Living fast and dying young is one of rock's great clichés, but no phrase better describes the reasons for the demise of L.A. punkers
. Capable of creating a firestorm of noisy, confrontational music, they were ultimately undone by their perversely charismatic lead singer. He was a madman named Paul Beahm, better known to the world at-large first as
-style out on the mainline at age 22.
Taking musical cues from
the Sex Pistols (and English punk in general), as well as the CBGB's scene, and adding the theatricality of
Bowie,
Iggy, and
Lou Reed,
Crash was the perfect frontman for
the Germs. Backed by guitarist
Pat Smear (later of
Nirvana and
the Foo Fighters), bassist
Lorna Doom, and drummer
Don Bolles,
the Germs kicked up a hellacious racket that strayed from fast/loud punk into art damage and garage grunge. On-stage, their gigs bordered on performance art, with
Crash in full
Iggy frenzy, diving into the crowd, adorning himself with whatever foodstuffs the audience provided, wearing less-and-less clothing, all done while the band cranked out noisy spasms of simple, but effective, rock noise.
Never capturing this mania on record (how could they?),
the Germs' recording career is based on the sole record made during
Crash's short life. Produced by
Germs fan
Joan Jett,
(GI) was a fine hunk of early L.A. punk rock that was more literate and compelling that what was being offered by lesser local luminaries such as the Zeroes and
the Weirdos.
Smear's guitar playing is especially volatile, matching the mewling vocals of
Crash note for note. It may not be life-changing music, but the white-hot, adrenal rush is a little bit of heaven.
By the time
Crash filled his veins with heroin in 1980,
the Germs were pretty much over.
Crash's behavior had become increasingly unpredictable, he was spending time in England, and began preforming as a solo act upon returning to L.A. Consequently, the valuable recorded work in this final period is spotty, but much of it shows up on the definitive
Germs release Germs (MIA) The Complete Anthology.
–
John Dougan, Rovi