Archiveintrag #3742 (440856) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Projekte wie dieses dürften öfter stattfinden:
Brüder im Geiste treffen im richtigen Leben aufeinander und lassen
gemeinsam die Sau raus. In diesem Foll mieteten Westcoast-Veteran Warren
Zevon und R.E.M. minus Michael Stipe ein Studio, um genehme Songs genüßlich
zu covern: hauptsächlich Schwarzes der Blues-Abteilung. Wenn dann doch
Raspberry Beret von Prince das Highlight ist und bis in die
Haarspitzen wie ein waschechter Zevon-Schmachtfetzen klingt, so liegt es
daran, daß die übrigen Songs (von Robert Johnson, Willie Dixon
und anderen) alle irgendwann so oderso ähnlich schon einma) von einer
derartigen Rasselbande durch die Mangel gedreht wurden. Die Hindu Love Gods kümmerten sich jedenfalls wenig um schillernde Klangreinheit, sondern favorisierten unbehauene, aggressive Rock-Dynamik. Dabei entstand kein wichtiges Album, aber eines, das pure Musik und Spielfreude vermittelt. (Werner Theurich in Musik Express/Sounds 1-91, 4 Sterne) |
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Hindu Love Gods formed in Athens, GA in 1984, a virtual cult-hero supergroup originally comprising guitarist Peter Buck, bassist Mike Mills, and drummer Bill Berry (all three of then-underground icons R.E.M.), pianist Warren Zevon (the famously sardonic singer/composer best known for the classic "Werewolves of London"), and vocalist Bryan Cook (a veteran of local favorites Time Toy and Oh-OK). Their first single, "Narrator," arrived on the IRS label in mid-1985, getting lost in the hubbub surrounding the concurrent release of R.E.M.'s third LP Fables of the Reconstruction. A year later, Buck, Mills, and Berry rejoined Zevon to collaborate on his Sentimental Hygiene solo effort; minus Cook, the foursome recorded a full-length Hindu Love Gods LP over the course of a single drunken after-hours studio session (Bill Berry: "It took us about as long to do as it takes to listen to"), with Zevon assuming vocal duties for a series of loose-knit electric blues covers capped off by a reading of Prince's "Raspberry Beret." The session remained an underground legend until it was finally issued on the Giant label in 1990; no other Hindu Love Gods recordings were forthcoming. (by Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide) |
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One of the oddest one-offs to come out of the '80s music
scene, this is a live-in-the-studio album by REM minus Michael Stipe (Bill
Berry, Peter Buck, and Mike Mills) and fronted by Warren Zevon of "Werewolves
of London" and "Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner" fame.
It was held for release for four years, and although it was apparently released
with the cooperation of Zevon, et al., it is neither an REM-style album,
nor a typical Warren Zevon album.
Muddy Waters once said that "the blues had a baby and they named it rock and roll." This album reverses that process, in that these are rock and rollers who decided to make a blues album. Warren Zevon? REM? Playing the blues? Is this some sort of weird, not-terribly-well-done lark undertaken after drinking too much whiskey late one night in some sleazy bar? Quite the contrary -- this is a true electric blues album. If it had been released by a legitimate blues label, I'm sure it would have made all sorts of Best of the Year lists, but the blues critics pretty much completely ignored it, as it was released on a vanity label operated by Reprise Records. The focus here is largely on hard-hitting, hair-raising electric blues -- straightforward playing with no fancy embellishments. Only super-tight musicians like these could function as an ad hoc blues band to back up Zevon on what is clearly his pet project. Both the selection of tunes and the rough-and-tumble delivery place the REM members as far as possible from their roots as an alternative rock band. They clearly spent some time learning to play the blues. The only place that their REM roots show is in the drummer's (Bill Berry) style -- unfortunately as boring as that of most rock drummers. The lack of originality on the drums is more than offset by Warren Zevon on the piano, sounding like Mac Rebennack on uppers -- he's almost too fast, but he never quite trips. (Strangely enough, I can find no proof that Mac Rebennack and Warren Zevon ever shared a recording studio gig -- a true pity, as it would have been a wonderfully weird gig!) But Zevon is in peak form here -- his cynical sense of humor and rough, not-terribly-good baritone add a spark of personality to even the overly familiar Muddy Waters ("Mannish Boy"), Willie Dixon ("Wang Dang Doodle"), Robert Johnson ("Walkin' Blues" and "Travelin' Riverside Blues") and Howlin' Wolf material. He also has the necessary bona fides to play the blues (Zevon has lived fast and hard, and just hasn't bothered to die young). The oddest cover, though, is a strikingly edgy rendition of Prince's "Raspberry Beret." Yes, they covered a Prince song! And in the process they turned it into an intense blues number to be remembered -- edgy, harsh, and ridden with sexual angst. This version of "Raspberry Beret" sounds like a blues version of the Springsteen song "I'm On Fire" (off his 1984 Born in the U.S.A. album). Warren hasn't been this good since he recorded his 1978 album Excitable Boy. (It's worth noting that the Hindu Love Gods' press kit says, "Who knows (if they'll play live)? If they do, we won't know about it 'til the morning after. According to one insider, predicting a Hindu Love Gods performance is akin to predicting the weather in Fond du Lac in mid-March." But this album is a studio project that feels live.) They finish the album out with an odd choice -- Woody Guthrie's "Vigilante Man." It's not that they do a bad job of covering it, but one does wonder, "Why this song?" I suspect it's because Woody is such an icon among folk and rock artists that everyone from Bruce Springsteen to the Scottish group the Old Blind Dogs feels they must cover one or more of his songs. If you like electric blues, hunt this CD out in your favorite used CD shop. And keep an eye out for the rumored Hindu Love Gods EP, which has two cuts on it that were not on this CD: an original song ("Narrator") and an Easybeats cover ("Gonna Have A Good Time Tonight"). [Jack Merry, www.greenmanreview.com] |
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