SOUNDTRACK: PRIMUS-June 2010 Rehearsal EP (2010).
Back in 2010 Primus reunited (again). And they released a free downloadable EP of their recent rehearsals. It’s got 4 songs and the mix is interesting–Les in the left speaker and Ler in the right, so you can hear each individual part if you like.
Two of the older songs are some of my favorites: “Pudding Time” and “Harold of the Rocks.”
The other two songs are “American Life” which comes from Sailing the Seas of Cheese. It’s a deep cut as opposed to the more obvious single, “Jerry was a Race Car Driver.” This version is 3 minutes longer than the original, which means that Primus are still in jam band mode. “Duchess and the Proverbial Mind Spread” is from The Brown Album. It’s got a pretty good solo from Ler.
This EP features the drumming of Jay Lane who was in Primus before Tim Alexander. This is the first official Primus release that he has been credited with. And his drumming sounds really good.
Since tis is a rehearsal, some leeway can be given with the sound quality which is very crisp–perhaps too crisp. But overall it’s great to hear these guys sounding so in tune with each other.
[READ: January 27, 2015] “The Crabapple Tree”
In my reading experience, Robert Coover likes to play around with fairy tales and turn them on their heads or, sometimes, inside-out–showing viscera and all.
To my knowledge, this one doesn’t mess around with an extant story, but it does have a very fairy tale quality to it.
I love that it happened “here in our town.” Th narrator’s friend married a local farmer. When the friend had her baby she died in childbirth. The farmer buried her under the crabapple tree. He proved to be a rough unpleasant guy: he drank too much and didn’t care much for the baby. He soon found another wife who, maybe, was a hooker. The kids in the area called her Vamp.
Vamp had a daughter from another marriage, Marleen. She was kind to her stepbrother although their games were certainly unusual. She’d put a collar on the boy and he’d walk around on all four with no clothes on–she taught him to pee by lifting his leg. But she cared for him and when he got sick, she could make him well again, kind of magically.
But mostly she played with the boy as if he were a rag doll–dragging him around by the heels. And then one day she was dragging him and his head popped off. Marleen claimed that her mother had loosened up his head and that she was the reason he was dead. He was buried under the crabapple tree near his mother. Later Marleen said that her mother had dug up and cooked up the bones of her stepmother.
The farmer died a year later. Some people think Vamp killed her stepson, poisoned her husband, abandoned her daughter and ran off. At the funeral of the farmer, Marleen said that she had re-created her brother from his bones.
People mostly just stayed away from the crabapple tree.
I haven’t really enjoyed Coover’s retelling of fairy tales, but I did enjoy this one which worked in the style but was original (to me).

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