Iron Cross (band)

Iron Cross is a hardcore/Oi! band from Baltimore, Maryland and Washington D.C..

They play a rough form of streetpunk, and is one of the first bands in the United States to adopt the skinhead look and the Oi! musical style.[1] Some early members were original to the DC Skinheads (the first Skinhead scene in North America) and had close ties to the Washington, DC hardcore punk subculture, due to its relationship with other hardcore bands, with Ian Mackaye, and with Dischord Records.[2] Singer Sab Grey was one of the many roommates in the Dischord House in Arlington, VA. The band's name — and with most of its members being Skinheads — led to accusations of fascism, which Grey and others in the band and the original DC Skins have always denied.[2] Grey stated in the 1st Iron Cross press kit in 1982, "...oh, and we're not Nazis!"

Career

Iron Cross formed in Washington, DC when Dante Ferrando met Sab Grey. Ferrando was previously in the band Broken Cross with Mark Haggerty while in school. When Grey and Ferrando decided to start a new band, Grey suggested the name Iron Cross. The first lineup consisted of Grey on lead vocals, Haggerty on guitar, Ferrando on drums and John Falls on bass guitar. This lineup lasted a very short time, with Falls leaving after Iron Cross's early show at the American University. After Falls's departure, the band went through two more bassists before settling on Wendell Blow, the former bassist for the DC hardcore punk band State of Alert (SOA).[1] The only non-skinhead in the band was Ferrando, who has usually maintained a spiky punk hairstyle.[3] The band's fourth lineup lasted until just after the recording of their first EP, Skinhead Glory, and just prior to its release. That EP features their signature song "Crucified," which was later covered by many Oi! and hardcore bands.

After Blow left the band, he was replaced by John Dunn, who in 2006 changed his name to Eoin Stewart, three days prior to Iron Cross's two-set show with Angelic Upstarts, where band members almost exchanged blows with members of Angelic Upstarts. Dunn had been an original member of the DC Skins and was close friends with the band's members. Dunn left the band just before the release of their second EP, Hated and Proud. He was replaced by Paul Cleary, who was a founding member of the DC bands Trenchmouth and Black Market Baby. The 1982 Dischord Records compilation Flex Your Head introduced three Iron Cross songs to an audience beyond the eastern United States.[3]

Aftermath and new lineup

After further lineup changes that left Grey as the only original member of Iron Cross, the band broke up in 1985. Ferrando went on to form the band Gray Matter with Haggerty. Ferrando also played in the band Ignition. Haggerty went on to play with the bands 3 and Severin. Blow and Dunn moved to Los Angeles in the late 1980s, and Dunn went on to play in several alternative rock bands.

Grey moved to England, where he married and had children. Since then, Iron Cross has re-released their EPs and previously-unreleased material in the form of the full-length CD Live For Now. Grey, who continued performing and expanding his musical style, moved back to Baltimore and, as of 2006, was playing with The Royal Americans (a rockabilly-style band), was performing solo acoustic shows, and occasionally performed with a new lineup of Iron Cross, which completed a national tour in 2003.

A split release with British oi! band Combat 84 was planned for release on GMM Records in 2002,[4] although this recording never materialized. The mini album, Two Piece and a Biscuit, featuring four songs from Iron Cross and three from The Royal Americans was released in 2007 on 13th State Records.

Ferrando now owns the DC club, The Black Cat. Haggerty lives in the Bay Area and continues to perform. Dunn left LA for Seattle in the mid 1990s. Blow lives in Austin Texas, with Cleary still residing in the DC area.

The 2009 lineup was: Sab Grey on vocals, Scotty Powers on drums, Dimitri Medevev (deceased 9/19/2012) on bass, Mark Linskey on guitar and Shadwick Wilde on Guitar.

"Crucified"

In the mid 1980s, New York hardcore band Agnostic Front began covering "Crucified", a song from Iron Cross' EP "Skinhead Glory". Agnostic Front included studio versions of the song on their Liberty And Justice For... and Something's Gotta Give albums. "Crucified" has become a staple cover song for many hardcore and Oi! bands. Grey's lyrics refer to being ridiculed for being different, being blamed for society's ills, accused of violence, and intolerance because of the actions of others. The metaphor of being crucified resonated with Leftist/Communist and apolitical skinheads who were sick of being labelled as neo-Nazis because of right-wing extremist who stole the skinhead fashion. White-Power/Fascists who called themselves skinheads also identified with the song due to persecution they received for their social and racial views. Crucified has become an anthem for both factions of skinheads worldwide. Live audiences have taken to adding a chant of "skinhead army!" to the chorus, a line not included in the band's original recording.

Discography

EPs

Year Title
1982 Skinhead Glory
1983 Hated and Proud
  • Released: 1983
  • Label: Skinflint Records
2009 Koi Records Split Vol. 5 (split w/ Keyside Strike)
  • Released: 2009
  • Label: Koi Records

Compilations

Year Title
2001 Live for Now!
  • Released: May 8, 2001
  • Label: GMM Records
2007 Two Piece and a Biscuit (split w/ The Royal Americans)
  • Released: 2007
  • Label: 13th State Records

References

  1. 1 2 Cheslow, Sharon. "Iron Cross interview". If This Goes On. Retrieved 24 November 2010.
  2. 1 2 Blush, Steven (2010). George Petros, ed. American Hardcore: A Tribal History Second Edition. Feral House. pp. 165–166. ISBN 978-0-922915-71-2.
  3. 1 2 "Interview with Iron Cross". Touch and Go. Retrieved 24 November 2010.
  4. "Iron Cross Interview". Punk & Oi In The UK. Retrieved 27 June 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, August 23, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.