The Fingers started out as a five-piece band (thus, the name) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in early 1977. Packing up their instruments and professional aspirations and leaving two Fingers behind, three members (two of them brothers) headed to New York City in September of that year hoping for some Ramones-type fame. As part of a press kit, their manager thought an actual record, instead of the standard cassette tape, might be more of an attention-getter. In December 1977, the Fingers recorded and soon released a three-song EP which was mostly sent to record company execs in the hopes of securing a contract. No deals were inked, but the "Isolation" EP purportedly caught the ear of Sire mogul Seymour Stein who dug but declined. Stein apparently deemed the Fingers style too similar to the Ramones — never a bad thing! The remainder of the "Isolation" EPs seem to have been swallowed up into the void. Until 1998, the record was completely unknown having never surfaced in a store or collection. Some collectors even had their doubts the record existed until a band member sent out a tape where, sure enough, you could hear the needle dropping down and some great punk rock begin. Between the manager and roadies and ex-girlfriends, around ten copies in varying condition made their way into collector hands. The A-side track "Isolation" is the hands-down winner while the two B-side cuts are less impressive but still good.
Of further interest to punk rock fans is the fact that the Fingers comprised the core of what would soon be The Features. Take three Fingers, add the manager, and a wardrobe change and you have the Features whose "Floozie of the Neighborhood" 45 is a pop-punk classic (a very, very rare classification 'round here). Modern day punk throwbacks, the Stitches, cover "Floozie" in fine fashion. Considering the chances of finding the original are slim-to-none, vinyl hounds should seek out the No One Left To Blame compilation LP which includes "Isolation" or — for the less discerning and more desperate — the Features LP released on Italy's Rave-Up label a few years back. (Ryan Richardson)
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source Break my Face (link)
7 comments:
Very English sound for a US band, isn't it? Nice texture to that rhythm guitar.
exactly
unfortunately didn't find any info about then besides that there were from pittsburg and that someone paid 3000USD from this ep on ebay
$3000????? That's a three followed by three 0's???? Three THOUSAND dollars????? Can that possibly be right?
Hmm, I think I'm going to spend the day fantasizing about selling off my 7 inch singles on eBay.
sorry, $3000 was the initial bid... the action was close at $4895 acording to this post
http://collectingvinylrecords.blogspot.com/2009/01/top-5-ebay-vinyl-record-sales.html
A great 7" that I finally get to hear. Insanely rare(I think about 100 copies) and the first time I've seen it on eBay was just lately.
The band later became The Features which put out an equal great single:
http://www.kbdrecords.com/2007/12/04/the-features-floozie-of-the-neighborhood-7/
Official reissue coming soon on Last Laugh Records.
www.lastlaughrecords.us
This reissue is available now! I just got one from Painkiller Records in Cambridge, MA, USA. It is AWESOME! I grew up in Pittsburgh and got into punk shortly after this record was initially 'released' and I'd never heard of them until a few years ago.
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