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Minuteflag
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| Minuteflag | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP by Black Flag and Minutemen | ||||
| Released | 1986 | |||
| Recorded | March 3, 1985 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 14:32 | |||
| Language | English | |||
| Label | SST (050) | |||
| Producer | Greg Ginn | |||
| Black Flag chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Minutemen chronology | ||||
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Minuteflag was an experimental jam band collaboration between members of the American punk bands Minutemen and Black Flag.[1] Their only release, an EP, consists entirely of instrumentals with the exception of "Fetch the Water" which features D. Boon on lead vocals.[1]
Recording took place in March 1985, while Black Flag was in the process of writing and recording Loose Nut at Total Access Studio in Redondo Beach, CA;[2] Minutemen had just completed their Project: Mersh 12" EP at the same studio the month before.[1] The members involved initially agreed that the material recorded during the Minuteflag sessions would not be released until at least one of the bands had disbanded.[2] A 12" EP on SST Records as SST 050 came out over a year afterward, by which time Minutemen had disbanded after the car crash death of guitarist/vocalist D. Boon; Black Flag themselves split up later in 1986.[citation needed]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Robert Christgau | D[3] |
| Punknews.org | |
Track listing
[edit]- "Fetch the Water" – 3:49
- "Power Failure" – 3:43
- "Friends" – 5:12
- "Candy Rush" – 1:49
Personnel
[edit]- D. Boon – lead and backing vocals, lyrics (track 1), guitar
- Greg Ginn – guitar
- George Hurley – bongo drum (tracks 1 and 2), bean can (tracks 3 and 4)
- Kira Roessler – backing vocals (track 1), bass
- Henry Rollins – lead and backing vocals (track 1)
- Bill Stevenson – drums
- Mike Watt – bass
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Hidden Gems: The Minutemen And Black Flag's "Minuteflag"". Magnet. June 7, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
- ^ a b Chick, Stevie (2011). Spray Paint the Walls: The Story of Black Flag. PM Press. p. 347. ISBN 978-1-60486-418-2.
- ^ "Robert Christgau: CG: minutef". robertchristgau.com.
- ^ "Minuteflag – Minuteflag". www.punknews.org.
Minuteflag
View on GrokipediaBackground
Minutemen
The Minutemen were an American punk rock band formed in 1980 in the working-class port community of San Pedro, California, by childhood friends guitarist and vocalist D. Boon, bassist and vocalist Mike Watt, and drummer George Hurley.[5] Emerging from a blue-collar background, the trio embodied a staunch DIY ethos, prioritizing self-reliance, affordable equipment, and community-driven creativity over commercial success.[6] Their early releases, such as the 1980 EP Paranoid Time produced by Black Flag's Greg Ginn, established them as innovators within the punk landscape, blending raw energy with intellectual depth.[7] The band's signature style featured short, fast-paced songs—often under two minutes long—that incorporated influences from funk, jazz, folk, and British post-punk acts like Gang of Four and Wire, alongside American roots rock from Creedence Clearwater Revival.[6] This eclectic approach diverged from the aggression of contemporaries, emphasizing melodic bass lines, polyrhythmic drumming, and wry, politically charged lyrics delivered in a conversational tone.[6] Their breakthrough came with the 1984 double album Double Nickels on the Dime, a 45-track opus recorded in just six days that fused punk urgency with experimental elements like spoken word and found sounds, selling out its initial 10,000-copy pressing on SST Records.[6] By early 1985, the Minutemen had completed their final EP, Project: Mersh, recorded in February at Total Access Studios in Redondo Beach, California, showcasing their continued evolution with covers and original tracks that highlighted their humorous and genre-defying spirit.[8] The band shared the SST label with Black Flag and occasionally joined them on tours, strengthening ties in the Southern California punk network.[7] However, their run ended abruptly on December 22, 1985, when D. Boon, aged 27, died in a van accident on an Arizona highway after being thrown from the vehicle without a seatbelt, leading to the group's immediate disbandment.[9] As a cornerstone of the Southern California hardcore scene, the Minutemen influenced a generation of DIY musicians through their SST affiliation and commitment to "jamming econo"—a philosophy of economical touring and recording that prioritized accessibility and originality.[7][6] Their output of four full-length albums and six EPs over five years not only captured the era's punk vitality but also expanded its boundaries with intellectual and musical experimentation.[9][6][10]Black Flag
Black Flag was formed in 1976 in Hermosa Beach, California, by guitarist Greg Ginn as an outlet for his songwriting amid the emerging punk scene.[11] Initially known as Panic, the band quickly adopted the name Black Flag and became a cornerstone of Southern California's hardcore punk movement through relentless self-promotion and performances at underground venues.[12] By 1985, the core lineup consisted of Ginn on guitar, Henry Rollins on vocals, Kira Roessler on bass, and Bill Stevenson on drums, marking a stable period after years of lineup changes and internal flux.[13] The band's musical style evolved significantly from its raw, aggressive hardcore punk roots, which emphasized speed, volume, and social critique, to more experimental territory incorporating jazz improvisation, heavy metal riffs, and atonal structures.[14] This progression was evident in key releases like the 1981 album Damaged, a seminal hardcore statement produced by Spot that captured the band's fury and DIY intensity despite distribution disputes.[15] By 1985, with Loose Nut—recorded concurrently with other projects—the group blended punk's brevity with longer, groove-oriented tracks influenced by jazz and metal, reflecting Ginn's desire to push boundaries beyond genre constraints.[16] Black Flag's intense work ethic, characterized by exhaustive touring schedules and non-stop recording, solidified their reputation as punk's most dedicated practitioners, often sharing stages and label resources with contemporaries like the Minutemen on SST Records.[17] Ginn founded SST Records in 1978 specifically to release Black Flag's music, establishing it as a pivotal independent label that championed the DIY ethos and released influential works by other punk and alternative acts.[18] However, the band's independence led to prolonged legal battles, most notably a 1981 dispute with distributor Unicorn Records (an MCA subsidiary) over Damaged's royalties and contract terms, which halted their recording and touring for nearly three years and exemplified the challenges of navigating major-label entanglements.[16] These conflicts, combined with the physical and emotional toll of constant road life, contributed to mounting internal tensions. Black Flag disbanded in 1986 following a final tour, driven by exhaustion from relentless schedules, creative clashes—particularly over Rollins's confrontational approach—and the cumulative strain on relationships.[19] Throughout their run, the band made enduring contributions to punk's DIY infrastructure, pioneering self-managed venues like the Hermosa Beach Skateboard Park shows, producing iconic flyers and artwork through collaborators like Raymond Pettibon, and inspiring a network of zines that documented and disseminated the scene's raw energy.[20] Their model of autonomy and community-building influenced generations of underground musicians.[21]Formation and recording
Origins of collaboration
The collaboration between Minutemen and Black Flag that resulted in Minuteflag stemmed from a deep mutual respect forged through their shared involvement in the Southern California punk scene during the early 1980s. Both bands hailed from the greater Los Angeles area—Minutemen from San Pedro and Black Flag from nearby Hermosa Beach—and frequently shared stages on regional bills and national tours, including a joint U.S. tour in May 1985 supporting Black Flag's Loose Nut alongside Tom Troccoli's Dog.[22] Additionally, Minutemen's debut EP, Paranoid Time, was released on Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn's SST Records label in 1980, establishing an early professional alliance that fostered creative camaraderie amid the DIY ethos of the era.[2] The idea for the Minuteflag session was sparked in March 1985, shortly after Minutemen completed recording their Project: Mersh EP in February of that year. While Black Flag was in the midst of writing and tracking their album Loose Nut at Total Access Recording studio in Redondo Beach, Ginn and Minutemen guitarist D. Boon—longtime acquaintances since Ginn first encountered the duo handing out flyers in 1979—arranged an informal jam on March 3.[2] This gathering brought together the full lineups of both bands: Minutemen's D. Boon, Mike Watt, and George Hurley with Black Flag's Greg Ginn, Henry Rollins, Kira Roessler, and Bill Stevenson, driven by Ginn and Boon's enthusiasm for blending their punk foundations with spontaneous improvisation.[2] Conceived as a one-off experiment rather than a commercial venture, the session emphasized free-form jamming over structured songwriting, initially intended as a benefit recording for the anti-nuclear Alliance for Survival group.[2] Participants agreed to archive the tapes indefinitely, stipulating release only if one of the bands disbanded—a reflection of their active statuses and commitment to prioritizing ongoing projects.[23] This pact underscored the collaborative's playful, non-committal spirit, capturing the raw energy of two influential punk acts at a pivotal moment before unforeseen tragedies altered their trajectories.[2]Studio sessions
The Minuteflag recording session took place on March 3, 1985, at Total Access Recording Studios in Redondo Beach, California, during a period when Black Flag was actively working on their album Loose Nut at the same facility and the Minutemen had recently completed sessions for Project: Mersh.[2] Engineered by Dave Tarling, the session involved an informal supergroup of seven musicians from both bands, who rotated and shared instruments in a collaborative setup to capture spontaneous performances.[24][2] D. Boon handled lead and backing vocals as well as guitar, while Greg Ginn contributed on guitar; Mike Watt and Kira Roessler both played bass; George Hurley provided percussion using bongos on the first two tracks and a bean can on the latter two; Henry Rollins added backing vocals; and Bill Stevenson manned the drums.[24] This jam-based approach emphasized improvisation, resulting in four tracks recorded live without overdubs, prioritizing raw energy over structured composition.[2][25] The tapes were subsequently edited and mixed in April 1985 at Hit City West in West Los Angeles by Greg Ginn and Mike Boshears, maintaining the unpolished, direct sound of the original takes.[24][2] Copyright for the material is held by New Alliance Music (BMI) and Cesstone Music (BMI).[24]Musical style
Experimental elements
Minuteflag's music marked a significant departure from the concise, high-energy structures typical of punk rock, embracing longer jam-oriented compositions that ranged from 1:50 to 5:17 in duration.[25] This shift allowed for extended exploration, contrasting sharply with the Minutemen's usual sub-minute tracks and Black Flag's often terse aggression, fostering a more open-ended format suited to live-like improvisation.[2] The EP's sound incorporated free-form improvisation reminiscent of jazz traditions, with Greg Ginn's guitar weaving angular, noise-inflected lines alongside the bass interplay of Mike Watt and Kira Roessler.[26] This collective dynamic emphasized group interplay over individual solos, blending the Minutemen's bass-driven minimalism—rooted in funky, economical grooves—with Black Flag's avant-garde rock tendencies, including occasional sparse vocals on tracks like "Fetch the Water."[2] The result was a hybrid of post-hardcore energy and experimental rock, drawing from the bands' prior ventures into jazz fusion, such as Black Flag's rhythmic experiments and the Minutemen's genre-blending on albums like Double Nickels on the Dime.[26] Tracks exemplified this unconventional approach through the absence of verse-chorus frameworks, prioritizing textural buildup and spontaneous energy. "Fetch the Water," the sole vocal piece, featured a calypso-infused groove with narrative lyrics delivered by D. Boon, evolving into chaotic, layered interplay between guitars and percussion.[2] "Power Failure" highlighted free jazz influences via wild, polyrhythmic percussion—including bongos—and high-treble guitar dissonance, creating a sense of unmoored intensity.[2] In contrast, "Friends" explored percussive experimentation through dense, rumbling bass lines evocative of Miles Davis's fusion era, building to an abrupt close that underscored the project's raw, unfinished aesthetic.[2] "Candy Rush" served as a shorter noise jam, abruptly cutting off amid escalating feedback, echoing Black Flag's earlier improvisational noise pieces like "L.A. Blues."[2] Overall, these elements reflected broader influences from funk rhythms and free jazz improvisation, transforming the collaboration into a punk-adjacent jam session that prioritized sonic exploration over conventional songwriting.[2]Instrumentation
The core instrumentation of the Minuteflag EP featured dual guitars, with D. Boon providing lead guitar and Greg Ginn handling rhythm guitar across all tracks.[24] Bass was played by Mike Watt and Kira Roessler, with notable interplay on "Friends."[24] Drums were performed by Bill Stevenson throughout the recording.[2] Vocals were limited to the opening track "Fetch the Water," where D. Boon delivered lead vocals and Henry Rollins provided backing vocals, alongside additional backing from Boon and Kira Roessler; the remaining tracks are entirely instrumental.[24] Percussion elements incorporated unconventional acoustic additions by George Hurley, who played bongos on "Fetch the Water" and "Power Failure," and bean cans on "Friends" and "Candy Rush," creating a hybrid of standard electric drum kit and found-object sounds.[2] Track-specific variations highlighted guitar interplay, as in "Power Failure," where the high-treble guitars intertwined rapidly with Hurley's bongo rhythms.[2] In contrast, "Candy Rush" featured a sparser arrangement with quick percussive bursts and punk-inflected guitar bursts, introduced by engineer Dave Tarling's spoken cue to the band.[2] The EP employed no synthesizers or electronic effects, relying solely on standard punk rock amplification and the raw interplay of electric guitars, bass, and percussion.[2] Recording occurred on analog tape at Total Access Studio in Redondo Beach, California, on March 3, 1985, capturing the live room sound of the collaborative jam session before editing and mixing the following month at Hit City West in West Los Angeles.[3]Release
Circumstances of release
The release of the Minuteflag EP was directly triggered by the death of Minutemen guitarist and vocalist D. Boon on December 22, 1985, in a van accident in Arizona, which resulted in the band's immediate disbandment. This event fulfilled a pact made by the participating musicians from Minutemen and [Black Flag](/page/Black Flag) during the recording sessions, stipulating that the material would remain unreleased until at least one of the two bands had disbanded.[2][23] SST Records, the independent label co-owned by Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn and founded by him in 1978 to support punk acts including his own band, issued the EP in December 1986. This came after Black Flag's own dissolution in August 1986, aligning with the pact's conditions now met by both groups. The label's choice reflected a commitment to preserving the punk scene's collaborative spirit amid these transitions.[2][18][1] The initial pressing was limited to a 12-inch vinyl EP format played at 45 RPM, containing four tracks with no accompanying singles and no reissues until years later. Tapes from the March 1985 recording sessions, mixed in April of that year, were finalized for pressing in 1986 to enable this release. Ethically, the issuance honored D. Boon's innovative contributions to punk music while upholding the original pact's intent to avoid commercial exploitation during the bands' active periods, transforming the project into a posthumous tribute.[24][27][2]Packaging and distribution
The EP was issued as a 12-inch vinyl record pressed at 45 RPM by SST Records, cataloged as SST 050.[24] The inner sleeve listed production and personnel credits but omitted a lyrics sheet, consistent with the EP's largely improvisational jams where most vocals were spontaneous rather than pre-written.[24] SST handled distribution through its established independent channels, targeting U.S. record stores, mail-order catalogs, and punk rock venues, resulting in primarily domestic availability with minimal international penetration. The release received no backing from major labels or traditional radio promotion, aligning with SST's DIY ethos.[28][18] Subsequent reissues have been limited; the EP became available digitally as part of SST's catalog in the streaming era, though no official CD edition was produced.[29]Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its 1986 release, Minuteflag's self-titled EP elicited confusion among listeners due to its unpolished, non-commercial jam style, which starkly contrasted the structured punk outputs of Black Flag and Minutemen.[30] Critics noted the recording's raw, improvisational nature as a departure from the bands' typical high-energy brevity, leading to mixed reactions within the punk community.[4] Prominent critic Robert Christgau assigned the EP a D grade in his Consumer Guide, describing it as an "unintended release" of a "tween-band instrumental jam" that lacked the intentionality of the participants' main projects.[4] In punk zine Maximum Rocknroll, a reviewer highlighted its experimental value in one structured track by D. Boon but criticized the rest as unstructured "late-night jam session" material with "little accomplishment," ultimately recommending it only to diehard fans of either band.[30] Initial sales were modest within the SST Records catalog, reflecting the EP's niche appeal as a limited underground release.[24] It received no mainstream coverage, with reception largely confined to the punk subculture where its rawness was appreciated by hardcore enthusiasts despite broader reservations.[30]Legacy
Over the decades following its release, Minuteflag has attained cult status among punk enthusiasts, particularly through reappraisals in the 1990s and 2000s that positioned it as a bridge between punk's raw energy and improvisational experimentation.[2] This recognition is evident in later analyses of the era's punk scene. In a 2017 retrospective, Punknews.org described the EP as a "solid musical workout" and a successful one-off collaboration that stands out for its experimental yet enjoyable instrumentals, labeling it an appealing discovery for dedicated fans of the era's punk innovators.[26] The release has influenced subsequent supergroup projects and jam-punk hybrids by demonstrating how punk musicians could transcend band boundaries in spontaneous, no-frills sessions, as noted in analyses of SST Records' output.[2] Minuteflag symbolizes the finality of punk's DIY spirit amid band dissolutions, emerging as one of the last joint efforts from Minutemen and Black Flag before D. Boon's death in December 1985 and Black Flag's 1986 breakup.[26] Its archival value lies in preserving some of Boon's final recordings, including his lead vocals on "Fetch the Water," which have contributed to ongoing Minutemen tributes by offering a raw snapshot of his creative voice in the months before his passing.[2] In the 2020s, the EP has seen renewed interest through streaming platforms, attracting niche audiences with around 330 monthly listeners on Spotify as of November 2025, underscoring its enduring appeal within underground punk circles.[31]Content
Track listing
The Minuteflag EP features four instrumental jam tracks, with one featuring vocals, divided across two sides on a 12-inch vinyl record pressed at 45 RPM to emulate an extended play format.[24] All compositions are published by New Alliance Music (BMI) and Cesstone Music (BMI).[24]| Side | Track | Title | Duration | Writers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | A1 | Fetch the Water | 3:51 | Stevenson, Boon, Hurley, Ginn, Rollins, Kira, Watt |
| A | A2 | Power Failure | 3:48 | Stevenson, Boon, Hurley, Ginn, Kira, Watt |
| B | B3 | Friends | 5:18 | Stevenson, Boon, Hurley, Ginn, Kira, Watt |
| B | B4 | Candy Rush | 1:50 | Stevenson, Boon, Hurley, Ginn, Kira, Watt |
