Jump to content

The Red Krayola (album): Difference between revisions

From Red Krayola Wiki
imported>Dotclub
No edit summary
imported>Dotclub
No edit summary
Line 52: Line 52:


=== The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock ===
=== The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock ===
1997<ref>https://archive.org/details/trouserpressguid00robb_1/page/597/mode/1up</ref><blockquote>Recorded by a collective of seven (including guitarists David Grubbs, Jim O'Rourke and Tom Watson, drummer John McEntire and German synthesist Albert Oehlen), The Red Krayola is a potent modern exposition of Thompson's Beefheart-ian musical inventions and wickedly offbeat lyrics. For all its idiosyncratic juxtapositions, the album is a relatively straightforward electric affair — alternatively engaging and patience testing — that sends antagonistic elements (noisy guitar, catatonic electronic blips, contrary rhythms) out to disrupt the calmly logical organization of restrained, tuneful inventions like the waltz-time "Jimmy Silk/Supper By Ready Medley," "Pride," "Book of Kings," (which paraphrases Carly Simon ''and'' quotes children's verse), the courtly, Roxy Music-like "Miss X," the chromatic "Art-Dog" and "Suddenly," crooned as a sweet harmony vocal exercise. Traditionally cavalier in his appreciation of song structures, Thompson fleshes out the album with "Rapspierre" (another of his accelerated Marxist theory courses, this one containing sing-song doggrel about monkeys, random keyboard noises and turntable scratches), the ripping drive-gear "People Get Ready (The Train's Not Coming)" near-instrumental and the catchy mantra "I Knew It." Provocative and, for the most part, highly entertaining.</blockquote>
1997<ref>https://archive.org/details/trouserpressguid00robb_1/page/597/mode/1up</ref><blockquote>Recorded by a collective of seven (including guitarists [[David Grubbs]], [[Jim O'Rourke]] and [[Tom Watson]], drummer [[John McEntire]] and German synthesist [[Albert Oehlen]]), The Red Krayola is a potent modern exposition of [[Mayo Thompson|Thompson]]'s Beefheart-ian musical inventions and wickedly offbeat lyrics. For all its idiosyncratic juxtapositions, the album is a relatively straightforward electric affair — alternatively engaging and patience testing — that sends antagonistic elements (noisy guitar, catatonic electronic blips, contrary rhythms) out to disrupt the calmly logical organization of restrained, tuneful inventions like the waltz-time "[[Jimmy Silk/Supper Be Ready Medley|Jimmy Silk/Supper By Ready Medley]]," "[[Pride]]," "[[Book of Kings]]," (which paraphrases Carly Simon ''and'' quotes children's verse), the courtly, Roxy Music-like "[[Miss X]]," the chromatic "[[Art-Dog]]" and "[[Suddenly]]," crooned as a sweet harmony vocal exercise. Traditionally cavalier in his appreciation of song structures, Thompson fleshes out the album with "[[Rapspierre]]" (another of his accelerated Marxist theory courses, this one containing sing-song doggrel about monkeys, random keyboard noises and turntable scratches), the ripping drive-gear "[[People Get Ready (The Train's Not Coming)]]" near-instrumental and the catchy mantra "[[I Knew It]]." Provocative and, for the most part, highly entertaining.</blockquote>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 12:26, 26 March 2023

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Jimmy Silk/Supper Be Ready Medley"1:57
2."Pride"1:06
3."Book of Kings"2:40
4."Pessimisty"2:50
5."Worms, Worms, Thirst"1:38
6."People Get Ready (The Train's Not Coming)"3:22
7."If 'S' Is"2:06
8."Miss X"2:37
9."Rapspierre"2:44
10."Stand-Up"2:42
11."Art-Dog"1:09
12."I Knew It"1:54
13."101st"1:54
14."(Why) I'm So Blasé"2:07
15."The Big Macumba"2:42
16."Voodoo Child"1:47
17."Suddenly"1:51

Background

Personnel

Musicians

David Grubbs, John McEntire, Albert Oehlen, Jim O'Rourke, Stephen Prina, Mayo Thompson, Tom Watson

Cover art

The cover photo was taken by Albert Oehlen. It appears to depict the Volksparkstadion stadium in Hamburg, Germany.[1] The visible advertisements are for "Nova Versicherungen," an insurance company, and "Tom T" — maybe Tom Tailor, a clothing brand based in Hamburg and a major sponsor of the Hamburger SV team until 2003.[2]

Reviews

The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock

1997[3]

Recorded by a collective of seven (including guitarists David Grubbs, Jim O'Rourke and Tom Watson, drummer John McEntire and German synthesist Albert Oehlen), The Red Krayola is a potent modern exposition of Thompson's Beefheart-ian musical inventions and wickedly offbeat lyrics. For all its idiosyncratic juxtapositions, the album is a relatively straightforward electric affair — alternatively engaging and patience testing — that sends antagonistic elements (noisy guitar, catatonic electronic blips, contrary rhythms) out to disrupt the calmly logical organization of restrained, tuneful inventions like the waltz-time "Jimmy Silk/Supper By Ready Medley," "Pride," "Book of Kings," (which paraphrases Carly Simon and quotes children's verse), the courtly, Roxy Music-like "Miss X," the chromatic "Art-Dog" and "Suddenly," crooned as a sweet harmony vocal exercise. Traditionally cavalier in his appreciation of song structures, Thompson fleshes out the album with "Rapspierre" (another of his accelerated Marxist theory courses, this one containing sing-song doggrel about monkeys, random keyboard noises and turntable scratches), the ripping drive-gear "People Get Ready (The Train's Not Coming)" near-instrumental and the catchy mantra "I Knew It." Provocative and, for the most part, highly entertaining.

References