142 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
142 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Title: Burroughs releases bizarre new album
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Date: 09/28/93
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By T. Carter Scholl
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Lantern arts writer
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There is something disturbing about an album by a 79-year-old
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man with a parental advisory label on the cover.
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"Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales" is the second collaboration
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between multi-media artist William S. Burroughs and producer
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Hal Willner.
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For this album, Willner calls in Michael Franti and Rono Tse,
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better known as The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy, to provide
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the music. It is a well-suited match, as both Burroughs and The
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Disposable Heroes have produced works of sarcastic social commentary.
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Burroughs is best known as an author. In this medium, he was
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an early influence on Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsburg, who became
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leading beat poets in the 1960s. Burroughs' writings include
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the 1953 "Junky" and "Naked Lunch," which was written in 1959
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and made into a movie in 1991 by David Cronenberg; "Cities of
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The Red Night" written in 1981; and "The Cat Inside," his most
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recent work was written in 1992.
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Burroughs, a 1936 graduate from Harvard, is also an acclaimed
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painter. "Seven Deadly Sins," which was published in 1992, is
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his newest book of prints.
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In recent years, Burroughs has entered into the field of acting
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with appearances in the films "Heavy Petting," "Twister" and
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"Drugstore Cowboy."
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While "Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales" is the product of Burroughs'
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writings, it is also Willner's baby.
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"I was interested in making a record like the ones I listened
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to in the '60s, where one style flowed into the next, and one
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on which you'd hear every genre of music on the same disc," Willner
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said.
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The most impressive characteristic of "Spare Ass Annie and Other
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Tales" is how well the music and Burroughs' stories fit together.
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While the hip-hop of The Disposable Heroes is the underlying
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musical theme throughout the album, many different periods in
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musical history are touched upon.
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The album begins with one of four short interludes. While Burroughs
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warns of the danger of wrinkled earlobes, the background sounds
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like the engine room of the Starship Enterprise from the original
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"Star Trek." A sampled horn line takes you out of the engine
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room and prepares you for Burroughs' announcement. He then says
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"Spare Ass Annie" as if he were endorsing an underarm deodorant.
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Here, the hipping and the hopping begins.
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Musically, the title track is like a subdued version of the song
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"California Uber Alles," a musical assault on California Gov.
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Pete Wilson, from the Disposable Heroes' 1992 Island release,
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"Hipocrasy Is The Greatest Luxury."
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The voice of the guitar is a subtle tribute to Jimi Hendrix.
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The music is good - if you first hear it sitting down, your head
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is likely to start bobbing; if you stand, you might feel like
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moving some of your spare parts.
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As the music pulses, Burroughs begins describing his characters.
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The narrator is the captain of a town of ugly and disgusting
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creatures. There is Annie, who has an extra sphincter in the
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middle of her forehead; a nameless suicidal scorpion creature
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who wallows in self-pity; and a centipede creature that makes
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sexual advances towards everyone. One wonders whether these are
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characters solely of Burroughs' imagination or whether they are
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observed human characteristics with parts of arachnids anatomy
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attached.
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"Mildred Pierce Reporting" is an observation of the horrors of
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war read over the backdrop of clean and sweet-sounding music
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reminiscent of any given 1950s television situation comedy.
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"Dr. Benway Operates" begins with a lullabye and breaks into
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a loose funk with Burroughs spinning the story of an old doctor
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devoid of compassion. Burroughs twists the old five miles walking
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in the snow cliche with "Did I ever tell you about the time I
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performed an appendectomy with a rusty sardine can?"
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In "Warning to Young Couples," Burroughs, a cat lover, displays
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a pointed dislike for man's best friend. The song begins with
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a loose funk similar to "Dr. Benway Operates," but breaks into
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another sweet and joyful orchestral piece as Burroughs tells
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expecting parents to get rid of their dogs.
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"Did I Ever Tell You About the Man Who Taught His Asshole to
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Talk?" is an excerpt from "Naked Lunch." Here, the character
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is a man with poor social etiquette whose hobby eventually leads
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to his bottom end taking over his body. The song opens with a
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Jamaican reggae beat. There are animal sounds throughout. But
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be warned: it is a funny story only if you can stomach it.
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"The Junky's Christmas" is a long piece that tells the story
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of a drug addict who spends Christmas Day finding a fix. The
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junky winds up giving his hard-won pain killer to a man who is
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hurt and desperately needs the pain killer. It is a decadent
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story of giving, complete with sweet-sounding Christmas carols
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divided by a relaxed but funky groove.
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The album closes with "Last Words With Michael Franti." Here
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Franti reads from Burroughs' 1964 book "Nova Express." The music
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is sinister and Franti's voice is menacing as he scolds the governments
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of the world for spoiling the future for the unborn.
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Overall, "Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales" is an amazing collaboration.
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As a conceptual piece it fits together much better than the first
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Willner and Burroughs collaboration in 1990, "Dead City Radio."
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On "Dead City Radio," Willner used different sources for the
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music such as John Cale, who has stood among the avant garde
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since his earlier days with the Velvet Underground, eighties
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feedback junkies Sonic Youth, and the early 1960's NBC Symphony
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Orchestra.
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While "Dead City Radio" had the same concept as "Spare Ass Annie
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and Other Tales" of melding the work of a great writer with great
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music, "Dead City Radio" was basically a mishmash of unrelated
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music with an old man reading over it.
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By using The Disposable Heroes, a band that itself has had a
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lot to say about the state of society, to provide the musical
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backdrop throughout this entire album, Willner has created a
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work that while touching upon several different musical genres
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retains cohesion.
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After its release today you can listen to this album in one of
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three ways it can be taken as a conceptual whole, a new form
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of art if you will; it can be listened to as a series of thought
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provoking stories; or it can be used as music upbeat enough for
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a party. Take your pick.
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