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AN
INTRODUCTION TO THE RESIDENTS
by Ade Furniss

Who are The Residents?
Most informed students of rock history will at least have some
vague awareness of San Francisco-based art collective The Residents.
Since the early 1970’s, images of these mysterious, anonymous
artists in their iconic eyeball-head-with-top-hat-and-tails disguise
have occasionally leaked into the mainstream music press, leaving
an indelible mark on the collective imagination. Many of those
who’ve been sufficiently intrigued to explore The Residents’
musical works over the years have surely found themselves alarmed
and alienated – at least initially - by the squawking theatricality
and psychotic surrealism emanating from records such as Meet
The Residents (1973) and The Third Reich &
Roll (1976). And yet, as abrasive as it can be, with
repeated listening and – crucially - an appreciation of
The Residents’ unique absurdist vision, a significant proportion
of the curious have gone on to develop an overpowering addiction
to the strange, idiosyncratic music created by these shadowy individuals.
In addition to the numerous studio recordings, since 1972, The
Residents have produced a wealth of visual art in the form of
short films / videos; photographic and illustrated imagery; and
even CD-ROMs. The surreal aesthetics – including the beautifully
bizarre album covers - form an essential part of The Residents’
identity and, as such, are an intrinsic part of fully appreciating
their music.
40 years on from the release of Santa Dog, their
debut single, The Residents are currently celebrating this anniversary
by undertaking an extensive tour, proving that uncompromising
cult artists can sustain a lengthy career in music as long as
there remains a devoted fanbase and curious newcomers continue
to be enticed. However, with such a bewilderingly vast discography,
entering the strange universe of The Residents for the first time
can be a daunting prospect. So here are five tried-and-tested
Residential classics to whet the jaded appetite of those ready
to investigate the works produced by a truly unique underground
phenomenon.
MEET
THE RESIDENTS (1974)
There simply was no precedent for The Residents debut album when
it landed on Earth in 1974. Unlike their notional contemporaries
in underground experimental music, The Residents had a predilection
for aggressive weirdosity and childish melody over the much more
measured, aloof approach of the krautrock scene or post-Trout
Beefheart. At this early stage, The Residents wanted to rub your
face in their low-fi avant-garde stew rather than touch you on
some deep intellectual level or seduce you with conventional rock
stylings. In fact, apart from the odd cursory garage punk riff,
the closest that Meet The Residents comes to
conventional rock music is the searing guitar on eternal fan-favourite
Smelly Tongues, and even then it’s
subverted by the sickly weediness of the surrounding instrumentation.
The rest of the record is dominated by piano and brass –
familiar sounds rendered alien by a creepy, hollow non-production
and cheapjack studio effects. Often, the whole enterprise teeters
on the brink of collapse, but there is some beauty here on the
pseudo-classical Rest Aria, even if
several musical missteps ensure that the ramshackle charm remains
intact. Overall, harsh ugliness and grating satire – for
example, the brutally slaughtered Boots
and Nobody But Me, originally by Nancy
Sinatra and Human Beinz respectively - are the order of the day,
making this revolutionary record a challenging option as an entry
point but an essential part of Residential history nevertheless.
FINGERPRINCE
(1977)
Originally conceived as a three-sided record set, Fingerprince
surfaced in the more traditional two-side format in 1977 with
the shunted tracks eventually appearing on the Babyfingers
(1979) EP. An advance on the grubby recording techniques that
made the previous releases so abrasive, the production on Fingerprince
gives much more space to the music, resulting in a relatively
polished, slightly more sombre atmosphere. The writing and performance
also show considerably more discipline, particularly on the frantically
percussive, exotica of Six Things To A Cycle
and You Yesyesyes Again, with its delicate
Spaghetti Western lilt. Elsewhere, there’s the southern-fried
surrealism of Tourniquet Of Roses; an
insanely catchy duet featuring two redneck caricatures salivating
over the prospect of a fried breakfast and “feeling up”
a lover’s leg. While Godsong ruminates
over the somewhat loftier subject of mankind’s love/hate
relationship with his supposed creator, accompanied by sinister
rumbling piano and shrieking brass. A dramatic, thought-provoking
highlight. Coming to the fore on Fingerprince
is British-born guitarist Snakefinger (Philip Lithman) who accentuates
the sense of delirium by adding crazed FX-laden lead guitar to
the proceedings. Until his untimely death in 1987, his blistering
contributions would prove a vital element of The Residents’
sound. If there’s any flaw to be found on Fingerprince,
it’s the occasional lapse into the repetitiveness and deadening
starkness, but it remains a compellingly dark, seminal work, as
well as representing a progressive step in The Residents’
career.
DUCK
STAB / BUSTER & GLEN (1978)
Never ones to take the conventional path, in 1978 The Residents
combined their Duck Stab EP with seven additional
songs (which were originally intended to be released as another
EP entitled Buster & Glen) and unleashed
what subsequently became their most lauded album. Indeed, Duck
Stab / Buster & Glen is often cited as the zenith
of The Residents’ artistic achievements, and with some justification.
There’s a certain concentrated intensity to this music;
an amped-up take on the acerbic but slightly more leisurely delirium
of their previous works, with an even greater emphasis on elaborate
sound textures. So here then are fourteen cartoonish, wildly colourful
tales of twisted Americana; where the gleeful, demented nursery
rhyme tendencies of yore are complemented with a maturing ability
to create dramatic subtlety. If Constantinople
is the sound of acid being thrown into the face of a Muppets’
show-tune,Sinister Exaggerator is a
jet-black character assassination set to a dense soundtrack of
subterranean bass and Snakefinger’s jangling spy-theme guitar.
If Krafty Cheese is shrill, whacked-out
electronica complete with singing plant life, Hello
Skinny is a nervy, minimal mood-piece; a near-whispered
Lynchian sketch describing a scrawny misfit who peddles musical
soundtracks to truck drivers at dusk. Across all of its 14 stories,
Duck Stab / Buster & Glen is richly imaginative
and diverse, retaining the snarky surreal humour but embellishing
the musical accompaniment with new, highly inventive sound manipulations
and evermore exotic instrumentation. If you only hear one album
by The Residents……..
COMMERCIAL
ALBUM (1980)
Following what is still the most radical project of their recording
career, Eskimo (1979) on which the ethnic music
of the Arctic was given a Residential slant, The Residents returned
to the “pop” song format with the Commercial
Album; an imaginary Top 40 chart rundown condensed to
LP length by carving-off the blubber that serves to bulk-out the
average 3 minute pop tune. According to legend, the mandate on
this project was that each song must only feature one verse and
a chorus, and last for one minute. In practice though, there’s
little in the way of anthemic pop choruses and the 60 second rule
proves ripe for the bending. However, the concept remains fascinating,
and the overall effect is mind-scrambling. The rapid-fire onslaught
of different moods and musical styles here should be painful to
endure but, somehow, the entire record works as a cohesive whole.
And some of The Residents’ finest work can be found here;
from the funky, playful Picnic Boy (guest
vocals: Lene Lovich) and the fizzing, parping new wave of Moisture,
to the skin-crawling horror of Die In Terror
and funereal doom of The Coming Of The Crow.
Lyrically, the Commercial Album holds some of
The Residents strongest imagery (the bleak humour of My
Second Wife and the death of romance on The
Act Of Being Polite). There’s also a moving
poignancy here that speaks of the inherent sadness at the heart
of the human condition. On Perfect Love,
the futility of searching for the ideal soul-mate is ingeniously
counterpointed - and consequently emphasised - by its deliriously
wonky synth motif and emotionally blank vocal, whereas Tragic
Bells (an ingenious twist on the Bee Gees’
Tragedy) creates an agonising sense of despair
bereft of any humour whatsoever. Although there was still strong
music to come, The Residents would never again attain the consistency
of this remarkable cornucopia of imagination, incisive wit, and
emotive potency.
GOD
IN THREE PERSONS (1988)
In the early 80’s, advances in music technology meant that
The Residents became increasingly reliant on synthesizers to produce
their art. Given their longstanding penchant for bizarre noise
and experimentation, this was perhaps bound to be the case. Sadly,
over the next two decades, sterile, soulless electronics often
came to overshadow the otherworldly organic sounds born of limited
resources, found on the 1970’s albums. However, 1988’s
God In Three Persons is a striking exception.
Although mostly created by artificial means, there is an imposing,
grandiose depth to the instrumentation here, and a sense of restraint
that serves the overall concept perfectly. As a cautionary tale
of religious fervour and the exploitation, God In Three
Persons pulses with a rancid sexual tension as it explores
the relationship between co-joined twins with miraculous healing
powers and their manager Mr X. As the story gradually unfolds,
the latter, who narrates in southern drawl via a “talking
blues” style, starts to allude to his lust for the female
twin as the tense music subtly signposts the way to an inevitable
explosion of violence. The inherent sleaziness of the narrative
– told in captivating, literate poetry – is a prominent
but ultimately superficial element. The true underlying themes
of hypocrisy, temptation versus conscience, and the balance of
power in human relationships are the profound foundations upon
which the story is built. The recurring musical motifs , mostly
based around keyboard melodies, tend to be simple but meticulously
layered, lending a thrilling cinematic air to the more turbulent
moments. The more quirky tendencies are largely suppressed, although
the riff from the 1966 U.S hit Double Shot (Of My
Baby’s Love) appears as one of the main themes
- adorned with blaring, triumphant brass - reminding us of artists’
long-standing fondness for molesting beloved pop classics. But
how that particular cultural reference fits in with the overall
concept is a mystery among many on this enigmatic, cerebral masterpiece.
FURTHER EXPLORATIONS
The Third Reich & Roll (1976) – Hideously mangled
1960s pop tunes presented as two 20 minute suites. An avant-garde
masterpiece but not for the faint-hearted.
Mark Of The Mole (1981) – The opening chapter
of a concept album trilogy. A compelling drama, permeated by a
palpably dank atmosphere, telling of a subterranean life where
violent conflict is never far away.
The 13th Anniversary Show Live In Japan (1986) –
In-concert reworkings of old favourites, pared down to minimalist
electronica and shot through with some scorching lead guitar from
Snakefinger.
Wormwood (1998) – Where The Residents mercilessly
plunder The Old Testament for its most salacious and brutal stories.
A lysergically-enhanced Godspell.
Demons Dance Alone (2002) – Supposedly a Residential
response to 9/11, this a late classic in their canon. Underscored
with a deep sense of melancholy, this is a moving collection of
relatively accessible songs (though not without its moments of
gleeful surrealism).
Icky Flix (DVD) (2001) - A remarkable, eye-popping compilation
of music videos and short films from the archives. A must for
any connoisseur of subversive, experimental film. A number of
the earlier films are held in the permanent collection at New
York’s Museum Of Modern Art.
BUY
THE RESIDENTS
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