PETE
LABONNE PRESS |
GIGUNDA ANTHOLOGY By Chris Schepp
Finally the good folks at TAR PIT GRAPE TIRE RECORDS have
released the long awaited PETE LABONNE anthology c.d. collection.
An excellent follow up to the JAKE SMITTHENS best of thing they
put out last year. Well, its all here and a lot more (hats
off to whoever excavated and compiled this balling monster)
including remixes, dance versions, demos, outakes, oneoffs,
live versions, long lost acetates, wing-its, warts n all
mistakes, duets, and sound scetches of some of his lesser and
better known hits. lf thats not enough to remortgage your
home so you can afford this fridge-sized fold out (26 c.d.s
in all) consider the packaging. No expense was spared here,
for within its many folds one finds a wild array of artwork,
graphics, stickers, chewing gum, never before seen baby photos,
all the lyrics and famous artist perceptions of his songs and
the artist including a few frameable portraits all printed on
bizarre materiels resulting in a no two are exactly alike collectible.
A big (literally) additional surprise is the life size glossy
poster peal-off found inside the card board exterior cutout,
shaped like the profile of an aleosauris hunkering over a multi-colored
pastiche of lovely LAKE LUCERNE. Cumbersome yes, but worth it
none the less as it is one of the most incredible career spanning
releases this reviewer has had the pleasure to scrutinize so
far.
It
took me several months to get through it, but the adventure
was an exciting, awesome and sometimes enlightening experience.
I found it difficult to not jump ahead to some of the later
discs to the more familiar materiel in their cleaned up remastered
forms but it was a pleasure to educate myself to the ground
breaking earlier offerings dispersed throughout the first dozen
or so chronologically presented discs. I prefer this format
as in this case (and what a case!) one can really hear the growth
of the artist as he continued his wonderful journey through,
over and under sound shapes unvisited by any other. Only long
stringy detailed sentences suffice in describing the credibility
of this singer songwriting musician maniac.
The
listener is first introduced to PETE in the earliest known recordings
direct from his close and play kiddie recorder. The songs clearly
display the childs vision of a very young rocker hamming
it up to the delight of his plav pal audience. These reel to
reel tapes were evidently full sounding enough to be included
and are fine raw examples of pre-teen angst set to stomping
beats and wailing auto harp resulting in primitive garage R&B.
Here one finds the original and legendary versions of some of
his outrageous cult hits such as ROCK THE BONE,
PONYTAIL, NOSEBLEED and the much later
recorded jukebox standard STRIP JOINT. I was equallv
blown away with the CARNEGIE HIGH SESSIONS (C.D.#3) where it
sounds like the spectators were dissected and set aflame to
the thunderous recital of a then thirteen year old flute, ukelele
and washtub bass playing LABONNE, which includes the a Capella
masterpiece IN THE BEGINNING which is really
a cleaned up rendition of the afore mentioned soon to be classic
STRIP JOINT. This tender song bought tears to my
eyes and further illustrates his unparalelled approach to song
craft. Profound ideas and Iyrical messages parade with gelatinous
rhymes and overflow onto the first eleven C.D.s. The wild array
of song structure and field hollers combined with caustic poetry
nearly numb the senses, causing one to quickly consider alternative
belief systems to replace existing dead ones collecting in the
brainwashed expanse of the pop conscious present yet barely
alive in the new mind of our universe today. Yes, He could become
the next charismatic leader if the right people wrongly interpret
the radical viewpoints that murkily surface within the digitally
reproduced grooves and bitmaps of this wicked coup. The Companion
C.D.ROM (#12) visually compounds the evident power of his benevolent
stare, as one witnesses with shear wonder the live video footage
restored from an archaic OHS taped LIVE AT THE GOLDEN
FLEECE shown here in its glorious entirety (at last!)
complete with an introduction provided by the shapely CHERYL
LOWRY. The version of SPACE CAR DRIVER shook the
wind-ups right off my cabinet in the next room near my bungalow
listening booth . It is so damn rocking I contemplated masturbation
while cranking it up to ten on my SONY PLACE MAT 2000. 1 only
got my cloths off before the next number THE DESTRUCTOR
came on, which in typical LABONNE fashion changed my mood
completely
whereupon I decided to dress up in my leather motorcycle jacket
and put on my peach-fuzz wool pajama bottoms. Oddly enough most
PETE freaks Ive e-mailed seem to have similar stories
pertaining to changing cloths while checking out various LABONNE
tunes. Why this phenomenon seems to happen is any ones guess
but, I believe the strange sonic designs present within his
music cause a person to find it hard to remain in the same outfit
while listening to certain tunes, Especially on the fantastic
remixed versions of the monumental recordings ANTIQUE
REVOLT(C.D.#13) and of course the newer DOPE FIEND(C.D.#19).
I can't begin to express the significance and importance of
the music presented here, needless to say the historians of
pop and un-pop culture of the future will use this anthology
as the bedrock of all that follows in its wake. As if
bored with merely confronting and conquering each musical boundary,
PETE created a few new ones along the way. No love songs have
ever come close to the feelings stirred up in the anguished
and dramatic ballads that seem to effortlessly flow from the
pen and tongue of LABONNE. One listen to the heart wrenching
"ORIGIN OF MY GIRLFRIEND(C.D.#15) or the equally
sublime THE F WORD(C.D.# 16) among others,
Will rend any skeptic speechless and temporarily impotent. Time
and time again within the confines of his songs and music, he
finds different wavs to stupefy the inherent limitations of
the common tendencies of radio formatted disciplines prevalent
on the airwaves for the last three centuries. Not to be outdone
by his sensitive side PETE crams nearly each C.D. with generous
portions of light hearted prose deftly adhered to some of the
most infectious rhvthms and melodic instrumentals ever. Stuff
like SCREEMITIS (C.D.s#13& #21 respectively)
The history based THE WORLD IS SQUARE (C.D.14)
and others keep things from getting sappy. He can be pretty
funnv when he wishes, obvious in gems like BRAIN DEADor
ROLE MODEL BUICK(C.D.#lO), originally found on the
NIKKOLAI WIEDEMANNS DECENT BURIAL, COLLECTION and here
on C.D.for the first time.
At
this point its probably time to mention some of his collaborators
with whom he shares singing and sometimes instrument duties.
There are duets a-plenty for those looking for twosomes. Divas
like his babette SHELLEY muster up some fine vocal treatments
as well as his third wife SUE. Big name stars like MARGARET
FOURNIER, BRUCE EATON, PAUL DODD, ARPAD, FEATHERHEAD JOlNES
jr., RICHARD HELL, JANIS JORDON, BAAZWA and others all contribute
and make cameo appearances throughout the GIGUNDA (Aptly named)
collection. Each song or composition freely conjured is often
fully inverted for the listeners pleasure. Check out... The
aqua blues song SWIMMING HOLE( C.D.# 16), The psi-scarring
NOSE BLEED (C.D.# 17), The crunching obligatory
EAT HOT DOGS(C.D.#21) The anxiousHUNCH A RAG
( alsoC.D.#21) The very heavy CEMENT TRUCK (C.D.#20),
The twisted SIR DANCE A LOT (C.D.#22), The sad POOR
LITTLE FLOWER (C.D.#18), The tell all HOLLOW FIGURINE(
C.D.s#4 & #15), and of course his now epic monumental SLAG
HEAP(C.D.s#8,#12,#14,#21 and #25) are here gloriously
presented. The Essential SLAG HEAP gets special
treatments and is fabulous in each, theres the 4-track
demo(C.D.#8), the studio stereo single mix (C.D.#12), the extended
ganja dance mix by D.J. BONG-O (C.D.#14), the two live versions
a:Infest 1992, b:Courtyard by Marriott 1999 (C.D.#21), and the
intense SLAG HEAP 2001 (C.D.#25). (That song alone
justifies the somewhat hefty price tag of $1.399.00.)
I
had the extreme good fortune of interviewing PETE and his righteous
squeeze SHELLEY at the ROCHESTER PUBLIC HEALTH CLINIC this past
June (see interview, THE DALLIANCE ROUGH NECK POST issue #143)
there we talked about his Japanese releases, his favorite guitars
and how he pulls down trees near his Adirondack retreat and
studio. I was vastly impressed with his intelligence, good sense
of humor and the brand of cheap beer he preferred. Now I eagerly
await his ULTRA-RARITIES collection and his next
record "BLASTING CAP,THE MOVIE SOUNDTRACK. Both supposedly
due for release next spring. So, "GIGUNDA is here
and both the past and the future of music joyfully collide within
it, so get off and get in and buy yourself a ticket
to the next three fads. NOTE: The first twenty thousand copies
of GIGUNDA include a free LABONNE BIC LIGHTER
and a Commemorative brass medallion collectible pendant bearing
LEROY NIEMANs LABONNE PORTRAIT on one side and the SEMI
MAN graphic on the other.
Pent
Up News Group Intl.
Pete
Labonne / The Rutliners Live at Spotty’s 2/29/02
”He’s gonna off himself onstage tonight “
I heard as I entered the club. Most seemed to be there due to
the wild rumors that have been spreading like wild napalm fire
on the internet and in the alternative/ indie mid-fi gutter
press about Pete Labonne.”This guy’s supposed to
be some kind of a sick depraved psycho animal !” says
some pierced stooge in a yellowish carhart coat. “I think
he’s got naked black chicks with huge purple afros that
sing backup for him” assures one zit faced college kid
to another. As I looked around the room I realized two things;
one was that I had to get totally wasted that night and two,
that I had to talk to Pete again (maybe before he hit the stage).
This
place is a box full of collegiate breeding training enactments
every weekend, theres no place to stand , no place to sit down
and the bar is only about four feet long so, it takes about
a half an hour to get a beer , the collection of folks at the
joint must form a slow migratory like pattern circling about
the room stopping at the watering hole with each member of the
flock always looking towards the stage. The sound is terrible
no matter what new stuff they “just put in”.
I
shmoozed my way into the third floor dressing hole at around
nine o’clock thinking I would have about an hour to ask
some questions and get caught up, instead I ended up doing lines
with the two black ladies ( whom I later found out were prostitutes
) and downing shots of 500 year old tequila with Pete’s
bus driver Jeff. Pete was a few feet away sitting on an old
green couch, nursing a Jenny lite while eating chicken wings
and chocalate covered grasshoppers. “These wings are really
good!” I heard pete say, before his management came along
and swept all of us lowlifes (except the prostitutes) away.
Damn! no interview!
Three hours later Pete hits the stage and sure enough both black
chicks (“Miss Nelly” and “Miss Nasty”
are in the raw along side of him humping his amp while he’s
playing his guitar upsidedown! Within about 40 seconds, before
anybody even knows what song he’s supposed to be doing,
the cops bust in the back door right behind the drums and right
when you think the big fat cop is gonna pulverize Pete with
his nightstick, both cops rip off each others cloths and start
having gay sex in front of everybody. Of course these cops turn
out to be catholic priests and not real cops but those uniforms
sure as hell fooled everybody including Spotty himself who was
drunk at the end of the bar and as confused as any of us.
Needless
to say most of us were already thouroughly disgusted and started
booing and gagging and heading out of the place, but some on
the other hand were yelling “yeah!’ and “go
Pete go !” and so preety much all of us hung around to
see what would happen next. Pete starts singing something about
a go-cart and the place just explodes! Beers fly in all directions,
floor boards are pulled up and thrown along with bar stools,tables
and ashtrays at and towards the people in front. Whom go along
with it as if it’s all part of rocking in the pit. Soon
enough somebody is shooting a gun at the aquarium and theres
water and slimy exotic fish all over the floor. Some people
start raising there arms and gyrating to the light acoustic
strumming ignoring all this chaos as if It’s all some
iritation that will go away so they can enjoy the serious music
.The doors are clogged with bodies so nobody can get out, meanwhile
Pete Labonne is still singing his ass off up on the stage and
somehow never gets even a drop of beer on him, he’s up
there playing away with his eyes closed all sincere like.
The
gun fires it’s sixth and hopefully last bullet into the
wall behind the fish tank and all you hear is dead silence ,
about 15 more maddening seconds of quiet uncertainty goes by
when the entire room hears Pete softly singing in his most girlish
falsetto a litte nursery rhyme sounding thing about getting
a valve job done on a classic car. Miss Nasty turns out to be
an amazing harmonica player, sometimes playing three at a time.
The remaining audience not knowing If they can even relate to
what he’s putting down but unable to pull away from the
twisted spectacle before them. And just when you find yourself
questioning the validity of his tortured soul splitting delivery
the lights dim , you see someone offstage hand Pete a sawed
off shotgun . It gets real quiet and as one everybody , draws
in thier breath and peals thier eyes to the stage . Pete stands
up off his stool throws the rifle into the crowd and walks off
laughing , drinking something out of an old silver flask. Pure
Genius man! Pure Genius !
Pete
Opened the show for The Rutliners and if anyone stayed to see
them please notify this writter and tell me how they were.
-
Jacob
Cristen |
PETE
DISCOGRAPHY
PETE
VIDEO
PETE
LYRICS
PRESS
PHOTOS
DOWNLOAD
MP3
ORDER
PETE LABONNE CD HERE |
Cape
Codder 10.30.03
A
ONE OF A KIND NEW YORK STATE OF MIND
Music preview / By Joe Burns
Friday, October 31, 2003
If you go...
Pete Labonne, Chandler Travis Philharmonic
Old Jailhouse Tavern, 28 West Road, Orleans
8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 1. Tickets: $10 at the door
He
lives in the Adirondack Mountains in a dirt-floor cabin with
no indoor plumbing, and has made fewer public appearances last
year then Puxatawny Phil. He's Pete LaBonne, an eccentrically
talented songwriter and musician so original and obscure that
he's almost fictional.
A
LaBonne sighting is rare, right up there with spotting Big Foot
or Dick Cheney.
"Last
year was my big year. I think I played six times. It was a lot.
I felt like a star - I think I even got paid once, LaBonne says.
It didn't quite cover the gas money."
Having
the reclusive singer come all the way to the Jailhouse Tavern
in Orleans on Nov. 1, to open up for the Chandler Travis Philharmonic
is a singular treat.
"Of
course Chandler's blowing my cover here giving me this gig.
I was almost a myth. I could have been a myth," says LaBonne,
spoofing the semi-legendary status he's attained in some circles.
LaBonne
has, in fact, already appeared with Travis on several off-Cape
shows. It's a pairing of kindred spirits, something that each
discovered some years ago. LaBonne remembers being urged by
a Casuals/Philharmonic fan to check out Travis's material.
"I
had a friend on the Cape and she was always into their music.
And for a long time I was just saying, yeah, yeah, OK. She just
finally forced these tapes on me and I took them home, listened
to them and said: This is somebody I think I could work with."
A
short while later Travis began receiving surprise packages with
an upstate New York post mark.
"I just started getting these tapes in the mail. ... They
were so out there. I was like, oh my god, what the hell's going
on here," says Travis, who was hooked by the first song
he heard, a slightly deranged polka called "Sound of Doom"
that coupled lines like "a tidal wave hitting the beach"
with "a trapeze out of reach" as it bounced along
happily spinning out visions of "imminent disaster."
The
song became one of 16 selected by Travis for the Sonic Trout
CD "Meditation Garden," a sampling of LaBonne compositions
culled from the collection of tapes that Travis had acquired.
Written
over a 10-year period, the songs were inspired, LaBonne says,
by "isolation" and "hangovers." Unpolished
gems ("I wouldn't know which way to buff it," LaBonne
says), they were recorded in glorious lo-fi by LaBonne in his
"hodge-podge lodge" home studio, where he overdubbed
all the parts himself on his seven-track (formerly eight-track)
reel to reel.
The
compilation is anti-pop in the purest sense - think Beck, Captain
Beefheart, Brave Combo, Tom Waits, The Residents and Zipp the
Pinhead.
The
pounding, panting "Pajama Pants Baby" is a seizure
set to music. The instrumental "Title Cut" sounds
like a lounge band tired of being ignored and looking for revenge.
You've got to love lines like: "Somebody must be praying
for me because nothing is turning out the way I planned it"
or "Open up the cash register, Pandora, we're headed for
the last snafu." And guaranteed, the refrain from "The
Drivin'," LaBonne's screwy sobriety sing-along, will bore
its way into your brain.
"He's
an amazing musician. ... He really puts his own personal stamp
on everything he does," Travis says. "He's almost
got some sort of reverse stage presence. Stage absence is what
he's got. He's so strange out there that people immediately
get kind of quiet and try and figure out what this guy is doing."
LaBonne's live solo performances differ from his layered recordings
in that he limits his accompaniment to electric guitar, and
maybe a bit of harmonica.
"The
guitar is a little louder, and hopefully a little more complex,
he says of his live act. "The guitar's getting louder and
louder all the time. I think the last time I played, the mike
was on 10," he says. "I think opening for them I would
tend not to blow it out - unless someone yells for me to." |
| |
City Newspaper, Rochester NY 4.4.01
THIS
WEEK"S BEST PICKS
Pete LaBonne - Glob
Precious few can cross-breed lo-fi and hi-brow without sounding
convoluted or full of shit. You know, the whole "get me,
I'm an enigma" set. The genuine article, in my opinion,
is too cooL for the mainstream plebeians choking down Whoppers
as they play miniature golf. Pete Labonne is too cool and perfectly
eclectic. LaBonne has exiled himself to a shack in the Adirondacks
and creates music of infinite brilliance, full of bluesy raunch
and crackpot insight. Denizens of the Beefheart-Waits world
will immediately latch onto LaBonne's pounding instrumentation,
lush arrangements, and left-of-center suggestions for a better
tomorrow. The emissions from his new release, Glob (Earring
Records), are extremely visceral and to the point; simultaneously
soothing and upsetting. The songwriters we most adore are generally
those that, deep down, make the most sense, even if it's not
readily apparent. This is clearly genius or madness at work.
And if it makes you shake your ass, laugh your ass off and think,
who cares? LaBonne's guitar work is thick and primitive, his
smatterings of piano virtually vaudeville. He is truly one of
the great (relatively) unknown songwriters of our generation.
His song "Kill This Bottle" has been stuck in my head
for almost 10 years now. Pete LaBonne and Nod (celebrating the
release of Good Night's Sleep on Smells Like Records) play at
10 p.m. on Saturday, June 8, at The Bug Jar. Info: 454-2966.
$5.
- Frank De Blase |
| |
ArtVoice,
Buffalo NY 6.6.02
PETE
LABONNE _ MEDITATION GARDEN
Former Buffalo resident Pete LaBonne's disc Meditation Garden
answers the musical question, "What, would it sound like
if Bruce Springsteen dropped acid, died and rose from the grave
as a wild-eyed zombie?" The tracks on this disc bear more
than a slight resemblance to such a bizarro Bruce, but also recall
such non-imagined voices as those of solo Richard Lloyd, soulfully
struttin' Willy Deville, Alex Chilton's post-Big Star, coke-fueled
freak-outs and Captain Beefheart at his best. While musical comparisons
are an easy means of setting a groundwork, LaBonne's music is
clearly in a class of its, own. There is no distinct rhyme or
reason to LaBonne's music, and therein lies its charm. A song,
that blends lounge, acid rock and a subtle dance beat (ala "Soft
Paper House") lies comfortably next to a not-so-tongue-in-cheek
faux gospel song like "Sound of Doom." Similarly, LaBonne's
naturally comic, lyricism runs scattershot throughout the disc,
popping up in the strangest of places (check out songs like-"The
F Word" and "The Last Snafu" for prime examples).
Perhaps LaBonne's musical collage is a result of his surroundings.
A big-time-city musician who moves to the mountains (he currently
lives somewhere in the Adirondacks), LaBonne, has got to have
a lot of noises rumbling around in his head even if there are
no cars, street signs and night clubs to produce them. Meditation
Garden produces just such a musical inner stream of consciousness
(only we all get to hear it). The best compliment I could give
this album is that every time I listened to it in the office,
passersby would look at me like I was crazy just for listening
to it ... how's that for a reaction? LaBonne's album presents
the sound of well-trained musician with musical dyslexia. Luckily,
you don't have to listen to his music backwards to feel immediate
pleasure. Pete LaBonne will make a rare local appearance this
Sunday at the Mohawk Place at 8 pm. Don't miss, this one!
- Mark Norris |
PETE
DISCOGRAPHY
PETE
VIDEO
PETE
LYRICS
PRESS
PHOTOS
DOWNLOAD
MP3
ORDER
PETE LABONNE CD HERE |
Atlantic
Monthly Magazine
DIAMOND
IN THE ROUGH
Recording at home has become almost as cheap as writing poetry
at home, which means there are more creators than consumers. And
rightly so, because like every other art form, most of it is terrible.
But some of it isn't, achieving a certain diamond-in-the-rough,
folk art originality that can flower only outside the entertainment
conglomerates. One such diamond in the very rough is Pete LaBonne,
whose Meditation Garden (Sonic Trout) has numerous charms that
transcend the savage-beast quality of the recording. Those charms
include lots of highly musical hooks, which make the listener
wonder what he could do in a first-rate studio as opposed to the
dirt-floor cabin in upstate New York where he lives and records.
Another charm is the arrangements, which are cubistically reminiscent
of Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band. Most charming is LaBonne's
sense of humor, which is laugh-out-loud funny when he parodies
sensitive folksingers ("Days of Yore") or reminisces
about his father making unwanted suggestions to his teenage rock-and-roll
band ("Trophy Bowler"). He also achieves true political
incorrectness, unlike the vast majority of comedians who claim
such a stance: "If you're gonna do the driving, I'm gonna
do the drinking / If you're gonna do the drinking, baby, I'm gonna
do the drinking too." One can hope that tune ("The Drivin")
doesn't become a big hit while still guffawing at its dead-on
portrait of low-rent alcoholism.
by Charles M. Young |
| |
City
Newspaper, Rochester NY 4.4.01
PETE LABONNE: MEDITATION GARDEN (Sonic
Trout)
Pete
Labonne is a genius. A master of the little word/big concept
school of songwriting. Labonne's songs exude a dizzying brilliance.
Spreading several lifetimes' worth of reckless creativity over
a 16 song collection, Meditation Garden runs roughshod through
a vast variety of styles and genres, leaving each infused with
a depth and humor that can barely be contained. Standout cuts
include "Sound of Doom," "F Word," "Somebody
Must Be Praying For Me," and the too-good-to-be-true "Trophy
Bowler," in which Labonne summons up the demented ghost
of The Old Philosopher and brings him to depths that even that
world class crackpot would've thought impossible. Meditation
Garden is a magnificent gift from a very generous fellow.
- Chuck Cuminale |
| |
NY
Press 3.25.01
PETE
LABONNE: MEDITATION GARDEN
(Sonic Trout)
A
National Treasure Who May Not Actually Exist
Pete
Labonne is the Sasquatch of American music. I had heard rumors
about him for years, and people would tell me that he had dozens
or "hundreds" of bizarre or great songs, including
the legendary "We Made a Mountain Out of a Molehill (of
Love)"; I spent some time searching for the supposed 45
of the supposed song "I Mow the Lawn" supposedly made
with a band called the Party Nuggets. He was, according to rumor,
a sort of rootsy Frank Zappa or a postpostmodern Van Morrison.
Every so often, Id hear that he had gigged in Costa Rica,
the Ivory Coast, British Columbia. He was 20; he was 70; he
didnt exist at all and was the nom de disc of some bipolar
country star.
Then a friend of mine finally sent me an actual CD, and told
me that Labonne was perfectly real and that he lived in a cabin
in the Adirondacks without electricity, phone, running water.
Im not sure I believe this any more than the previous
tales, but there is undeniably this disc: Meditation Garden
(Sonic Trout, www.sonictrout.com), that seems to have pictures
of the elusive Labonne on the cover.
The legend is fully justified. Take the Magnetic Fields
69 Love Songs and jack up both the eclecticism and the eccentricity
one more notch, throw in lyrics by Andre Breton and record it
all on maybe a four-track and youve got one of the most
challenging and amusing things youll ever hear. Lounge
piano and polka accordion and flamenco guitar bounce off of
boogie-woogie and soul and folk music like a NASCAR pile-up.
There are strange jokes and beautiful sentiments.
Hope never really dies. Maybe Labonne can be coaxed down/back
from wherever he really is to play a gig or record an album
in a professional studio. And Maybe Wanda can be coaxed back
to heterosexual hoeing.
By Crispin Sartwell |
| |
Tape
Op Magazine
Number 15
PETE LABONNE: STANDARD
TIME
Pete
LaBonne recorded Standard Time as a solo projectlast winter
at the "Hodge Podge Lodge" in the Adirondack mountains.
After hearing just a portion of this tape, I couldn't help but
wonder how isolated he was. This stuff is crazy! It opens with
a blues rock quitar qorkout on :Flashlight" and continues
with the "Rib Crib," a tale of the Spice Girls and
Dracula performing at a rib joint. Standard Time has thirteen
songs, all featuring LaBonne's unique sense of humor (I eat
brains" from the closer "Mongrel 900") and multi-instrumental
prowess (guitar, keyboards,/piano, drums, vocal effects).
The tape is loud and full sounding and well recorded. LaBonne's
equipment list includes a "Fostex A8 mounted on heating
pad with front cover removed to to catch the drive belt (with
knitting needle)," an "Alesis Disinigrating Monolith
16 (since replaced by Crest Audio "Ten Series" 12
channel - love it.), 2 ART Multiverb, a Fostex spring reverb,
2 Shure PE 47L mics, a Double Barrel 12 ga." |
| |
New
Mass. Media 08/09/01
PERPENDICULAR
GENTILE DAYS
If
Gertrude Stein, Captain Beefheart and Beck got together for
a barbecue, the result might be Sonic Trout recording artist
Pete LaBonne's album Meditation Garden. It's one beautiful train
wreck. The lyrics leave you bewildered, amused and blown away
all at the same time. "I smell days, golden reptile days,
perpendicular gentile days," he delivers, atop what promises
to be a normal folkie yawner until the lyrics come smashing
in. LaBonne, be he gentile, Jew or philistine, can pen fabulous
verbal Frankensteins. You'll have to find one of those standard
issue singer-songwriters for the usual talk of girlfriends past
and bus tickets to nowhere, 'cause it ain't to be found here.
So what's so great about a bunch of nonsense, a pile of odd-sounding
words forced together? It's the cumulative effect, the constant
surprises and the use of words just for the joy of how they
sound together. The album is an exuberant tongue-twister, both
verbal and mental. It's like waking up the morning after the
New Year's party astride the Empire State Building; it's like
a lot of things that can't be described.
The music is more than just funny, though. In "Clouds Are
Overspreading the Region," LaBonne says he's seeking "something
to remember yourself by," something authentic and meaningful
amidst his rubble of bon mots. These moments surface regularly,
offering the motion-sick just enough equilibrium.
The music is inventive, if perhaps less giddily dangerous than
the lyrics. A whole pawnshop's worth of lo-fi instrumentation
(much of it recorded in his dirt-floored cabin in New York)
piles on for the slippery ride.
The dense textures and pounding, squirgling Ringling Brothers
rhythms owe something to fellow Sonic Trout recording artists
The Chandler Travis Philharmonic, who will bring three rings
of avant-Dixieland-pop along to the Bay State the same night.
By
James Heflin |
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