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The
Nerves Jack Lee,
Paul Collins, Peter Case
OFFENCE
RECORDS (France) 9001
12" Vinyl
1986
SIDE ONE
HANGING ON THE TELEPHONE
Jack Lee
WHEN YOU FIND OUT (1st Version)
Peter Case
GIVE ME SOME TIME
Jack Lee
WORKING TOO HARD
Paul Collins
PAPER DOLLS
Jack Lee
SIDE TWO
ONE WAY TICKET
Jack Lee/Peter Case
ARE YOU FAMOUS
Jack Lee
STAND BACK AND TAKE A GOOD LOOK
Jack Lee
LETTER TO G
Jack Lee
WHEN YOU FIND OUT (2nd Version)
Peter Case
JACK LEE voacls, guitar
PAUL COLLINS vocals, drums
PETER CASE vocals, bass
The Nerves
by Kenneth Funsten
Whatever happened to the Nerves?
In the blitzed-out onrush of Los Angeles rock
and roll there are always those bands that get left behind in the
trenches. But in the legendary past of about 9 months ago, the Nerves
had seemed to be at the very center of things here. In fact, anyone
who was around way back then will probably find it hard to forget
those three loud-mouthed aspirants to musical fame and fortune.
And they weren't even punk! In retrospect, the Nerves set the "prototype"
for L.A. Power Pop.
Jack Lee on guitar, Pere Case on bass, and Paul
Collins on drums are the Nerves. It was these three who rented the
dilapidated basement in the tacky movie studio at the corner of
Sunset and Gower and dubbed it the Hollywood Punk Palace. From here,
the L.A. new-wave was born.
At the 5 Punk Palace shows, the Weirdos, the Dils,
the Zippers, the Zeros, the Screamers and many others all received
their baptism under public fire. The Nerves, too, gained valuable
experience.
Rejecting a loud and trashy punk image, the Nerves
dressed in quiet-colored three-piece suits. They looked more like
Hoover salsmen than rock and roll stars. They played only original
material, crisp songs with strong melodies, like "Hanging On
The Telephone" and "When You Find Out" off their
EP (Nerves Records, dist. by BOMP). Their bare, skeletal sound made
every lick seem memorable. They excelled in energy. People compared
them to the early Beatles or the Dave Clark Five. And then suddenly,
they were gone.
What Happened? Were they dead? Had they given
up, stopped playing? Or (God forbid!) had they become accounting
students, fanzine editors or perhaps something even worse?
None of the above. The Nerves had taken fate in
hand and booked their own cross-country tour. During the first week
in May, they played 3 nights at the Starwood in Hollywood. Then,
loading everything into their black '69 Ford LTD Wagon ("the
highest paid member of the touring organization"), the group
took off for dates in San Francisco, Denver, Chicago, Cleveland,
Toronto, Boston, New York, and Washington, D.C. And that was only
the first leg of their trip!
In an article for the Illinois Entertainer,
Cary Baker called it a "Magical Blistering Tour." The
band astounded even themselves by playing in Minneapolis on July
4, and then in Cleveland July 5. At one point they drove from Rockford,
Illinois, where they'd been playing with the Ramones, straight through
to San Antonio, Texas.
When it finally all came to an end after three
whirlwind months on the road, the Nerves were in Chicago playing
with Mink DeVille. It was by then the Nerves' thrid appearance in
the Windy City. Altogether, they had logged 25,000 miles and played
over 100 twenty to thirty minute sets. Whew!! As Jack Lee said,
"We think we've lived up to our name."
And so it all becomes clear now. Or at least evident
- the Nerves weren't dead. They were in training!
But in training for what? Since the end of July,
the Nerves haven't been heard from. They've been writing new songs,
of course, and talking to record companies about an album, but so
far there's been nothing definite. "We've just been getting
oriented to what our next move is going to be," explains bassist
Peter Case. "I mean, say you're a new group, you've released
your own record, you've run your own club, and then you went out
and did your own national tour, now what do you do after that?"
Pete answered his own question recently at the
Masque, the sleazy basement gathering place for L.A.'s young punks.
There, the Nerves headlined two spectacular shows with the Avengers,
the Zeros and Shock.
Their music is the same - only punchier, more
refined, and as high-powered as ever. Of their new songs, "Paper
Dolls" ought to become a classic. They picked up a lot from
the Ramones ("those guys impressed us"), and they've changed
their image some. Now dressed in streamlined, satin jackets and
black stovepipe pants they have a very All-American look - that
is All-American like some weird Las Vegas bar trio. But don't laugh!
This may be the look of the future.
What does Nerves music mean? "It comes from
being in the mainline. It's got meaning on its own for collectors,"
states Peter, "but when you write a song you want the greatest
possible number of people to hear it. That's what every writer dreams
about, and why not go for it?"
Go for it they will. They've got the brains, and
the balls....and the nerve. "We don't want to be part of the
scene," warns guitarist Jack Lee, "we want to be
the scene."
© 1986 Offence Records
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