email:
password:
remember:
login
Spotlight
Discover
Browse
what's new
messages
create
upload
edit profile
account
invite
Music
Playlists
Videos
Groups
People
Blogs
Artist
Overview
Bio
Albums
Music
Video
Related Artists
The Dead Milkmen
Favorite
Get Ringtone
During their heyday in the late '80s,
the Dead Milkmen
led a crop of college-radio jokesters that also included
Mojo Nixon
,
King Missile
, and
Too Much Joy
, among others. Playing a basic, happily amateurish brand of punk-pop,
the Milkmen
skewered popular culture, indie trend-followers, and the intellectually challenged, while frequently indulging their taste for tastelessness. Critics alternately praised and dismissed the band as geeky, juvenile wiseasses -- virtually every review seemed to contain the word "sophomoric," and either you found
them funny or you didn't. But despite the mixed reviews,
the Milkmen
earned a devoted cult following (which famously included Detroit Tigers utility infielder Jim Walewander), a few novelty hits on college radio, and even an MTV hit with
"Punk Rock Girl."
As polarizing as their sense of humor was among critics, it was what fans wanted and came to expect, and attempts to move into more genuine, serious territory during the '90s effectively spelled the end of the band. Oddly enough, by that time, they were exerting at least a small measure of influence -- perhaps more than any of their peers, they paved the way for the legion of smart-assed geek-rockers who ruled alternative radio for a brief period in the mid-'90s.
The Dead Milkmen
were formed at Philadelphia's Temple University in 1983. Guitarist and sometime vocalist
Joe Jack Talcum
(born
Joe Genaro
) and lead singer
Rodney Anonymous
(aka
Rodney Amadeus Anonymous
, aka
Rodney Anonymous Melloncamp
, born
Rodney Linderman
) grew up together in the small Pennsylvania town of Wagontown. During high school,
Genaro
started writing a newsletter about a fictional band called
the Dead Milkmen
, and the exploits of its lead singer
Jack Talcum
. When
Genaro
graduated and enrolled at Temple, he and
Linderman
kept up a songwriting partnership through the mail. Through his acquaintances at Temple,
Genaro
met drummer
Dean Clean
(born
Dean Sabatino
), who played in a local punk band called
Narthex
, and bassist
Dave Blood
(identified only as
Dave S.
), with whom he struck up a songwriting partnership. All three started playing together in 1983, and with
Rodney Anonymous
joining them that summer, they performed their first gig as
the Dead Milkmen
.
Over the next year or two,
the Milkmen
recorded several live, self-released cassettes, and achieved considerable local notoriety with a live radio performance in 1984. They earned some attention in the punk magazine Maximumrocknroll, and the resulting buzz helped them land a deal with Restless Records subsidiary Fever. In 1985, they issued their debut album,
Big Lizard in My Backyard
, which consisted mostly of material from their cassette releases. The track
"Bitchin' Camaro"
-- which featured a rambling spoken intro full of snotty putdowns and nonsensical banter -- became a hit on college radio, and sloppy joke-punk tunes like
"Takin' Retards to the Zoo"
cemented their new cult following. The follow-up,
Eat Your Paisley!
, appeared in 1986, and while some fans considered it a letdown, they had some radio success with
"The Thing That Only Eats Hippies."
1987's
Bucky Fellini
was a return to form that spawned the underground smash
"Instant Club Hit (You'll Dance to Anything),"
a spot-on satire of Britain's gloomy alternative music and the pretension of its attendant subculture in America. The song (and several remixes) served as the basis for an EP, and it also pushed
Bucky Fellini
onto the national album charts for the first time in the band's career.
Poised for something vaguely resembling a breakthrough,
the Milkmen
expanded their cult following even further with 1988's
Beelzebubba
. That was largely due to the single
"Punk Rock Girl,"
a college-radio smash whose video was also aired fairly extensively on MTV.
Beelzebubba
just missed climbing into the Top 100 and wound up as the group's biggest seller, also featuring fan favorites
"Stuart"
and
"Life Is Shit."
A second single,
"Smokin' Banana Peels,"
was also released, and anchored another EP that featured five additional new songs, including the gross-out-fest
"The Puking Song."
The band's proper follow-up,
Metaphysical Graffiti
, appeared in 1990 and featured guest vocals from
the Butthole Surfers
'
Gibby Haynes
on
"Anderson, Walkman, Buttholes and How."
However, the album received a mixed response from fans, some of whom praised the beefed-up production but others of whom found the material erratic; in any case, it stalled some of the band's momentum. There were also reports that their record company was unhappy with the unlisted bonus track,
"Cousin Earl,"
a near-seven-minute shaggy-dog story that piled on
the Milkmen
's gross-out humor to previously unimagined levels.
Whether it was the fault of
"Cousin Earl"
or the fact that Restless' parent company, Enigma, went bankrupt,
the Dead Milkmen
found themselves hunting for a new label after
Metaphysical Graffiti
. They wound up on the Disney-run Hollywood Records, and in an even more bizarre twist, elected to play things mostly straight -- with no pressure from the company to do so -- on their 1992 label debut,
Soul Rotation
. Perhaps signaling what they hoped was a new era for the band,
Anonymous
adopted the new name
H.P. Hovercraft
, while
Talcum
switched his to
Butterfly Fairweather
and took on a larger share of the lead vocal duties. Some critics -- mainly those who'd never found
the Milkmen
all that funny -- and a minority of fans embraced the record and its more eclectic songwriting, but the new direction simply wound up alienating most of the group's fan base. A second album for Hollywood, 1993's
Not Richard but Dick
, fared even more poorly, and
the Milkmen
were dropped.
The Milkmen
did celebrate their tenth anniversary in 1993 by self-releasing
Now We Are 10
, a CD compilation of some of their early cassette-only recordings. They returned to Restless Records for 1994's
Chaos Rules: Live at the Trocadero
, a run through some of their best-known songs, and offered the new studio set
Stoney's Extra Stout (Pig)
in 1995. It was virtually ignored, and
the Milkmen
elected to disband. All the members got day jobs, and most continued in music on a local basis in Philadelphia.
Rodney Anonymous
reverted to his given name and started a gothic-tinged Celtic rock band called
Burn Witch Burn
, which issued a self-titled CD in 2000.
Joe Jack Talcum
and
Dean Clean
reunited, also under their real names (
Genaro
and
Sabatino
), in
Butterfly Joe
, who also released a self-titled debut nationally in 2000. The two also gigged with several other Philly bands over the '90s:
Genaro
with
the Town Managers
,
Touch Me Zoo
, and
the Low Budgets
, and
Sabatino
with
the Big Mess Orchestra
.
Dave Blood
, meanwhile, gave up the bass due to pain in his hands, and went to graduate school to further his interest in the former Yugoslavia. Meanwhile, Restless issued the career retrospective
Death Rides a Pale Cow
(titled after one of their early cassettes) in 1997, and 2003 brought
Now We Are 20
, an expanded reissue of
Now We Are 10
given wider release by Restless. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
More
Popular Songs
Listen to these songs as a playlist
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Bitchin' Camaro (Album Version)
6,596 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Takin' Retards To The Zoo (Album Version)
2,425 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Bitchin' Camaro (Album Version)
2,308 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
If You Love Someone Set Them On Fire (Album Version)
2,202 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Rc's Mom (Album Version)
1,598 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Stuart (Album Version)
1,543 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Life Is Shit (Album Version)
1,298 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Tiny Town (Album Version)
1,206 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Beach Party Vietnam (Album Version)
1,146 plays
Download
Playlist
Ringtone
Laundromat Song
1,020 plays
view all
To access the QuickMix feature, you must first disable your pop-up blocker or add imeem.com to your pop-up "safe" list.
Fan Comments
Login to leave a comment
.
Are you sure that you want to report this as spam?
Albums (10)
Now We Are 20
(19 songs)
Cream of the Crop: Best of the Dead Milkmen
(10 songs)
Death Rides a Pale Cow: The Ultimate Collection
(22 songs)
Stoney's Extra Stout (Pig)
(2 songs)
view all
Related Artists
The Dickies
They Might Be Giants
Mojo Nixon
Elvis Hitler
view all
About imeem
Jobs
Blog
Legal
Press
About Us
Help
Content
Top 100 Music
New Music
Music Videos
Local Music
Artist Events
Discover Music
Most Popular Artists
Lil Wayne
Chris Brown
Ne-Yo
Rihanna
Mariah Carey
Linkin Park
Top Music Genres
Hip Hop
R&B
Pop
Rock
Indie
Do More
Android App
IPhone App
VIP Upgrade
Developers
Advertise on imeem
Follow imeem on Twitter
View imeem on Facebook
Music
Playlists
Videos
Groups
People
Blogs
Polls
© 2009 imeem, Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2009 All Music Guide, inc. All rights reserved.