Butthole Surfers
Butthole Surfers (1983)
eatdogs
This is the debut EP from the legendary Hardcore
(early)/Noise Rock/Psychedelic band the Butthole Surfers.
Recorded in 1982 and released in 1983 on Alternative
Tentacles, this EP proved that Punk bands could exist from Texas and be totally
weird. Jello Biafra thought so as well when he witnessed the band perform live opening
for Dead Kennedys and T.S.O.L.. He offered to reimburse whatever studio they
picked if they could get time to record something.
The result of those recordings is the introduction to one of
the most brash, crazy, and downright awesome bands of the early Hardcore and
College Rock scene. With nonsensical lyrics that are barely intelligible, lead
vocalist Gibby Haynes and guitarist Paul Leary show off their full force of Art
meets Rock through rancid combustions of sleazy truth and irony and don’t care what
happens as an outcome (*read the story of Daniel Johnston dropping acid and
seeing the band live and losing his mind in the process*). As for the music
itself, it is thrashy, ugly, moody, noisy, and awesome. The Butthole Surfers
were not ones to go for simple song structures. Instead they were experimental
for the sake of their own entertainment and if you happened to have seen them live
in those early days you were perhaps witnessing one of the greatest American
live acts ever (in some people’s opinion of course…).
With eight tracks totaling a time of 18 minutes and 45
seconds, you get a diverse arrangement of “songs” and topics. Tracks like
"The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey's Grave" and "Suicide," appear
to be mockeries and awful attempts on purpose of the Hardcore Punk style that
was rising in popularity at the time in America. In addition, there is the
track "The Revenge of Anus Presley" which seems to parodying Black
Flag and Henry Rollins as well as the songs "Hey" and "Bar-B-Q
Pope," which showed an early version of their more Psychedelic sound they’d
become accustomed to in later years.
There is a bit of controversy over the actual name of the EP
(funny how that is the only thing controversial here…). It was originally released
Self-Titled, but later editions have it called Brown Reason to Live and Pee
Pee the Sailor. If you find it today it’ll most likely have the Brown Reason to Live title since that is
what Alternative Tentacles sells it as. (green reissue out now and limited to
1000 copies!)
So yeah, this is the debut of San Antonio darlings the
Butthole Surfers. An interesting starting place, this will hopefully give you
interest in checking out their more experimental later years that are insanely
terrific and mind bending. Also, look up footage from their older shows, specifically
one that took place at the Danceteria in early 1986 that has become the stuff
of legend.
Dig it…