Disturbing Domestic Peace Explained

Disturbing Domestic Peace
Type:Studio album
Artist:The Ex
Cover:Disturbingdomesticpeace.jpg
Released:1980
Recorded:LP on October 10–12, 1980 at Joke's Koeienverhuurbedrijf
Live 7" on August 30, 1980 at the Drieluyck, Zaandam
Genre:Anarcho-punk, noise rock, post-punk
Length:30:05 (includes 7")
Label:LP on Verrecords
Live 7" on Eh Records
Reissued on CD by Ex Records
Next Title:History Is What's Happening
Next Year:1982

Disturbing Domestic Peace was the debut album from Dutch anarchist band The Ex.[1]

Background

The Ex had formed and recorded their earliest material in 1979 during the heyday of the Dutch squatters movement.[2] Following the band's release of their All Corpses Smell the Same EP, the group's bassist René left the band for New Zealand and was replaced by then 15-year-old Bas.[3] The Ex reentered Dolf Planteijdt's Koeienverhuurbedrijf (literally "cow rental") Studio to record 10 songs for an LP that covered topics such as the Dutch housing crisis and squatters' movement ("Squatsong"), police brutality ("Warning-Shot"), environmental illness ("A Sense of Tumor"), and sexual assault ("Meanwhile").[4]

Release

Because Disturbing Domestic Peaces studio material clocked in at under 30 minutes, the band decided to press it at 45 RPM and add a bonus 7" of four live songs to make the package into a full-length release. The album's cover depicts Dutch police in the process of evicting squatters, reflecting the heightened tensions and confrontations in Netherlands and other parts of Europe at that time. The band priced the record at 10 Dutch guilders and sold out all 1,000 copies of its original October 1980 pressing within a week, prompting them to order further pressings that sold another 3,000 copies for that year's Christmas season. A final batch of 500 copies followed in early 1981.

In addition to the bonus "Live Skive" 7", the original 12" album included a booklet of lyrics, starting the band's habit of including many inserts in their next 12 years' worth of releases.[5] The album was first issued on CD, along with The Ex's entire back catalog, in 1993, and then as a digital download on Bandcamp in the 2010s. The American label Superior Viaduct announced that it would be reissuing the album in its original 12"-with-bonus-7" format, including a 20-page booklet, in September 2020.[6]

Track listing

All tracks by The Ex

Studio LP

  1. "The Sky Is Blue Again" - 2:01
  2. "Map" - 1:14
  3. "Outlook-Army" - 0:39
  4. "Sucking Pig" - 1:58
  5. "A Sense of Tumour" - 4:00
  6. "Meanwhile" - 3:54
  7. "Rules" - 1:41
  8. "Squatsong" - 1:51
  9. "Warning-Shot" - 2:55
  10. "New Wars" - 2:46

Live-Skive bonus live 7"

  1. "Introduction" - 2:20
  2. "Human Car" - 1:48
  3. "Punk" - 1:47
  4. "Horse" - 1:11

Personnel

Remark: The studio's name, "Joke's Koeienverhuurbedrijf" translates from Dutch as "Jenny's Cow Rentals, Ltd." ("Joke" is quite a common first name for women in the Netherlands).

Notes

Notes and References

  1. News: Hager . Christa . Happy Birthday, The Ex! . 17 May 2020 . Musik-Blog - Wiener Zeitung Online . December 9, 2019 . de.
  2. Book: Shepherd . John . Continuum encyclopedia of popular music of the world . 2005 . Continuum . 978-0-8264-7436-0 . 266 . en . ... became the centers for alternative, underground art. One of the bands of this era was The Ex, whose debut album, Disturbing Domestic Peace, was released in 1980, the heyday of the squatters' movement..
  3. Book: Anyway: 45 Records in 45 Days . Sok . G.W. . April 6, 2020 . 4 . en.
  4. News: Hofman . Edwin . The Ex - Disturbing Domestic Peace Alternative . 17 May 2020 . Written in Music . March 9, 2020 . nl.
  5. Book: Robbins . Ira A. . The Trouser Press Record Guide . 1991 . Collier Books . 978-0-02-036361-3 . 229 . en . [Most of the Ex's albums contain vast amounts of printed material. Disturbing Domestic Peace includes a bonus live single and an illustrated lyrics booklet.].
  6. News: Just Announced: The Ex's First Two Albums . 14 July 2020 . Superior Viaduct . July 13, 2020 . en.