Wednesday, June 29, 2005

 

Colosseum

Shockabilly
Shimmy Disc



Shockabilly Ghost, the reissue of Earth vs and Colosseum


Contemporaneous detractors aside, Shockabilly were one of the great unsung heroes of the ugly, atonal eighties. They beat the Butthole Surfers to the windowpane acid spiked punch bowl and could out-goon the Cramps on any day.
And actually, most critics of the band seemed to center on guitar molester Eugene Chadbourne's Muppet-on-DMT vocal stylizations, which is understandable and difficult to defend.
But in today's musical pantheon, he doesn't sound all that out of place, say next to Les Claypool, nor do they sound as hickoid-on-bathtub crank as, say a Bob Log III.

My favorite Shockabilly record, hands down, is Colosseum, their second full length album.
Here they've edged away from country and rockabilly (save a hilarious take on Roger Miller's Dang Me) and move straight into psychedelic rock and retardo sludge.
The semi-autobiographical The Secret of the Cooler is one of the most beautiful ugly songs I've ever heard. The album also features more original songs by both Chadbourne and Kramer than on their debut EP and subsequent album. A Chadbourne original, Hattisburg Miss. is one of the straightest things this trio has ever committed to vinyl. Eugene really cuts loose on a version of the Byrd's Eight Miles High with a fat, overdriven solo that at times sounds like Robert Fripp channeling the late, great Sonny Sharrock.
Sadly, Eugene Chadbourne claims Shockabilly was one of his least favorite projects and Kramer has apparently desecrated the mixes on subsequent reissues of the Shockabilly catalog.
Find the original vinyl (on Rough Trade) if you can.

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