On today's episode of Hello Bastards, we will be giving a special postmodern analysis of the discography of the screamo/powerviolence band known as Orchid. Legends within the scene, Orchid was active from 1997-2002 and became infamous for combining the extreme intensity and speed of hardcore and grindcore with very emotional and soul-baring screaming, all filtered through a postmodern aesthetic that made references and oblique homages to Anna Karina to the Frankfurt School, both lyrically and stylistically. They released three albums and they're all essential listening for any hippie who dare uses the term "punk rock" unironically.
As far as postmodern analysis goes, Orchid are, ironically enough, the one group who I've discussed who most directly reference, meta-textually, these concepts and ideas in their work. One such example exists in their second LP Dance Tonight! Revolution Tomorrow! on the song Snow Delay At The Frankfurt School. The song is only a minute long and in its last 20 seconds the singer shrieks:
"like anywhere else there are no
coincidences, probability makes for accomplices and change creates meaning."
when we move, it's a movement.
Damn son. The postmodern aspects of the philosophy (consistent change that creates a constantly changing truth) translate onto the ethos of the band (rapid-fire and unpredictable music played at varying dynamics) like butter onto toast. The band challenged the meathead conformity of the hardcore scene by blatantly challenging it with abstract lyricism much like the postmodern literary movement sought to do against the singular, modernist views of the past. Orchid was, at its core, an emoviolence punk rock band, but it was also a band that was emotional, skeptical, and spastic in its music and lyrics.
Check dis shit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTdt-PbcYZY&t=409s
Reference:
Green, Jayson. Perf. Geoff Garlock, Jeffrey Salane, and Will Killingsworth. Snow Delay At The Frankfurt School. Orchid. Kurt Ballou, 1999. MP3.