Pearls Before Swine |
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toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member Retired Joined: March 04 2008 Location: Retirement Home Status: Offline Points: 3658 |
Topic: Pearls Before Swine Posted: September 02 2010 at 13:02 |
Pearls Before Swine were a sixties psychedelic folk band with progressive tendencies. The have released some records which has earned the band a cult status. I got in touch with their leader Tom Rapp for the Pearls Before Swine story. ########################################
Our Pearls Before Swine
biography is pretty extensive so let's not go over this again.
Just let's jump straight over to your albums. Most of the biographical pieces fail to mention that I shot a man
in Reno, just to watch him die. OK........ Please give me your
(long or brief) thoughts and lowdowns on....... One Nation
Underground from 1967 Just kids, as Patti Smith might say, who heard about
ESP-DISK and sent a handmade LP to ESP, and they said, OK, come up to
NYC and record. It's harder these days, I'm pretty sure. They gave
us a $1,500 budget (which included buying hamburgers and rice pudding
from the Smiler's Deli down the street) and the genius of Richard
Alderson to record and mix the record. He worked with Dylan before we
met him—you can see him briefly in a scene from Scorsese's No
Direction Home. The studio was full of instruments from all over the
world and we got to play them on the record. It was like “world
music” by accident. But we had brought our own audio oscillator for
an ascending scream in one of the songs.
The first thing we recorded was “another time” which I wrote
right after being thrown from an Austin Healy Sprite that flipped
over and then landed right side up. My glasses were under the left
rear wheel and the windshield was in the top of a tree 20 meters
behind us. Kids, do not do this at home.
“Another Time” has been covered many times and even made the
soundtrack to Fassbinder's movie, Rio das Mortes in 1969 and last
year (forty years later!) in Agathe Teyssier's La Femme Invisible
(with Julie Depardieu and CHARLOTTE RAMPLING). I like Charlotte
Rampling.
It is not true that we went with ESP because they recorded Charlie
Manson. We actually liked the Fugs a lot and were honored to be on
the same label. Ed Sanders of the Fugs also edited a magazine called
“f**k You—A Magazine of the Arts.” With ESP at the time were
Pharoah Sanders (no relation to Ed except cosmically) and his
Arkestra, the Godz, Randy Burns and Albert Ayler.
For One Nation Underground we tried a little bit of every kind of
song: protest (drop out, uncle john); imitationdylanrock (playmate);
psychedelic (surrealist waltz, i shall not care); completely weird
sh*t (morning song) and obscenity (Miss Morse). With ESP we got to
pick the cover (Hieronymus Bosch) since we came in under budget in
one straight 100 hour session, though “straight“ is not perhaps
the right word.
Balaklava from
1968 Same studio with Richard Alderson. The Vietnam War was going on
forever and ever no matter what any of us did. This was an anti-War
album based on the Charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava in the
Crimean War, when everyone died stupidly for nothing and no glory
ever. Used the trumpeter who actually blew the Charge, got it from
old recording cylinders from the 1880's. Used Florence Nightingale,
a nurse at the same battle, also from old cylinders. Country Joe
McDonald has a fascination with Nightingale and how she helped the
wounded. Has a website for it. www.countryjoe.com/nightingale.
Ending the record with a scary slab of Tolkien and then
running the tape backwards to the beginning—like the neverending
War.
These Things Too from
1969 The first album for Reprise. Should mention here about the
members of the group. Lane Lederer joined the navy during recording
of Balaklava. Roger Crissinger joined a really interesting band
called One who recorded for Jefferson Airplane's label Grunt. Wayne
Harley had his own interests, but sat in on Balaklava and These
Things Too and added good stuff. [Like me, he cannot believe this was
over 40 years ago. We both have tie-dye walkers and psychedelic
orthopaedic shoes.] After that the group was whoever was around,
able and interested, and some really talented Nashville musicians.
The Use of Ashes from 1970 These were all songs that I wrote when living with my
then-wife Elisabeth in Holland. She was Dutch. We lived in a
romantic location with swans and rose bushes and a small bridge from
the 1500's.
About 100 meters away was a Nazi bunker from the war, with
swaztikas and barbed wire. The Dutch left it there so we would
always remember. This was an odd emotional combination for writing
songs, which I think comes through on all the songs. “Rocket Man”
was written the night of the moon landing; The Jeweler was based on
Elisabeth's polishing old coins with spit and ashes—something I had
never heard of; The Riegal was a German ship full of English
prisoners that was sunk by mistake by the Allies. And so on. There
is a Dutch group named “The Use of Ashes.” Very good, too. City Of Gold (AKA The
Nashville Album) from 1971 This was from the same sessions and same musicians as Use
of Ashes. But more “mystical” (whatever that is), and more
“country” (whatever that is).
.... Beautiful Lies from
1972 These were more Netherlands-inspired songs. I was under the
influence (more) of Jacques Brel and other European writers, and, of
course, Leonard Cohen. My name for the album was just “beautiful
lies.” Stardancer from 1972 That
would go here. The pearls vs. solo was always only semi-real from
early on. Stardancer's songs came out of tours, performing on the
road, being away from home and my son. Sunforest from 1972 Has
some of the songs that are my favorites nowadays. And my favorite
color is tan. And my favorite food is chicken francais with a light
lemon butter sauce (Poulet jeanne d'arc).
I
like:
O
children, don't you weep/ if the road is long/ all of us are prayers
of action/ on our way to god
and
love
will get you through times of no sex better than sex will get you
through times of no love
(stolen
from the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers: dope will get you through
times of no money better than money will get you through times of no
dope.
Journal
of the Plague Year
Woronzow 1999
New
album that Damon & Naomi (from the band Damon & Naomi)
encouraged me to record. They have a studio in Cambridge. We met at
the first Terrastock festival. New songs after a 25 year hiatus and
after I began performing again (at the first Terrastock festival).
The record has a song for Kurt Cobain and one for Simeon of the
Silver Apples (a melody put to the Yeats poem).
and the live album Live
Pearls This was a bootleg—I'm amazed how many bootlegs show up
and their quality, considering the technology was yelling into a big
horn in those days. Joe Phillips has found a lot of these and gives
them a good shape.
You have also released some
compilations (like The Wizard of Is from 2004) and boxes. Please also
tell us more about them. Reprise was working on putting out a collection of many of
the songs from the 4 Reprise albums (not counting “familiar
songs'). I hear about it from my son Dave who heard about it on the
internet. Reprise had assumed I was dead, I guess. The New Musical
Express had an obit that I died of a drug overdose in NYC in 1973.
That was not true. Name of the collection: “Constructive
Melancholy.” Birdman 1999.
Jewels Were the Stars, Water Records, 2003 all the Reprise albums
in a box set with an insert with people saying nice things about me.
Wizard of Is, Water Records, 2 CD's, 2004: A bunch of stuff I found in all those boxes that I wondered what was in them. So the CDs had lots of live things, demos, outtakes, songs in progress, unreleased songs, and nudity. At the first Terrastock, I was told that Jeffrey Alexander
of Magic Eye was putting together a tribute album, For the Dead in
Space, with a lot of performers doing pbswine songs: damon &
naomi, ghost, bevis frond, flying saucer attack, kitchen cynics (alan
davidson), and many more, all bands that I first met at T1 and admire
to this day. My surprise was that any of them had even heard of
pbswine. Jeffrey put together 2 more volumes of FTDIS with marissa
nadler, bardo pond, thurston moore, and many, many more. Incredible
to have other bands do your songs. I had to pinch myself to make
sure it wasn't all a dream, and was left with a nasty welt on my arm.
When and why did Pearls
Before Swine break up/decided that the swines no longer was worthy
any more pearls ? See above. As we say in legal documents.
How is the availability of
the Pearls Before Swine albums ? Amazingly to me, all the albums from the 60's and 70's are
out on CD. Including the ESP ones that have been in print (?) for
over 40 years. Cherry Red put out stardancer and sunforest (the Blue
Thumb records). I thought that surely the albums would all become
extinct and found only by archeologists in the dead language of
vinyl. In fact, some were released on vinyl in conjunction with the
CD releases/ Just to give those of
us who are unknown with Pearls Before Swine a bit of a reference
point or two: How would you describe your music and which bands would
you would compare your music with ? Pink Floyd meets the Carpenters.
No?
OK, our influences at the beginning were Joan Baez (for her chord book), Dylan, of course—he invented the alphabet that we all write in, Jefferson Airplane, Velvet Underground with Nico, the Fugs, Leadbelly, Woody Guthrie, Bessie Smith, Peter, Paul & Mary, Tom Rush, Jacques Brel. The list could go on. You went solo after the
swines was cut of from their supply of pearls. Please tell us more
about your solo career and your life outside Pearls Before Swine.
See above. What we can expect from you
in the future ? More pearls for us swines ?
We always felt that the name meant that we (the people our
age, and our ideas and ideals) were the pearls before the rest of the
world, i.e., the swine. As I say now, “never trust anyone over
75.”
I have songs that I may record, but now I'm a retired civil rights
lawyer living in Florida with my wife, Lynn, and two
Canine-Americans, Lucy and Atticus (feral dogs of Destiny). Our
email address is [email protected].
Anything you want to add to
this interview ?
A recipe for chocolate coffee bourbon orange almond cinnamon cake.
I'll have to email it later.
Thanks for the interview. Now I have to go finish The Girl with
the Dragon Tattoo. Thank you to Tom Rapp for this interview
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32531 |
Posted: September 02 2010 at 13:17 |
Love the first comment!
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Rocktopus
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 02 2006 Location: Norway Status: Offline Points: 4202 |
Posted: September 02 2010 at 14:01 |
Oh, great!
Tom Rapp is undoubtly one of the top lyricists/songwriters of the/any era. I enjoy the four PBS albums I got, but The Use of Ashes is the one among my desert island discs (Balaklava is also wonderful). I've been waiting for a proper re-release of this underappreciated classic, but it seems its already out there? Too bad there's no videoes, streams or anything of neither Jeweler, Rocket Man, Riegal, Song About a Rose... anywhere to be found. But I know most europeans can listen to Use of Ashes online for free on Spotify (which seems to be down right now). Deeply moving and timeless. A reccomended listen for everyone! |
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Over land and under ashes
In the sunlight, see - it flashes Find a fly and eat his eye But don't believe in me Don't believe in me Don't believe in me |
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