For today’s post, we
feature a tape of demo recordings made by author and punk icon Jim Carroll with
Seattle psych-rock explorer Robert Roth (and his band Truly), who met up in a
Seattle studio in 1994 to record two tracks, “Falling Down Laughing” and “Dirge
Song.” “Falling Down Laughing” would be re-recorded for Carroll’s final album, 1998’s
Pools of Mercury. While Roth is credited with writing the music, neither
he nor his Truly mates—Hiro Yamamoto, ex-Soundgarden, and Mark Pickerel, ex-Screaming
Trees—appear on the album. Carroll’s and Truly’s original recording of “Falling
Down Laughing,” however, remains unreleased. “Dirge Song,” meanwhile, later
became “Hairshirt Fracture,” which was remixed and issued by Kill Rock Stars
in 2000 on the five-song EP Runaway, Carroll’s swan song.
As I recall, the Carroll–Roth connection originated with Rosemary Carroll, Jim’s ex-wife and Truly’s attorney. Carroll mentored Roth as he was writing the lyrics of Truly’s 1995 masterpiece Fast Stories … From Kid Coma, and he co-wrote “Repulsion” on Truly’s sophomore LP, Feeling You Up. In 1998, while touring in support of Pools of Mercury, Carroll reconnected with Roth for a show at Seattle’s Crocodile CafĂ©, with Roth joining Carroll and company on guitar. Three songs recorded from that night were included on the Runaway EP, including a live rendition of “Falling Down Laughing.” In the weeks leading up to that show, I convinced Roth to do a Q&A with Carroll to be printed in The Rocket, the magazine I was editing at the time. And that’s how I came into possession of the very tape I’m highlighting today—a generous gift from Robert Roth himself.
For more about Truly,
and to purchase a 25th anniversary digital edition of Fast Stories …
From Kid Coma (a vinyl reissue said to be coming soon), visit their Bandcamp
page. To venture down the vast and expanding rabbit hole of the Northwest Demo Tape Society, go
here.