Thursday, June 25, 2009

Forgotten: Sunday Cannons - Red to the Rind

Back in 1988, I caught an Amnesty International benefit show at the Towson Armory in Towson, MD. Having seen locals Black Friday a few months before, I was anxious to catch them again along with Pearl Fishers, Sunday Cannons and the Unknown. While the latter was fairly rotten (one of the few bands whose set I walked away from), the other three were all very good. Sunday Cannons were so good, in fact, that I bought Red to the Rind the following week.

I pulled the album off the shelf a few weeks back and found that this punk/alt/psych material still appealed to me 20 years later, perhaps even more than it did at the time. It's true that there were plenty of bands in this vein in the late 80s underground, but Sunday Cannons are a fine example of that time and place. Perhaps some of the appeal for me today is nostalgia, but there's more to it. It's not just about a sound, but a vibe that still finds it's way into good music today.

Thanks to Mike Lane (now of The Lanes) for permission to make the album available for download.

Sunday Cannons - Red to the Rind

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Sunday, March 30, 2008

Forgotten: Stranger Than Fiction - Motherfungus


Label: self-released

Released: 1991

Baltimore metal fans are probably familiar with Meatjack, but perhaps fewer know of the Daniloski brothers' first band, Stranger Than Fiction. Their Motherfungus demo was released in 1991 (when the brothers were in their early 20s). These were the days just before a band could make a professional sounding demo cheaply, so the thin production dates this every bit as much as the fact that it came on a cassette. However, the tape explores a sinister silliness (à la early Butthole Surfers) using a kind of lo-fi, punk/prog and even free jazz at times. Don't expect prog and jazz chops on Motherfungus though. It's more the grand, avant garde spirit of those genres that lives here in a strange symbiosis with DIY energy and simplicity.

The tape's first side is a tougher listen as it delves deepest into experimentation. Their live version of "God of Thunder" at the end of Side 1 is a turning point. It maintains the over-the-top hard rock appeal of Kiss, yet it's also infused with the strange craziness that pervades the whole album. The second side doesn't stray so far into the bizarre, though it is still a far cry from what was typically coming out of garages in the late 80s and early 90s. The album's finale, "A Little Off the Top," is reminiscent of Henry Rollins' spoken word material on Family Man, where more effort was put into shock than substance, but the music helps by conveying an increasing madness as the song winds through it's nearly 10 minute story of what happens after a man snaps. Motherfungus is anything but a pop album, being more concerned with crazy than catchy. While the Daniloskis' current work isn't exactly in the mainstream, it is not nearly the free, open (and unfocused) work from whence they came.

Ratings
Satriani: 6/10
Zappa: 9/10
Dylan: 5/10
Aretha: 7/10
Overall: 7/10

If you're curious about my rating categories, read the description.

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