Their name is Bastard, although Orphan seems more apt a
handle—for why would any sensible parent lay claim to this mustachioed sausage party? Thankfully,
Bastard’s story is a short one. Conceived backstage at Toto concert in Brussels
in the spring of 1975, Bastard was the product of a rather strange tryst
involving the roadies of opening bands, Bulge and Fanny, a men’s room handicap
stall, Robert Plant’s prosthetic, and a female centaur AWOL from a trashy
sci-fi paperback. Nine months after the curtain fell, Bastard, propelled by a
drummer named Toto (told you!), slithered and oozed onto the pages of Kerrang! (three full years before the
magazine began publishing) and into the back-alley cabarets of Hamburg, where, in
a moment of true serendipity, they successfully propositioned the very man who
awarded them a record deal. The resultant album is the only one emblazoned with
the Bastard name and the band’s four-headed dog logo (so many heads, so few
balls). The record is notable but for one thing, and that thing has nothing to
do with the music on it (no one will actually admit to dropping the needle on
this plastic turd, myself included). See the sleazoid second from the left with
the porn ’stache and the patches on his jeans? Yeah, that’s right; he tore those swatches from the AIDS quilt and stitched ’em to his crotch. Fuckin' bastard!
Showing posts with label i love my organ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label i love my organ. Show all posts
Monday, July 1, 2013
Monday, May 14, 2012
A Guy with Kaleidescope Pipes
I bought this album for its cover. Look at it: It comes in colors, everywhere. It’s like a rainbow. In fact, it’s a bright psychedelic lovefest of colors, a cross between the Kinks’ Face to Face and the Chocolate Watch Band’s No Way Out. And check out Virgil Fox: He has pipes sprouting from his head. And that bow tie, might it have belonged to the Electric Prunes? While Into the Classics: Meditations and Sonic Spectaculars may have psychedelic connotations in the title, this is no psychedelic record. It wasn’t even released in the ’60s, during the psychedelic era, but the early ’70s. Virgil Fox plays the Aeolian-Skinner Organ—without accompaniment. And he’s not guiding you on a wild magic carpet ride into new sonic and sensory realms; he's taking you to church. Yep, Virgil was letting the flowers of his imagination sprout not in some incense-clouded harem, but in some incense-clouded cathedral. On this album, he sticks to the classics, working his dizzy fingers through Tchaikovsky, Grieg and Bohm. Psychedelic or not, his choice of material is inspired, his performance superlative. Just imagine yourself seated alone one lazy summer afternoon in the cool comfort of a gothic cathedral, the sun gleaming through stained-glass windows, letting dusty rays of beautiful colors shower down on you as you take in Virgil’s virtuosity. This record may venture down some well-trodden paths, but with a little imagination, you can set your sights for the center of the sun.
I wrote this piece a few years back. I pulled it out of mothballs (and gave it an editorial bath) after listening to Fox’s record on my hi-fi last week.
I wrote this piece a few years back. I pulled it out of mothballs (and gave it an editorial bath) after listening to Fox’s record on my hi-fi last week.
Labels:
i love my organ,
psychedelic,
records,
thrift store junk
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