SOUNDTRACK: FISHBONE-Truth and Soul (1988).
Fishbone opens up yet another album with a fantastic one-two punch. Truth and Soul is Fishbones’s perfect blend of ska, punk and hardcore. This album has a few heavy moments but it was recorded before they got the heavy metal into their system.
The disc opens with “Freddie’s Dead.” Which is just a blast of rocking funk. It is catchy, it is fun to sing along to, and it rocks. It’s followed by “Ma and Pa” a fantastic ska song that is darkly humorous [“Hey Ma and Pa, what the hell is wrong with y’all?”]. It also features great vocal effects throughout the song: grunts and groans in place of beats and notes. It’s just fantastic. These are probably two of the best songs of the late 1980s. The following two songs slow things down a bit, with “Pouring Rain” being a 5 minute long ballad.
“Deep Inside” follows with a blast of punk and call and response vocals. And “Mighty Long Way” is an upbeat, keyboard heavy track about friendship. It also has a great guitar riff (and really shows off the wailing guitar solos that will come up on later records).
This all leads to the majesty of “Bonin’ in the Boneyard” (the lyric sheet for this states: “If you can’t figure this one out, then you are lame!”). This song is just an amazing horn-filled, bass slapping riot of a good time. In general I don’t like horns in rock, but there is something about horns and ska that are just perfect. And I could listen to this horn section all night long.
“One Day” comes next. It’s less hectic, but contains more great guitar work and some great harmony vocals. It’s a very catchy song about racism. “Subliminal Fascism” is another short song that shows some of their newly found metal leanings. “Slow Bus Movin'” deals more overtly with racism, and yet its comical use of western-style music is something of a surprise.
“Ghetto Soundwave” and “Change” end the album with another one-two shot of greatness. “Soundwave” is a fantastic horn-filled song. And “Change” is a truly beautiful ballad.
Truth and Soul is a great album.
[READ: December 29, 2008]: “The Santosbrazzi Killer”
I’ve been meaning to read Julavits’ novel The Uses of Enchantment for some time, but it keeps getting pushed back by other titles. So, this is my first exposure to her as anything other than editor of The Believer. And I enjoyed this story very much.
The main character is a overseer–she travels to a Cincinnati-based subsidiary research outfit and criticizes them. At some point in the story she admits she’s pretty much an asshole: officious, nitpicky, antisocial, and really quite unpleasant (Sample: “I arrived with my insulated travel mug filled with clearly superior off-site coffee”). On this particular trip something different happens: she gets to stay in a different hotel than her usual place: The Tuck Inn.
After doing her job (and making everyone very tense), she returns to her hotel and inquires about a place to eat. The concierge explains that there’s a bar/cafe downstairs. The snooty waiter/bartender offers her a “bible” of a menu (with at least 476 pages). Among her choices are: the Grinning Necrophiliac and the Vengeful Subsidiary (which she requests, but is not allowed to have due to the bartender’s lack of an essential tool). And so, she settles on the titular Santosbrazzi Killer.
After waiting some time, a gentleman sits down. He explains that what she ordered was not so much a drink as, well…. I’m not going to give it away. From this point the story gets very interesting: the tension mounts, and yet the dark humor never departs. It was a very enjoyable story.
It also introduced me to a new verb: to jick. It is used throughout the story. Initially it described the action of clicking a ball point pen. But as the story progresses, the verb is used in a few different places (usually denoting a sound), with the meaning always being relevant.
Assuming this is representative of Julavits’ work, I’m looking forward to reading her novel one of these days.
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