Taking Sides: Big Black vs. Butthole Surfers

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Or, 'Cronenberg vs. Craven: Slight Return', i.e. 'Crash' vs. 'Hills Have Eyes'. (Or maybe 'Robocop' vs. Deliverance'?)

dave q, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Victory on points to the Texans - both were worst when doing their 'exploitation' reel-in-the-gullible numbers ("Jordan, Minnesota", "22 Going on 23"), but the Surfers did LESS of them

dave q, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black by miles. Gasoline from 'Atomiser' and most of 'More Songs...' are ace IIRC, but haven't heard 'em for 10 yrs..

Butthole Surfers - is it possible for a band to be this BAD? Supposed to be 'disturbing' (hey, let's get a few photos of deformed midgets for the album cover), supposed to be 'sonically challenging'(the only challenge is how to get through to track 3 without wanting to knock yourself unconscious), supposed to be 'confrontational' live (in other words even worse than the records, but you get to see Gibby Haynes naked, stoned and drooling. Oh and they have some slides with pictures of abortions and shit and stuff). Losers.

Dr. C, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Nonono Dr.C you're so wrong. :) Butthole Surfers all the way. Yeah Big Black had their moments and 'Jordan Minnesota' = nasty in a beautiful way. But Butthole Surfers had the sonics, the attitude, the fun and the mystique. Besides 'Johnny Smoke' = the great American 20th century poem.

Of Dave Q's comparisons I like the Robocop vs. Deliverance best (sleek, sarcastic, "fascistic" vs. self-indulgence, red-neck glamour, inbred speed music...err something like that).

Omar, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

butthole surfers all the way, and yes, robocop vs deliverance isn't a bad analogy. yes, they had the sonics, like a 3 way between sonic youth, bummed era happy mondays and all texas psych ever, but then wired to fuck. a really really underrated band.

gareth, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

prefer buthole cos once they stopd arsing abt and made proper records with tunes they rok lik fuk electriclarryland. big blak bunch of fakers as iv sed alredy.

XStatic Peace, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Victory on points to the Texans - both were worst when doing their 'exploitation' reel-in-the-gullible numbers ("Jordan, Minnesota", "22 Going on 23"), but the Surfers did LESS of them

What are you like? The Butthole Surfers' '22 going on 23' is a great track with monster guitar riffs and disturbing samples. You are obviously a mentalist.

I don't know both bands' oeuvres well enough to comment, but I gather the Surfers did two good albums and loads of rubbish ones while Big Black did three G*R*A*T*E albums and nothing else. So that looks like Big Black are ahead on goal difference.

DV, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

everything up to hairway to steven is brilliant, and pioughd has its moments too. after that, forget it

gareth, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black did three G*R*A*T*E albums

Big Black only made two albums (Atomizer and Songs About Fucking). Both those albums are better than whatever the BH Surfers turned out. I used to like the Surfers enough, but I don't think they've aged all that well. A song like "Going to Florida" I used to find really enjoyable, but I heard it the other day for the first time in 5 or 6 years, and it seemed to go on forever (and not in a good way).

Vic Funk, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black, no contest.

Andy K, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I'm more familiar with Big Black and at one point I counted them as one of my favorite bands. Besides, "Kerosene" describes the mindset of the kids from my home town so well it's frightening.

Dan Perry, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

draw - bib black for albini, butthole surfers for name, visuals and being in detox with kurt cobain

goeff, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

The Buttholes were good (the opening to Locust Abortion Technician is the perfect way to torment tripping friends) but suffer from not- knowing-when-to-break-up syndrome. They haven't gotten BAD yet, but they're mediocre, and I'd think mediocrity=death for a band like the Butthole Surfers. I mean, does anyone remember anything about their 90s output besides a feeling of vague annoyance? Big Black on the other hand are godlike. The early stuff is kind of silly but Atomizer and Songs About Fucking are brilliant from beginning to end. Mr Albini takes himself far too seriously but he still rocks my world.

adam, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Butthole Surfers. While each album has a great deal of stuff to listen to on acid, only a little of it is so nonmusical as to be tedious when sober. I personally like Moving To Florida, but Rembrandt Pussyhorse is the least song-like album, only 3 songs of which could be lifted and put on a Butthole Surfers compilation ROCK album: Creep In The Cellar, Too Parter and Tornadoes. The rest is watery acid lunacy.

Now, you take Brown Reason To Live. Every song is a masterpiece! 7 songs of something never heard before, exploring all kinds of sonic territory. I bet many have still never heard this album, as it's only available on LP from Alternative Tentacles.

Psychic, Powerless... Another Man's Sac is also full of tuneful experimental rock and very much like Deliverance ("pass me some o' dat dumbass ovah dere, hey boy"). Every song's a winner. Classic.

Some people like Locust Abortion Technician for it's amazing sonics, which sound great when high. It's actually Paul Leary's favorite album. But, most agree there's only two real "songs" on there, Human Canonball and Woly Boly. Personally, I think the two versions of Graveyard are great, tuneful songs and I like 22 going on 23. The guitar harmony is beautiful and uplifting after this Swans-like decent into oppressive bludgeoning and pitiful voiceovers.

Skipping over to Hairway to Steven, we have one very long intro track which most fans absolutely love called "Jimi", but might turn off those who are fond of 3-5 minute songs. In that case, we have the entire rest of the CD, with some of the best songs they ever recorded: Strawberry, Fast, Julio Iglesias, I Saw An X-Ray of A Girl Passing Gas, John E. Smoke and one other whose name escapes me.

The Pioughd album was a joke on their record company Rough Trade and the band's least favorite album. Besides 3 versions of Lonesome Bulldog, the album has a ton of great 3-5 minute fairly normal songs, with the exception of Blindman, which is similar to the first 20 minute long acid casualty of a song (Jimi) on Hairway to Steven and features the great lines: "I AM IRON MAN!" to which a chipmunk voice replies, "No, I'M Iron Man, you ALWAYS get to be Iron Man" and argument ensues as the music seems to get twirled up in a blender. Eventually, the chipmunk voice returns to scream, "Crazy, crazy fucking world, ha ha ha, crazy god damn world, ha ha ha!" The truly saving grace of this album is the first ever studio version of PSY, which is just one of the coolest songs ever written, has a nice melody and progression and turns from an instrumental jam to a fast rocker. It sounds pointless enough, but if you listen, it's about Nikki's antisocial tendencies, how she gets mixed up in the KKK and somehow it ends with the lines "Well, I'm still sleeping in the graveyard, I'm sleepin', I guess you don't believe me but you really should believe it, she fell in love with Lauren Becaul", so Nikki ran away, joined the KKK and fell in love with Lauren Becaul and the narrator is, by the way, still fascinated with graveyards (ever since Locust Abortion Technician, apparantly). The great thing about the Butthole Surfers is the continuity of themes: movie stars are frequently mentioned, as well as certain phrases, references to the graveyard, lots of odd returns of subject matter, fucking your family members, etc. On this Pioughd album is also a remake of Something, which was on the first Brown Reason To Live album, but in an entirely different form.

People really caught onto Independent Worm Saloon, but to me it's just a slightly warped very 90's-sounding Monsters of Rockish classic rock album. I don't like it. Lots of short rock songs, though.

ElectricLarryLand was much better, less ear-piercing, mellow rock. This was when everyone started claiming they ripped off Beck. Lots of fun songs on this album.

Weird Revolution is fairly boring, but ok for a play here or there. Two really good, fun songs. Very radio-friendly. Is that so bad?

As for Big Black, I'm fairly certain they put out at least 3 albums, didn't they? Songs About Fucking, Atomizer and The Hammer Party?? Poor Man's Eight Track was a compilation, correct? Songs About Fucking was great and Atomizer was pretty great, especially Kerosene, which is nuts. By Hammer Party, we realize what we partially realized on each of the first two albums, Big Black is a one-trick pony. All the songs sound the same. I don't think they could have made a decent fourth album if they tried. They'd pretty well mined the sound with their first album and Atomizer was just a continuation. In the end, I guess you have to decide whether you prefer industrial sounds to organic sounds, as Big Black is mostly mechanical slams and Butthole Surfers are mostly intestinal gurgles, but Butthole Surfers definitely offered more incarnations of themselves over their first 3 releases. Also, Big Black only conveyed 2 emotions: menacing and psychotic. Butthole Surfers added a few more: menacing, psychotic, goofy, empassioned, love and most importantly, fun.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black made at least 4 albs, if you include the two live ones...

I always liked the Butthole Surfers' alb titles more than their actual recs (which never sounded quite as far-out superpsych mindblowing freak out as I was led to believe)- 'Locust Abortion Technician', 'Rembrandt Pussyhorse', 'Hairway to Steven' - genius!

I expect the Buttholes put on a 'good show' - never saw 'em. Did see Big Black at the Hammersmith Clarendon, on a bill w/ World Domination Enterprises and Head of David. Ahh, those were the days blah blah

Andrew L, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black. Yeah, the music's horribly dated, but at least they never sued Corey Rusk.

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Ah, but Corey deserved to be sued, didn't he? I mean, he lost, didn't he? personally, I think the Buttholes should be making money off their classic albums and Corey wasn't paying them shit. Also, nowhere was there an official agreement that Touch N' Go owns these recordings for eternity.

Nude spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

feels kind of like the same argument as Kraftwerk vs Devo only with Big Black in the sleek, focussed, cool Kraftwerk role and Buttholes in the geeky, ugly, embarassing Devo role.

fritz, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

which is funny because Big Black were pretty geeky and embarrassing themselves.

fritz, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black. This would be a lot harder to call if Hairway... was the Buttholes' final album. As it stands, Big Black did not release anything that could be considered weak, but you can't say the same for the Buttholes, glorious though the earlier material may have been.

Sean Carruthers, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Big Black technically made two studio LPs. The Hammer Party originally combined the Lungs and Bulldozer EPs; when Touch & Go reissued it, they added the Racer X EP. The Rich Man's Eight Track Tape combines the Atomizer LP with the Headache EP and also includes the "Heartbeat" 7". Songs About Fucking was the second and final studio LP. Pigpile was a live record released well after they split.

I hope to contribute something later about the Rusk fiasco.

Andy K, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

jeez reading the above youd've thought the question was hank marvin's guitar solo's versus dungeons & dragons gaming. v. aspergers' style responses. big black had weak releases so did the buttholes. buttholes good stuff for me stands up to the test of time better than the good big black stuff. maybe cos it doesnae sound like gary numan playing stranglers tunes badly while trying his hardest bless his cotton socks to piss people off songs about fucking indeed stop it you'll make us blush and of course albini was a truck driver and not an artsy journalism student. at least the buttholes was honest upfront dumbass bad jokes for thick stoners even if they have peetered out into an embarrassing post rehab lobotomy pointlessness, whereas albini is just rehashing his second guessing antagonist persona with a slightly better band. obviously our memories of both bands serve us better than the facts. "negro observer" versus "i live in a hole" i mean who'd bother responding to that post?

bob snoom, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

BIG BLACK. sorry.

Butthole Surfers, while their early albums are beauty, I saw a part of them on the LATE LATE SHOW, and it was very very embarrassing. Plus, h-stencil is right, they DID sue Corey Rusk.

Gage-o, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

The Late Late Show, by the way, not that you'll care, was very definitely a shitty performance due to a horrible soundman/monitors/soundboard. Gibby quickly dissed them, stating, "we must have made someone mad there and I think he even called Greg Kineer (is that right?) an "asshole".

I saw them a few weeks before in NYC with Kid606 opening up for them and let me tell you, it wasn't embarrassing. Sounded perfect as usual, just like old times. But, I am defending them too much. I should stop replying to this thread. And so, I will.

nude spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's good to know that the Surfers are still good live, because that last album really stunk up the place something fierce. As someone pointed out to me recently, they used to actively "freak out the normal man". Now they just talk about it. Over refried commercial beats, no less.

Sean Carruthers, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Well, I will not lie to you, Sean... they SOUND good live, but Gibby is no wild man anymore. Now Paul is the highlight of the show with his happy smiles, weird expressions and spaztic maneuvers. Not to mention he still sings The Shah!... woops, I'm replying again... They are older now. I wouldn't really like it if they tried to be all young and crazy like Stephen Tyler and Mick Jagger do. Gibby looks like he should: a wasted, fat mess.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Interesting battle royale here. I'd have to say they both do the business, but this again reminds me of the Smiths vs. REM conundrum -- band that long ago broke up vs. one still trundling along.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Ah, but Corey deserved to be sued, didn't he? I mean, he lost, didn't he? personally, I think the Buttholes should be making money off their classic albums and Corey wasn't paying them shit. Also, nowhere was there an official agreement that Touch N' Go owns these recordings for eternity.

Deserved to be sued? I don't think so. I think a settlement could've been reached if the Buttholes had been interested in one, instead of punishing Corey for making sure their records were in print. Secondly, their actions put the business practices of a lot of small labels (most of whom can't afford full-time lawyers) in jeopardy. I'm all for artists retaining the rights of their work, but in the case of the Buttholes v. Rusk, I don't see how in any way that Corey was harming them. If anything, most artists who released stuff on Touch n' Go got a much better royalty rate (50%) than they'd ever get from a major for a new record, much less their back catalog. Corey wasn't paying them shit because they weren't selling their back catalog for shit. Yes, they should've renegotiated with Corey; yes, he shouldn't own the rights to their albums for eternity? But sue him and fuck over royally the only guy who, for a long spell, would put out your records? Fuck that.

I'd post a link to the excellent Chicago Reader article by Josh Goldfein about this whole mess for you, but those fuckers recently instituted a pay archive (despite Michael Miner's many columns deriding the Trib for having a pay archive policy).

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Well, of course from the indie fanboy point of view, everyone sides with Touch N' Go. When you've been screwed over by the industry (Capitol), wasting away your time and money with little to show for it, it's suddenly becomes important to have control over your famous works. As the case goes, Touch N' Go wasn't willing to make a deal, actually, despite the fact that the Buttholes hadn't seen much money, if any, in years from TNG and despite the fact that the Butts back catalog was keeping TNG afloat in years past while the Butts lived on a budget of $5 a week at times. There's two sides to every story. I don't believe a handshake entitles TNG to full ownership. TNG could have decided to sell Creep In The Cellar to Budweiser for a commercial if they wanted based on this nonspecific verbal agreement.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Your indie-fanboy comment is a bit pedantic. I'm not a big fan of most of the music released by Touch n' Go over the years, but I do respect Corey and other people I've met from the label because of what they have done for their artists.

Secondly, Touch n' Go theoretically could've sold a song to Budweiser, but would they? No. Be realistic.

And I doubt that Corey was making "tons of money" while the poor little Buttholes got nothing. The deal was fifty-fifty. Okay, so there were 4 guys in the band, but hey, Touch n' Go has (had?) 17 employees.

"If you go for a walk in the park and it's a beautiful sunny day but four guys jump out of a bush and beat you to the ground and take your money, that doesn't mean you shouldn't go in the park. It means you got robbed."

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Aw fuck, that link to Goldfein's article didn't work.

Here's the URL:

http://www.independentsounds.net/music/features/reading/indierock.htm

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

You're url didn't work, but I've read that before. If memory serves, most articles I found on the net were pretty one-sided. According to the case, the Buttholes were not receiving 50% and there's the first rub.

Based on the way King Coffey ran trance, I'd say they Butts are good guys and know the difference between "fair" and "corporate weasel". I believe TNG was seen to be a little corporate weasel.

nude spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's Cronenberg all the way. Craven is a hack.

Sean, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Alright, from your link, this says it all:

"Rusk says now that he may have been too stubborn: "I suppose maybe I should have picked up the phone and called them. I have to admit I was insulted I was getting these calls from their manager." "Corey has a point," says Coffey. "He said, 'I didn't make a deal with the manager. I made a deal with the band. Why should I be discussing this with anyone other than Gibby?' But we pay our manager 15 percent of our income, and he has to earn his keep. Corey can't ignore him just because he doesn't like him. Corey didn't make it clear until well into the lawsuit that [he hadn't called back] because he wanted to talk to Gibby directly. We had to take it to court to force the issue because otherwise nothing would happen."

The legal battle started officially in December 1995 when the Buttholes sent Rusk a letter demanding that their share of the net profit be increased to 80 percent. When Rusk refused their proposal in writing, they sent him another letter demanding that he stop selling their records and give back the master tapes. When Rusk again refused, the Buttholes sued him and Touch and Go for copyright infringement, replevin (legalese for "return of property"), and invasion of privacy.

In January 1998, U.S. District Court Judge David H. Coar found in the Buttholes' favor on the first two counts, and in February he ordered Rusk to pay the Buttholes $100,000, to stop making and selling their merchandise, to return the master tapes, and to destroy his inventory of Buttholes records. Rusk smashed their merchandise in the back of a garbage truck, documenting the destruction on video, then filed the appeal that was decided on March 26. "One of the most painful moments of my life was going to [my] deposition," says Coffey. "It tore me up to see my name attached to a lawsuit against a friend. I've lost friends in this process, I had to witness my friends turn against each other, and there wasn't much I could do about it because everyone on both sides felt so strongly that they were right. "

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

According to the case, the Buttholes were not receiving 50% and there's the first rub.

I've never read anything that claimed that, even in less "biased" reports of the case's outcome in the mainstream Chicago media. If a former accountant and a former finance major can't figure out a way to live on more than $5 a day, then I'm not really sorry for them. I seem to remember an old article in Spin about the Surfers owning a large ranch house in Texas while still recording for Touch n' Go, so I don't believe they were ever that broke (at least, compared to any other punk rock bands that sold the amount they did).

Based on the way King Coffey ran trance, I'd say they Butts are good guys and know the difference between "fair" and "corporate weasel". I believe TNG was seen to be a little corporate weasel.

Well, what I believe is based on my experience on doing booking deals with Touch n' Go artists and working with the label's reps, and I've never heard anyone bemoan their deal, or Corey for that matter. Everyone I've ever known to record for Touch n' Go received a fifty- fifty split on net profits, which worked very well for most of the bands I worked with. Even people I know who quit working at Touch n' Go have enormous respect and esteem for Corey and the operation he runs (or used to run, I think his involvement has been severely curtailed since his motorcycle accident). So, if it comes down to people I know and trust and haven't screwed me in deals or Paul Leary (whom I've never met) talking shit in magazine articles, I know who I'd believe first.

Although I s'pose anyone willing to pay money to see the Butthole Surfers in 2001 deserves to be completely gullible.

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Well, it really doesn't matter. They won. As far as a ranch house in the middle of nowhere in Texas is concerned: it's cheap. TNG was basically a promo department for them. They didn't buy their equipment or pay for recording budgets or much else besides press a few thousand units at a time. That's why they lived on $5 a week. The Butts really made themselves, as is obvious if you trace their label affiliations. 50% is a lot of dough for pressing some units.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

TNG was basically a promo department for them. They didn't buy their equipment or pay for recording budgets or much else besides press a few thousand units at a time. That's why they lived on $5 a week. The Butts really made themselves, as is obvious if you trace their label affiliations. 50% is a lot of dough for pressing some units.

If you really think Touch n' Go does nothing for its artists besides pressing records, and has no costs other than manufacturing, then you don't know much about how their business (or any other record label, large or small) is run. Hey, if the "Butts really made themselves," they could've released their own records and kept all the profits, but I don't think they could have ever sold as many records as they did that way.

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

They did promo stuff for THIS band, mr. holier-than-thou. The Buttholes did a great deal of their own promo from the beginning. They even wrote it into their song about being a butthole surfer: "... it's about PR, it's about doing promotional work, it's about licking the shit off the floors..."

One thing you forget about them is the fact that they toured straight for about 15 years and lived wherever. It's pretty hard to press records and send samples to college rock stations.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

One thing you forget about them is the fact that they toured straight for about 15 years and lived wherever. It's pretty hard to press records and send samples to college rock stations.

I didn't forget about that just because I didn't mention it. Give me a break.

Look, I'd love to debate this with you all day, but it's not getting anywhere, and since you're obviously a "fan," I'm not sure what the point is. In parting, though, if you think Corey is some sort of millionaire living off artists and that the Buttholes have always been starving, well then there's a bridge in Brooklyn I'd like to sell you. I agree that they should've been able to renegotiate their contract, and that Corey should've been more flexible (he'd probably agree, in retrospect, too), but other than that, the Buttholes are, literally, buttholes for screwing over someone who did everything in his power to champion their music.

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

BTW, Latino Buggerveil manages quite well and the Butts are currently experiencing such a high volume of traffic for their mp3 files (with 22K hits and over 15 GB of data transferred this month and it's only 1/17) that they are looking for a new place to store the files, rather than pay $1,000/per month. This interest wasn't generated by TNG, but simply the release of Weird Revolution, a fairly underpromoted and ill-received piece of work. If you think about it, they haven't had good luck with any label, really: Alternative Tentacles, Rough Trade, Capitol. Their constant touring and live show is what generated the most interest by word of mouth.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

...I realize it's the 23rd, that quote was taken from their site, which was posted on the 17th...

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Based on the way King Coffey ran trance, I'd say they (sic) Butts are good guys and know the difference between "fair" and "corporate weasel". I believe TNG was seen to be a little corporate weasel.

That's funny considering Touch and Go manufactured and distributed (and continues to maintain long after King Coffey ditched it) Trance Syndicate Records. King said he didn't have the money to do the label by himself, and T&G helped him out tremendously. Which would make him (and Craig Stewart) little more than glorified A&R guys.

Anyway, to the question at hand, Big Black remains my answer.

Vic Funk, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's not that funny considering being "fair" has nothing to do with having enough money to run a label.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Butthole Surfers. I have no opinion on all the politics.

I dig both bands quite a bit, though. I haven't really followed the Butthole Surfers recent music, but I'm from Texas, they're from Texas, their best stuff sounds like Texas, and I like Texas music. So there. Locust Abortion... is the one I like most.

Oliver, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

For an alternate look at the TNG "fiasco", look here, where this is taken from:

"[Touch & Go] were taking the stance that they had perpetual rights to these records," explains Coffey. "They wouldn't even entertain the notion of changing the royalty splits. We never agreed to this deal."

Touch & Go founder Corey Rusk's stance was that the band understood from their original oral agreement that what kept the company alive was the continued income from its back catalog, and for a time there were kneejerk reactions insisting that a victory for the Butts would usher in the death of the indie record industry. Haynes says the quote that hurt him most was one in the Chicago Reader by Fugazi frontman Ian MacKaye claiming that the whole lawsuit was about greed.

"I'd be willing to agree with that," says Haynes, "but whose greed is he talking about? Our greed or Corey Rusk's? What he didn't realize is that we sued Corey because he stopped paying us! He stopped paying us money for our records he'd been selling! We had no choice. It was sort of about greed, but ... intelligence, too, you know?"

The band won the lawsuit in the end and re-released the albums themselves -- Coffey having gotten plenty of relevant experience as founder of Touch & Go-distributed Trance Syndicate -- but found little to rejoice about, particularly after seeing not only the bad press, but also the number of peers that turned on them in print.

Seems to me, TNG should have been nicer to the band that brought 'em so much $$ with their own records as well as a share of all those wonderful Trance Syndicate bands.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It also doesn't follow logically for them to risk their reputations, partnerships, friendships and all else if they WERE being paid 50%, which is A LOT, especially after being financially DRAINED by Capitol.

The fact that they HADN'T been paid 50% for several years was why they wanted 80% and the reason Touch N' Go was fined $100,000 and forced to destroy their remaining copies; they couldn't PROVE they'd paid them.

But, it's obvious you're a fan of Corey Rusk's, so what's the point... ;-)

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Disclaimer: I don't know Corey personally, never was a fan of the Necros, again I just know what I know about him through what I've heard about how he has treated other artists on the label, the current and former employees of the label, and people from other labels who have worked with him.

From what I understand, the lawsuit was not about whether Corey paid them or not, because if it was, the Buttholes could certainly have made claim to more than $100,000 in damages. (Assuming that just one of the Buttholes Touch n' Go-released albums sold 50,000 units, and that the net profit on each record sold was $5 [okay, that's a bit high maybe], that's still a total of $250,000 in profit to split two- ways.) The lawsuit was about the Buttholes retaining the rights to their recordings, because Corey wouldn't agree to an absurd 80% royalty rate (which I doubt they're getting now).

I don't believe for a second Gibby's claim that they were never paid by Touch n' Go, but my distrust of his claim is based solely on the many positive statements I've heard from, again, other artists, current and former employees, and other label people plus my own positive dealings with the Touch n' Go staff.

hstencil, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's not that they never got paid, it's that they payments became more and more sporadic until they eventually realized they just hadn't been getting paid for some time, as if their recent success meant they didn't need to get paid properly/on time/whatever. Take into account the distribution deal with Trance and the Buttholes' 2 year battle with Capitol and you see why it became a bit hard to stay on top of the whole thing.

As far as 80% goes, it does sound outrageous. That's why they wouldn't ask for it without a reason. Corey admits he was too stubborn. The court found fault with his business dealings. Justice prevailed. They remastered the TNG albums and have been releasing them under their own label, Latino Bugger Veil, which I'm sure they'd rather not bother doing. Why do all the extra work and deal with your own overhead for albums that most people interested already bought years ago, especially when you're recording new material and touring again for a different label? If they were interested in making a huge profit with self-released material, they could have done so with Weird Revolution and the album they are currently recording. They could charge money for the 3 dozen or so mp3s they offer for free on their site (and at 22,000 downloads the first half of this month, I'd say they could make some money). As it stands, they've decided to release a rarities disc and their first two LPs as Latino Bugger Veil releases later this year, not to make a killing financially, just to make their fans happy who've been w/o new music for 5 years and have never been able to get the first 2 eps on cd format. This lawsuit was pretty cut and dried. It's not the OJ trial. Corey just thought he could get his way. He's so pissed at BHS, I'm sure he would sue them for slander/defamation if he had been found to been paying the 50%. The Butts have held to the same story from day one.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's not that funny considering being "fair" has nothing to do with having enough money to run a label.

Seems to me, TNG should have been nicer to the band that brought 'em so much $$ with their own records as well as a share of all those wonderful Trance Syndicate bands.

Let's see... the Butthole Surfers left T&G years earlier to Rough Trade, so despite not really having anything to gain from it, Corey Rusk agreed to help out someone by fronting tons of cash to help out his little vanity label, and do all the important stuff (make, market, distribute). That seems like a fair guy to me.

You seem to think that the BH Surfers brought aboot Slint, Big Black/Shellac, the Jesus Lizard, Girls Against Boys type money, which they may have, but I doubt. And I'm sure putting out John Boy albums (and other such wonderful Trance Syndicate bands) didn't really bring in the cash.

It also doesn't follow logically for them to risk their reputations, partnerships, friendships and all else if they WERE being paid 50%, which is A LOT, especially after being financially DRAINED by Capitol.

Why would the band be "drained" by Capitol? They sold over 600 000 copies of Electriclarryland, which is probably more than they had sold of their T&G albums combined. Plus licensing their songs to Nintendo commercials should've put money in their pocket. Plus royalties from "Pepper" (and even "Jesus Built My Hotrod"). As hstencil said, for a former accountant and a finance major, they really seem to not be very good with money.

But, it's obvious you're a fan of Corey Rusk's, so what's the point... ;-)

I'm no fan of his (I don't know him), and I probably own less than 10 LPs/CDs on Touch & Go. And I agree he shouldn't own their albums forever just because years prior they verbally worked out a deal. But the way they went aboot it is ridiculous. The band lost its hardcore audience (save you), become an alt-rock one hit wonder, and decided that because they couldn't sue Capitol, they'd go after the albums that actually meant something to people (why else would they ignore the Alt. Tent. releases?). If they weren't getting paid, that's not right, but I can't imagine they're selling more albums with their own label than having the albums on Touch & Go.

Another question to ask: Why don't all the bands/labels that got fucked over by the Surfers bankrupting Rough Trade in 1991 sue the Butthole Surfers for royalties and the like that they never saw?

Vic Funk, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

The Buttholes bankrupted Rough Trade? I'd like to hear more about this story.

electric sound of jim, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Correction: they did sue Capitol. The lawsuit lasted 2 years during which time Capitol did their best to "grind this band into the ground", as Paul put it. Capitol didn't want to release them, promote them or let anyone else have them (that would be competition). So, what little money they did make from "Pepper" (anyone knows one hit single split between 3 guys, a producer and a big label with a big promo department isn't much) was spent on lawyer's fees. Also, as Paul points out, "everyone loves music, but when it comes to the band, nobody wants to pay". They didn't sue Alternative Tentacles because there hasn't been a problem there. They are releasing the AT eps this year as one cd. As for Rough Trade, from the Buttholes' perspective, they weren't happy with their deal from the beginning and released a stinker album to make a point. Rough Trade says this about their decline: (from http://www.furious.com/perfect/rt.html)

PSF: What happened to the American branches of Rough Trade in New York and California?
GEOFF: We had Rough Trade in California and the shop is still flourishing and thriving. In 1989, Rough Trade had grown so much but I wasn't working with the distribution part of it anymore. A lot of professional, middle-management type people were coming into the company. They were supposed to be bringing in this professional business culture. They ruined Rough Trade basically. They made some very bad errors. They were unlucky in that a company that owed them a lot of money went bankrupt also. So the distribution company went bankrupt and that brought down the rest of the group. We had a good history in America though. We were making good progress. We had Mazzy Star, Galaxie 500, Lucinda Williams. I thought it was good to have medium sized independents there- it's really ripe for it.

No mention of Buttholes.

Nude Spock, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Interrupting the financial dealings -- is the limited edition live album from 1988 finally back in print again?

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

No, Ned, they've been giving it away for free going on 8 years now on their website, along with 2 other bootlegs. Go download it quick before they take it down. The traffic picked up ridiculously on their servers recently and unless they find a place to put them for free, they'll probably take them down. I am assuming you're talking about the Double Live bootleg, right? If you miss the boat, I bought it on cassette back in the "day" and would be happy to dub it for you. It is one of those moments in history that make them stand out as something extremely unique. Before I saw them live, this release made me fantasize about what they must be like. Mysterious.... "and I walked on down the hall... and I came to the room where my sister was and I stuck my forefinger into her vagina proper and inserted my thumb into her anus cavity and I walked on down the hall... and I came to the room where my mother was and I noticed that he had/she had shaved her pussy just for the occasion and I walked on down the hall... and I came to the room where my father wuzzzzz... and he looked down into my green eyes and he said to me, 'son.... SATAN! SATAN! SATAN!"

Nude Spocl, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Eight years? Boy, they kept that quiet. Anyway, I just get some 'forbidden to access' BS when I visit the webpage, so oh well, maybe it's already down.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Fuckin' shit. email me at heybuddy@hotmail.com (the secret's out) with your address. I can't convert it to digital, but you'll have 6 more songs than the vinyl version, at least!

Nude Spock, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Well, someone out there must have the 2CD version, which has the same bonus tracks as the cassette presumably?

Brian MacDonald, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Yeah, someone must. Anyone? Point of departure for BHS and fans: cds.

Nude spock, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Baaah, typical. Nude Spock spills the beans on a a great double bootleg, so I'm getting all excited and then you get the bastard "No permission" message. :(

Omar, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Seeing as how I'm convinced the only reason The Butthole Surfers are in "Our Band Could Be Your Life" is because Jello Biafra, fuckhead this he is, refused to discuss the legacy of the Dead Kennedys so that he can use it in his own literary cash out...

Big Black. And Songs About Fucking is a better album cover than anything horrible ever concieved by BHS.

JM, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

From the butthole forum about the mp3s/forbidden message

King 

Drum Machine Operator 

 





149 Posts	Posted - January 24 2002 :  08:49:42 AM     

------------------------------------------------------------------------



quote:

------------------------------------------------------------------------

When I tried to log on this morning a message kept popping up saying you 

are forbidden. Does anyone have an Idea of whats going on?

------------------------------------------------------------------------



I'm not sure, but I think the MP3 traffic caused the ISP that hosts 

buttholesurfers.com to block all traffic to it. Even I can't log in via FTP to 

remove the MP3s. 



The ISP was upset about the heavy volume, but I thought we had until the 

end of the month to find a new home for the MP3s. Hopefully we can get it 

worked out soon.

Many great bootlegs are available on ebay almost every day, including the Double Live on CD or LP. My favorite is probably the Live in CBGBs cd.

Nude Spock, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

one month passes...
Omen Vs Independent trucking, isnt that like Dracula vs Darth vader, Freddy vs Jason shiva vs nemisis

i like them both, at the same time,

Dissing anyone as ardently and self rightiously as you have, makes me wonder what experience you have to prove all options werent explored by the band,for music and enjoyment that continues today,.. this very discussion...

His Sneetanic Majesty, Wednesday, 20 March 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

three years pass...
butthole surfers has to win because of 'hairway to steven'...

doomie x, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 13:43 (twenty years ago)

How did I not weigh in on this?

I love Big Black (as they loved Killing Joke), but my heart belongs to the Butthole Surfers.....who were, simply, much more fun.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:19 (twenty years ago)

Yea, the Butthole surfers are better than pretty much all of Steve Albini's own music.

DAEREST V1CE MAGAZINE!!!!! (ex machina), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:27 (twenty years ago)

I think a lot of that has to do with the fact (?) that Albini at least seems to be an utterly humorless, hateful asshole.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:39 (twenty years ago)

BH Surfers are still kind of bad, though.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:40 (twenty years ago)

Well, the `Surfers were never tight like Big Black (or, for that matter, Shellac). The appeal of Big Black -- at least, to me -- was their blunt intensity and penchant for relentless battery. The Butthole Surfers, meanwhile, while capable of occassionally "rocking out," were an entirely different affair.

Big Black are Robert Duvall in Apocalypse Now where the Butthole Surfers are Dennis Hopper.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:45 (twenty years ago)

...in other words, both kinda damaged and scary, but in two entirely different ways.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:45 (twenty years ago)

But both totally corny and not that great musically, either.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:46 (twenty years ago)

Big Black.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:47 (twenty years ago)

But both totally corny and not that great musically, either.

Well, then, go listen to Steely Dan and have yourself a little muso yawn party.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:47 (twenty years ago)

I don't like Steely Dan.

Metal Urbain >>> Big Black - for example, or ...

Camper Van Beethoven >>> BH Surfers

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:49 (twenty years ago)

I'm honestly not familiar enough with Metal Urbain (they're French, no?) so I can't address that one, but....

Camper Van Beethoven >>> BH Surfers

Well, I mean, they're just so different. I love Camper Van Beethoven (or at least their first album), but they never disturbed me in a way even remotely comparable to the Butthole Surfers. Camper Van Beethoven were smarmy in their humor, whereas the `Surfers were simply flat out scary! (thus way cooler, obviously.)

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:52 (twenty years ago)

Incidentally, when I speak so reverently about the Butthole Surfers, I am decidedly not referring to their work post-Independent Worm Saloon (and even that was especially patchy). I'm speaking about vintage Butthole Surfers ala Locust Abortion Technician and Psychic...Powerless..Another Man's Sack and Creamed Corn from the Socket of Davis, etc. etc.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:54 (twenty years ago)

Big Black. the Butthole Surfers never did it for me other than "Psychic, Powerless...Another Man's Sac", whereas Big Black has a scorching, searing quality to the music that has always hit home, essentially what Alex said about intensity. Sometimes you just want to be pummelled about the head or at least I do.

chris besinger (chris besinger), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:54 (twenty years ago)

Big Black; and Albini is much funnier than the Butthole Surfers.

Leonard Thompson (Grodd), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:55 (twenty years ago)

Metal Urbain, tho essentially inventing the Big Black template, are simply too harsh for me...good for a couple songs, but they don't really have the hooks (for real) that Big Black had (mostly supplied by the bass player and usually lifted from the Stranglers/Killing Joke)...the Big Black catalog is much more diverse than the Metal Urbain one

chris besinger (chris besinger), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:56 (twenty years ago)

2nd and 3rd CVB albums are fairly BH Surfers like, but way more musically accomplished and not as simple-mindedly obnoxious.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:58 (twenty years ago)

I need to hear me some that Metal Urbain stuff.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:58 (twenty years ago)

That Acute comp is great.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:59 (twenty years ago)

2nd and 3rd CVB albums are fairly BH Surfers like, but way more musically accomplished and not as simple-mindedly obnoxious.

I don't think the `Surfers were ever even remotely interested in being musically "accomplished". That just wasn't on the menu.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 16:59 (twenty years ago)

Well, if they were doing something genuinely interesting with being primitivists instead, then maybe it wouldn't have been a liability for them.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:00 (twenty years ago)

Like, say, I don't know, Brainbombs, for instance.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:02 (twenty years ago)

I dunno....I mean looking to the Butthole Surfers for musical chops (though I think I can name less competent bands) seems to miss the point.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:03 (twenty years ago)

The point being that the fact that they did mediocre '80s indie rock was okay because at least they were all scary and shit?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

Again, not really a fair TS, as one band broke up at its prime, which was the very year of the OTHER band's prime (1987)..

If we pretended that this was Big Black vs. Butthole Surfers and it was 1987.. gosh.. I'd have to go with the Buttholes, as their work was just all over the place in all in the wrong positions, which is exactly what changed my approach to, well, approaching rock music.

Big Black always seemed to have a great flavor, but never strayed too far from the flavor.. I think Rapemen and Shellac were certainly progressions, but the releases were more spotty.

The Buttholes were a gross sherbert of sorts, but an interesting one, even if inconsistent. You'd have proto-indie pop songs like "Negro Observer" and then complete vomit-rock dirges like "Comb".

However, Big Black's best song ever, "Kerosene" >>>>> Butthole Surfer's best song ever, "Cherub".

Then again, Big Black never had a guarenteed rib tickler like "Moving To Florida" or "Lady Sniff".

....

But it's not 1987, and since then, Gibby's last greatest moment to date (and also Ministry's) is 1991's "Jesus Build My Hotrod". Albini has been a much greater contributor to music since.. mostly being a great engineer, and a great interviewee... more for the Tape Op studio/recording geek mindset, but hey, that's his thing.

So, in the end -- in spirit -- Big Black wins.

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:24 (twenty years ago)

Well, for a start, I wouldn't have called them "mediocre 80's indie rock". Not sure what I'd call them, honestly, but not that. I seem to remember them as sort've parallel to hardcore (the same friends of mine who listened to Naked Raygun and the Circle Jerks and MDC also loved the Butthole Surfers). Anyone remember the term "pigfuck skronk rock"? Maybe that suits them. Whatever. Moreover, I wouldn't call their early recordings mediocre. I find nothing mediocre about Locust Abortion Technician or Rembrandt Pussyhorse . You may beg to differ. I find pretty much everything Camper Van did after Telephone Free Landslide Victory to be pretty samey and mediocre. It's not bad, but am I supposed to be all wowed because they have a violin player? Big whoop.

And as a live act goes, the Butthole Surfers --- despite Dr.C's cynicism way above -- were amazingly entertaining.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:24 (twenty years ago)

Can the Noise board trade Tim for Alex?

DAEREST V1CE MAGAZINE!!!!! (ex machina), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:29 (twenty years ago)

haha should someone repping for camper van beethoven really be calling anyone out on 'mediocre 80's indie rock'???? ye gods

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:33 (twenty years ago)

"I find pretty much everything Camper Van did after Telephone Free Landslide Victory to be pretty samey and mediocre. It's not bad, but am I supposed to be all wowed because they have a violin player? Big whoop."

Much better songwriting. Much better players all around.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:33 (twenty years ago)

well now we know who's buying all those rhino college rock boxes

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:34 (twenty years ago)

You don't know shit!

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:36 (twenty years ago)

Jay Hinman recently on BH Surfers:

There was a time when this band was the be-all & end-all for many a young parent-hating, drug-taking college student. Their 1980s live shows were absolute carnival freak shows, with absurd props & pranks, horrid medical accident films, crazed light shows, and unholy, droning noise that either sent one on a search for better stimulants or straight out of the room. But the records? Well, as the band themselves admit, it was never really about the records, and listening to them today I have to agree. There are a few screeching slices of low-end croak like “Concubine” or “To Parter” that still stand up, but mostly the Surfers on vinyl come across these days as gimmicky, unfunny and straight-up boring. I remember laughing hard at “The Shah Sleeps In Lee Harvey’s Grave” in the 10th grade – today it sounds like something only Jello Biafra or a 10th grader could still cop to digging. JUKE BOX JURY VERDICT? Line up those old LPs for a ritual unloading on eBay – the Butthole Surfers are GUILTY.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:39 (twenty years ago)

tim what's yr fave connells album?

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:41 (twenty years ago)

Why don't YOU tell me what the connection is between the Connells and CVB? And while you're at it, why don't you tell me about how great the Reverb Motherfuckers were?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:44 (twenty years ago)

what the connection is between the Connells and CVB? - you can be pretty fucking sure they both opened for rem and you can be sure they were both ECSTATIC to score that gig. i don't care what people say, college rock is here to stay!


j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

Locust Abortion Technician still seems to me to be the classic album of its period. Big Black/Albini's bleak determination to be more 4-Real and X-treme than thou got boring very quickly. Never felt the need to own their stuff at the time, no inclination to return to it.

Metal Urbain didn't have hooks or songs? Are we talking about the same band(upthread)? Big part of their appeal for me is that, underneath that ridiculously excessive sound, it's solid pogo-along garage/punk gold. Yes, Alex, you need 'em in your life.

Soukesian, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

Haha "college rock is here to stay" - yeah, like Big Black and the Butthole Surfers, apparently.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:50 (twenty years ago)

Soukesian otm.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:51 (twenty years ago)

alex you should definitely check out metal urbain. tim you should definitely check out 10,000 maniacs.

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:52 (twenty years ago)

I actually quite like parts of that comp of the early, pre-Elektra 10,000 Maniacs records. Ever heard it, fule?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:53 (twenty years ago)

Haha the Minutemen opened for R.E.M., too.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:54 (twenty years ago)

I give it to the Butties. While I do appreciate it, and Albini's contributions to production and "the scene" notwithstanding, I hardly ever listen to Big Black anymore. The Butthole Surfers stuff I break out fairly regularly and it always makes me smile.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 17:58 (twenty years ago)

What's funny to me is how neither of these groups sound remotely "extreme" today - Big Black seems positively dinky with that cute little drum machine puttering along, while even my inner 14-year-old thinks the endless fart joke that is the Butthole Surfers' career is just kinda stupid. Maybe it was scarier in the 80s or something.

That said, "Psychic..." is a good album, but Big Black has better riffs so they win. That drum machine can be pretty cute, too.

And yeah, everyone should check out Metal Urbain.

Zack Richardson (teenagequiet), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 18:11 (twenty years ago)

Everyone should check out early DAF.. particularly Die Kleinen und die Bösen (1980). The first half is freaky no-wavey Wire/Devo-esque, but the second half is a live recording that's just insane. "Die Lustigen Stiefel" will still run anyone screaming from a room today. As will SPK's "Slogun" (available on the Auto Da-fe CD with all the early stuff as bonus tracks.

Both of these German bands were doing stuff in 1979 and 1980 that are far more extreme today than Big Black *and* Butthole Surfers in retrospect.. both bands also are cited with glee by Albini.. and possibly the Butts, I dunno.

DAF's Ein Produkt Der Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft is very proto-Shellac.. the album itself is basically just fragments, but very unique rock fragments of songs for their time.

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 18:52 (twenty years ago)

Am I the only one who senses a strong toungue-in-cheek humor to Big Black? Especially "Kerosene" and "Bad Penny"...

My vote goes for Big Black. Best "bad" guitar tone of all time. Bombastically tinny (If that's possible.)

Haven't had much time for CVB, but I just bought "Key Lime Pie" for next to nothing and am surprised at how much I like it. "When I Win The Lottery" and "The Humid Press of Days" are both great.

John Justen (johnjusten), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 19:08 (twenty years ago)

d00ds be WAY too 'hardcore' w/ the albini love...

don't get me wrong, BB deserves some love, as does the Shellac and Rapeman (ok, well, sorta). but, C'MON!! BHS win w/ 'Sweat Loaf' and 'Human Cannonball' being together on the SAME album. not to mention that album (Locust Abortion Tech.) remains, even almost a decade after i've taken LSD, to be the mind-fuck-album-of-the-century. sober, the album is dense and simply terror inducing. listening to it in the dark of the forrest whilst on drugs shaped mine and more than a few others teen years in shades of bad jokes and truly terrifying sound-imagary!
now, i also hear WHY people don't dig it, either. it's understandable, but, i had this discussion the other day- BHS one of the best bands to see in the 80's, reason- GIBBY+CO. insane pyro shit, mute shaven dancer, affiliation w/ alex winter (a la 'Texas Family BBQ- "YA'LL BI??") and drugs till drugs weren't drugs.
they said yes.
albini never says yes. unless it's telling someone that yes, he's right...
but, for producing the Amps, i will love his little bitter brain.

eedd, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 19:24 (twenty years ago)

Jay Hinman could be talking about any of a number of recent (and not so recent ie 1992-) heralded Bay Area noise/out-acts in that paragraph (and he probably is quite aware of that too).

gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 19:36 (twenty years ago)

Metal Urbain didn't have hooks or songs? Are we talking about the same band(upthread)? Big part of their appeal for me is that, underneath that ridiculously excessive sound, it's solid pogo-along garage/punk gold.

-- Soukesian (byakhee2000nospa...), June 15th, 2005

they have hooks, just not as good or diverse amount as Big Black

chris besinger (chris besinger), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 20:00 (twenty years ago)

Beg to differ: Metal Urbain also have warmth, humour, sex, style, self-parody, dancability . . we're talking Adam & the Ants vs Skrewdriver here. But this is a whole 'nuther thread.

Oh, and Metal Urbain were inspired by Roxy Music. I defy you to spot the Roxy Music influences in Big Black.

Soukesian, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 20:14 (twenty years ago)

Just because they were inspired by Roxy doesn't make them better or worse, just a different influence

and yr comparing Metal Urbain to Adam & the Ants? We must not be talking abhout the same band

chris besinger (chris besinger), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 20:19 (twenty years ago)

Sure: "warmth, humour, sex, style, self-parody, dancability" all conspicuously lacking from Albini's work IMHO. But that's all a matter of opinion.

What I do know is that a Metal Urbain cover of "Young Parisians" is a much more appealing prospect than any possible attempt by Shellac. "Allo!"

Soukesian, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 20:41 (twenty years ago)

Buttholes all the way!

The Buttholes were the bizzaro psychedelia band - they held up some prism and refracted all of the hippie ideal through the strains of Watergate/punk/cocaine/designer drugs - it's the post-burn out hippie dream turned nightmare. It's all the bad shit in your brain caused by drugs magnified orders of magnitude, amplified to unbearable decibels.

Big Black were all nudge-nudge, wink wink. Cool record collection rock. Screw that. I like Steve Albini as a sound engineer, and he gets some cool guitar tones and writes the odd good lyric, but I don't ever necessarily want to listen to him.

Brooker Buckingham (Brooker B), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 20:57 (twenty years ago)

gotta be the buttholes. big black managed two classic albums but the butthole's have three total, total classics - 'psychic powerless...'. 'rembrandt pussy horse' and 'locust abortion technician'. they also have the best in concert video ever with 'blind eye sees all'.

but really, it all comes down to one word and that word is 'cherub'.

as for tim harping on about musical abilities - 1) wtf? and 2) who cares?

stirmonster (stirmonster), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:10 (twenty years ago)

more interesting would be - taking sides : butthole surfers vs. sun city girls.

stirmonster (stirmonster), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:13 (twenty years ago)

Buttholes all the way!

The Buttholes were the bizzaro psychedelia band - they held up some prism and refracted all of the hippie ideal through the strains of Watergate/punk/cocaine/designer drugs - it's the post-burn out hippie dream turned nightmare. It's all the bad shit in your brain caused by drugs magnified orders of magnitude, amplified to unbearable decibels.

Big Black were all nudge-nudge, wink wink. Cool record collection rock. Screw that. I like Steve Albini as a sound engineer, and he gets some cool guitar tones and writes the odd good lyric, but I don't ever necessarily want to listen to him.

-- Brooker Buckingham (brooker...), June 15th, 2005.

very OTM, though i still prefer the way big black sounds.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:32 (twenty years ago)

I just kicked Sun City off the ipod.
Buttholes are probably next.

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:34 (twenty years ago)

I'm kinda surprised this has been so divisive. What other "This Band Could Be Your Life" pairing could we pit against each other?

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:38 (twenty years ago)

husker du vs replacements, obviously.

sonic youth vs mission of burma?

fugazi vs beat happenning...?

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:40 (twenty years ago)

husker du vs. the minutemen?

stirmonster (stirmonster), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:41 (twenty years ago)

Replacements
Sonic Youth
(I don't listen to Beat Happening or Fugazi at all any more, and can't think of many reasons why I would ever want to in the future. both seem too much of their not-all-that-interesting time and place.)

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:42 (twenty years ago)

Black Flag vs. Bad Brains

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:43 (twenty years ago)

O0000W, now if you're gonna go back to HC, that's real fightin' talk! (But, yes, the Brains ROIR tape destroys all)

Soukesian, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:49 (twenty years ago)

Black Dots, dude. Trust me.

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 21:52 (twenty years ago)

OK, Flipper vs. The Germs - have loved the former for twenty years, though the studio albums don't really cut it, and have read screeds about how great the latter were, but have yet to hear a listenable quality recording.

Soukesian, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:00 (twenty years ago)

Big Black.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:03 (twenty years ago)

Wasn't "harping" on musical abilities. Just pointing out that CVB had tons more (and yes, their 2nd and 3rd could be compared to BH Surfers) and it's certainly a part of their appeal.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:15 (twenty years ago)

man, I *really* don't see the similarities between CVB and the Butties, beyond some basic similarities in 60s psych reference points (Pink Floyd, 13th Floor Elevators, etc.) The Butties musical/thematic vocabulary is so much freakier and more scatalogical, intended to shock/disturb/surprise/make you gibber like an idiot. CVB on the whole is much more refined (structured songs! tricky time signatures! vocal harmonies!) and much lighter in tone.

(I love both bands, btw)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:19 (twenty years ago)

Emerson, Lake, & Palmer had more musical abilities than Camper Van Beethoven, in total.

(I'm still wondering why CVB got brought up in this thread.)

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:20 (twenty years ago)

Can I bring up the Jack Rubies, the Judybats, and Guadalcanal Diary?

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:21 (twenty years ago)

(yeah, I don't get CVBs relevance either)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:23 (twenty years ago)

I was trying to think of a band from the period whose aesthetic was somewhat similar to the Buttholes but who were better. I do think the second and third CVB albums are somewhat comparable (and, yes, better).

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:30 (twenty years ago)

I'd offer the Cramps as a closer analogue in terms of aesthetic and shock tactics, but they were a bit earlier.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:35 (twenty years ago)

Maybe a record like Psychedelic Jungle? I can see that. Rembrandt Pussyhorse is totally like a more John Watersian version of the second or third Camper album, though.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:42 (twenty years ago)

yeah that's a good example - "Don't Eat Stuff Off the Sidewalk", "Green Fuzz", the jungle song - that's all pretty *ahem* Buttsian.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:44 (twenty years ago)

(also the Cramps stage show - strobe lights, nudity, breaking stuff, grotesque fashion, etc. is very Buttsian. As are many of Lux's vocal tics - the Echoplex effects, the hiccupy delivery, alternating growls and silly yelps)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:46 (twenty years ago)

This thread inspired me to listen to Songs About Fucking all the way home from work.

That being said... I just heard Locust Abortion Technique for the first time a few months ago, and it totally didn't interest me. Maybe that's the wrong album to start with? I think the only other thing I ever had by them was Electriclarryland in about the 4th Grade. All the talk of LSD and nightmare trips has rekindled my interest.

Big Black by the way. El dopa fixed me, alright?

- (smile), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:49 (twenty years ago)

Best Butts release ever was the Cream Corn From The Socket Of Davis EP.. which can be found on the Rembrandt Pussyhorse issue as a bonus (or the Psychic..Powerless..Another Man's Sac CD, if in Europe.)

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:51 (twenty years ago)

I think you're better off with Scratch Acid comparisons.. or U-Men.

I never remembered CVB having these monstrous gated tom drums... or anything like a song with backwards violins and a sped up voice in a bad english accent talking why "it's oll bein' bouh a buh-hole sehfeh"

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:53 (twenty years ago)

"anything like a song with backwards violins and a sped up voice"

oh, I'm absolutely certain CVB used both of those tricks, tho I'd have to look up particulars...

(Scratch Acid is a good nomination)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 22:56 (twenty years ago)

Reed, Hairway To Steven is the most interesting Butthole Sufers record for noobs because it has plenty of midtempo rockers, a sampling of their sense of humor in John E. Smoke and plenty of weird noise that is not too extreme. The first song is quite long and pretty awesome for LSD. The cover is also awesome for LSD. The other Butthole Albums are too noisey or too poppy for people just getting into them. Like all great bands, they covered a lot of territory and every album showed quite a bit of growth, even if it was often directionless or backwards.

Butthole Master, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:02 (twenty years ago)

So, I'm the only guy who think The Widowermaker EP is tops? "Helicopter" is great!

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:05 (twenty years ago)

So, you reduce it all down to one song? That is a great song, especially on drugs. For me, everything before Independent Worm Saloon is equally great for totally different reasons. Everything after and including are also equally great for different reasons, but if the earlier stuff was A material, the later stuff is B material.

Butthole Master, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:12 (twenty years ago)

Scratch Acid might be a good nomination in terms of lyrics, but their style was very different.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:12 (twenty years ago)

I mean first group is equal with each other. Second group is equal with each other.

Butthole Master, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:13 (twenty years ago)

This debate bemuses me.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:20 (twenty years ago)

I mean, like, the entire revival.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:20 (twenty years ago)

"Alright, we just heard the latest single from the Dharma Bums and coming up is an oldie from House Of Large Sizes, but first, I'm going to turn up the volume, so cover your eyes kids, because this is Big Black with 'L Dopa' here on One-0-College-Point-Rock FM!"

donut e-goo (donut), Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:32 (twenty years ago)

there's a point in the BHS catalog when it does wear a little thin (ie- pghiougd or whatever and incidentally the Widowermaker EP falls into this almost, but not quite) and as was stated, each album DOES cover a lot of ground as far as what's goin on. my perspective on the BHS catalog-
Brown Reason to Live- until 1995, i never heard this. and then on vinyl, and then at the wrong speed. and it still sounded right to me. that speaks volumes about this one. it's enchanting w/ the sax and pseudo-HC vibe.

PCPPEP-it's BRtL, LIVE!!!

Psychic, Powerless- this's the one i listen to the least of em all. not to say that the songs are bad, but for the most part this is almost the tamest of the bunch. to me, at least...except for Cherub.

Rembrandt/Davis- starting to get creepy here and some genuinely strange sounds but man, does this album just scream out to me...lots of great actual songs,too.

Locust Abortion- i can't say enough about this album. it changed my mind about how i should view "music". and scared the shit outta me and my buddies.

Hairway- the peak of the BHS magick. i loves this one as equally as any other, but man does Jimi kick it right into the gutter!!! gotta love it for that, X-Ray of Grrl and Jon E Smoke alone...

Widowermaker EP- starting to lose themselves a bit here. some good tunes, but nothing really eventful.

Pighoued(whatever)- good for a laugh, and for the remake of Something. oh, and PSY. that song's pretty neat...

Independent Worm- good for when it came out and still makes me think o' them days. Who Was In My Room, Wooden, DustDevil,Alcohol all classics.

Whole Truth- why, it's a live buttleg!good stuff...

Larryland- and the end is certainly coming...a few good shots, but it doesn't hold a candle really. strangely, the only BHS w/ a hit...

Weird Revolution- i refuse to buy this, as i have After the Astronaut on disc....crap.

Humpty Dumpty LSD- a fond B-sidey farewell...has some great songs on it just the same.

that's it.

eedd, Wednesday, 15 June 2005 23:55 (twenty years ago)

This debate bemuses me.
-- Ned Raggett (ne...), June 16th, 2005.

Are you being sarcastic?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 16 June 2005 00:03 (twenty years ago)

Not in the slightest!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 16 June 2005 00:07 (twenty years ago)

Cool. : )

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 16 June 2005 00:14 (twenty years ago)

eedd, you forgot DOUBLE LIVE, which might just be the best thing they ever put out! I even liked it before I became familiar with these songs. It was just so alien it fascinated me.

I think you can still download that DOUBLE LIVE in mp3 format from their site somewhere.

Butthole Master, Thursday, 16 June 2005 00:56 (twenty years ago)

http://www.buttholesurfers.com/kathleen.gif

BM, Thursday, 16 June 2005 00:59 (twenty years ago)

Double Live helped me figure out the names of the Hairway To Steven songs except for the last one, which was eventually released anyway ("Fast Song"?)

donut e-goo (donut), Thursday, 16 June 2005 01:21 (twenty years ago)

Big Black by the way. El dopa fixed me, alright?

Then you should jettison the pretender and go right to the throne. "L Dopa" is a thin re-write of "Wardance" by Killing Joke.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 01:33 (twenty years ago)

Haven't had much time for CVB, but I just bought "Key Lime Pie" for next to nothing and am surprised at how much I like it. "When I Win The Lottery" and "The Humid Press of Days" are both great.

The first half of Key Lime Pie is utterly amazing. Don't let anyone tell you anything different. Which doesn't change the fact that Big Black is still the winner over the Buttholes. OK.

Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Thursday, 16 June 2005 01:55 (twenty years ago)

Nuh-uh.

You're Wrong, Thursday, 16 June 2005 02:18 (twenty years ago)

Yuh-huh

No, I'm Right (SeanC), Thursday, 16 June 2005 02:31 (twenty years ago)

You are incorrect, sir.

Wait, hold on, I'm getting something... okay... there it is!, Thursday, 16 June 2005 02:37 (twenty years ago)

The correct answer is Killdozer.

Pete Scholtes, Thursday, 16 June 2005 02:52 (twenty years ago)

Uh, no. Actually, the correct answer is Die Kreuzen.

Brooker Buckingham (Brooker B), Thursday, 16 June 2005 03:30 (twenty years ago)

actually, you morans the correct answer is Badfinger.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 03:32 (twenty years ago)

no wait, its Loverboy.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 03:34 (twenty years ago)

everybody's working for the weekend, and thats when they're out for blood, bitches.

latebloomer: We kissy kiss in the rear view (latebloomer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 03:49 (twenty years ago)

The Moran I knew in high school would vote Foetus.

Pete Scholtes, Thursday, 16 June 2005 05:45 (twenty years ago)

GOD WHO FUCKING CARES STOP EMBRACING THE EIGHTIES

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 16 June 2005 07:49 (twenty years ago)

L DOPA HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH WARDANCE YOU DEAF-ASS MORON.

but seriously jaz should fucking sue james murphy already

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 16 June 2005 07:50 (twenty years ago)

ALSO STIRMONSTER AND SULKY I AM ASHAMED OF YOU SUN CITY GIRLS DESTROY BUTTHOLES ANY FAT FUCKING FAG DAY OF THE WEEK C'MON ROOKOOBAY VS. HAIRWAY TO STEVEN NO FUCKING CONTEST TORCH OF THE MYSTICS VS. ANYTHING JESS HARVELL LIKES EVER, GIVE ME A FUCKING BREAK OR GO AHEAD AND LISTEN TO SHITTY GRIME ALREADY DON'T MAKE ME NOT WANNA GIVE UP ALREADY MORE THAN I ALREADY WANT TO.

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 16 June 2005 07:53 (twenty years ago)

SUN CITY GIRLS DESTROY BUTTHOLES... ROOKOOBAY VS. HAIRWAY

I don't think so, but you've happened upon a fascinating discovery:

http://www.mbajungle.com/images/contentimgs/apple_orange.jpg

ktemplate, Thursday, 16 June 2005 08:55 (twenty years ago)

damn, yr right! i did forget Double Live!!!

how i wish i had an Official copy of that to complete my Latino Buggerveil collection...

Sun City, eh?
i keep hearing the name but nothing i've heard of em makes me wanna hear more.
suggest a good point to start wiff.

eedd, Thursday, 16 June 2005 14:55 (twenty years ago)

L DOPA HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH WARDANCE YOU DEAF-ASS MORON.

Have you ever heard "L Dopa", Stence?

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 15:53 (twenty years ago)

HEY JOEL - YOU BEEN DRINKING???

i totally agree that sun city girls blow the buttholes out the water but there are a few vague similarities and i was hoping to provoke a debate (no takers. plus ca change). while i am here, can i publicly declare my thanks to hstencil for introducing me to scg? they have given me more pleasure than almost anything besides my girlfriend's tongue in the last five years.

OK, NOW I'LL GO BACK TO EMBRACING THE FIFTIES.

stirmonster (stirmonster), Thursday, 16 June 2005 16:07 (twenty years ago)

what this thread needs is MORE DRUNKEN YELLING

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 16 June 2005 16:09 (twenty years ago)

ON ACID!!!

donut e-goo (donut), Thursday, 16 June 2005 17:55 (twenty years ago)

I like Uncle Jim, but SCG don't use enough electronics for daily application.

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 17:58 (twenty years ago)

yes i was drunk. sheesh, i don't even remember writing that.

yes alex, i have heard both "l dopa" and "wardance," i believe we have discussed this before, they do not sound a damn thing alike. unless there's a part of "wardance" where the band stops playing and jaz sardonically sez in a midwestern accent "wardance fix me, all right" and i missed it or something.

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)

I'm talking more about the guitars and pace of the track than the vocals. Seriously, I'm not picking a fight -- just listen to them again back to back.....if you can be bothered (I promise I'm not making it up ---- and Albini is an admitted Joke disciple.)

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:07 (twenty years ago)

the PACE???

j blount (papa la bas), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:09 (twenty years ago)

dude, i have listened to them many times, they are just not alike. as far as "the pace" (i think you mean tempo) "l dopa" is faster, and way more syncopated with stops and starts.

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:23 (twenty years ago)

how i wish i had an Official copy of that to complete my Latino Buggerveil collection...

I have the cassettes, but for some reason I began treating them like shit sort of accidentally and now the covers are all wrinkled. The tapes are still great though. They were high-quality anti-eat cassettes, I guess. I sure am glad they put up the mp3's though.

Butthole Master, Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:24 (twenty years ago)

Wardance feels slower, but there is something obvious that the word "pace" describes perfectly. It's like a push-pull effect that's more of a result of the expression of sounds than it is the tempo onto which the sounds are created.

LDOPA SUCKS, ALRIGHT?, Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:26 (twenty years ago)

I'm too tired to argue about this. Moreover, there is more than one version of "Wardance" (the single version is much stealthier). There is a direct line between them and whether you choose to believe that or not is entirely up to you, Stence. I shan't think less of you if you choose not to.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:46 (twenty years ago)

yes, the pace. If I meant tempo I would have said tempo.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 16 June 2005 18:50 (twenty years ago)

xxppoossttss:
Tying this all in together, "Jesus Built My Hotrod" has the same tempo as L-DOPA and Wardance, but not the same pace.

Butthole Master, Thursday, 16 June 2005 19:18 (twenty years ago)


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