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Field Day (ex Dag Nasty Members) / Cordial Spew / Hand Painted Police Car / Mere Shadows at Reverb Lounge

Fri, May 06

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Reverb Lounge

punk rock show with Field Day, the new project from Doug Carrion and Cortner of Dag Nasty!

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Field Day (ex Dag Nasty Members) / Cordial Spew / Hand Painted Police Car / Mere Shadows at Reverb Lounge
Field Day (ex Dag Nasty Members) / Cordial Spew / Hand Painted Police Car / Mere Shadows at Reverb Lounge

Time & Location

May 06, 2022, 9:00 PM

Reverb Lounge, 6121 Military Ave, Omaha, NE 68104, USA

About the event

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Black Heart Booking presents...

Field Day - hardcore/punk from Los Angeles, CA featuring ex members of Dag Nasty (Doug & Peter) https://fielddaysounds.bandcamp.com/ https://www.facebook.com/fielddaysounds

Cordial Spew - hardcore/punk from Omaha, NE https://www.reverbnation.com/cordialspew https://www.facebook.com/cordial.spew

Hand Painted Police Car - punk rock from Omaha, NE https://handpaintedpolicecar.bandcamp.com/ https://www.facebook.com/handpaintedpolicecar

Mere Shadows - punk / post-hardcore band from Omaha, NE https://mereshadows.bandcamp.com/ https://www.facebook.com/mereshadowsomaha

at Reverb Lounge All Ages Show / 9 PM / $17 adv or $20 at the door

In 2020, Field Day’s Opposite Land EP raised the bar high for Doug Carrion and Peter Cortner’s modern take on a classic hardcore charge. Together, they pulled off the unlikely feat of reinventing the disaffected ethos of their brief but defining tenure with D.C. hardcore outfit Dag Nasty for 1987’s Wig Out At Denko’s and 1988’s Field Day LP.

With their latest offering, the four-song “Why?” 7-inch, the group wields an even sharper edge.

Field Day’s emergence was a postmodern reference to a reference — a triumph that dug deep into the past to find wholly new levels of fertile creative soil in which to grow. The short, sharp blasts they delivered with Opposite Land’s cuts “One Song,” “Stolen Words,” “Speak The Truth,” and “Waiting For A Miracle” laid the blueprint for a new, no-nonsense aesthetic, and proved there was more music and chemistry left to explore within vocalist Cortner and singer and bass player Carrion’s dynamic.

“Why?’s” opening salvo expands upon the speed and velocity of Field Day’s previous efforts, while coalescing around a searing guitar lead and the lyrics: “You’re living in a world built on fiction. What’s the reason? I wonder why you never realized. It’s up to you, but you keep living a lie. Did you ever stop to ask the question: How did you get so disconnected?”

This open-ended indictment underscores the crucial power of PMA to find balance amid an era in which technology has gone awry and social unrest percolates under the shadow of an oppressive virus. It could mean anything, or it could mean something very specific — it’s about what the listener brings to the music.

The increased focus on display between Cortner, Carrion, guitarist Shay Mehrdad, and drummer Kevin Avery simply and powerfully ignites the group’s melodic tension, and amplifies Field Day’s search for answers while placing the human experience under the microscope.

Across the board, the group has stepped up the intensity of every element in the music. And with production by Carrion and mixing courtesy of Cameron Webb (Pennywise, Motörhead, Ignite), these four songs are louder and strike with a greater sense of urgency.

Field Day revels in a real-time musical confrontation of emotions — a trait that’s extended since Cortner and Carrion’s days with Dag Nasty, and Carrion's formative years spent playing with the Descendents. Their veracity hits hard with “Audience Of One.” The song kicks off with a thunderous drum roll, signaling a heart-pounding finale. The fiery guitar tones, sprinting rhythm, and the lyrical query: “You always tell yourself what you want to believe, but when will you accept that you’re an audience of one?” brings the record’s prompt to a fine point: Look deep within yourself to find the power to rise above apathy.

Field Day has already proven their skills by releasing a handful of powerful and direct offerings. The four songs on the “Why?” 7-inch carry the pace to a higher level. Each number is bristling with rejuvenated and undeniably electric energy. It's one thing to create something new from a decades-old chapter in Dag Nasty’s discography. It's an entirely different thing to find new relevance, and outshine the past by creating vital new music. With “Why?,” Field Day revives classic punk and hardcore’s base emotions, while asking the hard questions, while keeping their gaze fixed on what lies ahead. ~ Chad Radford

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© 2022 by Lucas Wright / Black Heart Booking                                                                                                                         background photo by Ben Semisch 

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