Credit: Photo by John Gihooley

“There was a time when someone would ask you who your favorite band was,” recalls singer Mike Lohrman of the Stitches, an Orange County fourpiece preaching the 1977 punk gospel since 1993. “If you said the Sex Pistols? ‘Oh, you’re a poser!’ because you weren’t listing some hardcore band of the time.”

An Orange County fourpiece preaching the 1977 punk gospel since 1993

When he saw a flier in his now-defunct Underdog Records shop looking for a Pistols/Clash/Black Flag-influenced singer, he auditioned. One year later, when debut 45 “Sixteen” b/w “Something New” exploded via Lohrman’s own Vinyl Dog imprint, the group rebranded as the Stitches, with only their original guitarist remaining. Following two more singles, an EP, and an LP, the original axe wielder now gone, the Stitches as we know them solidified into Lohrman, guitarist Johnny Witmer, bassist Pete Archer, and drummer Craig “Skibs” Barker.

The basic sound: pure, adrenalized, Seventies snot-rock. Fusing the power-drive catchiness of the Ramones, the Dead Boys’ explosiveness, and low-rent trashiness from Brits like the Lurkers and Eater, they’re controlled chaos. Live, Lohrman tangles himself in microphone cables as Witmer hurls his Gibson against the amps.

And that’s just the first number.

“Two guys are sober, four are married,” shrugs Witmer, including new co-guitarist Jim Kaa of Seventies OC legends the Crowd.

Come 2002’s 12 Imaginary Inches LP, producer/former Sparks guitarist Earle Mankey introduced Joy Division/PiL-esque hooks to the Stitches’ destructo-speed-rock tunes about “drugs and prostitutes,” as Witmer once described them. Currently on tour with like-minded Seattle crew the Briefs, they’re advancing a 2-LP Burger Records collection of every Stitches 7-inch.

“I’m used to playing in a tiny rehearsal space with a shit P.A.,” says Lohrman. “To hear us mic’d with good equipment takes away the proper piss-and-vinegar from the shit equipment and angry mindsets that made these songs originally.”

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Tim Stegall contributed to The Austin Chronicle 1991-1995, and was a staff writer 1995-1997. He returned as a contributor in 2013. He has also freelanced for publications ranging from Flipside to Alternative Press to Guitar World. He plays punk rock guitar and sings in the Hormones.