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  • Steve Lieberman – “Cheap Japanese Bass”

Steve Lieberman – “Cheap Japanese Bass”

Chorus Chronicles 16 July 2025

With a title as unapologetic as its creator, Steve Lieberman’s “Cheap Japanese Bass” is pure scorched-earth punk—gritty, manic, and completely unhinged in the best way possible. Clocking in as the lead single from his 85th album (yes, really), this track is a raucous declaration that underground music still has a heartbeat—and it’s thudding through overblown amps and fuzzed-out speakers. Lieberman, also known as The Gangsta Rabbi, doesn’t whisper his legacy. He howls it.

From the moment it kicks off, “Cheap Japanese Bass” detonates with all the subtlety of a brick through a stained glass window. The mix is gloriously raw—distortion everywhere, vocals barely contained, and chaos threatening to boil over. But underneath the anarchy is something strangely touching: a tribute to a battered bass guitar and the years of rebellion it fueled. Lieberman channels his ‘70s roots and turns nostalgia into noise, memory into movement.

The real marvel here isn’t just the sound—it’s the sheer force of will behind it. Lieberman plays 25 instruments across this album, and that obsessive devotion to the DIY ethos bleeds through every note. “Cheap Japanese Bass” feels like it was recorded in a bunker under siege, with nothing but duct tape, adrenaline, and a battered four-track. And yet, there’s melody buried in the chaos—a kind of punk jazz, erratic and fearless, that refuses to sit still.

Lyrically, it’s Lieberman doing what Lieberman does best: venting, celebrating, mocking, and testifying all at once. There’s a sense of humour twisted into the feedback, but also a strange kind of reverence. That “cheap” bass isn’t just an instrument—it’s a symbol of punk’s scrappy soul, of rebellion that doesn’t need polish to pack a punch. This isn’t music for everyone. It’s not supposed to be. But for those who’ve ever found beauty in the broken, it hits like gospel.

“Cheap Japanese Bass” is more than a song—it’s a war cry from the fringes. It’s proof that punk never died, it just got louder, weirder, and older in the best way. Steve Lieberman is still out here doing what he’s always done: making noise that matters, even if no one’s asking him to. And thank God for that.

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