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2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Punk
rockers display their talents Green-tinted,
spiked hair creeping up the back of a pierced teenager's head might be shocking
to some, but it is a staple of the punk rock look -- and part of the youth
scene in Sisters.
Ear-rupturing punk music with
screeching lyrics filled the small Domino Room venue in Bend on Friday,
February 7.
Local hard-core and punk rock
bands from Sisters and Bend displayed their musical creations to a gathering
of eager fans.
The scene offered everything
from tattooed youngsters with multi-colored hair and gleaming silver rings
protruding from various facial positions to middle-aged folks sporting
North Face jackets and the latest Eddie Bauer fashions.
The spectacle presented an
almost humorous mélange of rebellious youth and their conservative elders.
Sisters High School senior
Gray Bushnell produced the show along with his partner Matt Feffer. Bushnell
and Feffer have created a service called Fire-Side productions, dedicated
to putting on local shows.
Bushnell didn't perform during
Friday's show, but he is a part of another band called The Suspenders.
Bushnell characterizes his
involvement in punk rock as "positive and productive. Something to do
with my time."
One band featured was a crew
from Sisters High School. Sisters students Everett Dahl, Ryder Hornbeck,
Corey Rood, Ryan Buck and Shane Connor make up the band called The Forensics.
Junior Everett Dahl enjoys
the punk rock scene not for its popularity, but for the music.
"When you listen to punk rock,
it's not a music that soothes you," Dahl said. "It irritates you to a
certain degree. It's not the type of music that you can just sit and listen
to."
Other bands that performed
were The Confede Rats, No Cash Value, The Ginas, 42, and To Each His Own.
A punk show is unlike a concert
where the audience sits contentedly in their assigned seats, moving ever
so slightly to light and soft melodies.
There is no dancing at a punk
show. Instead, agitated listeners slam into one another in a chaotically
choreographed mix of flailing extremities.
The action takes place in
a "mosh-pit." A mosh-pit is basically a glorified group brawl where participants
willingly thrash into each other to the beat of the music.
The show was a success. The
fans were happy, the bands played well, and all managed to escape without
any major damage.
Future shows produced by Fire-Side
Productions are posted on their website, www.fire-side.net.
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