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The Residents
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Over the course of a recording career spanning several decades,
the Residents
remained a riddle of Sphinx-like proportions; cloaking their lives and music in a haze of willful obscurity, the band's members never identified themselves by name, always appearing in public in disguise -- usually tuxedos, top hats and giant eyeball masks -- and refusing to grant media interviews. Drawing inspiration from the likes of fellow innovators including
Harry Partch
,
Sun Ra
, and
Captain Beefheart
,
the Residents
channelled the breadth
of American music into their idiosyncratic, satiric vision, their mercurial blend of electronics, distortion, avant-jazz, classical symphonies and gratingly nasal vocals reinterpreting everyone from
John Philip Sousa
to
James Brown
while simultaneously expanding the boundaries of theatrical performance and multimedia interaction.
It was commonly accepted that the four-member group emigrated to San Francisco, California from Shreveport, Louisiana at some point in the early '70s. According to longtime group spokesman
Jay Clem
-- one member of the so-called Cryptic Corporation, the band's representative body -- they received their name when Warner Bros. mailed back their anonymous demo tape, addressed simply "for the attention of residents." Finding no takers for their oddball sounds,
the Residents
founded their own label, Ralph Records, for the purposes of issuing their 1972 debut
"Santa Dog,"
released in a pressing of 300 copies which were mailed out to luminaries from
Frank Zappa
to President Richard Nixon. Their debut full-length, 1974's
Meet the Residents
, reportedly sold fewer than 50 copies before the group was threatened with a lawsuit from Capitol Records over its cover, a twisted, dada-esque parody of the art to
Meet the Beatles
.
The follow-up, 1974's neo-classical excursion
Not Available
, was recorded with the intention of its music remaining unissued; locked in cold storage upon its completion, only a 1978 contractual obligation resulted in its eventual release. 1976's
Third Reich 'N' Roll
was the next official offering, a collection of pop oldies covers presented in a controversial jacket portraying Adolf Hitler clutching an enormous carrot. After a 1976 concert in Berkeley, California which cloaked
the Residents
behind an opaque screen, wrapped up like mummies -- the most famous of only three live performances mounted during their first decade of existence -- they issued an abrasive 1977 cover of
the Rolling Stones
'
"Satisfaction,"
which became an underground hit on both sides of the Atlantic at the peak of the punk movement. As the decade drew to a close, the group released a flurry of recordings, further building upon their growing cult following; among them were 1977's
Duck Stab/Buster & Glen
, 1979's
Eskimo
(purportedly a collection of native Arctic chants) and 1980's
Commercial Album
, a compilation of 40 one-minute "pop songs" that aired on San Francisco radio only because the
Residents
played them during the advertising time they bought.
In 1981
the Residents
embarked upon their "
Mole Trilogy
," a prog rock collection of albums -- 1981's
The Mark of the Mole
, 1982's
The Tunes of Two Cities
and 1985's
The Big Bubble
-- recounting an epic battle between a pair of tribes named the Moles and the Chubs; a lavish, multimedia tour, "The Mole Show," followed. In the interim, the group also mounted another ambitious project, the "
American Composer
" series, although only two of the projected titles -- 1984's
George and James
(a reinterpretation of songs by
George Gershwin
and
James Brown
) and 1986's
Stars and Hank Forever
(celebrating
John Philip Sousa
and
Hank Williams
) -- ever appeared. Instead, in the wake of financial and corporate difficulties which resulted in the creation of a New Ralph label,
the Residents
issued the one-off
God in Three Persons
(a talking blues outing), and 1989's
The King and Eye
(a reinterpretation of
Elvis Presley
standards).
After losing control of the Ralph label as well as their back catalog,
the Residents
regained the rights to their music in 1990 and began reissuing long-out-of-print material as well as the new
Freak Show
, a meditation on circus sideshows and carnival dementia. Four years later,
Freak Show
was reissued as a CD-ROM, marking the group's first leap into the new digital interactive technology;
Have a Bad Day
followed in 1996, and included the soundtrack to the CD-ROM game "Bad Day on the Midway." In 1997, the band celebrated their silver anniversary with the release of the career-spanning overview
Our Tired, Our Poor, Our Huddled Masses
.
Wormwood: Curious Stories From the Bible
followed the next year, with
Roadworms
(songs from
Wormwood
as performed in the stage show) being issued in mid-2000. They followed that up with the awesome Icky Flix DVD, an incredibly detailed collection of their videos that featured both old and new soundtracks, 5.1 Digital Stereo Surround sound, countless hidden videos and in-depth histories of each individual track. That was followed by another one of their rare tours, which saw them incorporate the DVD into their live act and bring out guest singer
Molly Harvey
for some truly creative duets. The
Petting Zoo
retrospective followed in the spring of 2002, acting as a budget sampler for new fans and giving old fans something to tide them over while several high concept projects neared completion. The first was
Demons Dance Alone
, a complicated pop album that hearkened back to the catchier material from
Duck Stab
and
The Commercial Album
. That was followed in 2002 by a live retrospective called
Kettles of Fish on the Outskirts of Town
that contained 3 cd's and a DVD, and a further look at their past via remasters and remixes put out by EuroRalph (including a remix of their previously unreleased and notorious "Warner Brothers Demo"). A DVD of the
Demons Dance Alone
tour came out in 2004 and another new project,
Animal Lover
was released in 2005. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Hunters
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