Brown Reason to Live cover

Brown Reason to Live

Released

Butthole Surfers’ 1983 debut was extremely timely. US hardcore’s structures were already codified with tensed-up machismo and hierarchical scenesterism, often simply substituting a tattooed but otherwise equally uptight scene superego for society’s rules. So this cantankerous blurting of acid orneriness from the bowels of Texas was a much needed reminder of how rock ‘n’ roll could still get loose and fly its freak flag high. Vocalist Gibby Haynes, guitarist Paul Leary and their mutant crew took cues from Devo‘s arch social satire, but replaced its urbanity with pure awopbopaloobop rock ‘n’ roll gibbering, drugs and bodily functions colliding with icons and folk devils. None of which would have had amounted to more than a disruptive and brief diversion were the group not brutally, undeniably accomplished. They were musicians in the tradition of Beefheart, Hendrix and Funkadelic blasting away the illusion of oppositions between bestial rawness and virtuosity, chaos and control, freakout and groove — Leary in particular ripping hypersexualised pulsating streams of noise out of his guitar in a way that very few bar Hendrix have done before or since. This was, and remains, a joyous re-affirmation of the dirty and barely (if at all) controllable impulses at the very core of rock music.

Joe Muggs

Recommended by

Suggestions
Vive La Trance cover

Vive La Trance

Amon Düül II
Ice Cream for Crow cover

Ice Cream for Crow

Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band
The Hand Gallery cover

The Hand Gallery

Aisha Orazbayeva
MM3 cover

MM3

Metá Metá
Daylight cover

Daylight

David McAlmont
Dusk cover

Dusk

Andrew Hill
The Bible Without God cover

The Bible Without God

Justine Lai, Henry Lee, Andy Meyerson, Michael Lindquist, Krystal Barghelame, Spartacus Locus, Alex Bandza, Cheri Li, Molly Butcher
The Cherry Thing cover

The Cherry Thing

The Thing, Neneh Cherry
About Time cover

About Time

New York Gong, Daevid Allen