Choking Victim
Choking Victim was an American punk band formed in New York City in 1992, active primarily through the mid-1990s until disbanding around 1999.[1] Emerging from Manhattan's Lower East Side squat scene, the group blended hardcore punk, ska, and crust elements into a style they termed "Crack Rock Steady," characterized by rapid tempos, politically charged lyrics critiquing capitalism, authority, and social decay, and performances in informal venues like abandoned buildings.[2][3] Core members included vocalist and guitarist Scott Sturgeon (known as Stza), bassist Alec Baillie, drummer Skwert, and co-vocalist Ezra Kire, with earlier lineups featuring Sascha Dubrul on bass and others like John Dolan and Shayne Webb.[3] The band's output consisted of several 7-inch EPs and culminated in their only full-length album, No Gods / No Managers, released in 1999 on Hellcat Records, which featured tracks like "Crack Rock Steady" and "War on Drugs" that encapsulated their anarchistic worldview and gained a lasting cult following in underground punk circles.[4][5] Following the band's dissolution amid internal conflicts, Stza and Ezra formed Leftöver Crack, extending Choking Victim's raw, confrontational aesthetic into subsequent projects that maintained influence within anarcho-punk and squat communities, though the original group's brief tenure solidified its reputation for uncompromised, DIY ethos over commercial success.[3][6]History
Formation and early activity (1992–1995)
Choking Victim was founded in 1992 in New York City by vocalist and songwriter Scott Sturgeon, professionally known as Stza, during a period of intense activity in the city's punk and anarchist squatter communities.[3] The band emerged from the Lower East Side's underground scene, where Stza, then a teenager influenced by hardcore punk and ska, assembled initial lineups that included rotating members such as guitarist Sascha von Krieger and drummer Skwert, reflecting the fluid nature of squat-based punk collectives.[7] Early rehearsals and performances centered around communal squats like C-Squat, fostering a raw, DIY ethos tied to anti-authoritarian living. The band's initial shows in 1992–1993 took place at informal venues within New York's punk circuit, including house parties and squat spaces, where they honed a high-energy style blending aggressive hardcore riffs with ska rhythms.[8] These performances attracted a niche following among squatters and punks disillusioned with mainstream society, emphasizing themes of urban decay and resistance that would define their output. By 1994, Choking Victim had solidified enough to self-release their debut Crack Rock Steady EP on cassette and vinyl through informal channels, featuring tracks like the title song that introduced their signature "crack rock steady" sound—a gritty fusion recorded in low-fidelity conditions. In 1995, they followed with the Squatta's Paradise EP, similarly produced on a shoestring budget and distributed via tape trading and local punk outlets, capturing live-wire energy from ABC No Rio and similar spots. These early recordings, limited to runs of a few hundred copies, documented the band's chaotic evolution amid lineup shifts—Alec Baillie's bass joining for stability—and built a grassroots reputation without major label involvement, prioritizing ideological alignment over commercial polish.[9] The period marked Choking Victim's establishment as a fixture in NYC's anarcho-punk underbelly, predating broader ska-punk revivals.Peak years and No Gods, No Managers (1996–1998)
In 1996, Choking Victim released the Squatta's Paradise 7-inch EP, a limited pressing of approximately 2,000 copies that showcased their evolving sound blending ska rhythms with aggressive hardcore punk riffs and themes of urban decay and resistance.[8] The EP featured tracks such as "You Ought to Die," "Born to Die," and "Money," recorded in a raw, DIY style that emphasized the band's ties to New York City's squatter subculture.[10] This release marked a step up in visibility within underground punk circuits, as the band leveraged informal networks for distribution amid limited commercial infrastructure.[3] By 1998, amid intensifying activity in the Lower East Side punk scene, Choking Victim issued Victim Comes Alive, a 7-inch single limited to 1,000 copies on Hellcat Records, containing "Fucked Reality" and "Hate Yer State."[8] [11] These tracks served as early previews of material later refined for their full-length album, demonstrating the band's maturation in fusing melodic ska elements with crust punk intensity and satirical lyrics critiquing societal control.[12] The EP's release underscored their growing cult status, with performances at squats and DIY venues drawing crowds attuned to their anti-authoritarian ethos.[13] That same year, from March to April, the band recorded No Gods, No Managers in a budget studio setting, producing 13 tracks that encapsulated their "crack rock steady" style—a term they coined for the chaotic interplay of uptempo ska, d-beat hardcore, and metallic edges.[13] Engineered under constraints typical of independent punk production, the sessions prioritized live energy over polish, resulting in songs like "500 Channels" and "Infested" that dissected media manipulation, drug culture, and systemic oppression.[5] Although the album saw posthumous release on March 30, 1999, via Hellcat Records following the band's 1998 breakup, its creation represented the apex of their collaborative output, with core members Stza (vocals/guitar) and Ezra Kire (bass) driving the ideological and sonic innovations.[5] This period's output, constrained by squat living and self-financed efforts, cemented Choking Victim's influence on subsequent anarcho-punk acts despite scant mainstream exposure.[8]Breakup and immediate aftermath (1998–1999)
Choking Victim disbanded in 1998 during the recording of their debut full-length album No Gods, No Managers at Excello Recording in Brooklyn, New York, after completing sessions in a single day under producer Tomas Kalnoky of Operation Ivy.[14] The material captured during that abbreviated process—14 tracks blending ska-punk, hardcore, and dub influences—was sufficient for the complete album, which Hellcat Records (an Epitaph subsidiary) posthumously released on June 29, 1999, achieving cult status within underground punk circles despite the band's dissolution.[14] No official statement on the split's causes emerged at the time, though the group's documented involvement in New York City's squatter scene and associated substance use provided contextual tensions typical of late-1990s DIY punk ensembles.[14] In the immediate aftermath, frontman Scott Sturgeon (Stza) and drummer Alec Baillie promptly formed Leftöver Crack in 1998 as a direct continuation of Choking Victim's raw aesthetic and anarchist ethos, recruiting additional members from the local scene and releasing early material via DIY channels.[14] Guitarist Skwert and bassist Ezra Kire, meanwhile, assembled INDK with other ex-Choking Victim affiliates (excluding saxophonist Sascha DuFort), shifting toward a straighter hardcore sound and issuing their debut EP Kill Whitey! in 2000 on TKO Records.[14] These splinter projects preserved fragments of the original band's personnel and thematic urgency amid the Lower East Side's fracturing punk underbelly, though none replicated Choking Victim's precise ska-hardcore fusion.[14]Reunions and sporadic performances (2000–present)
Following their 1998 breakup, Choking Victim reunited on November 11, 2000, for a one-off performance in Tompkins Square Park, New York City, utilizing a lineup drawn from their No Gods, No Managers era with Alec Baillie substituting on bass for the original bassist.[8] The event drew on the band's ties to the Lower East Side squat scene, where they had originated.[15] The band remained inactive until late 2005, when they staged four reunion shows, including documented live recordings such as a September 11 performance and a "Christmas with the Victim" set later that year.[16][17] These appearances featured core member Stza (Scott Sturgeon) alongside varying supporting musicians, reflecting the group's fluid post-breakup collaborations. A follow-up show occurred on June 11, 2006, again at Tompkins Square Park, emphasizing continuity with their New York punk roots.[18] Activity lapsed until September 2016, when Choking Victim announced a limited reunion tour billed by Stza as potentially final, commencing with an October 30 show at Warsaw in Brooklyn, New York.[19] Additional dates expanded into November, including November 9 in Dallas, Texas, with Days N' Daze opening, and November 14 at Oakland Metro Operahouse, California.[20][21] The lineup centered on Stza and Alec Baillie, augmented by drummer Skwert from earlier configurations, prioritizing songs from No Gods, No Managers and Squatta's Paradise.[22] The tour extended into 2017 with appearances such as Punk Rock Bowling in Las Vegas and a May 7 performance at Mohawk in Austin, Texas—marking their third and ostensibly last Texas date of the reunion—supported by acts like Starving Wolves and Casual Relapse.[23][24] No verified performances followed, consistent with Stza's 2016 statements framing these as concluding efforts amid ongoing commitments to projects like Leftöver Crack.[6]Musical style
Core elements and genre fusion
Choking Victim's core musical elements centered on high-tempo, aggressive instrumentation driven by distorted guitars, rapid drumming, and bass lines that alternated between punk drive and reggae-inflected offbeats.[25] The band's sound featured Stza Crack's distinctive vocals, which shifted between high-pitched screeches reminiscent of black metal and gritty, shouted hardcore delivery, often layered with gang shouts for emphasis.[26] Drummer Skwert's style emphasized relentless rolls and fills, providing a chaotic propulsion that underpinned tracks with tempos exceeding 200 beats per minute in faster sections.[27] The genre fusion, self-described by the band as "Crack Rock Steady," blended rocksteady ska rhythms—characterized by upbeat, syncopated guitar skanks and horn-like melodic punctuations—with the raw aggression of crust punk and metallic riffing.[28] This hybrid extended to incorporating heavier, dissonant elements akin to crust and thrash metal, such as down-tuned guitars and abrasive breakdowns, while retaining punk's DIY ethos and occasional dub-reggae breakdowns for dynamic contrast.[29] Unlike conventional ska-punk, which often prioritized melodic accessibility, Choking Victim's approach emphasized abrasive confrontation, fusing ska-core's energy with crust's misanthropic density to create a sound that critiqued societal norms through musical extremity.[30] Their sole album, No Gods, No Managers (1999), exemplifies this, with tracks like "Crack Rock Steady" showcasing reggae-tinged verses exploding into punk-metal choruses.[25]Production and recording approaches
Choking Victim's production and recording practices embodied the DIY principles of the New York squatter punk scene, favoring raw, unrefined captures of live energy over commercial polish. Early demos, such as the 1992 self-released tape and the 1996 Crack Rock Steady Demo, relied on rudimentary home setups with limited equipment, yielding lo-fi audio characterized by distorted guitars, unprocessed vocals, and minimal post-production to preserve the band's visceral, chaotic performances.[31] For their sole full-length album, No Gods / No Managers (recorded 1998, released 1999 on Hellcat Records), the band shifted to professional New York studios Serenity and Succulent in Alphabet City, while retaining a punk ethos through expedited sessions that concluded shortly before their breakup. The album was co-produced by the band—primarily vocalist/guitarists Stza and Ezra, bassist Shayne, and drummer Skwert—alongside Mike Trujillo, who also mixed the tracks; engineering was handled by 3 Point Bone.[32][4] This collaborative, band-led approach minimized overdubs and emphasized speed, resulting in a sound blending frenetic ska-punk rhythms, sampling, and aggressive instrumentation without heavy compression or effects.[27] Trujillo's involvement, drawn from his work with Epitaph/Hellcat acts, provided technical grounding while allowing the raw interplay of dual screamed and melodic vocals, rapid-fire drums, and groove-heavy bass lines to dominate.[33] The sessions' brevity—often cited as wrapping in days—mirrored the band's unstable dynamics, capturing a tense, authentic urgency that defined their output.[34]Lyrics and ideology
Anarchist and anti-authoritarian themes
Choking Victim's lyrics prominently featured anti-authoritarian motifs, emphasizing resistance to state control, capitalism, and institutional power structures, often framed through a lens of personal autonomy and direct action. Frontman Stza Sturgeon explicitly rejected the anarchist label in favor of autonomism, a ideology prioritizing self-organization outside both capitalist and statist frameworks, coupled with atheism.[28] This perspective informed the band's advocacy for practices like squatting in abandoned buildings, which Sturgeon described as claiming space through theft and piracy as a form of reclaiming urban decay from neglectful authorities and property owners.[28] The 1999 album No Gods / No Managers encapsulated these ideas via its title, a variation on the autonomist and anarchist motto "no gods, no masters," signaling opposition to religious dogma and managerial hierarchies alike.[35] Central to the band's critique was capitalism's role in alienating individuals, portrayed as a system fostering consumerism and exploitation. In "500 Channels," lyrics lambast mass media as a mechanism for inducing resentment and unattainable aspirations, with lines decrying "500 channels of a day-dream stimulation" that lock viewers into cycles of dissatisfaction and reruns of idealized lives.[36] Similarly, "Money" rails against monetary commodification, equating it with societal dehumanization and urging rejection of wage labor's constraints.[37] The album's production underscored this stance by omitting barcodes, symbolizing defiance of commercial distribution norms and encouraging free dissemination of the music.[35] Anti-state and anti-police rhetoric permeated tracks like "Crack Rock Steady" and "Apple Pie and Police State," which depicted law enforcement as enforcers of oppressive order, including explicit calls for violent retaliation against officers.[35] These sentiments aligned with broader endorsements of vagrant resistance tactics, such as shoplifting glorified in "Five Finger Discount," positioning petty crime as subversive autonomy against property laws.[35] Spoken-word interludes sampled from Marxist critic Michael Parenti further amplified critiques of imperialism, corporate media, and U.S. foreign policy as extensions of authoritarian control. Atheism intertwined with these themes, employing provocative Satanic imagery not as endorsement but as a metaphorical assault on theistic authority, with Sturgeon clarifying it as an expression of atheistic rebellion rather than occult belief.[28]Drug culture and personal excess references
Choking Victim's lyrics prominently featured references to drug use, particularly heroin and crack cocaine, as a facet of urban decay and personal rebellion against mainstream society. Vocalist and primary lyricist Scott Sturgeon, known as Stza, drew from his own experiences of homelessness and substance abuse in New York City's Lower East Side during the 1990s, integrating these elements into songs that depicted drugs as both escapist tools and symbols of defiance amid systemic oppression.[26][30] The 1999 album No Gods, No Managers exemplified this, with tracks portraying narcotics consumption alongside critiques of capitalism and media saturation, reflecting the band's immersion in a squat-based punk scene rife with intravenous drug use and petty crime for survival.[38] Specific songs explicitly invoked hard drugs to underscore themes of alienation and self-medication. In "500 Channels," the narrator responds to overwhelming television propaganda and consumerist despair by declaring intentions to "smoke some crack" and "shoot some dope," framing opioid and cocaine use as immediate antidotes to psychological torment induced by societal "stimulation."[38] Similarly, the track "Crack Rock Steady" coined a term blending the ska subgenre rocksteady with "crack rock," evoking the gritty fusion of musical energy and street-level narcotics prevalent in the band's Alphabet City environment, where abandoned buildings served as hubs for both rehearsals and drug-fueled gatherings.[30] These references extended to broader personal excess, such as chronic parasitism and bodily deterioration in "Infested," which alluded to infestations from unsanitary squatter living conditions often exacerbated by drug-induced neglect.[38] The band's early demos and EPs further embedded drug culture into their narrative, listing members' habits—like heroin injection—on packaging as unapologetic badges of authenticity, tying personal indulgence to anti-authoritarian ethos.[39] This portrayal aligned with Stza's later reflections on drugs enabling survival in a hostile urban landscape, though contemporaneous accounts noted the prevalence of overdoses and arrests within their circle, underscoring the raw, unfiltered excess of their depicted lifestyles.[30]Critiques of lyrical glorification and real-world outcomes
Critics within and outside the punk scene have argued that Choking Victim's lyrics, which frequently reference hard drug use such as crack cocaine and heroin in a defiant or escapist context, risk normalizing destructive behaviors for young fans immersed in the subculture's anti-authoritarian ethos.[35] For instance, tracks on No Gods, No Managers (1999) like "5 Years Ahead of My Time" depict hallucinatory drug experiences amid societal collapse, framing substance use as intertwined with rebellion against capitalism and police, potentially blurring lines between critique and endorsement. Such portrayals, while rooted in the band's Lower East Side squat scene amid prevalent crack epidemics, have drawn implicit rebuke from peers like Morning Glory's Ezra Kire, who highlighted the irony of vocalist Stza (Scott Sturgeon) warning others about addiction given his own moniker "Stza Crack" and history.[40] Real-world consequences for band members underscore the hazards amplified by this lyrical lens. Sturgeon has admitted to heavy heroin and cocaine use during the Choking Victim era and beyond, including an arrest in 2008 where police found multiple syringes on him due to his intravenous habits.[41] In a 2016 interview, he described drugs as initially aiding social connections and averting suicide in isolation but acknowledged eventual cessation of addiction by age 40, though not full sobriety.[6] The band's dissolution in 1998 coincided with escalating personal excesses in New York's drug-saturated punk environment, where rehearsals occurred amid discarded needles and pipes.[30] Broader outcomes in the influenced punk community reveal patterns of overdose and dependency. Drummer Brandon Possible of successor band Leftöver Crack, formed from Choking Victim remnants, died of a drug overdose in 2004 while sharing a tour van with Sturgeon, highlighting the scene's toll.[6] While direct causation from lyrics to fan behavior remains unproven empirically, the band's open advocacy—evident in songs urging "smoking crack" as anti-systemic—correlates with documented substance issues among adherents, as Sturgeon's own trajectory from glorification to recovery illustrates the gap between rhetorical defiance and physiological reality.[6][42]Members
Principal lineup
Scott "Stza" Sturgeon served as the lead vocalist and guitarist for Choking Victim throughout its active years from 1992 to 1999, providing the band's primary songwriting and frontman presence.[2] Alec Baillie handled bass in core configurations, particularly during the mid- to late-1990s, forming a foundational rhythm section with Stza that carried into post-breakup projects like Leftöver Crack.[43] Drummer Skwert joined around 1993 and contributed to pivotal releases, including the 1999 album No Gods, No Managers, where he provided drums and backing vocals alongside Shayne Webb on bass and Ezra Kire on additional guitar and vocals.[4] Earlier iterations featured bassist Sascha DuBrul and drummer John Dolan, reflecting the band's squat-based, fluid personnel typical of New York City's punk scene.[44] This rotating yet Stza-centered structure enabled the group's raw, genre-blending output amid frequent lineup shifts driven by the transient lifestyles of its members.[3]Timeline of changes
Choking Victim was formed in 1992 in New York City by vocalist and guitarist Stza (Scott Sturgeon), bassist Sascha DuBrul, and drummer John Dolan.[44][45] Dolan departed after roughly seven months, two shows, and the development of about ten songs, prompting the addition of drummer Skwert Gunn, who accelerated the band's rehearsal pace and songwriting.[45][46] DuBrul exited following the recording of the Crack Rock Steady demo and EP. Alec Baillie, who had earlier collaborated with Stza in the short-lived No Commercial Value, rejoined on bass around 1995 for the Squatters Paradise 7" release.[44] Baillie was later removed from the lineup and temporarily replaced by bassist Shayne Webb (also known as Pezent Shayne); Webb was then succeeded by Baillie's short return before departing again, with Webb resuming bass duties into 1999.[44][46] In 1998, guitarist Ezra Kire joined, forming the final configuration of Stza, Kire, Webb, and Gunn for the No Gods / No Managers album sessions.[8][46] The band dissolved in 1999 during the No Gods / No Managers recording process, driven by interpersonal and creative conflicts, particularly between Stza and Gunn.[45][44] Sporadic reunions from 2000 onward primarily featured Stza and Gunn as constants, often with Kire and rotating bassists including Baillie until his death in 2020; post-2020 lineups have varied further for live performances.[46][47]Discography
Studio albums
No Gods / No Managers is the only studio album by Choking Victim, released on March 23, 1999, via Hellcat Records as catalog number 80408-2. The 13-track record, with a total runtime of 41:39, captures the band's signature fusion of ska, punk, and hardcore, recorded shortly before their disbandment.[48] It was issued on CD initially, with subsequent vinyl reissues including a 2004 pressing on Hellcat.[4] The album's production credits are attributed to the band members, reflecting their DIY ethos amid New York City's squat scene.[49] Key tracks include "500 Channels," "Crack Rock Steady," and "Suicide (A Better Way)," which exemplify the group's rapid tempos, satirical lyrics, and instrumental aggression.[50]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 500 Channels | 1:59 |
| 2 | In Hell | 2:35 |
| 3 | Crack Rock Steady | 2:29 |
| 4 | Suicide (A Better Way) | 2:47 |
| 5 | In My Grave | 3:22 |
| 6 | Fucked with My Head | 1:04 |
| 7 | Born Freak | 2:40 |
| 8 | Jim Morrison | 1:38 |
| 9 | Five Corporations | 3:03 |
| 10 | Eat Shit | 1:49 |
| 11 | A Lifetime of Beats | 1:19 |
| 12 | I, Shithead | 1:09 |
| 13 | Praise the Lord | 3:23 |