SOUNDTRACK: TRENCHMOUTH-Vs the Light of the Sun (1994).
I learned about Trenchmouth from an interview with Fred Armisen on The Sound of Young America. He informed us that he was the drummer in Trenchmouth before he was on SNL. And he and Jesse Thorn had an amusing discussion about how he was sure they would make it big. I can’t recall if they played a snippet of the band or not, but it’s a pretty laughable thought that Trenchmouth might be his claim to fame. Because they are awesome, but they are totally NOT commercial.
In fact, just a few seconds into the lead-off track “Washington! Washington!” will tell you how noncommercial they are. (It’s a sort of fast heavy punk version of prog rock–jazzy guitars, independent bass, wonderful drumming (Armisen kicks ass) and the screamed hyperkinetic vocals of Damon Locks (he’s passionate, man).
There’s a lot of atonal work here (“Washington! Washington!” opens with drums and Lock’s ragged voice), and once the guitars kick in, it actually makes the song more confusing. “A Prescription Written in a Different Language” opens with wavering harmonic notes before busting into a full on punk noisefest. The album lurches around to different styles of weird noise rock (most of the songs are quite short, although “A Man without Lungs” runs over 6 minutes).
But before making it sounds like this is a mess of a record, a few listens will reveal the sanity beneath the chaos. There are even some discernible choruses: “Here Comes the Automata”‘s “Everybody needs protection” and “Bricks Should Have Wings”‘ “Let the bricks fly” are fun to sing along to. Similarly, the guitar work that opens “Set the Oven at 400” is rather conventional and quite pretty.
This disc is not for most people, but Trenchmouth is a cool band that has been unfairly lost to the annals of history.
[READ: April 4, 2011] “Rome, 1974”
I had received a pre-pub of Bezmozgis’ novel The Free World, but I haven’t read it yet. I am interested in Bezmozgis’ writing and was planning to read the book. As it turns out this “story” is really an excerpt from the novel.
The story is about the Krasnansky family, a Jewish extended family emigrating from the Soviet Union to Italy. The opening scenes detail the physical hardship that such a move would have taken (it’s played for somewhat comic effect when the large duffel bags are thrown off the train). There is much dissent among the family members although they sem to settle in well–except for patriarch Samuil who is disconcerted by everything and unhappy to have left the communist country he feels comfortable in.
Eventually Samuil makes a friend. Roidman is an older man who he immediately thought he would dislike. But Roidman is also an opinionated Jew, and while he disagrees with Samuil about some things, they make for good companions.
The final scenes involves Samuil’s childhood. They are both joyful and violent.
This except says it was “adapted” from the novel, which I assume means that these pieces are not together in the same way in the book. The excerpts given several glimpses into Samuil’s life. I’m not entirely sure that they make me want to read the whole book though. I found the character to be an interesting one, and this was certainly a good character sketch. I’m just not sure I want to read a whole book about him and his family.

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