Documentation: The Residents
Aug. 31st, 2008 10:37 pmAs I'm going through the process of recovering the music lost in my external hard drive crash early this month, I realize that I've never actually posted this anywhere.
Back in college, I discovered The Residents, one of the oddest of the odd balls in the avant-garde of American music. My favorite of their musical projects was their early album The Third Reich and Roll (1976), two twenty-minute collages of 1960s pop/rock music reinterpreted in painfully strange ways that demonstrate a deep understanding of exactly what made the music work, by systematically breaking every part of it. Their version of The Rolling Stones's "Satisfaction" is so otherworldly and demonic that Devo's version of it seems almost staid by comparison.
One of the enduring questions of the Residents (besides "Why do they do this?") is, "Who are they?" The actual identities of the members of the band have never been openly admitted. Famously, they perform concerts in face-hiding costumes, including their famous white-tail-and-giant-eyeball uniform which is featured in the video linked above. (My brother was convinced that one of his landlords in San Francisco was a member of the band.) However, there are a lot of clues, which the Wikipedia entry currently summarizes:
Further (the Wikipedia continues), William Poundstone, in Big Secrets (1983), zeroes in on Fox and Flynn and makes a strong, though far from definitive, case. However, I had a valuable piece of additional information.
In the 1990s, when I was working for Crossover Technologies, one of our freelance artists was a very amusing and interesting woman. One of her many interesting and amusing anecdotes was that she had been one of the backup singers on Third Reich and Roll. She said that the Residents she met at the recording sessions were two men, one called "Homer" and the other called simply "H".
So, I'd say Poundstone had it exactly right.
Back in college, I discovered The Residents, one of the oddest of the odd balls in the avant-garde of American music. My favorite of their musical projects was their early album The Third Reich and Roll (1976), two twenty-minute collages of 1960s pop/rock music reinterpreted in painfully strange ways that demonstrate a deep understanding of exactly what made the music work, by systematically breaking every part of it. Their version of The Rolling Stones's "Satisfaction" is so otherworldly and demonic that Devo's version of it seems almost staid by comparison.
One of the enduring questions of the Residents (besides "Why do they do this?") is, "Who are they?" The actual identities of the members of the band have never been openly admitted. Famously, they perform concerts in face-hiding costumes, including their famous white-tail-and-giant-eyeball uniform which is featured in the video linked above. (My brother was convinced that one of his landlords in San Francisco was a member of the band.) However, there are a lot of clues, which the Wikipedia entry currently summarizes:
Much of the speculation about the members' true identities swirls around their management team, known as "The Cryptic Corporation." Cryptic was formed by Jay Clem (Born 1947), Homer Flynn (born April 1945), Hardy W. Fox (born 1945), and John Kennedy in 1976, all of whom denied having been band members. (Clem and Kennedy left the Corporation in 1982.) The Residents themselves don't grant interviews, though Flynn and Fox have conducted interviews with the media. Nolan Cook, who has been working with the band recently, denied in an interview that Fox and Flynn are the Residents, saying that he has come across such rumors, and they are completely false.
Further (the Wikipedia continues), William Poundstone, in Big Secrets (1983), zeroes in on Fox and Flynn and makes a strong, though far from definitive, case. However, I had a valuable piece of additional information.
In the 1990s, when I was working for Crossover Technologies, one of our freelance artists was a very amusing and interesting woman. One of her many interesting and amusing anecdotes was that she had been one of the backup singers on Third Reich and Roll. She said that the Residents she met at the recording sessions were two men, one called "Homer" and the other called simply "H".
So, I'd say Poundstone had it exactly right.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-01 03:43 pm (UTC)(This place (http://tagoo.ru/en/?search=Los+Punkrockers&artist=on) seems to have both cuts, and yes, they're via WFMU. I didn't test the link because I already have the songs.)
no subject
Date: 2008-09-01 04:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-01 05:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-01 06:09 pm (UTC)