I saw the Flaming Stars for the first time at the AN Club in 1998, immediately after the release of this (exquisitely named and presented) compilation. For those not familiar with it, AN is the oldest live music establishment still standing in Athens. It was founded in 1987, the same year with Rodon, which stood less than a kilometre away at Victoria Square. AN is at the notorious Exarchia area, Athens' student neighborhood with a rich history of counterculture, art, anarchism, defiance and violence - naturally, my chosen place of residence until I left Greece. But it's never been the same for me since December 2008, when a policeman shot a 15-year old kid a few blocks from my home for no other reason than that someone in his company swore at him. It was a disaster waiting to happen: Successive Ministers of Public Order had vowed to clean up the neighborhood from the lawless anarchists and junkies, while big-time property developers bought de-valuated real estate in anticipation of the next boom that would transform this very centrally located place into the next commercial/entertainment theme park - if only the annoying students, leftist inhabitants and small shop owners could be swept away to make room for the offices and big chain stores. For the months preceding the shooting, teams of armed-to-the-teeth cops performed police crackdowns, basically consisting of harassing pub customers and passersby - leading to confrontations and the occasional molotov cocktail thrown at the SWAT team guarding the PASOK party headquarters situated at the borders of the neighborhood. After the shooting all hell broke loose: I'm telling you I've seen clips of riots in Palestine and assorted war zones and it really was no different than that. When the dust settled, we were left with a hardened, violent group of youngsters consumed by hate for the establishment, which included everyone who worked for a living or had any kind of ideology that didn't include blowing everyone up. On the other side, we lived under permanent siege with submachine gun-toting policemen guarding the entrances of the neighborhood and harassing everyone. While the government was drowning in scandal and corruption, they demonized the youth movement and anyone opposing their schemes. I knew then that I had to leave the country. Only months later, the debt crisis exploded, plunging Greece into chaos. The oligarchs and intertwined business/political interests who had been profiting from the loans promptly withdrew their money from the Greek banks and sailed for safer havens while the EU instigated a crushing austerity program in return for an economic bailout. This led to unprecedented recession, the social results of which are evident everywhere - nowhere more so than the center of Athens, with rows of closed shops and homeless people searching the trash bins for food. Exarchia has likewise fallen in a state of decadence, all plans of gentrification abandoned due to the crisis. At least, thanks to the graffiti artists and musicians, it's still decadent in an artistic and interesting way. And, beyond all expectations, AN Club still stands, although more celebrated entertainment venues have succumbed to the crisis.
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***** for Bring Me the Rest of Alfredo Garcia, Broken Heart, Downhill Without Brakes
**** for Money to Burn, Like Trash, The Face on the Bar Room Floor, Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye, Burnt Out Wreck of a Man
*** for Bury My Heart at Pier 13, Get Carter, New Shade of Black, Ten Feet Tall, A Hell of a Woman, Bandit Country, Revenge
** for Davy Jones' Locker, 3AM on the Bar Room Floor, Eat Your Heart Out, Spaghetti Junction
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