Nine-pound Hammer is an American cowpunk band.[1][2] They were formed in 1985 by vocalist Scott Luallen and guitarist Blaine Cartwright in their hometown of Owensboro, Kentucky.[3] They experienced their initial success with Crypt Records.[4]

Nine-pound Hammer
Guitarist Blaine Cartwright at performing in November 2012
Guitarist Blaine Cartwright at performing in November 2012
Background information
OriginOwensboro, Kentucky
GenresHardcore punk, cowpunk
Years active1985–1997, 1998-present
MembersScott Luallen
Blaine Cartwright
Earl Crim
Brian Pulito
Mark Hendricks

Nine-pound Hammer was one of the first rural hardcore punk bands to substantially incorporate rural blue collar motifs into the minimalistic hardcore sound. Their lyrics (suggestive of outlaw country) featured themes such as alcoholism, rural poverty, and violence, and included references and homages to the likes of Jesco White and Dale Earnhardt. In contrast, most of the urban, experimental cowpunk bands of 1970s/80s Los Angeles and the UK were roots rock, folk rock or New Wave bands incorporating country music instruments and influences as a secondary (sometimes temporary) aspect of their sound.

Following the breakup of the band in 1997, guitarist Blaine Cartwright formed the band Nashville Pussy,[5] which shares many of Nine-pound Hammer's musical and lyrical conventions with the addition of a lead guitarist and a more hard rock/Southern rock-focused format.

History

edit
 
Yuppie Mop Dogs at Ross Theater, Evansville, August 1985

Nine-pound Hammer first played at the Ross Theater, opening for the Xtian rap group, the Disciples of Decadence, in nearby Evansville, Indiana, with drummer Toby Myrig, David Epperson, and bassist Brian (Forrest) Payne, in 1984. David and Brian left, and Bart Altman, thunderstick man from the Disciples of Decadence, joined on bass. This lineup played a single show at the Ross Theater as the Yuppie Mop Dogs on August 31, 1985. The band played locally in Owensboro, Kentucky and Evansville, Indiana, garnering a very loyal following before relocating to Lexington, Kentucky as the Raw Recruits. The band then changed their name to the Black Sheep and became the house band at Great Scott's Depot. Darren Howard replaced Toby, and the band became Nine-pound Hammer again. The name of the band is taken from the Merle Travis song Nine-pound hammer.

Brian Moore (Active Ingredients) and Rob Hulsman (Tarbox Ramblers) joined on bass and drums in 1988, just before recording the band's first LP, The mud, the blood, and the beers.

The band has eleven full-length albums and several EPs. The Guardian deemed Hayseed timebomb, the band's third release, a "stand-out" "trashy indie" album.[6][7]

In 2005, Nine-pound Hammer was asked to pen a theme song and lyrics for 12 oz. Mouse, a new Adult Swim animated series showing on America's Cartoon Network. Singer Scott Luallen also appears in the series as the voice actor for the character Roostre. More recently, they were featured on Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters Colon the Soundtrack with the track "Carl's Theme," in which the lyrics play off of the character "Carl" and one of his lines in Aqua Teen Hunger Force.

Releases

edit
 
Earl Crim

Full-length

edit

Other

edit

Current line-up

edit
 
Rob Hulsman
  • Scott Luallen (vocals)
  • Blaine Cartwright (guitar)
  • Earl Crim (guitar)
  • Brian Pulito (drums)
  • Mark Hendricks (bass)

Former members

edit
  • Brian Moore (bass)
  • Matt Bartholomy (bass)
  • Bill Waldron (drums)
  • Bart Altman (bass)
  • Rob Hulsman (drums)
  • Adam Neal (drums)

References

edit
  1. ^ "Nine-pound Hammer biography by Mark Deming". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  2. ^ Terlesky, John (1 Sep 1995). "Nine-pound Hammer to bang out cowpunk in Bethlehem". The Morning Call. p. D8.
  3. ^ Davidson, Eric (2022). We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988-2001. Backbeat. pp. 100–103.
  4. ^ Tunis, Walter (Aug 9, 1996). "Nine-pound ready to hammer out tunes, tour again". Weekender. Lexington Herald-Leader. p. 4.
  5. ^ de Luca, Dan (7 Nov 1997). "Nashville P.". Features Weekend. The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 16.
  6. ^ Bozman, Dion (Sep 15, 1995). "In the Groove". The Daily Times. Salisbury. p. 11.
  7. ^ Glenn, Joshua (1 Oct 1995). "Americana: Joshua Glenn takes in the White Trash 'Sleazefest' and finds there's sometimes too much pork for just one fork". Preview. The Guardian. p. 46.
edit