of niche KBD gems and classics like The Ramones and The Misfits. The band has signed with Feel It Records to release their most dialed and corrosive record to date- a pièce de résistance for LSD enthusiasts and jabronis alike.
To learn more about Citric Dummies: