Debris'

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
One Way Spit 00:00 Tools
Female Tracks 00:00 Tools
Tricia 00:00 Tools
Witness 00:00 Tools
Leisurely Waiting 00:00 Tools
Boyfriend 00:00 Tools
New Smooth Lunch 00:00 Tools
Flight Taken 00:00 Tools
Manahattan 00:00 Tools
Tell Me 00:00 Tools
Blue Girls 00:00 Tools
Zebra Ranch 00:00 Tools
Other Things 00:00 Tools
Hospital Boys 00:00 Tools
Real Cool Time 00:00 Tools
Gun 00:00 Tools
New Smooth Lunch (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Real Cool Time (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Boyfriend (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Gun (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
One Way Spit (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Flight Taken (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Tell Me (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Hospital Boys (Rehersal) 00:00 Tools
Boy Friend 00:00 Tools
One Way Split 00:00 Tools
One Way Spit [*] 00:00 Tools
Boyfriend (Rehearsal) 00:00 Tools
Zebra Ranch [*] 00:00 Tools
Real Cool Time [*] 00:00 Tools
New Smooth Lunch [*] 00:00 Tools
Boyfriend [*] 00:00 Tools
New Smooth Lunch (Rehearsal) 00:00 Tools
Tell Me [*] 00:00 Tools
Other Things [*] 00:00 Tools
Flight Taken [*] 00:00 Tools
Boyfriend + Leisurely Waiting 00:00 Tools
Gun [*] 00:00 Tools
Flight Taken * 00:00 Tools
Tell Me * 00:00 Tools
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The town of Chickasha, Oklahoma, might seem an unlikely birthplace of a seminal experimental proto-art-punk band set on pushing the boundaries of rock. In the face of indifference, and even redneck hostility, and lasting only a year, Debris' forged a small legacy with its D.I.Y. ethic and improvised playing style. Charles Ivey and Oliver Powers played various instruments in various bands for several years before the summer of 1975, when they approached drummer Johnny Gregg for a new band. Debris' was quickly launched and by September, they had the first of the four live gigs of their short existence. Their chaotic performance style and dark, quirky sound — influenced by the Velvet Underground, the Stooges, Captain Beefheart, as well as English glam rock — did not endear them to their Oklahoma City-area audiences. At one such show, a Battle of the Bands competition where 50 bands vied for a new sound system, Debris' came in dead last while a cover band took home the prize. At the same time, they took advantage of a 1,590-dollar promotional package from a sound studio, which provided ten hours of recording time and a 1,000 LP pressing. With the lofty ambition to "cut the ultimate record of the decade," they recorded material in two sessions in mid-December and the record was pressed several months later (since released on CD as Static Disposal with much bonus material). The band started to mail it out to various record labels and rock magazines as a demo in hopes of getting a record deal and to more fully realize their project. With early negative reviews and no local support, Debris' disbanded, ahead of their time and in the wrong place. Within a year, more favorable press appeared and CBGB even offered them a gig and a chance to cash in on the burgeoning New York punk scene, but it was already too late. from: www.allmusic.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.