Dirty Rotten Publishing, 1988 |
DIRTY ROTTEN IMBECILES (D.R.I.) was one of the biggest and best hardcore thrash bands
during the 1980s. They first became known for playing songs of a faster and
shorter nature than most punk bands; their debut record managed to fit 22 songs
onto a 33-RPM 7-inch! D.R.I. would then become one of the first hardcore bands to
merge their sound with that of heavy metal with the release of their 1987 album
Crossover. Bands such as METALLICA and SLAYER had been emulating hardcore’s fast pace throughout the decade to
create thrash, speed, and death metal; D.R.I. had simply returned the favor and
hit the big time themselves.
D.R.I. in the Crossover era: Kurt Brecht (vocals), Spike Cassidy (guitar), Felix Griffin (drums), Josh Pappe (bass). |
D.R.I.’s
members weren’t exactly living the rock star life while much of this was taking
place. They had moved to the Bay Area from Texas in 1984, living in their tour
van for the time being. This book gathers journal entries written by vocalist
Kurt Brecht during his final months as an outdoor resident of San Francisco’s Haight
District. I actually received a copy of Notes
from the Nest while living on the streets of Berkeley and Oakland in my
early twenties, so these stories were (and still are) a lot of fun for me to
read.
Golden Gate Park is bigger than New York’s Central Park, taking up 1.583 miles and over a thousand acres. There are plenty of places for a resourceful homeless person to hide. |
Kurt
briefly explains his current situation—he sings and writes lyrics for D.R.I.,
sleeps in a tree in Golden Gate Park, and eats at a nearby soup kitchen. He
doesn’t have anywhere else to go for now and crashing out on the grass isn’t a
good idea, as he is aware of stories about local homeless people being
assaulted and killed in their sleep. Kurt manages to find the perfect
configuration of branches to form a “nest” where he can sleep in relative
comfort well above ground. Cops, murderous thugs, and passers-by in general are
unaware of his presence. He works part-time for a flaky jeweler and might move
into a place with his new girlfriend if a potential new job works out. Kurt
even has a cat that lives in the tree with him.
Raging madness and gang warfare at the Olympic Auditorium. |
D.R.I. also plays a show with SLAYER at the Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles, in
which one of the four simultaneous
circle pits erupts into gang warfare between skinheads, metalheads, and
Suicidal members. Kurt returns home to find that life is changing fast. He and
his girlfriend will be moving into a room in Oakland after all. One more night
in the nest to end this chapter of Kurt Brecht’s life as another one begins.
Notes from the Nest is not easy to come
by; I saw a single copy listed on Amazon for $150. I was lucky to have acquired
my copy when I did; it often lifted my spirits when homeless punk life had me
down. You probably should have been a down-and-out D.R.I. fan to appreciate these
tales, but Notes from the Nest is a
fun and fast read if you ever find a copy for yourself.
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