Prison Rock: Libertine Headlines Prison Rock Concert

Prison Rock: Libertine Headlines Prison Rock Concert

The room is dark, and the crowd eagerly awaits.  Large speakers are held on stands several feet high, and yellow caution tape crosses the room separating the audience from the band.  The feeling is of a 90s dive bar, someplace you would go to hear Greenday or another punk band back in their infancy.  But this is no dive bar; the floor is too dingy and the room too cold.  And there are no tempting groupies or hipsters.  There is no alcohol — at least none that is visible to the prison guards strategically placed around the event.  This is a prison rock concert at FCI Petersburg, a medium-security federal prison in Petersburg, Virginia.

Come 2:00 PM on this rainy Saturday afternoon, the stage clears, and the members of Libertine gain the blocked-off performance area.  An area also occupied by several pieces of indoor recreation equipment.  Sangye and Terry pick up the battered guitars, Darryl his microphone, Trevor his drumsticks, and Patt his bass.  All of the equipment is the property of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, not the prisoner musicians.  Nevertheless, they play it like they stole it: hard and loud.

The air is not tense, but expectant.  For years, the members of Libertine have been bringing down the house for their incarcerated audiences and fans.  While other groups play music (some better than others), Libertine makes beautiful, jarringly loud, skillful, and soulful music.  And they do so in the typically violent punk fashion of yesteryear.  At this moment they are not prisoners or musicians, they embody the rock gods of days gone by before the indie labels died and Clear Channel ruled the airwaves.  The audience is diverse but oddly in synch.  In a word, the relationship and the exchange from band to fans is true; hyperbole has been left by the wayside, replaced with absolute honesty and integrity in a land of convicts and gangsters.

“Are you ready to rock?!” intones lead singer Daryl; more of a command, not a question.  After all, a wiry, shirtless man with a shaved head, “death metal” tattooed across his toes (which are visible due to his lack of footwear), and the name “Libertine” tattooed across his heavily muscled stomach, does not ask questions, but demands answers.  A chorus of validation echoes around the small, yet packed room.  And the music starts to play.

Libertine plays its own material — it’s fast and complex and angry — but today is a cover gig, and the band bashes into “A Warrior’s Call” by Volbeat.  A song by a Danish band, Libertine’s version seems darker and more menacing than the original one.  The “fight, fight, fight” refrain is genuinely scary with an audience of convicts shouting along with it.  And with the shouts, nervous looks can be seen by the prison guards on hand.

Standing in the back of the room an odd assortment of characters is visible.  A man named John occupies a makeshift sound booth — which is equipped with a mix station and the customary yellow caution tape.  John reminds one of a hippie in the wrong generation.  He’s been down for 33 years.  On the left of the room, there are angry white dudes and burly black guys sitting on the various fitness machines.  On the far right side, there is an odd assortment of people; categorization fails to account for the melting pot of tattoos and no tattoos, hair and no hair, white, black, and Hispanic, and even the more unfortunate creepy convict.  Even a couple of prison trannies have made an appearance for the show.  And in the center of the crowd are those kindred spirits who most certainly have spent years and years in rock venues.  One of which is shirtless, banging his head and flipping his long hair for his worth.  All of them are moving to the music.  All of them are connected to the art which is being created and shared in a momentary communion of those who do not commune together.  After all, prison culture is a stalwart to voluntary segregation, whether by race, religion, creed, or even charge.

Prison rock is a culture unto itself.  It is a following, a leading, and all with an instant cult acceptance.  While some come to the shows to be thrilled by the absurd speed with which Sangye thrashes out guitar solos, others come to see Darryl hit his gnarly, grungy notes, and growls which make you want to punch someone’s lights out.  And still, others come to enjoy Patt playing bass as if it is a cross between a harp and a machine gun; carefully orchestrated notes mixed with a hammering of skill that punctuates the expert vocals and the dude on the ax.

There is a lot of crappy music in prison, of course, as access to new music is sometimes limited.  As such, every prison that has a music program usually has a classic rock band or two, guaranteed to butcher old 70’s staples.  There is usually a Christian rock band, spoiled by the extra practice time and real equipment that the overwhelmingly evangelist-bent chaplains hook them up with.  One such band does mutated versions of rock classics, including an unintentionally creepy version of “Prayin’ in Boys Room,” missing the irony completely.  But some convict bands like Libertine can be good ones when the whole band is stuck behind bars for decades and committed to their craft.  They write solid songs, as good as anything on the outside, and with plenty of time to practice, they have some serious chops.  Super tight and well-rehearsed, some caged rockers are genuine pros, the real deal.

Prison is hardly the land of happy songs and handholding, but more often than not, the convicts come together in the thing called “prison rock.”  May it continue to be raw, real, and unadulterated forevermore.

(First published by Blog Critics and used here by permission)

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