
Ian Svenonius is the only DC punk rock luminary who, in conversation, sounds like a lost Theodor Adorno book that rips apart contemporary culture and makes you laugh at the same time. They both say things like approximating historical antecedents instead of ripping off Lou Reed and trope of rock history instead of the Beach Boys. He’s such a for-real revolutionary that those crazy Marxists in Rage Against the Machine even asked him to sing for them after Zach de le Rocha left to join the Zapatistas. Of course, Ian had to say no because a) he’s better than that; and b) he had to do his new band, Scene Creamers.
Scene Creamers is best described in likes but withouts, ie: like Royal Trux without the drug posturing, like Love without the strings, like MC5 without the White Panther bullshit. What you get with their debut, I Suck On That Emotion, is loose-limbed and super-dirty rock, stuff that’s suitable for both chin stroking and hip shaking. And if you see them live once, you’ll be an immediate convert. Onstage, Svenonius is like a genius primate OD’d on Viagra and Gingko Biloba.
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The question, then, is how does one stand out in history? How does a band mercenarily get some staying power? Ian seems to have found an easy answer: "People have to understand that history is bullshit. If you want to enter the canon, don’t ape things formalistically. Make some important friendsthat’s what Lou Reed and Iggy Pop did, and it served them pretty well. If you get to that level, you can just pay Victor Bockris to write anything you want about yourself."
JAN PEOPLES
I SuckOn That Emotion is out now on Drag City.






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