Showing posts with label Paul Mernagh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Mernagh. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2025

The Panic Attacks

ORIGINS: Sydney, NSW
GENRE: Hardcore / Powerviolence
YEARS ACTIVE: 2001-2003
 
MEMBERS:
RELEASES:

  • Self-Titled (2003) - Download Here.
    • 1. Dead on the Inside
    • 2. Time
    • 3. Morphine and the Box
    • 4. Quiet City
SUMMARY: Initially beginning as 'ADD Thrash', the band consisted of Micko and the Mernagh brothers and only played one show as a three-piece before the lineup began to change. The band briefly became known as just 'ADD' and by 2002, with Micko the only remaining member, the band changed its name to The Panic Attacks.
 
SHOWS: 

ORAL HISTORY:

MICKO: Luke Shirker and I were going to join this dumb ska band but on our way to our first practice we found out it had been cancelled. So I contacted BxE and Buttahz from Deadstare and we had a jam seeing as we'd already paid for the space. I had only started playing drums a few months earlier and I'm not sure why I was up for ska riddims but that day I realised how much I wanted to drum in a hardcore band. Luke and I mused on the fact that adding thrash to a style of music was always mad, as I had been experimenting with playing thrash drums along to King Tubby dubs. So we made it a thing, got his brother Paul to do vocals and called it ADD Thrash. Neither of us really listened to 'thrash' but it's what we called the fastcore/power violence of the time.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
MICKO: ADD Thrash is now well and truly into full effect with a full practice notched up finally. We've got four songs written... no idea how to describe what we sound like but I guess it takes heavy influences from bands like Negative Approach, Sick of It All, Spazz, Nine Shocks Terror, and Tear It Up.
Micko (Drums), Micko's Tapes website, 2001

LUKE: We were just all best mates and hung out all the time at the house Micko and Troy were living in on Trafalgar Street, Stanmore. After a gig at Hornsby I was left without anywhere to stay and I'd never talked to Micko but had seen him around. He ended up offering me a place to stay for the night. He said "Melbourne" were staying there that night, which was his Micko-way of explaining that some members of the Oiskas were staying there already. Since that night I would go there to escape the 'burbs and family and would unofficially live there on the couch on weekends throughout the end of high school. They became my best mates and still are to this day. I stayed there and at other houses they later rented, right up until I was at uni after high school had finished. At that point, they gave me my own room and forced me to start paying rent! We started jamming in the house when we were bored and wrote ridiculous lyrics and riffs based on killing cockroaches (all the houses we shared were absolutely infested), old people watching television in the nursing home next to the local basketball courts where we shoot hoops, etc. I was always a pop punk kid and they were really into ska and grind so it made for a weird mix. All my favourite hardcore stuff was early '80s DC and we all had that in common. Our sound ended up being a weird mix of crusty grind hardcore with some melody snuck in.
Luke Mernagh (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 

MICKO: There was only one ADD Thrash show. It was at Hornsby PCYC and I barely remember it because I was really nervous about playing drums live for the first time. Other bands included Not An Option and Televised Schoolyard Massacre. The whole thing was a blur but I do remember Jordan (RIP) from Ghetto Blasterz pretending to play bass for us. We did a cover of 'Egg Raid on Mojo' by the Beastie Boys. At the time most people in the hardcore scene were going through their emo phase so they were all at the Green Square watching the band Grade that night.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
LUKE: I had played in hardcore bands before but always youth crew and early DC stuff, so this whole inner city crusty grind shit was a bit unknown to me. But it was fun just being a brat and writing songs about anything at all.  
Luke Mernagh (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
KNIBBSY: Micko, Troy and I were in Melbourne at the end of 2001 doing some shows with our respective separate bands at the time. I spent a fair bit of time hanging out with Micko and Troy and thought they were down to earth guys who liked NRL and cricket and sport in general - just as much as I did. We like similar (but not identical) music. The reason we were hanging out was because we were the only three people out of the four Sydney bands on tour in Melbourne at that time (Dot Dot Dot, Cheapshot, Staying at Home, Worse Off) who dodged the Arthouse's legendarily 'rustic' backpacker accommodation. I didn't know much about ADD Thrash other than that they already had some songs and had practiced with a couple of lineups with Micko and the Mernagh brothers as the core members. I think Luke and Paul Mernagh had both left by that point and the momentum had stopped. So Micko had a band name, some songs, and was probably keen to keep drumming in a band. I hadn't played bass yet at that point but soon after we got back from Melbourne, I somehow ended up at ADD's practice with a bass. This was a bold call on Micko's behalf because I very much had L plates firmly on - a bass player with a whole month's experience. I'd been teaching myself to play along to the first Ramones record and the Joy Division Substance compilation, and then added some Screeching Weasels songs because they were much faster than Ramones and Joy Division, which is a good option if you need to keep up with thrashy hardcore songs. 
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025 

MICKO: ADD Thrash and The Panic Attacks can be considered the same band. We only recorded as 'The Panic Attacks' but the EP has Paul on two songs and he'd left the band by the time it was The Panic Attacks. Luke wrote two of the songs on that EP too so it's not really a separate entity. There was a changeover gig where both Luke and Paul played as well as Jonny and Knibbsy at the squatted behemoth that is the Midnight Star Social Centre in Homebush. This was under the name 'ADD'. I put on this gig and was crazy anxious about drumming so also remember very little, except for the cops not showing up and it went well. Other bands for this show included Conation, Headless Horsemen, and The Stockholm Syndrome. I was very annoyed at my performance so I left for the bottle shop without packing up the kit. We also threw in a bit of One Dollar Short's awful well-known song into one of ours because Troy got headbutted by one of those jerks. 
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024


PAUL: To me, ADD Thrash is basically just pre-ROFL and the border is hazy in my mind. When Luke left that was when the new name started I guess, but it was the same adventure. ADD Thrash was more raw enthusiasm than a real band I guess.
Paul Mernagh (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

MICKO: To find new members I went through my phone and asked anyone who was already in a band if they wanted to join. Everyone played in 25 bands at that time so there was never trouble putting together bands. Nothing was a problem back then.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

KNIBBSY: We practiced as a three piece - me, Micko, and Luke - like, a few times at Micko and Troy's place in Annandale. They showed me a couple of songs they already had. One was 'Quiet City', which I said was similar to 'High Hopes' by Gorilla Biscuits, which they took diplomatically by not responding, haha. Micko had a full drumkit in his bedroom but there was no aircon or fan. It was summer, and brutally hot. I played through a tiny guitar practice amp that cut out all the bass, but it didn't matter because it was completely drowned out by the drums. Luke was just there to show me the songs but we understood at the time that he wouldn't be staying.
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

WADE: Micko and Troy lived directly across the road from Zen Studios in St Peters in a share house with Matt from Syndicate and maybe Luke from The Shirkers lived there for a while too. Their hallway was chock-full of gear from local bands who couldn't afford storage, hahaha. We would always go there to kick on after shows at the Green Square. I was younger than the crew who lived and hung out there but I loved it because it was like having 20 big brothers and sisters and they all knew so much about underground music. All different kinds of punk, hardcore, powerviolence, avant garde noise shit... just different stuff to the mainstream hardcore that my other friends liked. Micko and Troy asked if I was keen to play guitar in a band with two singers, both with heaps different screaming styles. We had a few rehearsals across the street and then we played a bunch of shows before I left. 
Wade Keighran (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024


KNIBBSY: The first show I played was in the winter of 2002 at the Midnight Star Social Centre, which was a squat that had recently started in Homebush. They'd just started having shows there but, as it turned out, this didn't continue much longer so we were lucky to play there. It had an amazing interior and originally was some kind of theatre. I remember a lot of massive dark velvet curtains and, even in its rundown state, it had that 'no expense spared' look from the early 20th century. It must have been pretty opulent in its day. I think Luke played guitar for this gig as a favour, alongside Tyler. We did a cover of 'Egg Raid on Mojo' by the Beastie Boys - it must've been mandatory for every new hardcore band to cover that particular song. Being a squat, there wasn't a lot of lighting or the usual PA setup - maybe just a vocal PA. I realised immediately that gig how I was very reliant on seeing the fret markngs at that stage of my bass playing. I barely looked up during the 15 minutes we played for - I was really that flat out just trying to see and hear what I was doing.
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025

MICKO: Knibbsy joined and played the one show as ADD before we became The Panic Attacks. Jonny was involved with The Panic Attacks but never played any shows, just recorded. We realised there was another ADD in Sydney, plus none of us had ADD, so we changed the name. I experienced panic attacks at the time and thought the music suited the anxiety I felt.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

JONNY: I was playing in The Optionals and possibly still Worse Off at the time. The early-ish 2000s were hazy and ridiculously fun. It was only natural that I would eventually meet Micko and Troy as they were a crucial part of the extended Sydney hardcore conglomerate. I had already met Knibbsy (also crucial) through the Gordon/St Ives crew and was extremely impressed with his enthusiasm and musical taste. Many bucket bongs were inhaled and the St Peters parties at Micko and Troy's were next level. I was the daggy long-haired guy that had one foot in the indie camp and the other in the punk camp. I had two to three jams with The Panic Attacks and came to the realisation that I had no time to commit to a third band (which is weird because I am eternally in three to four bands). So I never played a show with The Panic Attacks. I did, however, jump up for a guest vocal thingy at the Midnight Star (best venue ever). 
Jonny Turcinskis (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

 
MICKO: Troy and I lived across the road from Zen Studios, so it was the easiest place to record. We jammed there and a lot of bands would record with Geoff Lee - so why not us? I'm not sure why we never released it. For some reason after the recordings were done in bands I was in, nobody really cared enough about it being a product and it never got to the art stage. Artwork is finally being done now in 2024 for a release on the illustrious Noise Levels net label. Back then, we burnt copies for our friends so it got around. One song was also on a Snapshot Records compilation. For some reason I've always liked the idea of sitting on old records and then releasing them decades later. Most probably though, it's just sheer laziness.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

KNIBBSY: The recording was done quickly - maybe four hours or less. It was done at Zen with veteran in-house engineer Geoff "I'm barely tolerating your terrible band and you'll know because it's written on my face" Lee. In fairness to Geoff, he was super competent, knew every part of the studio, knew inherently how to set up a band, and in a class of his own in his ability to get decent sound within minutes. And because of all that, he was efficient with how he used the time the band is ultimately paying for (which, remember, was about as cheap as studios got back in the era when studios were the only option for recording). So the constant bad poker face didn't matter at all to us or the on the other times I recorded there. There was a deadline for the recording because we needed one track to give to Jay Snapshot for a compilation. It was a CD giveaway he was doing for each payer at a big show he'd organised around the Easter Long Weekend in 2003 - because of that deadline we'd ended up recording without either of our guitarists at the time - Wade had maybe already left by then and Tyler was overseas or out of town. So we hit up my old mate Jonny Optional as super-sub to do the guitar.
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025


JONNY: The Panic Attacks had a recording session booked with Geoff Lee at Zen and Wade, their guitarist at the time, couldn't make it so I stepped in at the last minute to record four songs. We pretty much had to rehearse the songs for an hour before Geoff hit 'record'. I'm pretty sure it was the best day of Geoff's life. I was completely stoked that I was asked to do it and my main aim was to Dag Nasty the shit out of the songs. Also a massive bonus was having Paul Shirker doing ridiculously great screaming on the track 'Quiet City'. Listening back, it holds up pretty well! I adore those times.  
Jonny Turcinskis (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

KNIBBSY: Jonny played both guitar parts as they were written but added his trademark x-factor precision, which tightened up the songs more than they deserved, haha. For example, I really like the solo he added to the end of 'Time', which he improved on the first take. He wasn't entirely happy with the solo and wanted to do another take and I intervened and said something like, "No mate, that's perfect - it's better than it was", and he accepted this like the all-round good bloke and top tier shredder that he is. We recorded two early ADD Thrash songs ('Quiet City' and 'Morphine and the Box'), a newer song ('Dead on the Inside') that I think Tyler did the music for, and one that I did the music for ('Time'). Paul Mernagh came to the studio, which was cool f him. He certainly added something extra to the two ADD Thrash songs that he might have written or co-written. I remember that he really went for it in the guest vocalist/cameo tradition, did each in one or two takes and left nothing behind. Probably couldn't speak properly for days. Those songs sounded better for his effort, and Troy brought plenty to it also and was right there with Paul on both tracks. Paul did a couple of live appearances too, which was awesome.
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025

DANO: I joined at the tail end and rode it to the death. I took over from Wade as we were good mates back then so it was a nice transition. I knew the other guys from the Bombshellzine online messageboard and from various visits to Sydney before I moved there, so it felt like it all just fell into place! It was a fun band to be in for sure, and helped forge the strong bond I have with Troy and Micko. I joined at the experimental stage where Tyler was getting a lot more technical than a lot of the back catalogue and it was fun to contribute to a more quirky and mathy version of thrash hardcore/powerviolence. It was also cool to get to know Knibbsy and to just generally be in a band in Sydney! I'd never had anything resembling a band while I was living in Forster before this.
Daniel 'Dano' Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024


KNIBBSY: A show that was memorable for being comedically awful was my last one with the band. It was Dano's first gig and I'd told the band I was leaving. I'd been in two bands at the same time for a couple of years by this point and I was suddenly running out of space to fit it all in around uni. Anyway, the show was a poorly advertised, poorly attended Wednesday or Thursday show at that weird Candy's Apartment venue in King's Cross. I never had a decent show there with any band I'd been in. The load-in was a complete backbreaker, it was a shitshow upstairs, and you'd have to double-park on Bayswater Road out front. And it was just pouring rain - or maybe just in my head, just to lift the spirits. And then a revelation as I was driving home, "I'm looking at this wrong - it's all upside! I'm never going to have to repeat that indignity" and then I stopped and thought, "Fuck, I'm still in another band". 
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025

DANO: One gig that stood out was playing Fuck... I'm Dead. I remember feeling so inferior, hahaha - they had a smoke machine that was constantly going off to the point where you couldn't see fuck all aside from an occasional flash of light or a near miss from a studded wrist band. It was hectic and I was stoked to be on that bill!
Daniel 'Dano' Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

KNIBBSY: I hung around in the band a bit longer because there were some shows we needed to do. By this time they'd tee'd up Dano for the second guitar. I really liked Dano just from already chatting to him at shows. In Dano they'd unearthed another high calibre guitarist who, despite being a bit younger than Wade, really had his shit together - more than some people I knew in their 30s. He'd been working for a while and had recently moved to Sydney. Like Wade, he was the right amount of serious, which was impressive for an 18 year-old, and without drama too. Also like Wade, he also managed to balance this by remembering to have fun and keep calm and not overreact. He also owned a quality, proper guitar and full size amp and cab. I had neither of those things when I'd joined. He also had his driver's licence, which almost made me stay in the band as I'd previously been the sole 'driver by elimination' for long periods in The Panic Attacks. 
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025


MICKO: It took Knibbsy ages to quit even though we knew he wanted to. When he eventually did we tried out Nathan (Encryptor) on bass for one practice and then the band was done. That was when we started ROFL.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

KNIBBSY: Another big factor to me leaving was that I wasn't the right guy to do justice to the direction the songs were going in - more intricate, complicated, and much more unique/interesting. I wasn't my cup of tea in terms of what I listened to but even I could see how interesting it was. I told them to go hard down the path of what they were doing, thinking they'd maybe land as an unhinged hybrid spawn of No Means No, Spazz, and Mogwai, or something like that. I was a guy who'd taught himself to play with the first Ramones album so I said; I'll bail out here and leave you guys to it with only my best wishes. There was no weirdness or animosity and everyone stayed friends. Micko's only surprise was that he'd expected me to quit sooner!
Luke Knibbs (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2025
 
DANO: I think the end was brought on by Knibbsy leaving. We did carry on sans-bass for a little while, which is where we tried to get a lot more technical and I think it was just starting to not feel as Panic Attack-y, so it sadly just fizzled out. I was kinda bummed but it didn't take long for ROFL to form from the ashes and fill the void again.
Daniel 'Dano' Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
RELATED BANDS: V.B.S., Cheapshot, The Trashtones, Stereo City, Dot Dot Dot, Encryptor, ROFL, The Tossers, Dime a Dozen, Taking Sides, The Scare, Wolf & Cub, Fallopian Butcher, Joythief, The Divorcee, Indigo Cult, Dagnabit, The Shirkers, Own Enemy, Instant Mayhem, The Breakout, The Lock Ups, Black Jaw, The Colytons, The Spitz, Brand Disloyalty, Crumble, Knuckle, Whopping Big Naughty, Lowercase, Worse Off, The Optionals, Animal Shapes, Arcane, Collapso, Chinese Burns Unit, Hellebores, Zen Demon, No Doz, Proton Energy Pills, VBS







Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Paul Mernagh

Paul Mernagh

  • The Shirkers (1997-2001) - Guitar
  • Own Enemy (1999) - Guitar
  • ADD Thrash (2001) - Vocals
  • The Spitz (2002) - Bass
  • Brand Loyalty / Brand Disloyalty (2002-2007) - Bass
  • ROFL (2003-2004) - Vocals

REGION: Baulkham Hills, NSW

Thursday, August 15, 2024

ROFL

ORIGINS: Sydney, NSW
GENRE: Hardcore / Powerviolence 
YEARS ACTIVE: 2003-2007
 
MEMBERS:
RELEASES: 
 
  • Self-Titled (2004) - Download Here.
    • 1. Sit Down, Shut Up
    • 2. XHumpty DumptyX
    • 3. A/S/L
    • 4. WWF Rematch at the Cow Palace (Spazz cover)
    • 5. C.L.A. (Spazz cover)
    • 6. Shit Talking
    • 7. Ask Our Band Manager (Alt F4)
    • 8. Individualised Floorpuncher (Charles Bronson cover)
    • 9. ...

  • Queensland Tour EP (2005) [split with The New Justice Team] - Download Here.
    • 1. A/S/L
    • 2. Shit Talking
    • 3. Sit Down, Shut Up
    • 4. Alt F4 (Ask Our Manager) 


  • The Crash That Ended in 'E' (2006) [split with Frank Rizzo] - Download Here.
    • 1. Plz Add Me to ICQ
    • 2. Rock 'N' Roll Substance Abuse Program
    • 3. Pan-Fried Tyrant
    • 4. Morphed Daze
    • 5. Blood to Floor
    • 6. + Hardcaw
  • The Lost Album (2007)
    • 1. Falconio
    • 2. The Black Sheep
    • 3. Coma 84
    • 4. Ballworker
    • 5. Alt F4
    • 6. Landslide
    • 7. The Beginning
    • 8. Harakiri
    • 9. Pan-Fried Tyrant
    • 10. Catching the Red Eye
SUMMARY: ROFL began as a jam session that formed out of the ashes of the band The Panic Attacks. Evolving to incorporate two vocalists, original singer Paul Mernagh moved on just prior to the band's 2005 Brisbane tour with The New Justice Team and was replaced by Simon 'Simmo' Slaughter. ROFL chaotically spilled across the stage of various venues for another three years before members decided to call it a day after the departure of founding guitarist Dano. Just prior to this the band recorded an album that was to never see release - the masters were lost until Simon found them again in 2024.
 
SHOWS: 
  • PCYC, Penrith - 8th October, 2004
  • The Harp, Tempe - 29th October, 2004
  • House Party, Redfern - 30th October, 2004
  • National Beer Day, Putty - 6th November, 2004
  • Arncliffe Hotel, Arncliffe - 26th March, 2005 
  • Newcastle Leagues Club, Newcastle - 30th April, 2005
  • The Clubhouse, Glebe - 17th June, 2005
  • Arncliffe Hotel, Arncliffe - 24th June, 2005
  • Ahimsa House, Brisbane - 2nd September, 2005
  • BBQ, House Party, Brisbane - 3rd September, 2005
  • The Orient, Brisbane - 3rd September, 2005
  • 22, Newtown - 4th February, 2006
  • Bar Broadway, Sydney - 24th February, 2006
  • The Lucky Country, Newcastle - 19th May, 2006
  • Punx Picnic, Sydney Park, St Peters - 19th August, 2006
  • The Pitz, Marrickville - 25th March, 2007
  • Sandringham Hotel, Newtown - 18th May, 2007 
  • Sandringham Hotel, Newtown - 3rd June, 2007

ORAL HISTORY:
MICKO: ROFL started after three differently-named bands didn't work out and it needed its own things. Originally I'd started a band with Luke and Paul Shirker called ADD Thrash in 2001, which was a bass-less power violence band with Western Sydney pop hooks. Luke left in late 2001 so that was it for that - after one show at Hornsby PCYC. With Paul Shirker, we gathered local legends Jonny Optional (from every band), Knibbsy (from Stereo City fame) and Teeroy (from the Bombshellzine forums), and changed the name to The Panic Attacks. After a few shows, some member changes, and a Geoff Lee classic demo which nobody has heard yet, Jonny and Knibbsy lost interest in mine and Teeroy's desire for power violence/fastcore and we eventually began ROFL. 
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
PAUL: ROFL was weirdness. I loved it. Micko is a genius and, when surrounded by the right kind of weirdos at the right time, he conjures up magic things. That's how it felt at the start and I felt like we could just be loud, weird, messy and stupid without being dumb if that makes sense. 
Paul Mernagh (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
DANO: The band kinda spawned from being in The Panic Attacks. I'd joined at the tail end of their existence and it was almost all of the members in that band who started ROFL. I think it started with the boys jamming with Chris Beer and working out a few Spazz covers, then deciding to form an actual band, and so I was asked if I wanted in.
Daniel Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
TROY: I'd watched lots of band shows, and helped put some on. I used to go and see a lot of ska and punk bands when I first started going to shows, then got into hardcore and heavier stuff more. I guess living with the music lover that is Micko helped... he always had some new and interesting music on, and I just love the energy of live shows, and made a bunch of friends in bands too - especially guys like Luke Shirker and Ryan (Mad Dash), who are still best friends. I was watching their bands every week. Went to lots of shows at the Iron Duke. I guess I was never that musical, never really thought about being in a band too much, but then Micko asked if I wanted to sing in a new band he had started so I said, why not? Can't be that hard!
Troy Harrison (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

JAMES: ROFL started in my Gordon street house in Burwood. I was lucky enough to have a jam room with drums and amp set up... one day Micko and I started thrashing around, him on drums and me on bass, being stupid, kinda mocking hardcore and speedcore, and it snowballed from there.We then got Chris and Troy involved around the same time.  
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
MICKO: We'd been hanging out a lot at Butterball and Cindy's house in Burwood and would jam a lot there. Local Bombshellzine celebrity Chris Beer lived down the road from the Burwood house and recent Forster import Dano was looking to join a band in Sydney so we started jamming together with Butterball on bass. It began as learning a few Spazz songs in the spare room that I'd usually wake up in every weekend. Paul was still keen so it was to be dual vocal/dual guitar six piece mayhem by idiots that had no idea what they were doing.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
CHRIS: We were just jamming around in Cindy's loungeroom (James's girlfriend) in Gordon Street, Burwood, when I suggested we learn a Spazz song. We learnt it and it sounded amazing so we decided to form a band together and play shows. 
Chris Foye (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
 
PAUL: I got to scream my guts out, which I'd never done before. I found a voice I didn't know I had. But then I lost it for three days after we first jammed, hahaha. 
Paul Mernagh (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024 
 
JAMES: The first few songs were recorded at a pretty nice studio in Surry Hills... Clay (The Brain, Quadbox) was our engineer. We had a four hour session on a Saturday morning. The studio was a fairly high end, and much too nice for us - it had isolated and floating rooms, a couch in the mixing room, the whole deal. I recall Clay had a mesa boogie bass rig set up in the room that he let me borrow. Very nice rig. Probably for the best, as the old Peavey amp I inherited/borrowed/possibly stole, well, it wasn't that great. We were pretty tight and excited to be recording at the time, so we laid the guitars and drum tracks down in quick succession. Probably too much coffee and red bulls for Micko and I. It was all very new too, so things happened very fast... I'm not sure what happened with mastering, I tend to think the 'album' we released was just a mix that Clay gave us at the end of our session. I remember creating the artwork, ripping copies of CDs and all that fun stuff being done completely during work hours on my work computer. The artwork was basically me just goofing around off the back of the whole internet-speak movement and putting something together to complement our ridiculous band name. I basically scoured the internet for images of stereotypical nerds. At the time I had access to a very nice Mac G5 for Photoshop. It was the shit. The G5 was also good for being a pest on the various internet forums, special mention to Bombshell! 
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
MICKO: We recorded a demo and were keen to play some shows. The internet 'theme' of the band came from us being internet nerds, I guess. It was the era of internet where forums were King so Butterball came up with the back cover design for the demo, ripping off Screaming Bloody Mess (another Internet forum. The lyrical themes regarding the internet were, I guess, to brand with the name of the band. But yeah, nah, that's just what we were into.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
JAMES: Our first show could have been at Maggotville... I remember the set being loads of fun and over quickly as were most of our sets. The one memory that sticks is how nervous Chris was, and he had read somewhere that bananas calm nerves, so moments before we went on he was smashing bananas side of stage! Needless to say, bananas didn't help.  
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024


MICKO: The first show was a gig I organised via Screaming Bloody Mess at Maggotville in July of 2004. Other bands on the bill were The Collapse from Perth, Stereo City, Altered Beast, and Organ Doner Kebab. I remember Beer being so anxious that he ate about six bananas. We weren't very good but hopefully it was noisy enough to mask the awful playing. The demo helped us do a good range of shows after this though... early on we got to play at the underground army bunkers in Malabar at a hardcore/breakcore/noise night, which was amazing. We also played a harbour cruise and other mad gigs like The Clubhouse in Glebe, Simmo's old house in Surry Hills, Arncliff Hotel, etc. Chris Beer got over it in 2005, as did Paul, so we had to change shit up again.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
PAUL: I wasn't ever really part of the band. I liked most of the guys a lot and considered them friends but I felt a but outside the dynamic collectively. And there was one guy there at the time who I didn't know so well, who I didn't gel with in a way that was important to me to move on from. I had Brand Disloyalty at that point anyway, and lots of other stuff going on. So it was best I made space for somebody else. Great fun for a while though!
 Paul Mernagh (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
SIMMO: The band had been around for a while with Paul Shirker on vocals but at some point he couldn't be fucked anymore. I'd been mates with everyone for years and perhaps they thought my baby bird squawking would suit the band, haha. I was in a band called Arkanoid at the time.
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
CHRIS: It was fun for six months until things went a bit dark. I left 'cause my heart wasn't it in anymore. Simon then changed the password on the ROFL website and told everyone I had changed it as my way of being spiteful. That was untrue but they all believed it and made some hate songs about me over it. Five years later, Simon confessed to me that he'd made it all up because he was mad at me at the time. It was all a bit of high school really. Still an interesting slice of history.
Chris Foye (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
SIMMO: Oh yeah, I vaguely remember something about that. Someone changed the password, nobody knew what it was so it was all over, haha. Might've been more to it but I can't remember. I didn't have much to do with that shit. 
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024




MITCH: I had known the guys in ROFL from going to gigs and hanging out around the Inner West and all over Sydney. My house mate and best friend from school - Daniel Ryan - was the guitarist and he was very passionate about grindcore and all really heavy fast music. Our musical interests and styles crossed over in many ways. We had a bit of a party house/bachelor pad with lots of different kinds of artists and musos coming and going on a daily basis. We were known as the punks by the locals and everyone knew what they were in for when they came over... the music was always on and up loud. I'd always enjoyed hardcore and heavier music. Dan kind of got me into grind and stuff like Dillinger Escape Plan, Pig Destroyer, Converge, and a bunch of awesome music. Anyway, he asked me to do a couple of gigs and taught me the songs one night in our living room. So I was roped in and had no choice to accept and enjoy playing some grind with a bunch of badass motherfuckers. 
Mitchel Pangas (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
DANO: ROFL shows were... well... heavily under the influence for sure, very much a party for us every time. I think for me, personally, coming from a small coastal town and not the city, I was living my rock 'n' roll dream, haha, getting ducked up and playing cool shows. We played a lot of shows where we would be the outlier on the bill, either too hardcore for the punk bands or too punk for the metal bands, which would sometimes be a factor in needing to get as smashed as possible before playing (perhaps nerves?). Either way, I would say our shows were a bloody good time with a cool bunch of people. I just wish I could actually remember playing a lot of the cool gigs we played. I would definitely say we would sometimes be menaces to the bands after us, heckling and the like, mainly me and Simmo, due to our 'pre-gig activities'. 
Daniel Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024


SIMMO: I'm shit at lyrics so Troy most of them. Dano wrote a couple too. I was recording once, absolutely off my dial, and I was sweating so badly - it was dripping all over Troy's handwritten lyric sheet. He was up my arse to get it right and the words were just smudging everywhere, haha. The lyrics kind of started as piss takes on internet acronyms but it kind of ranged from jeering at band managers, smoking weed, and various other trivial garbage... In terms of coordinating with Troy, we attempted to have a more layered, overlapping vocal arrangement - but it just ended up being you bark, I squeal, you bark, I squeal, etc. So we just figured out which parts we would each prefer to do, and the other would do the next part. If we both wanted to be involved in a certain part, then we just yelled over the top of each other, haha.
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

MITCH: I'd joined ROFL just before the Queensland tour and had an absolute blast playing those shows with the boys. I remember the warehouse gig in Brisbane being one of the best crowds I've ever played in front of. Simon and Troy feed off each other's energy and were amazing. Micko played vicious tribal bombasts at warp speed. James fingered the bass like it was the last day on earth and semi-erotically made love to the thing. Dan bled all over his guitar and we all played our hearts out. I couldn't believe how alive the gig was. It was packed out and people were dancing so enthusiastically, it was like a treacherous sea canopy moving around with arms and legs spinning in maelstroms of wildness and pleasure. 
Mitchel Pangas (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

JAMES: We did a trip to Brisbane for a weekend of madness. Hazy memories of a wild drive from Sydney. I think we did 3 shows. Some big pub in the city that I think we all got kicked out of afterwards, a popular artsy venue somewhere (which was insane because we started playing just as acid was kicking in), and someone's backyard for a very hungover Sunday afternoon. Somewhere in there we lost our minds when staying at a hostel, on acid, and we might have been kicked out of there too!
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
 
MICKO: The Brisbane tour was pretty wild. Teeroy and Luke Holmes (The New Justice Team) made a split CD one night at their Enmore house to take on the tour. The CD sucks because of the tracklisting going back and forth between the two bands. Which is cute if the volume levels were even... geez, what else do you want to do to poor people's eardrums? Anyway, we played three gigs in about 24 hours and by the end of the last set I couldn't hit the hi-hats. We also played a day show in someone's backyard and there were chickens roaming everywhere. Everyone in ROFL except me were off their dials and hanging onto the clothesline while playing in order to stand upright.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
MITCH: The day show has kept a warm little spot in my memory. It was a vegan BBQ and I was still very high on LSD from the night before and kind of just leaned against a hills hoist clothesline and watched the chickens running around my feet, oblivious that I was actually playing music. 
Mitchel Pangas (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
SIMMO: The show we played with The New Justice Team in Brisbane on the Saturday night was pretty wild but what actually stands out more in my memory was the show the next day in someone's backyard. I was so ratshit I just clung to the clothesline for support, trying not to die. We basically just sat around in a circle chainsmoking cones the whole show and trying to protect the bowl from the hungry chickens who were very keen to sample the THC-laden flora.  
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
DANO: Some of the best times of that Brisbane tour happened behind the scenes, mainly the acid-fuelled antics at the hostel we stayed in, which seemed to create the theme of the tour with the culmination being the show we played underneath a clothesline in the backyard of someone's house... watching chickens running 'round the people through the clouds of bong smoke. It was our first tour... first and only tour actually, haha, we weren't proactive enough to organise anything beyond that. It was made all the better for having The New Justice Team as tour pals keeping the Sydney camaraderie going amongst the Queenslanders!
Daniel Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
 
MITCH: I can't remember the last gig I played with ROFL or why I stopped. I played in a bunch of bands and did little tours before and after ROFL with Dime A Dozen, Talons, Dead China Doll, Bug Blood, Death Claws of the World Unit, etc. Those days and bands and gigs and merging scenes hold great memories. 
Mitchel Pangas (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
SIMMO: We played with Mortal Sin at Bar Broadway, which was pretty funny. Actually, I think my favourite memory was playing a Club Blink show at The Agincourt. There was a local bogan band called Thundabox (pronounced 'Fundabox') and they had a song with a chorus that went, "me mates are cunts, me mates are cunts". We used to put that song on for a laugh all the time. And now at this show, we were playing with them! You could imagine our excitement. The Agincourt fucked up and double-booked the downstairs room for a gaggle of Argentinians to watch the World Cup. So we ended up playing right next to the front doors that opened onto George Street in the city. It was sick 'cause there was this crazy mixture of Club Blink gronks, Agincourt soccer fans, and a few people there to actually see the show. There was this extremely well-endowed goth chick there with no top on, just a little sticker to cover each nip. The Muslim security guard was losing his fucking mind and trying to kick her out. So my girlfriend, Emma, cupped her breasts from behind, exclaiming to the security guard that she was a human bra and everything was fine. Dano was trying to get a photo of the hilariousness and the goth chick's girlfriend got very defensive and punched Dano in the head! It was very funny. But then we all got kicked out, despite my protests that we needed to play the gig. Eventually we got the manager to let us back in. During the set I would periodically stroll out the door onto George Street, yelling at passers-by or I would run into the pokie room and scream at cunts having a quiet slap. It was awesome. Then Fundabox came on, and played 'Me mates are cunts', much to our excitement. But that wasn't good enough. So we made them play it again and took all their microphones and sang the song for them, but with Blood Duster-style vocals. Definitely one of my favourite gigs.
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024 

MICKO: We recorded a bunch of songs at Scene Around Sound in Brookvale in 2006 with our new second vocalist Simmo, and seven songs from that are on a split CD with Northern Beaches legends Frank Rizzo. It's very different to the first recording. 
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 .
JAMES: The second recording was done at Scene Around Sound - shout out to Scotty and the Twin City Faction Crew (you fucking legends). We rehearsed there for a good stint, played a bunch of shows too. Some really fun and messy times. I woke up there once or twice after some big nights, haha. It was peak Sydney punk-hardcore scene days, I guess. The memories of recording and rehearsing all blend into one, haha. The songs were sounding sick, and we were tight as fuck, there was lots of jamming leading up to it. I think we planned the recording over a couple of days. The engineer was Matt, who had a pretty good set up out the back of the studio. We were surprisingly pretty organised and driven at the time; momentum was good. Lots of weed in preparation of course (big ups to Troy for always bringing a bong). Dano wrote such complex riffs and shredded, my bass was a bit out of shape then, so I remember having to bend the neck a little depending on where on the fret board I was, just to keep in tune. Blood thing. Have absolutely no idea where that bass is today. I definitely remember very sore fingers from playing so much.
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
 
MICKO: We eventually recorded again in 2007... we are idiots and thought each other had lost it but the master CD was found recently in Simmo's house.
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
SIMMO: The very last song we wrote had a line about emo kids following through with their threats and hanging themselves from their sky-blue scarves. We did this final recording before breaking up but it never saw the light of day and the masters were lost. A few months ago, one of my cats was fucking around in the bookshelf, just generally trashing shit in the vain hope of attracting my attention to gift her with a third dinner. And lo and behold, there was a CD that just said 'ROFLMASTER', lying on the ground. Haha, good Norks finding the long-lost ROFL master. It's only been 17 years since we recorded it!
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
MICKO: Cam (The New Justice Team) played a show with us at the Sando. Troy was away so it was Simmo and Cam on the floor doing vocals
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 
 
SIMMO: It was great... just hanging out with a bunch of good mates, taking drugs every week. We got to play all kinds of venues, with countless sick bands, and met shitloads of awesome people from all walks of life. Playing out of town to a room full of unfamiliar faces would definitely be a highlight for me. And it was all while getting your ego stroked because "you're in a band maaan". Hahaha. I also enjoyed screaming very close to people's faces, they didn't quite know what they were getting themselves into! 
Simon Slaughter (Vocals), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024 

JAMES: Like any band over time, things change and people move on and up. I think the scene in Sydney was dying out a little; fewer gigs, fewer venues, and other bands splitting up. Motivation was probably low and things probably just faded out slowly. No significant event took place to end the band, there was no active decision to stop except for Dano moving to the UK. We did discuss doing some rehearsing in 2010 but I think, in the end, getting us all together in the same room at the same time became harder and harder... and when we were all together it was more about mates catching up, rather than pushing the band along. Or, maybe I will start the rumour that T-roy and Simmo were fighting about a love triangle with a beagle, and punched each other in the face mid-show, and that was the end of that. 
James Giddins (Bass), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024
 

 
DANO: I think ROFL was able to survive for as long as it did because of the fact that we are all actually good friends, and we would hang out regularly outside of doing band things. We would often have nights out and then crash at each other's places. We were all big time bong smokers too, which helped a lot. Probably also our relaxed attitude towards rehearsing and playing, so no real pressure, although that was probably also why our releases are scarce and our tour history is lacklustre! What actually ended the band was my decision to move to the UK.
Daniel Ryan (Guitar), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

MICKO: ROFL finished when Dano moved to England, pretty much. By then I was well over playing drums and was more interested in making hardcore techno on my computer and my radio show anyway. My favourite thing about playing in ROFL was probably the laughter; the ROFLs. Laughing at trying to play so fast that we had to stop and have some billies. Knowing that the only song anyone liked had a Spiderbait riff in it. Servo runs with these idiots after band practice in Brookvale. 
Micko Lemur (Drums), Noise Levels correspondence, 2024

RELATED BANDS: ADD Thrash / The Panic Attacks, Dot Dot Dot, Dime A Dozen, Dystempa, Crimespree, Anarchoi, Fallopian Butcher, Joythief, The Divorcee, Indigo Cult, Talons, Dead China Doll, Bug Blood, Death Claws of the World Unit, Arkanoid, Ether Rag, Crisis Cult, Crust Fund Kids, Forakt, Wilbur Wilde, Snitch Trial, The Shirkers, The Spitz, Brand Disloyalty



Thursday, March 7, 2024

The Shirkers

ORIGINS: Baulkham Hills,  NSW
GENRE: Punk
YEARS ACTIVE: 1997-2001
 
MEMBERS:
RELEASES: 
 
  • Original Pogo Verse (1997)
    • 1. Billy Bob
    • 2. Understand
    • 3. Clone Me
    • 4. Restraint
    • 5. Refuse

  • Anthems for the Shirking Class (1998) - Download Here.
    • 1. Schmuck
    • 2. Qu__rboy
    • 3. Lyrical Inspiration
    • 4. Gossip Gander
    • 5. Gobbo's Song
    • 6. Hey Hey It's Saturday
    • 7. Growing Pains
    • 8. Just a Shadow
    • 9. Lonely Friend
    • 10. Refuse

  • Were the Blood [Split with The Blurters, The Rats, Death Before Dishonour, and Blurred Vision] (1999) - Download Here.
    • 1. Never Goin' Back
    • 2. The Kids
    • 3. Sellout
    • 4. Restraint
    • 5. Punk Rock Holiday

  • Alienation Within a Consumer Society (2000) - Download Here.
    • 1. Rye New York
    • 2. Screw Up
    • 3. 40 Hours
    • 4. You Make Me Pathetic
    • 5. Discontent Be Content
    • 6. 13 Years
    • 7. Friendshit
    • 8. Seventh Day
    • 9. Filler (Minor Threat)
SUMMARY: Luke Mernagh formed The Shirkers while still attending high school, enlisting the involvement of his brother Paul, his school friend Simon, and a work experience connection Adam. Craig McVea joined the band on bass after responding to a Drum Media ad and they quickly set about recording their first demo. McVea and Lees left the band shortly after recording, leading to Luke Mernagh taking over vocal duties and Barwick joining on bass - just in time for the band's first proper show. After this point the band regularly played a range of shows in pubs and squats with bands such as The Last Hemeroids, Cult 45, Frenzal Rhomb, and H-Block 101. 

In 2000, when Frenzal Rhomb had to pull out of the Big Day Out, The Shirkers were offered a slot playing the festival. They used the money from this to fund their second album and then things came to an end shortly after this when Barwick and Gobbo decided to move on.
 
SHOWS: 

The Shirkers at Grounded Festival

ORAL HISTORY:
LUKE: I always wanted to play music with my older brother and we shared a guitar. We would show each other riffs and that sort of thing. So we put some songs together. I convinced my mate Simon from school to learn drums as I noticed he was really good at tapping along to music and had a really good rhythm. We didn't know anyone who could sing or play bass... in fact, I wanted a bass but we ended buying the $50 guitar we shared instead. A few months later I had to do work experience for school and I ended up doing it at Phantom Records. There was another guy there my age doing the same. His name was Adam Lees and we got along really well. He was a great singer and loved Propagandhi. We started writing lyrics together. We always joked how we were kinda weaklings and not really punk rock, so we had ideas to call our band something like The Weaklings or The Wimps. We went with The Shirkers and started to rehearse.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024

CRAIG: I think I wanted to do more Beastie Boys stuff and the rest of the band wanted to do more punk/ska stuff. I played a couple of shows and we did a demo. It was fun at the time but I wanted to do Clobassi so I left Shirkers within a year.
Craig McVea (Bass), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024

Review of demo by Christina Myers, B.M.A, October 1998

LUKE: At a TUBbH gig my brother played the demo to Jono in the car tape deck and Jono wanted in. Jono really taught us how to do a band properly - how to get gigs, how to market yourselves, etc. We would not have gone anywhere but our rehearsal space had it not been for him.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024

ADAM: Becoming a musician just snuck up on me. I started singing in bands in high school and started playing guitar when I was about 16. I sang for a couple of shows and on the first demo of The Shirkers but I was young and didn't get to write any lyrics or music for the band. For a number of reasons, it was best that we parted ways. I was getting better at playing guitar and songwriting so I wanted to start my own band and play my own songs. 
Adam Lees (Vocals), Bombshellzine.com, 2005, and Staying At Home website, 2002
 
LUKE: Adam kept cancelling practices and we mutually decided to go on without him. We had our first first big gig with The Last Hemeroids and H-Block at the Globe in the singer... and we had no singer. I ended up filling in and people thought it sounded okay so we never thought about replacing me on vocals. We all sang a song here and there, usually we sang the songs we wrote.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024
 
 
LUKE: We wanted people to know we weren't a city band so we made a joke out of it and wrote 'Straight Outta Baulko' as our kind of slogan.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024
 
LUKE: Being a part of that scene at that time meant having that feeling that every young person strives for - feeling confident that you are finally good at something. I met a lot of long-time mates and was able to connect with hundreds of wonderful people.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024
 
Review by Con, Bar Code the World Issue 20, October 1999
 
LUKE: I found out we were playing the Big Day Out the morning after my last HSC Exams. My brother opened my bedroom door to tell me as I was sleeping-in on a beautiful Summer morning. I said: 'F_ck off, you're full of sh!t' and he was like 'Nah bro, I'm for real'. I got up and was so stoked. Went out the back and hugged my dog for ages and basked in the sun. I was very optimistic for what life would be like after school at that point. I actually couldn't afford a ticket to go see Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros at the Big Day Out so it was a dream come true. I got to meet Joe Strummer.
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024
 
 
JONO: Standout memories... playing the Big Day Out to a sh!tload of people and accidentally sconing someone in the face when I threw a CD into the crowd. Getting gastro on tour to Brisbane and almost sh!tting myself on stage. Gastro was honestly horrific, Paul ended up playing bass while I slept and shat and puked for three days.
Jono Barwick (Bass), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024
 
Review by Brad Moore of Kelts Bar show, Bombshellzine, December 2000
 
LUKE: We used the money from Big Day Out to self-fund a CD. We put it out and made it all ourselves. I designed and printed all the inserts and stuff. We then continued to play a few gigs but Simon lost interest and Jono too, so we just broke up a few months later. I was devastated. I had massive plans for us so I had to take a bit to think what was next for me. I had imagined that The Shirkers would be a band I would be in forever. So that was hard. As soon as I turned 18 it was, like, over. 
Luke Mernagh (Vocals, Guitar), Noise Levels Correspondence, 2024 
 

RELATED BANDS: Dagnabit, Own Enemy, TUBbH, Instant Mayhem, The Breakout, The Lock Ups, ADD Thrash, Stereo City, Black Jaw, Colytons, Baby Hitler Jesus, Domestic Clone Unit, Hell City Glamours, Fire@rms, Degeneracy, Cruelty's Fun, Garottes, The Flames of Love, Lungs, Staying at Home, Animal Shapes, Rocketboy, Oh Messy Life, Lightweights, Death Mountain, Clobassi, Fat Slinky, Carnage Flail, Scratch Habbit, Lucy and the Pheromones, Moonbombs, Brand Disloyalty, ROFL, The Spitz