Anyway, here's the first of the interviews, I did this way back in November last year the first time I intended on doing a zine, before the idea was shelved only to be resurrected several months ago only to be panned again. Who knows, maybe one day I'll start again, quit, start again, until the cycle finally spits out a result.
The band is Dirty Money from the UK, interviewee is the guitar player Rob.

1) First up, for the uninitiated, how would you describe Dirty Money?
Dirty Money is 3 guys from the North West of England, 1 Londoner and 1
Austrian playing hardcore punk influence by a lot of stuff, mainly NYHC.
2) When and how did you guys get started? Who is in the band and has
anyone been any previous bands?
Anthony Dearlove and Graham, started the band. Dearlove plays Bass,
Graham sings. They pretended they were in a band for a few months before
people started calling them up on it. At that point they got Seb in to
drum, and myself to play guitar. Then it was a real band. After a good
few months we recruited Chris (of Diction, Ninebar, Hellbent Diehard) to
play second guitar. That arrangement was always temporary, and we now
have Mark from Walk The Plank joining us. Just at the right time, since
Chris broke his hand during the Knuckledust set at Ninjagest this year.
Dearlove also plays in Frightener, Seb used to be in Austria's
AnchorsXUp and I (Rob) used to play in Nervous Wreck.
3) Just recently you released your first 7"/EP, 'No Escaping This' on
Dead and Gone, how did you hook up with them? Are you happy with the
final result? What has the response been like so far?
Dead And Gone has put out lots of good records. When we all went to see
the early Dead And Gone bands, times were good. I guess that label has
been a big part of UK hardcore for a while, and the bands associated
with it, like The Last Chance have done a lot for hardcore in the UK.
Ian got a copy of the demo and decided to give us a chance. It means a
lot, for me personally there is no better label in the UK. As for the
final result, we should maybe have mixed it a bit differently, but im
hoping it's a sign of better things to come. We have some ideas for the
next stuff we record. So far the response has been incredible, much more
than we had hoped for!

4) Dan Mills of Cold World fame did guest vocals on a track off your demo
in what could be seen as a masterstroke of genius marketing haha, how
did that come about? Did you guys know him beforehand or was it an idea
that you approached him with?
Graham and Dearlove met him on the first Cold World UK tour. On that
tour he met his future wife Hannah Jenkins. Hannah is a good friend of
all of us, and when we recorded the demo he happened to be hanging out
with her. We invited them along to recording and it was just a lot of
fun really. We had to write the lyrics for Dan to sing which took SO
long, but it was fun, and that's the main thing.
5) There are a lot of great bands in the UK that don't get nearly as much
coverage as their US counterparts, does it bum you out a little knowing
that a lot of people just dismiss the UK scene and are reluctant to
bother checking out anything that isn't right in front of their noses?
Good one. Yes it does bum me out. I think people in the UK back the
scene pretty well. People do get behind bands from overseas a bit more.
In some ways its understandable. You don't get chance to see some bands
very often, more people are inclined to travel from places to see them.
Sometimes that happens for bands I have absolutely no interest in, and
other times, bands with mind blowing records are totally overlooked, no
matter where they are from.
6) How is the scene over there at the moment? A lot of great new bands
seem to be popping up, Dead Swans, Crosses, Self Destruct, Deal With It
and yourselves as well as many others. Are there any other bands we
should keep an ear out for?
Frightener, they are about to split up, but if you like metallic stuff
they are awesome. Totally underrated. Fastpoint are also worth checking
out. They have a new 7 inch. Catchy Skate Punk. Colds Ones from
Liverpool, Meatlocker, Hellbent Diehard's new record will blow EVERYONE
away, Ninebar are always worth checking out, Bases Loaded on bank roll
records, Reality from Brighton, oh! Abandon Ship are amazing. Cold Snap
are worth a SERIOUS listen, get the demo, and maybe check out Hellmouth
if you like Ringworm. I'm sure im missing loads of stuff out, but that's
a good start. Rhythm To The Madness from Belgium deserve a special
mention.
7) You guys are doing a split with Deal With It soon, when can we expect
to see that? Will it also be released on Dead and Gone?
Yes, probably out early next year! We are also doing a split with
Baltimore's Trapped Under Ice. Details on that are to be confirmed.
That's all we have lined up. The 7 inch is also coming out on Bowl Head
Inc in Japan for this coming december/early january hopefully.
8) If you could be in any other band who would it be and why?
I'd be in The Rolling Stones. Imagine hanging out with Keith Richards on
a nightly basis! Plus I like the songs.
9) Top 5 albums?
Hard one... Currently... But always changing...
1. Biohazard - Urban Discipline
2. Life Of Agony - River Runs Red
3. Leeway - Born To Expire
4. Crown Of Thornz - Mentally Vexed
5. Madball - Set It Off
10) Honestly, what do you think of the English cricket team, and do most
english folk think Kevin Pieterson is as much of a knob as we Aussies
do?
Dude, I don't think I know anyone who cares about cricket. Maybe a few
people do. I for sure have no idea who that guy is! I worked in India
once, and cricket was big there, I think it has a totally different
image outside of the UK, its not popular amoung the youngsters, so you
don't get much homegrown talent.

11) Thanks for taking the time out to answer my questions, any further
comments/shout outs?
Crazy Neils from Straight A's, all the UK kids now living in Australia
that have messaged us, and A389 Records.

















There's not a whole lot of info floating around on these guys, there are stories the band was actually put together by a babysitter, conflicting articles have the singer Steve Metz as being anywhere from 8 - 12 years old, most suggest 8 or 9 so we'll go with that and the rest of the band couldn't be much older. Based on the photos it looks as though they were styled by a native american fan of Adam and the Ants. Anyway this EP came out on Hit and Run Records back in 1981 and features 5 tracks of standard early eighties LA punk, nothing amazing but pretty cool considering their age. Darby and the Weirdos were fans which managed to get them many great shows with the likes of the Adolescents, Circle Jerks, Germs, Weirdos, Black Flag and X.


Lately I have been listening to a shit load of old oi and a whole lot of old British punk, but for the time being I'll focus on the oi aspect of my recent listening habits.

The 4-Skins: Formed in '79, they broke up in 1984 after 2 albums ('The Good The Bad and The 4 Skins' and 'A Fistful Of..') and a live lp. One of the guitarists went on to join Skrewdriver. They reformed last year with two members of the Cockney Rejects and are recording a new album. Listen to 'The Wonderful World Of The 4 Skins' for a good overview.
Blitz: Blitz have been covered by numerous bands including Judge and Rancid, their first 3 7"s are ragers, start with them. All Out Attack (1981), Never Surrender (1982) and Warriors (1982). The guitarist was killed last year running on a freeway while drunk.
Cocksparrer: Originally Malcolm McLaren was to sign them alongside the Pistols in '76, they released a few singles then broke up in '80. They reformed in '82 after renewed interest and released the classic 'Shock Troops' album in '83, go get it now. Still playing live here and there, last album was released in 2007.
Angelic Upstarts: The Upstarts have released 12 albums since they formed in '77, they have gone through several lineup changes and still continue to this day. The first three albums are the best, check them out or get the Punk Singles Collection of theirs.
The Business: Their classic album is their debut from '83, 'Suburban Rebels'. Like most of these old bands they are still going and their last release 'Mean Girl' came out last year.
Last Resort: Originally only around for just over a year between '80 - '82, their album 'Way Of Life - Skinhead Anthems' is well worth checking out. They briefly reformed with a different lineup in '88 before breaking up again, then in 2000 another lineup emerged. The singer also sang for The 4-Skins in '84 before their first breakup.
Red Alert: Check out their first album 'We've Got The Power' that came out in '82. Unlike the other bands these guys have been together since '79 without any breakups, just plenty of lineup changes. 