I had a painfully long, drawn out and exceedingly snide explanation pertaining
to the remarks I made re. Jay Hinman just last week but deleted it in favor of
a briefer and hopefully more to-the-point dissertation. That is, one hopefully more to the point until I at least start embellishing on it. The first draft
was just too windbaggy, perhaps overly caustic in spots and well, we wouldn't
want to see any of that on this blog now, would we? So I did what I thought
was best and 86'd the original and whipped up a neater, shorter and hopefully
more coherent meltdown for all of you more brainfogged types out there in
blogland to comprehend. That is, until I start adding to it until it's bigger than the Dogpatch Ham which I am
wont to do!
First off, in reality I do not wish, hope or pray that any harm will befall
either Jay's wife or his brood even though I believe the former made a bad
choice in picking a mate and from what I can tell you can't choose your
parents (though I hope Jay's genes didn't affect 'em too much). And, believe it or not, I don't wish any
bad voodoo on Jay himself even though I'm more than certain, despite his mea
culpas in the previous comments section, the man'd just love to wish a whole
load of ill upon me given his past actions! (Frankly, I don't recall any
apologies from Jay regarding his effective tear down which separated me from a
lot of "friends" and cost me some outlets to peddle my fanzine --- perhaps it
was not "sackcloth and ashes" enough to register in my mind.) You
probably wouldn't think so but really, I am not the type of guy, even though
for all intent purposes I SHOULD be, who really deep down inside
wants my enemies smitten in the cruelest and most Elizabethan ways possible.
But eh, I can sure fantasize about
it, can't I?
All kidding aside, given the way the likes of Jay et. al. have used a slew of
half-truths, innuendos and downright fabrications against me (and rather
effectively at that) why shouldn't I use the same sort of crude and callous
remarks against him and his loved ones? And considering Hinman's reactions to my post all I gotta
say is, people think I can dish it out but can't take it???
But you really have nothing to worry about because after what you have written
about me hardly anyone even goes NEAR me let alone this site!
Maybe I am over-reacting, maybe it is projection, but so what! Eh, all of this
blog back 'n forth is just kid stuff anyway, although in many ways I gotta
admit that I sure do miss them old days of one-upmanship and backstabbing even
if it seems that all of the people who excelled in it way back when have gone
the kumbaya route to total peace and love through excessive violence
duncitude. Except me, thankfully.
It was all a joke, a sick one at that but just one of my attempts to stir up
a wasp's nest that I thought needed stirring up. And Jay, if you really do
want forgiveness (I have my doubts) well, OK. But that doesn't mean I have
to
forget. Or even like you for that matter,
though I do get the feeling (believe it or not!) that some day, some time,
we definitely will be compatico with each other and perhaps in a gosh darn
buddy-buddy sorta way at that. And that's not something I would ever say or
think about Dave Lang, a subsputum example I hope will do some
self-termination soon. Or all of the other former buddies who sure didn't
miss a chance to pile on me back when Jay wrote his initial teardown.
But until then sheesh, if you can have your fun at my expense I believe
that I should be able to have some at
yours!
'n I guess if there's no hard feelings on yer part, howzbout a real doozy
and positive (of course!) review of one of my old mags, eh? Do me right for once in my life!!! Boy am I askin'
for trouble!
***
After all
that bound to win me the Blog of the Year award
screeding howzbout I skip any other personal comments about life and what
I've been doing and thinking this past week (not much really since the
politico/socio geiger counter just hasn't been clickin' away as rapidly as it
should) and head on out into
RECORD REVIEW TERRITORY!!!! Starting
off with a mega-humongous gang-bang writeup of (now get this!) the entire
BACK FROM THE GRAVE series, and as it appears in the digital age
t'boot. Now, that's something that we all know is sure worthy of mention here
at the
BTC blog considerin' just how much these platters have made
an indent on a whole slew of not only you readers, but myself natch! After
that there are a few dibdabs regarding some other albums that I assume would
be worthy of your precious kopeks, so tighten up your bladders because there's
gonna be some mighty fine readin' (hah!) straight ahead and you just won't
want to tear away from your screens for a well-deserved piss break!
LIKE I SAID, YET ANOTHER OVERVIEW OF THE MUCH-DESIRED AND
MANDITORY IN YOUR COLLECTIONS BACK FROM THE GRAVE SERIES OF ONCE-RARE BUT THANKFULLY PLENTIFUL EARLY PUNK ROCK
MEWLINGS!
Lookin' back o'er the years I gotta say that there were quite a few of these
sixties-era garage band samplers that really made my existence a better one
to revel in amidst a world of turmoil and constipation. The
PEBBLES series, or at least the first ten volumes (the rest being of
intermittent high energy squalls) certainly rate as all-time collectibles
featuring the whole gist and movement of a rather short yet potent time in
rock 'n roll history, while the entire BOULDERS collection remains
close to my heart if only because of the low-fidelity placed not only on the
actual recordings and pressings but the beautifully simplistic covers. I'll
confess that the various other garage band series and one-offs out there
really don't jibe with me as much as these classics did, either because they
seemed to mix too much clarity and quality in with the teenage trash or were
just way too expensive for a guy like myself who was putting out a crudzine
on far less than what some would call a shoestring budget.
But as far as the only real sixties garage band "punk" series that not only
could hold their own with PEBBLES and BOULDERS but in many
ways supersede 'em, BACK FROM THE GRAVE has alla the competition
beat hands down. Sheesh, all I gotta say is that an eighties without
BACK FROM THE GRAVE woulda been akin to a seventies without a UHF
television station and a bottle of pop to watch alla my favorites reruns
with!
The entire series (or at least most of it with some interchangeable
inclusions I understand) is now available on Cee-Dee and well, I just hadda
dish out the hard-begged in order to add these particular pleasantries to my
collection. If you do feel that the following is a lame excuse to pay
tribute to a classic set of platters done up in a rather pale fanboy-ish
fashion well pod'ner, once again you'd be right on the money it took to buy
alla these disques.
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUMES 1 & 2
Shee-yucks but does this one take me back to October 1983, a
time when I was in one of my even danker 'n usual lifemodes waitin' in line
at the local post office so's I could buy a money order to purchase this
very first, and as they said at the time "limited edition" volume! Mind you
there were many of these garage band compilations up and about at the time
although like I said most were exceedingly expensive especially for a
fanabla like me who was working a minimum wage job tryin' to keep sane given
everything happening around me. Needless to say when the package finally
arrived and
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUME ONE got plopped on the
turntable things did come off rather pleasing even if life for the most part
was rather dismalsville.
This Cee-Dee pairing of the first two volumes of this series (sorry but I
don't have any particularly strong memories of obtaining the second 'un)
does remind me of all of the action and energy that just wasn't being
presented in a good portion of the rock music that had been produced since
those days of youth and innocence (right!). Yeah that "new" track done up by
the Lyres (a cover of the Sonics' "chestnut' "The Witch") was left off for
some perhaps not-so-strange reason, but the hefties are here from Michigan's
Ju Jus who had that singer who does
not sound like David Surkamp to
the famed Cle garage banders the Alarm Clocks who probably got the entire
seventies local undergrund scene rollin' if yuo want to stretch things a
bit!
Two Rats appear, the Rats proper with both sides of
their wondrous doof classic "Rat's Revenge" and
thee Swamp Rats doin'
the Sonics long before that group became the toast of the under-the-underground garage band crowd thanks to Mark Shipper. Yeah I woulda preferred Larry and the Blue Notes'
"Night of the
Sadist" 'stead of the bowdlerized "Phantom" overdubber,
but I think that might be on another 'un-a-these.
The second
BACK FROM THE GRAVE picks up on the first's "vibes" with
not only even more killer tuneage but a cover pick that features Chuck Eddy
being roasted on a spit. That'll give ya a good approximation of what's
inside of here (even tho Eddy did give one of these volumes a good rave,
perhaps in atonement for past rock critic faux pissoffs of which there were
many). Too much to talk about on this 'un but I'm sure glad that this 'un
includes the Ralph Nielsen and the Chancellors' "Scream" (the Crypt EP of
which I reviewed a few months back), the Hysterics trying to steal Sky
Saxon's thunder with "Won't Get Far" (a
BOULDERS fave from way back
when), the Mods reverbing "Satisfaction"
their way and (best of all)
this totally unknown to mankind band doin' a really heavy version of the ol'
whatchamcallit "Little By Little" on one of those Film Board of Canada moom
pitchers they usedta make ya watch in school! Funny but I don't remember
seeing that 'un unless there was a wild moose in it 'r sumpin'!
First beef... the sound quality is
TOP NOTCH unlike those worn,
crackly discs that were used on the original platters. Sheesh, I was hoping
that once again I could turn my cheap bedroom boom box into the modern day
equivalent of some teenbo gal's portable player circa. 1963! Second
beef...lotsa stuff that should be here is missing, like the Novas' wrestling
homage "The Crusher" and the Unrelated Segments' "Cry Cry Cry" along with a
few others whose monikers just don't come to what's left of my mind
right now.Yeah I know that in the good ol' meanwhile those missing
toons have been reissued on other platters but I like
AUTHENTICITY with these reissues, not latterday revisionism!
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUMES 3 & 4
Another nice pair o' screamers complete with those offensive covers that
shoulda set off a whole load of
VILLAGE VOICE freak types but didn't
because back then a whole bunch of 'em were clued in on the har-de-har-har
game. Thankfully even the New York snoot types could get off on these
accurate if tasteless portrayals of music done up by kids you thought woulda
been held in detention for life!
But when it comes to the music to be found inside well...it's still
everything that the likes of Robert Christgau and a whole buncha them Big
City rock crit types (who are either planted six-feet-under or have lost
their cushy newspaper jobs ages back) just loathe to smithereens, Then
again, how can ya argue with a 70+-year-old Alzheimer's victim who thinks
that the best thing ever to happen to rock 'n roll was the cowbell?
Plenty of hot stuff here, from one of a millyun Nomads doin' "Be Nice" to
the Tamrons' "Wild Man" and the Fabs (who I thought were Texans but weren't
exactly, the neat-o book with updated liner notes and plenny of photos will
fill ya in on it all!) doin' "Dinah Wants Religion"! Other top notch faves
include the Vectors' "What In The World" which was written and
performed by future Shadows of Knight guitarist Joe Kelley to the infamous
Bunker Hill with Link Wray and the Wraymen's "The Girl Can't Dance"! Yeah,
this '62 screecher just might be a li'l bit outta the mid-sixties teenage
garage band realm but if Dr. Feelgood and the Interns' pre-Beatles "Mister
Moonlight" coulda made the next-to-final cut for inclusion on the original
NUGGETS then why not this bonafeed howler passing as plain' ol'
unadulterated music?
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUMES 5 & 6
More mid sixties anti-malarky here featuring alla those groups whose members
I'm sure you sneered at way back when inna cafeteria line. There are a few
definite classics here (such as the Keggs' "To Find Out" and it's
not-so-boss but still superfine flip) to contend with, and if any of you
think that these groups are gonna be wafting over into late sixties
psychedelia well, you're wrong again chummo!
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUME 7
This might just be the one that busted a whole lotta previous records for
DOWNRIGHT ADDLED AND STOOPIDLY BEAUTIFUL MID-SIXTIES LOCALLY PRODUCED
ROCK PRIMITIVISM! True #7 covers a lotta area where many reissues have gone
before (the Bugs, the Mustangs, and a pre-fame Alice Cooper) but
what an area it was so-to-speak. The high energy quotient of this
package could even make
KICK OUT THE JAMS sound like third-grade
flute-o-phone music class what with the likes of the Gentrys (an' not the
ones of "Keep On Dancin'" fame) doin' the appropriately named "Wild" or this
Deep South act called the Snails (complete with a lead singer who sounds
somewhat like Bruce Hampton) throwin' a party complete with calls for
hamburgers right inna middle of their recordin' session! Some of those
later-on
PEBBLES and
HIGHS IN THE MID-SIXTIES do come off
kinda pale next to this particularly potent pounder, and for all of these
years I thought that was because alla the good 'un's were taken! Oh how
wrong I was!!!
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUME 8
Starts off pretty screamin' with some outright wailers courtesy bands with
such names as the Groop and the Benders, the latter who got the hard-edged
Iggy yelp down pretty snat which wasn't anything outta place when it came to
the mid-sixties spirit of knotty pine basement suburban slob aesthetics. The
Bojax's heavy duty "Like a Rolling Stone" meets "All Day and All of the
Night" "Go Alone" rises above the ranch house snarl like a particularly
purple pimple on a sea of blackheads splattered across your teenbo cheeks
and really, there are so many tracks here which represent the true spirit of
mid-sixties teenbo USA that it's hard to specify which one is better than
the other because it all comes off so rough...
But (at least in my who cares opinion) the best of the batch is the Dave
Myers and the Disciples track "Come On Baby" which to my tin ears sounds
more late-sixties psychedelic garage but was recorded smack dab in the
definitely teenbo culture year os 1965! That should make this cut a proto
something of worth which'll surprise a few considerin' Myers prestige as a
surf guitarist of the tippy-toppest order. The Painted Ship's "I Told All
Those Little White Lies" is the same one that Greg Prevost belted on the
first Chesterfield Kings album and I don't think he'd wanna kill me for
saying that the original tops the re-do. But who knows --- this offhand
remark just might get him to tear a big mad on against me! I mean, things
like that have happened before (see above).
BACK FROM THE GRAVE VOLUME 9
This final entry in the Cee-Dee series captures the last two vinyl efforts
in one nice splat and like, for a series closer it's sure a swell way to
make an exit! Lotsa slob gems to be found, like the tambourine-drenched
"Tamborine" (sick!) by the Why Nots who prove that you can use a
tambourine as a lead instrument, to the Classics' "I'm Hurtin'" which was
definitely sung by the five-foot-five kid who used to get real nervous in
the boys' gang shower after gym class. Personal pick of the volume's an
acetate of the Gentlemen's "It's a Cryin' Shame" which you might remember
from PEBBLES VOL. 5 only here it is in an even more feral
form!
Special kudos to the Donshires who really knew how to use the ol'
repeato-roff mode to the Fours' "69" which was recorded in '66 so I assume
they were rather anxious about things happening three years later, like high
school graduation or something along those lines. And it all ends with that
legendary whacked out version of "The Witch" by GMC and the Arcells which'll
get you either really PO'd or rollin' on the floor laughing your bean off,
your choice.
And that's all there is folk, and here's hoping that more'll make their way
out to the populace faster than yo can say "Knoll Allen and the Noble
Savages"! (ewwwww...)
***
OK, now for the regular portion of our
program for today...
Human Adult Band-SLOG QUEST CROSSTIME LP (Feeding Tube Records)
If I were the type of person to apologize, I'd tell the folk at Feeding Tube
that I am sorry to have waited so long to review this. Since I've given up
on apologies (apologies are a sign of weakness as Duke Wayne said and
besides, I figure there are a lotta weaklings out there who should line up
to apologize to me), well I won't.
But hey, these Human Adult guys are pretty interesting. A lo-fi bunch who've
released a slew of sound o'er the years, on this Feeding Tube debut they
rage from noise blare to hard rock to garage band here to and fro with that
sorta creepy feeling you only seem to get from Feeding Tube. Gotta admit
that some of this dragged on quite a bit but that's OK considering the
general scrunginess of it all. If you're on the lookout for some atonal yet
still rockist soundscapading well the search is up!
Ronald Shannon Jackson and the Decoding Society-MONTREAUX 1985 CD-r
burn
The mere word "Montreaux" can conjure up images of quite a few
state-of-the-sad-state-of-jazz acts that have graced that fest's stage, but
then again there have been many good live efforts from the kinda new thing
groups we like that've emanated from that stage. And the Decoding Society
are but just one of 'em.
Jackson and his Society already had a buncha LPs out and a pretty decent
reputation in the under-the-underground jazz community when they popped up
at the 'fest, and by the time this '85 gig was recorded a lotta the
roughness that could be heard on the earlier releases seems to have been
ironed out of the sound. It might sound somewhat slick in spots to a few of
you readers, but I find this particular gig something that should settle
well with those who have been fans and followers of the punk funk genre ever
since the very late-seventies, if not before. Go ahead, watch it on youtube
and burn yourself a copy to play while beating the kids.
***
Magic Tuber Stringband-TARANTISM LP (Feeding Tube Records)
Mighty sweet downhome folk here with a bizarre avant twist that might
remind you of something John Fahey would've cooked up had he hung around
with the Red Krayola a little more. Classic finger-pickin' and fiddlin' folk instrumentation flows and
weaves like something you thought you've experienced before but you just
wonder where, coming off so fine in that real Amerigana fashion
that comes off more rustic than anything the Grateful Dead ever
attempted. If you're bigtime on things llike that well, it's your
choice.
***
Saphron-RED AMBER LP (Feeding Tube/Shagrat Records)
Whew! Judging from the name of this act I thought I was gonna be in store for a bunch of lesbians singin' 'bout lappin' lilies and munchin' menses! Turns out
that these recordings (discovered by the essential Nigel Cross) were
actually made by a group of innocent early-seventies London schoolgals who
were into the folk and singer/songwriter realm of the day. And despite
what you might think they pulled it all off with total smoothness
recording these acoustic folky tracks that'll please you even if you ain't
exactly the kinda guy who'd go for some Cat Stevens-lovin' hippoid
wannabe. Don't kid yourself, these Saphrons perform a music that's got a strong and nervy backbone to it, quite
pleasant without being all joss stick. And believe it or not but this even ends with a cover of
"Moonchild" from IN THE COURT OF THE CRIMSON KING!
***
SPECIAL NOTE TO MISTERS FORWARD AND OBERLIN---Sorry but I still haven't received anything from youse in the mail as of yet!
***
DOWN TO THE WIRE LAST MINUTE MENTION!-Humungous big huzzahs go to Mr,
Vance Vilandre from Johnson City, Tennessee who (now get this!!) sent me
that Ed Ward (and not Greg Shaw as I
have read elsewhere!) fanzine article from a 1970 ish of ROLLING STONE, the exact same one that I had requested just last week! Way to go noble reader but sheesh, I
only wanted the article and not the entire dad blamed magazine --- I hope
nobody sees me reading this thinking I'm a Leon Russell fan! Just kidding
Mr. V and thanks, pal!
***
Winter's here, so why not buy some of these
back issues of BLACK TO COMM to store in your hut during the remainder of these cold months? Yeah
you might not wanna read 'em, but just think of how warm they'll keep you
when you stick a few of 'em in the pot bellied stove! You'll probably think
they''ll be put to their best usage that way, and in some snarky way so do
I!