The Suicide Commandos

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Attacking The Beat 00:00 Tools
Mosquito Crucifixion 00:00 Tools
Shock Appeal 00:00 Tools
Semi-Smart 00:00 Tools
Burn It Down 00:00 Tools
You Can't 00:00 Tools
Mr. Dr. 00:00 Tools
Call of the Wild 00:00 Tools
I Need a Torch 00:00 Tools
Real Cool 00:00 Tools
Kidnapped 00:00 Tools
I Don't Get It 00:00 Tools
She 00:00 Tools
Premature 00:00 Tools
Match/Mismatch 00:00 Tools
Slow Down (Live, 1976) 00:00 Tools
Complicated Fun 00:00 Tools
Emission Control 00:00 Tools
Mark He's a Terror 00:00 Tools
Cliche Ole 00:00 Tools
Match - Mismatch 00:00 Tools
Monster Au-Go-Go 00:00 Tools
My Little Red Book 00:00 Tools
Boogie's Coldest Acre 00:00 Tools
It's My Life 00:00 Tools
Shake 00:00 Tools
The American Ruse 00:00 Tools
Monster Au Go Go 00:00 Tools
Journey To The Center Of The Mind 00:00 Tools
Hallelujah Boys 00:00 Tools
She Said Yeah 00:00 Tools
Real Good Time Together 00:00 Tools
Keep Your Hands To Yourself 00:00 Tools
There Goes Gladys 00:00 Tools
Burn It Down (Live) 00:00 Tools
Bits And Pieces 00:00 Tools
Wild In The Streets 00:00 Tools
Seven Deadly Finns 00:00 Tools
Three Cool Cats 00:00 Tools
Fire 00:00 Tools
Milk of Human Kindness 00:00 Tools
I'll Wait 00:00 Tools
Back In The USA 00:00 Tools
I Think Of You 00:00 Tools
Slow Down 00:00 Tools
Born To Be Wild 00:00 Tools
Ghost Burrito 00:00 Tools
Try Again 00:00 Tools
You Play Too Hard 00:00 Tools
If I Can't Make You Love Me 00:00 Tools
Fireball 500 00:00 Tools
Frogtown 00:00 Tools
Commando Rhapsody 00:00 Tools
The Wrong Time 00:00 Tools
Boogie's Cold Acre (Radio Edit) 00:00 Tools
Late Lost Stolen Mangled Misdirected 00:00 Tools
When I Do It, It's O.K. 00:00 Tools
For Such a Mean Time 00:00 Tools
Match / Mismatch 00:00 Tools
Tent (Jan. 28, 2012) 00:00 Tools
Cocktail Shaker 00:00 Tools
Action Woman 00:00 Tools
Tent 00:00 Tools
Poll Palace Cigar 00:00 Tools
08 I Need A Torch 00:00 Tools
04 Mr Dr 00:00 Tools
Burn it Down (Jan 28, 2012) 00:00 Tools
I Need a Torch / Complicated Fun (Jan. 28, 2012) 00:00 Tools
WEEKEND WARRIOR 00:00 Tools
Nervous Breakdown 00:00 Tools
take a dive 00:00 Tools
I Fought The Law 00:00 Tools
Wipe Out 00:00 Tools
Search And Destroy 00:00 Tools
Monster au Go-Go 00:00 Tools
10 Premature 00:00 Tools
The Silent Treatment 00:00 Tools
Mosquito Crucifixion - 1977 00:00 Tools
12 Real Cool 00:00 Tools
Motorbikin' 00:00 Tools
Plastic Bullets 00:00 Tools
Personality Crisis 00:00 Tools
Back In The U.S.A. 00:00 Tools
Anarchy In The U.K. 00:00 Tools
O Carole/Petticoat Junction 00:00 Tools
O Carole / Petticoat Junction 00:00 Tools
Hellraiser 00:00 Tools
Cliché Olé 00:00 Tools
15 Match-Mismatch 00:00 Tools
13 She 00:00 Tools
Cliche'ole' 00:00 Tools
You can`t 00:00 Tools
It Doesn't Matter to Me 00:00 Tools
You're Not The First One 00:00 Tools
Pool Palace Cigar 00:00 Tools
SEMI SMART 00:00 Tools
Chiche Ole 00:00 Tools
She [Monkees cover] 00:00 Tools
I Need a Torch / Complicated 00:00 Tools
Bind Torture Kill 00:00 Tools
Bunr It Down 00:00 Tools
For Such a Meann Time 00:00 Tools
It Doesn't Matter 00:00 Tools
08 Attacking The Beat 00:00 Tools
Boogie's Coldest Acre 00:00 Tools
I Need a Torch [1978] 00:00 Tools
O Carole/ Petticoat Junction 00:00 Tools
Boogie's Cold Acre 00:00 Tools
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Now known as "the Godfathers of the Twin Cities punk music scene," The Suicide Commandos were formed in 1974 when Chris Osgood and Dave Ahl asked Steve Almaas to join their new band, named after a 1969 Aldo Ray movie. Their creed was simple: play fast & loud, and have fun. By 1975, the band had begun to build a following at The Blitz Bar in the basement of The Roaring Twenties strip club in downtown Minneapolis. The following year, apparently unaware that such things were impossible, The Suicide Commandos managed to get themselves booked at the legendary CBGB's in New York City. After their successful "tour" of the East Coast in the spring of 1976, the band returned to Minneapolis to find that a venue right across the street from The Blitz Bar was looking for bands to play on their stage: The Longhorn. It proved to be an ideal match. The band was instrumental in creating the Longhorn scene, which also gave rise to other groups such as The Suburbs, Hypstrz, Curtiss A, NNB, and others. As the Commandos' reputation grew, they opened for national acts such as The Ramones, Iggy & the Stooges, and Cheap Trick. The Suicide Commandos released two independent singles in 1976 and 1977 before they finally signed a national recording contract with Polydor's short-lived punk label Blank in 1977. Their debut album, Make a Record, was a success musically and in the Twin Cities, but failed to make much of an impact on the national music charts. The band also contributed three songs to Twin/Tone's compilation LP Big Hits Of Mid-America Vol. III. In 1978, the group dropped “Suicide” from their name and added keyboardist Mark Goldstein for a time, moving their sound in a decidedly more pop direction. But by that summer, when The Commandos returned to Minneapolis from a short tour of the West Coast, they had the sense that they'd peaked and it was time to get out while the getting was good. They had achieved what they set out to do, turning a sedate and complacent music scene on its ear. So from November 22 to 24 of 1978, the Suicide Commandos - once again a threesome - played their last official shows together. At that point, it was clear the band was not going to release another studio album because Polygram had not renewed the group's second LP option. However, the best of those final live shows were preserved for posterity as The Commandos Commit Suicide Dance Concert, released in 1979 on the Twin Cities' own label Twin/Tone. All the Twin/Tone recordings are available on CD. The Suicide Commandos reunited to play at the Minnesota State Fair on Sunday, August 26, 2007, along with Fountains of Wayne. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.