After that New Year's Eve year-end blowout post I did I'm feeling more run down than one of Tura Satana's bras, so rather than peck out one of those long-drawn out posts where I dribble on about the last ten "important" recordings to have graced my ears I thought I'd take it easy and just dish out a few briefies to satisfy your soul. And to start off today's soiree here are three CE-R's of what I definitely would call bootlegged material, with all three having in common the unadulterated fact that they've been "released" by the same "label" (Full Seeing Eye) and contain "themed" material scraped together from a variety of sources that have been cluttering up the tape/CD-R-trading markets for quite some time. These CD-R's sorta remind me of those old "California"-based albums (with titles like THE CALIFORNIA CHRISTMAS ALBUM, THE CALIFORNIA EASTER ALBUM and THE CALIFORNIA WALPURGISNACHT ALBUM) from the early-eighties which gathered various West Coast acts and packaged them for what I would have assumed was the serious fan of the late-sixties West Coast ound. At the time (1983) I coulda cared less about the late-sixties Californicate sound...nowadays I wish I forked over the money for these albums because if anything, Gene Sculatti and Mick Farren where right about this stuff, or at least most of it, all along!
***Betcha thought I was gonna up and leave you with this mere review eh? Well, don't say that I come cheap, for here's another Cee-Dee review you might want to read in order to edjamacate yourself a little more as to the nature of pure, unadulterated sound. Anyhow, let me begin...I dunno if any of you know who David Solomonoff is, but you should since he did have a "role" in a budding late-seventies underground Cleveland avant garage scene that should have been documented just as much as the New York or Boston ones from roughly the same time. A musician and writer, I first knew of Solomonoff through his writings for the CLEVELAND EXPRESS, a free paper that was more or less vying to be a small (hopefully) monthly variation on THE VILLAGE VOICE without being as overwrought as the original. His writings appeared sporadically (well, at least I was able to pick up the paper sporadically so he might have been writing for them a lot more than I realize) amidst the likes of Cindy Barber's and Charlotte Pressler's documentation of a Cleveland underground twisting and turning in the wind, and although I couldn't possible remember everything I've read by the man one article stuck out in my mind like a sore lobe, mainly one about the under-the-underground scene that was transpiring in the city that was so unknown that even CLE magazine didn't cover it, though that might have been due to personal reasons rather than sheer ignorance.
The groups mentioned as being part of this movement were Harlan and the Whips, Willie and the Criminal Mystics (or "the Criminal Secrets" as they were called in another edition of the EXPRESS) and Bernie and the Invisibles. If I remember correctly through a haze of a much longer time than I could ever imagine, Solomonoff made these groups out to be roughly the equivalent of what was happening in the New York no wave underground, bands playing without the usual professionalism or "talent" but with a lot of interesting ideas and a shaping of the best the sixties had to offer in a seventies "frame", one that hopefully would point towards a music of the eighties. Harlan and the Whips supposedly had that early-Velvets hard-drive and played through a sound system that used to be a living room hi-fi. Willie and the Criminal Mystics/Secrets reportedly sounded like a cross twixt the Velvets and Mothers of Invention during their more musique-concrete days with leader Willie singing/ranting above it all, the results sounding like "listening to Hegel in a steel mill" or something to that effect. As for Bernie and the Invisibles, they were also bestowed with a Velvets comparison with some John Cage thrown in, and if you think I wasn't impressed with what was presented/promised in this piece then brother you don't know the meaning of obsessive/compulsive!
Unfortunately whereas a New York rock scene was open to the extreme no wave stylings of Lydia, James and Lmo, the staid Cleveland atmosphere shunned this new innovation with a voracity unknown in ages. It wouldn't have mattered anyway, since the only group in the batch to ever strike out and play in public was Bernie and the Invisibles, who not only were able to obtain high profile gigs (or what passed for them in Cleveland) but even got to jam with the one-off group the Fusionists, who performed at the legendary "Nazi/Zionist Love-In" set up by local poet Simon Emler. Reports say that both Harlan and the Whips and Willie and the Criminal Mystics did perform at private parties and the like, but to this day I've heard very little else about them and unfortunately no recordings have surfaces adding even more to the mystery surrounding these acts. Hopefully this will be corrected more sooner than later, but until then I'd say waiting for a release of these groups both legal and not would be akin to waiting for a legitimate Velvet Underground exhumation to make its way to the local shops, or the release of those avant garde Lenny Kaye/Robert Palmer tapes that I've been wanting to hear for quite some time as well.
A rumor has it that Solomonoff was involved with both Harlan and the Whips and Willie and the Criminal Mystics, and another even speculated that both of these groups were in fact totally the fabrication of Solomonoff's mind but I wasn't buying that...well, not totally. However, I did notice Solomonoff's name in an early-eighties issue of THE NEW YORK ROCKER in the course of a live review of a George Jones show (done in a conversation style originally made famous by CREEM) as well as via the existence of a cassette featuring music he recorded with a Carola Von Hoffmannstahl. Naturally I snatched up the tape as soon as I read about it in whatever new issue of OP was out there, and despite my best efforts I've yet to locate the tape in my collection even though I do recall the electronic squirms and squeals therein as well as a track called "The Nun and the Whore" which had two gals hissy fit catfighting about somethingorother to some crunchy industrial tuneage...good enough, but I really would have preferred the Harlan material, if it had existed of course!
After all these years and a chance mention of Solomonoff in an earlier post whaddya know, the man gets back in touch with me (as if selling me a cassette was ever being in touch in the first place) and sends me a CD-R of THE SIMPLE WAY, the latest effort from the Solomonoff/Von Hoffmannstahl collaborative that hearkens back to the glory days of not only the "cassette culture" but the Cleveland underground from whence Solomonoff and a few other bright ideas gone unnoticed evolved. It's short, but it still packs enough avant garage energy and excitement into it to turn at least this grizzled old head a total 360 a la THE EXORCIST or long before that Sherwood the City Slicker.

hey Chris, no need to print this.
ReplyDeleteIt's Predrag from Perth, Australia.
hope you're well and Happy New Year. although, with Ron Asheton passing away it's been a bad start. I'm glad I saw the Stooges twice in last 2 years...
take care and keep doing this blog!
p
Thanks for the great writeup! Can you give me a direct email address so I can fill you in with some more info?
ReplyDeleteRIP Ron, "the king of feedback and fuzz" as one letter to the editors of CREEM put it.
David