
Courtroom Wedding
Courtroom Wedding, the feral new album by singer-songwriter-punk rock legend Chris D.âs new unit Poison Fang Society, succeeds In the Red Recordsâ release of two expansive albums by the bandleaderâs Divine Horsemen, Hot Rise of an Ice Cream Phoenix (2021) and Bitter End to a Sweet Night (2022).
The taut, economical eight-song set grew out of several songs penned in the immediate wake of the COVID pandemic lockdown and originally envisioned as material for a third Divine Horsemen record. But logistical problems involving the bandâs co-lead singer Julie Christensenâs ability to record in Los Angeles led to the formulation of a new solo configuration rooted in the past.
Poison Fang Society guitarist Larry Schemel, most recently of Death Valley Girls, and Tucson-bred drummer Johnny Ray are both veterans of the eight-piece lineup heard on the Flesh Eatersâ 1999 album Ashes of Time. They are joined by bassist-keyboardist-guitarist Sharif Dumani, who also engineered the collection and co-produced with Chris D.
The songs Chris brought to the studio reflect a shift in style: âI was really trying to write some more traditional kinds of songs, but not make them sound really anonymous. On the last couple of albums, the Divine Horsemen albums, there was a lot more cut-up stuff. I still did some cut-up in the lyrics with this record, but not as much. The lyrics to âCellars to Weepâ were very influenced by songs like Bob Dylanâs âSubterranean Homesick Bluesâ or âHighway 61 Revisited,â even though song doesnât sound like that. I wanted to keep that kind of surrealist humor that Bob Dylan has â those nonsense phrases that add meaning when theyâre all put together.â
With tracks inspired by subjects as diverse at the gun-toting MAGA couple who pointed their weapons at Black Lives Matter protesters (âGoddamn Thieving Shameâ) to the sleazy come-on cover lines of â50s pulp paperbacks (âSex Kittenâ), Courtroom Wedding flexes a lean, potent sound that recalls the knife-edge attack of the Don Kirk-era Flesh Eaters and the heavyweight vibe of Chrisâ second solo album (as Stone by Stone), 1989âs I Pass for Human. Like this punk grand masterâs finest work, it displays an electric, tormented immediacy.
âCourtroom Wedding sounds more live than the Divine Horsemen records,â Chris says, âand I think thatâs a good thing.â
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Courtroom Wedding
Courtroom Wedding, the feral new album by singer-songwriter-punk rock legend Chris D.âs new unit Poison Fang Society, succeeds In the Red Recordsâ release of two expansive albums by the bandleaderâs Divine Horsemen, Hot Rise of an Ice Cream Phoenix (2021) and Bitter End to a Sweet Night (2022).
The taut, economical eight-song set grew out of several songs penned in the immediate wake of the COVID pandemic lockdown and originally envisioned as material for a third Divine Horsemen record. But logistical problems involving the bandâs co-lead singer Julie Christensenâs ability to record in Los Angeles led to the formulation of a new solo configuration rooted in the past.
Poison Fang Society guitarist Larry Schemel, most recently of Death Valley Girls, and Tucson-bred drummer Johnny Ray are both veterans of the eight-piece lineup heard on the Flesh Eatersâ 1999 album Ashes of Time. They are joined by bassist-keyboardist-guitarist Sharif Dumani, who also engineered the collection and co-produced with Chris D.
The songs Chris brought to the studio reflect a shift in style: âI was really trying to write some more traditional kinds of songs, but not make them sound really anonymous. On the last couple of albums, the Divine Horsemen albums, there was a lot more cut-up stuff. I still did some cut-up in the lyrics with this record, but not as much. The lyrics to âCellars to Weepâ were very influenced by songs like Bob Dylanâs âSubterranean Homesick Bluesâ or âHighway 61 Revisited,â even though song doesnât sound like that. I wanted to keep that kind of surrealist humor that Bob Dylan has â those nonsense phrases that add meaning when theyâre all put together.â
With tracks inspired by subjects as diverse at the gun-toting MAGA couple who pointed their weapons at Black Lives Matter protesters (âGoddamn Thieving Shameâ) to the sleazy come-on cover lines of â50s pulp paperbacks (âSex Kittenâ), Courtroom Wedding flexes a lean, potent sound that recalls the knife-edge attack of the Don Kirk-era Flesh Eaters and the heavyweight vibe of Chrisâ second solo album (as Stone by Stone), 1989âs I Pass for Human. Like this punk grand masterâs finest work, it displays an electric, tormented immediacy.
âCourtroom Wedding sounds more live than the Divine Horsemen records,â Chris says, âand I think thatâs a good thing.â
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Courtroom Wedding, the feral new album by singer-songwriter-punk rock legend Chris D.âs new unit Poison Fang Society, succeeds In the Red Recordsâ release of two expansive albums by the bandleaderâs Divine Horsemen, Hot Rise of an Ice Cream Phoenix (2021) and Bitter End to a Sweet Night (2022).
The taut, economical eight-song set grew out of several songs penned in the immediate wake of the COVID pandemic lockdown and originally envisioned as material for a third Divine Horsemen record. But logistical problems involving the bandâs co-lead singer Julie Christensenâs ability to record in Los Angeles led to the formulation of a new solo configuration rooted in the past.
Poison Fang Society guitarist Larry Schemel, most recently of Death Valley Girls, and Tucson-bred drummer Johnny Ray are both veterans of the eight-piece lineup heard on the Flesh Eatersâ 1999 album Ashes of Time. They are joined by bassist-keyboardist-guitarist Sharif Dumani, who also engineered the collection and co-produced with Chris D.
The songs Chris brought to the studio reflect a shift in style: âI was really trying to write some more traditional kinds of songs, but not make them sound really anonymous. On the last couple of albums, the Divine Horsemen albums, there was a lot more cut-up stuff. I still did some cut-up in the lyrics with this record, but not as much. The lyrics to âCellars to Weepâ were very influenced by songs like Bob Dylanâs âSubterranean Homesick Bluesâ or âHighway 61 Revisited,â even though song doesnât sound like that. I wanted to keep that kind of surrealist humor that Bob Dylan has â those nonsense phrases that add meaning when theyâre all put together.â
With tracks inspired by subjects as diverse at the gun-toting MAGA couple who pointed their weapons at Black Lives Matter protesters (âGoddamn Thieving Shameâ) to the sleazy come-on cover lines of â50s pulp paperbacks (âSex Kittenâ), Courtroom Wedding flexes a lean, potent sound that recalls the knife-edge attack of the Don Kirk-era Flesh Eaters and the heavyweight vibe of Chrisâ second solo album (as Stone by Stone), 1989âs I Pass for Human. Like this punk grand masterâs finest work, it displays an electric, tormented immediacy.
âCourtroom Wedding sounds more live than the Divine Horsemen records,â Chris says, âand I think thatâs a good thing.â











