Marriage Licenses Marcin Wrobel and Alexis Susan Matelevich, both of 335 E. Center St., Mount Carmel, issued July 3. Michael J. VanBuskirk and Dionne Michelle Dauber, both of 205 Brown Ave., Milton, issued July 4
Suicide were a musically influential but commercially ignored project launched by singer Alan Vega and keyboardist Martin Rev in 1971. But the impact they had on no-wave, post-punk, synth-pop and other acts who followed them will be recognized by a series of tribute EPs being released by the U.K.'s Blast First label.
American Legion Hall Post 13 †Bandage. 8 p.m.-midnight. $5. 229 Lake Ella Drive. 222-3382. Backwoods Bistro †The Zach Bartholomew Trio. Jazz. Noon-2 p.m. Free. 106 Municipal Ave., Sopchoppy. (850) 962-2220.
American Legion Hall Post 13 †ACME Rhythm & Blues. 8:30 p.m-12:30 a.m. $5. 229 Lake Ella Drive. 222-3382. The Beta Bar †"Cheddareeta Free" with DJs Little Foot and Truewill. 10 p.m. Free. 809 Railroad Ave. 425-2697.
As do Sunn O))), Klaxons, Primal Scream, Lydia Lunch, Peaches Catch phrases like "way ahead of their time" and "blazing their own trail" don't really cut it-- Suicide were in their own sonic world entirely for most of the 1970s. It took folks a while to catch on, but catch on they did, and nowadays Alan Vega and Martin Rev are widely revered for their influence on punk, no wave,