If this album were attending high school, right now it would be on its way to the principal’s office, about to be expelled for having been caught selling cheap speed to the younger kids at the school gates.
So, from where did it cop its supply? Why, from one Lance Barresi, proprietor of American emporium Permanent Records who, together with Daniel Hall of Riding Easy Records, has undertaken a heroic trawl through the vaults in order to bring the discerning music-buying public this tasty selection of greasy, long-haired cuts with a bad attitude:So, what have you got to say for yourself?
Fuck you, Principal Brown.
The premise is so simple it could almost form the basis of a question in a logical reasoning test:
Question 14 – Complete the next in the sequence:
Garage Punk – Nuggets
Proto-Punk – Punk 45
Heavy Rock – ….. ….
When Spine of God made its victorious entry into the world’s consciousness in 1991, like Pompey arriving home in imperial triumph, suddenly there was concord. Everyone loved Monster Magnet. Who could not? Filthy monolithic guitar riffs, thinly veiled hostility at the straight world, vocal delivery like that of a hopped-up kid about to rip off your car – who could not like this stuff? All three of us could finally stack a bong and know instantly what to put on. Peace reigned in the valley.
All of (these songs) could’ve been huge given the right circumstances. But for one reason or another most of these songs fell flat and were forgotten. However, time has been kind in my opinion and I think these songs are as good now or better than they ever were.
Admirably refusing to bootleg the tracks, Barresi has instead painstakingly tracked down the original participants and encouraging them to license the material officially, thus ensuring that the project, as well as being musically satisfying, is also ethically-sourced. Top man.
So, before Quentin beats you to it, here’s a tip. Buy a copy of Rick Perlstein’s Nixonland – his chilling, masterful overview of the turbulent years of ’60s and ’70s America from Barry Goldwater’s rise to Tricky Dick’s downfall – open the pages, have a large chillum and stick on Brown Acid, in mono, on a wood-effect-finish music centre. Now that’s the kind of history lesson we can all relate to…
-David Solomons-
i The names have been changed to protect the guilty.
ii Zebra! Punch? Tour! Christ, they were really never destined to succeed with ill thought-through monikers like that.