Cut Off Your Hands

Cut Off Your Hands

Rosy-Red Fragments Of Conclusions By Young Men Of Yearning

Apr 27, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

It would have been an interesting job to have been a custodian at The Independent, the club that Cut Off Your Hands played at the end of February during the Noise Pop festival this year. There would been the standard, post-performance rubbish languishing on the concrete floor, crushed and bothered, smeared with all of the other street grime, mixed in with the beer that was paid for and wasted down the legs of goers. Also there amidst all of that, near the front of the stage, directly in front of where lead singer Nick Johnston kept his microphone stand, there must have been one of two chips from teeth, cracked off pieces of pearly white that left their former keepers still grammatically able speak properly, just with more of a whistle sound with the S words they want to get out. Before the first song of the New Zealand band's set had been alive for longer than a minute, Johnston had turned from his full bottle of hot liquor that he kept near Brent Harris' drum kit and sprinted full-speed into the audience. He returned to the stage looking as if he took the worst of it, with two red-ass cheeks that looked as if they'd been whipped with a wet towel or a belt buckle. We could all let out a deep exhale though. The spastic young man wasn't hurt a lick. He just gets excited (already exhibited by the booze-cajoled dash into the paying customers) and when he gets excited, that goes doubly for the temperature and blood capsules in his baby cheeks. They get as red as embarrassment. The kind of excitement that Johnston allows to work itself up inside is the exact same effect the band's sonic output throws at all who are listening. It's all of the testosterone that typically gets suppressed in the majority of males and it's like a triple shot of it that females tend to only experience when they're pregnant with a young male inside their womb. It's an unavoidably stiff kick in the bellies, this music of Cut Off Your Hands, a band that comes after you like a rabid dog that knows a thing or two about still being romantic and cluelessly so, as it were. One thing Johnston chooses to try to figure out - and we've all learned this to be a hopeless sort of endeavor - is the nature of the beastly thing called love and as such a young kid still, his findings take on the breathlessly discouraged, dizzily confused and shocking conclusions of a manic preacher, yearning to find those glimmers of hope in the ruckus. The band's debut full-length - You & I -- is a short-fused diorama of the various, nettlesome worries that set swirling above a guy's head when ladies and the pressures of real life are just starting to be one and the same, when life and love take predictable turns into devastatingly graphic structures of forbidden fruit and cold, cruel responses. Or, that's one of the ways it all can go if allowed to go untended or unmodified. The tizzies that Cut Off Your Hands spurs up and into existence are all bred of the fundamental insistence that "none of this is ever going to become clearer, so let's just pillage it, knock some stuff over, get pissed and fall asleep with a fuzzy conscious - not necessarily in that order or any determined cap on the frequency that it can occur." It's almost always better to get worked up over something than to just yawn and grimace, to passively let it detonate amid a huge, collective sigh. Those whip marks on the cheeks and those whistle-y bits of front teeth are badges of honor and signs of four guys caring enough about the chaotic feelings to hurt themselves in the process of discovering the head from the ass of whatever ails them.

Cut Off Your Hands MySpace Page
Cut Off Your Hands Blog Site
Frenchkiss Records

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  • another great brand from new zealand. long live post punk!

    waltjabsco | Friday, January 01, 2010 | 1:33 pm

  • love 'em!

    bandit23 | Saturday, November 07, 2009 | 7:07 pm

  • Nostalgia is a nice song. I can't quite remember the rest, and i'm in a computer class so i can't turn my speakers on. I'm also at an unfortunate loss of earphones. As musician i like the lyrics.

    BRAINSBRAINSBRAINS | Thursday, June 04, 2009 | 9:22 am

  • Back in October Daytrotter, Take the Handle, and Snowghost Music presented a groovy little gathering of music at the Glasslands Gallery in Brooklyn, New York. Cut Off Your Hands were in attendance, and I thought they were amazing, they truly rocked out in a most impressive manner. They were also a really nice bunch of guys. Sean really does a wonderful job capturing their frenetic live show in his always wonderful lyrical musings. I snatched up four copies of the EP at the show, and could not recommend it enough. If you ever get a chance to see these guys love, run do not walk to do so! Namaste.

    Ktistec Machine | Friday, May 22, 2009 | 9:04 pm

  • I like your band's name.

    thank | Sunday, May 10, 2009 | 5:11 pm

  • the cure is lodged in your sub conscious... shit's kinda weak

    thank | Sunday, May 10, 2009 | 5:10 pm

  • I was at that show. In fact, the person next to me was toppled by his (first) leap. (Quick note: The crowd parted like the Red Sea on his subsequent pavement dives.) Initially, I wrote off this band as nothing more than the usual preening pretty-boys with a look-at-me-I'm-a-rock-star attitude (though falling far short of the title) that so enthrall the hearts of teenage girls, but add precious little to music. Upon further reflection... I'm sticking with that opinion.

    ZC | Monday, May 04, 2009 | 1:19 pm

  • I saw these guys live, very cool indeed!

    ShellyAnne | Sunday, May 03, 2009 | 6:29 am

  • on a semi related sidenote, between these guys, the recently featured Bear Hands, and The Shaky Hands; bands w/ hands in their monikers seem to be everywhere all of the sudden not that i'm complaining as I quite like all three just an interesting trend developing in my cd collection

    PoorMonger | Friday, May 01, 2009 | 5:28 pm

  • their song "expectations" is really good wish it'd been in the session, still glad to see them here.

    PoorMonger | Friday, May 01, 2009 | 5:24 pm

Songs by Cut Off Your Hands

  1. first song

    Welcome to Daytrotter

    Download Cut Off Your Hands playing Welcome to Daytrotter
  2. second song

    Turn Cold

    Download Cut Off Your Hands playing Turn Cold

    - original version appears on You & IIt's kind of just an admittance that underneath it all I'm just as scared, hopeless and clueless as everyone else. And in a relationship setting, it's an awareness that I could really just be wasting our time.

  3. third song

    You & I

    Download Cut Off Your Hands playing You & I

    - original version appears on Shaky HandsThis is the first song I wrote. It's the title track of our debut full length, but isn't on it. It's simply about the dysfunctional relationship between myself and a family member.

  4. fourth song

    Closed Eyes

    Download Cut Off Your Hands playing Closed Eyes

    - original version appears on You & IThis song's about this church that I once went to, where they told me that if I was a musician I was only allowed to play Christian worship music, at least until the point where God told them that I could make my own music. The pastor told me, ''The vision comes from God, then to me, then to you." That's where the line about closed eyes comes from, it was basically their opinion that to progress you had to proceed with your eyes shut to reality.... Obviously I thought that was fucked.

  5. fifth song

    Nostalgia

    Download Cut Off Your Hands playing Nostalgia

    - original version appears on You & IInspired by the film "La Bamba" about the life of Ritchie Valens. A sweet nostalgic sentiment -- from the point of view of the hopeless ending of a relationship -- of the thrill of its beginnings.

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