List City, USA: The Most Missed Local Bands


When the Bills entered the American Football League in 1960, Buffalo was the 20th largest urban center in the country. As a lucrative nexus between the Great Lakes and the Eastern Seaboard, the city was situated as an industrial powerhouse in the pre-global era. But when America's manufacturing dominance began to erode towards the end of the 20th Century, Buffalo slid into disrepair and decadence (Right now, we're #70 in population). Without much going for them, Buffalonians sought meaning in new forms, and a vibrancy in the arts was the natural outcome (by the way, the Albright-Knox museum will be curating “Wish You Were Here” this spring, an exhibit showcasing the contributions the Buffalo arts community made to the avant-garde movement in the 1970s, check it out).

More recently, with the city consistently fluctuating between 2nd and 3rd poorest in the country (and typically rating just as high on “Drunkest City” lists), the trend of artistic intensity has continued. Our music scene has thrived as well, and in the last few years, we've spawned an abundance of great, creative bands. Unfortunately, many of them have been as prone to disappointing implosion as the Bills. Here's a quick rundown of some of the best local bands to collapse in the last few years.


5) Vice Transmission
In the early days of Tight Pants Scenesterism, kids sought music that would reconcile their punk upbringing with their desire to straight-up dance. Buffalo's go-to for dance-punk TBAs for a while was Vice Transmission, a group as gritty as they were White-Funky. Fans of post-hc acts like Blood Brothers, Refused, and DFA79 (and who were weaned on sexless 90s radio rock) might remember the glory days when cool clothes and making out with girls became important parts of music again. In Buffalo, Vice Transmission was part of the soundtrack.





4) The Old Sweethearts
The last few years have been a period of constant shifts in musical tastes. Fads and genres have come and gone faster than journalists can add hyphens to their definitions (remember how uncool chillwave got the minute someone came up with a name for it?). That's why The Old Sweethearts were such a relief for music fans in Western New York: they just played great, regular, rock and roll, with touches of indie and folk that never lent itself to trendiness. Farewell, TOSH. You'll be missed by show-goers and exasperated writers alike.




3) Robot Has Werewolf Hand
The first show I saw when I moved to Buffalo a decade ago was Robot Has Werewolf Hand. After quietly setting up in the dim, dank 99 Custer basement, one of the vocalists came on the mic, like, “Hi, we are Robot Has Werewolf Hand and we are going to play sixteen songs in fourteen minutes. Go.” And the next fourteen minutes were an upside down, inside out blender of noise and bodies. After an unsurpassable farewell show in 2004 (and a mega-snide song called “A Vote Against the Reunion Tour”), I've given up hope on ever being thrown into such a crazy blender again.




2) Knife Crazy
Mathy, witty, and still quite danceable, these guys were mad scientists at getting people excited about experimentation. If you were going to bring some weird act into Soundlab from out of town in the mid-to-late 00s, the advantages of booking Knife Crazy to open were twofold: 1) their name itself made show flyers “pop,” and 2) their angular, avant guitar-rock was so catchy, they rendered weird-ass headliners “at least marginally accessible” by proxy. Fans of both Don Cab and the Kinsella clan were equally pleased.




1) Chylde
Buffalo is one beaten down and profoundly drunk city. For a couple years, the uber-heavy, dive bar rock quartet Chylde provided a perfect score of rust-belt blues for our whiskey-soaked self-loathing – a genre still kicking in these parts, but somewhat less intensely in the band's absence. After some extensive touring, one bad-ass record, and fistfuls of wild local performances, their break-up in 2010 was a serious Wide Right for the Buffalo music scene.





steve gordon

6 comments

  1. fishs eddy/queen city knights

  2. yecch. Fishs Eddy were god awful.

    the tragedy in Chylde was that they were just getting good. Not that they weren't before, but the new material was pretty sick. However, you can hear a lot of that progression/progressiveness now in White Bison, just without the massive heavy.

  3. Bloody Hollies, Tyrades, Baseball Furies, Trailerpark Tornadoes, The Rabies

  4. Bloody Hollies are still together I think, they just moved to San Diego(?). Tyrades and Baseball Furies were amazing bands as well...although they spent most of their time in Chicago.

  5. Emerson

  6. Sleeping Kings of Iona

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