DC's

The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Gig #144: Power Pop Retrospectors (1974 – 1984): The Three O’Clock, 20/20, Let’s Active, The Hollywood Stars, The Last, The Boys, The Jam, Shoes, Yachts, Plimsouls, The Records, Nick Lowe, The Bangles, The Headboys, The Nerves, Cheap Trick, Pandoras, Dwight Twilley Band, Flamin Groovies, The Undertones, The Bongos, The Neighborhoods, The Diodes, Great Buildings, The dB’s, Milk ‘n’ Cookies, Teenage Radio Stars, Rezillos, Wreckless Eric, The Quick, Tommy Keene, The Flys, The Dickies, Pezband, Big Star *

*(restored)

 

The Three O’Clock
‘The Three O’Clock were the quintessential L.A. Paisley Underground band. Lead singer and bassist Michael Quercio in fact coined the term to describe the set of bands, including the Dream Syndicate, Rain Parade, Green on Red, and the Bangles, who incorporated the chiming guitars of the Byrds and the Beatles into their pop songs with a psychedelic bent, and the clothes to match.’


Her Head’s Revolving (1982)


Jet Fighter (1983)

 

20/20
‘One of the key bands in the Los Angeles power pop explosion of the late 1970s and early ‘80s, 20/20 never quite scored a hit single, but they were a powerful draw on the West Coast in their heyday, and their signature song, “Yellow Pills,” became a cult favorite, covered by a number of later power pop acts and providing a noted pop fanzine with its name.’


Yellow Pills (1979)


Remember The Lightning (1979)


Nuclear Boy (1981)

 

Let’s Active
‘Mitch Easter carved his place in music history as a hip producer in the ’80s, most notably for the early R.E.M. albums Murmur and Reckoning; unfortunately, these achievements often overshadowed and distracted him from giving his full commitment to his own recording career with Let’s Active, a band that, between 1983 and 1988, released some of the finest Southern power pop/jangle pop of the decade.’


Waters Part (1984)

 

The Hollywood Stars
‘While they never earned more than a tiny cult following outside their home state of California, the Hollywood Stars became heroes to glam and power pop fans with their tight, hooky, guitar-driven music, which emerged at a time when prog rock and singer/songwriters were dominating the rock scene. The sole album they released during their heyday, 1977’s Hollywood Stars, was an overcooked disappointment with too much polish and not enough punch. But a pair of post-breakup collections of unreleased material, Shine Like a Radio: The Lost 1974 Album and Sound City, captured the band’s sound with fewer frills and revealed them to be a tough but tuneful rock band with a confident guitar attack, strong melodic hooks, and expert harmonies that didn’t blunt their swagger. Their style and approach wouldn’t have been out of place in the West Coast new wave pop boom that swept the city just two years after their album came and went.’


Escape (1974)


Supermen are Always Gentlemen (1974)

 

The Last
‘The Nolte brothers formed the band in 1976, and the band’s sound was influenced by garage rock, surf rock, folk rock and psychedelic rock. The first settled line-up also included Vitus Mataré (keyboards, flute) and Jack Reynolds (drums). After three self-financed singles, the band was signed by Bomp! Records, who issued the debut album L.A. Explosion! in 1979 (described by Trouser Press as “a near-perfect debut”). It was also issued in the UK by London Records. They reverted to their own Backlash label for second album Look Again (1980), and split up in the mid-1980s.’


She Don’t Know Why I’m Here (1979)

 

The Boys
‘The Boys have on occasion been described as The Beatles of punk, which seems a fair comparison if you think ‘Love Me Do’ rather than ‘I Am The Walrus’. Certainly, they were purveyors of a superior brand of high-speed guitar pop, with camp Cockney vocals, a tinkling piano and a tendency to keep most songs under three minutes. In addition, the band celebrated Christmas each year as did The Beatles (with their fan club Xmas flexis), but The Boys celebrated in proper punk style by recording abusive yuletide songs as The Yobs. They did not, however, go all Sgt Pepper on us.’


The First Time (1977)


Brickfield Nights (1979)

 

The Jam
‘Possibly the key to the groups overwhelming success was not only Weller’s outstanding ability as a songwriter and musician but also his ability to move with the times. Punk faded away in 1979 and whilst the group’s second album ‘This Is The Modern World’ contained elements of the Post-Punk songwriting that appeared on the previous Album, a new audience began to associate themselves with the group; the early 80s Mod Revival or ‘Jam Boys’ as they became known. Famously, the first draft of the ‘All Mod Cons’ album was scrapped in a trying period for the band with Weller temporarily lacking motivation. However the revised version of the album was well received and three more successful albums followed: ‘Setting Sons’, ‘Sound Affects’ and ‘The Gift’. The group became synonymous with the 70s/80s mod scene (partly against their will), influencing other bands in the process.’


All around the world (1977)


Strange Town (1979)

 

Shoes
‘Shoes pushed forward, beginning with the power pop classic Black Vinyl Shoes, a record which showcased their signature sound: fuzzy electric and bright acoustic guitars, jangly melodies, melancholy lyrics, and shimmering harmonies. When it was self-released in 1977, it received excellent press, including a glowing review in The Village Voice, and was eventually picked up for re-release by JEM/PVC Records. With increased distribution, Black Vinyl Shoes drew the attention of major labels, and Shoes signed with Elektra/Asylum in early 1979. Their three Elektra records—Present Tense (1979), Tongue Twister (1981), and Boomerang (1982)—won Shoes an international following and solid critical respect. They worked with Mike Stone, who had produced Queen, and Richard Dashut, who had helmed both Fleetwood Mac’s massive best-seller Rumors and its experimental follow-up, Tusk. Shoes’ videos—“Too Late” and “Tomorrow Night” in particular—were prominently featured on early MTV. But Shoes had signed during the devastating Crash of ’79, and they struggled to break out during these years against the backdrop of an industry in free-fall. They were released from their Elektra contract in late 1982.’


Now and Then (1979)


Too Late (1979)


When It Hits (1980)

 

Yachts
‘Retrospective appraisals of the band’s output vary. M.C. Strong dismisses Yachts as “one of the many outfits jostling for recognition in the overcrowded pop / rock marketplace”. Colin Larkin is more generous, writing that “Yachts’ popularity was fleeting but they left behind several great three-minute slices of pop, including a cover of R. Dean Taylor’s “There’s a Ghost in my House”. Vernon Joynson summed up Yacht’s approach. “Lyrically, much of their material was in the usual boy / girl realm but with humour. Musically, they ranged from sixties influenced rock with [farfisa] organ to fast-paced punk-cum-[new wave]”.’


Yachting Type (1978)

 

Plimsouls
‘Formed in Los Angeles in 1978, the Plimsouls merged roots, retro and guitar rock with a ramshackle punk aesthetic. At a time when rock music was shifting gears, the Plimsouls’ brand of soul-punk — a modern take on ’60s soul, British Invasion and garage rock sounds — fit right in with the ’80s post-punk American guitar band movement. Known for their kinetic live performances, the Plimsouls had an exceptional frontman in singer/songwriter Peter Case whose decision to pursue a solo career effectively ended their ’80s run, but whose songs have kept the group’s slight catalog and legacy in the public eye.’


Now (1981)


A Million Miles Away (1983)

 

The Records
‘Will Birch and John Wicks founded The Records in 1978. Will thought of the name in the bathtub. Influences included Big Star, The Raspberries, Blue Ash, Badfinger, Stealers Wheel and the Beatles’ Revolver LP. Will and John immediately wrote 11 songs including Teenarama, Up All Night and Held Up High. They advertised in Melody Maker and located Phil Brown (bass) and Huw Gower (guitar). In 1978 The Records joined the Be Stiff tour as backing group for Rachel Sweet. They recorded the 45 Starry Eyes and signed to Virgin Records. Their debut album Shades In Bed (aka ‘The Records’) helped to establish their reputation, particularly in the USA, where Starry Eyes was a minor hit. The Records disbanded in 1982.’


Starry Eyes (1979)

 

Nick Lowe
‘As the house producer for Stiff, he recorded many seminal records by the likes of the Damned, Elvis Costello, and the Pretenders. His rough, ragged production style earned him the nickname “Basher” and also established the amateurish, D.I.Y. aesthetics of punk. Despite his massive influence on punk rock, Lowe was never really a punk rocker. He was concerned with bringing back the tradition of three-minute pop singles and hard-driving rock & roll, but he subverted his melodic songcraft with a nasty sense of humor. His early solo singles and albums, Jesus of Cool and Labour of Lust, overflowed with hooks, bizarre jokes, and an infectious energy that made them some of the most acclaimed pop records of the new wave era.’


So It Goes (1978)


Marie Provost (1978)


Cruel to Be Kind (1979)

 

The Bangles
‘The Bangles combined the chiming riffs and catchy melodies of British Invasion guitar pop with a hint of the energy of new wave. In the process, they became one of the handful of all-female bands of the ’80s to win both critical and commercial success. The critical success came first — with their self-titled debut EP and full-length album, All Over the Place — and popular success arrived once they polished their sound, added some synthesizers, and deviated slightly from their trademark jangling guitar hooks. Once they were selling at the platinum level, the Bangles didn’t stay together long, but they left several pop gems in their wake.’


Real World (1984)

 

The Headboys
‘Formed in Edinburgh, Scotland, from the ashes of pop group Badger, the Headboys – Lou Lewis (guitar/vocals), Calum Malcolm (keyboards/vocals), George Boyter (bass/vocals) and Davy Ross (drums/vocals) – secured a lucrative contract with Robert Stigwood’s RSO label on the strength of a set of superior demos recorded at Malcolm’s own studio. They enjoyed a minor hit with ‘The Shape Of Things To Come’ (1979), but a faintly ludicrous schoolboy image undermined their grasp of power pop. The Headboys was not a commercial success and the group split up soon after its release.’


The Shape of Things to Come (1980)

 

The Nerves
‘L.A. power pop trio the Nerves are best known for writing “Hanging on the Telephone”, which was famously covered by Blondie (and, later, L7 and Cat Power, among others). The Nerves were only a band for a few years (from 1975-1978), and that– plus the fact that their only recorded output is a four-song, self-titled EP– has led them to be largely overlooked in the discussion of proto-new wave pop music.’


Hanging on the Telephone (1976)


Give Me Some Time (1976)

 

Cheap Trick
‘Combining a love for British guitar pop songcraft with crunching power chords and a flair for the absurd, Cheap Trick provided the necessary links between ’60s pop, heavy metal, and punk. Led by guitarist Rick Nielsen, the band’s early albums were filled with highly melodic, well-written songs that drew equally from the crafted pop of the Beatles, the sonic assault of the Who, and the tongue-in-cheek musical eclecticism and humor of the Move. A canny student of ’60s rock, Nielsen first worked with bassist Tom Petersson in the band Fuse, who released one album in 1969 before dissolving. Nielsen and Petersson continued working together in several formats until they teamed with drummer Bun E. Carlos and vocalist Robin Zander to form the definitive lineup of Cheap Trick in 1975. After developing a cult following after three outstanding albums — 1977’s Cheap Trick and In Color and 1978’s Heaven Tonight — and relentless touring, Cheap Trick scored an unexpected hit with 1978’s At Budokan, a live album originally issued only in Japan that became their international breakthrough.’


Big Eyes (1977)


Southern Girls (1977)


Way of the World (1980)

 

Pandoras
‘One of the leading acts on the Los Angeles garage punk scene of the ’80s, the Pandoras were also one of the few all-female acts on the fuzztone and Farfisa circuit, though they were more stylistically diverse than most of their peers.’


It’s About Time (1984)

 

Dwight Twilley Band
‘Though the Dwight Twilley Band only had one hit (Twilley had another on his own), Twilley and partner Phil Seymour created an enduring and highly memorable brand of power pop that blended Beatlesque pop and Sun rockabilly “slapback” echo. Only a fraction of the band’s early output was made available at the time, but these records are highly revered by power pop aficionados. According to the legend, Dwight Twilley met Phil Seymour in 1967 at a theater where they had gone to see the Beatles’ A Hard Day’s Night. After the film they immediately went to Twilley’s house to start writing and recording. The two continued the partnership over the next several years, calling themselves Oister and recruiting another part-time member, Bill Pitcock IV, on lead guitar. After developing their sound in their homemade studio, “the Shop,” they decided to take a stab at professional recording and headed out to Nashville, though they ended up stopping first at the legendary Sun Studios. Jerry Phillips (Sam’s son) was impressed enough to team them up with former Sun artist Ray Harris, who introduced them to “the Sun sound,” roughing up their Beatles-obsessed style a bit and creating a unique and endearing sound.’


That I Remember (1977)


England (1976)


Lookin’ for the Magic’ (1977)

 

Flamin Groovies
Shake Some Action is rightly championed by collectors and critics extolling its effortless pop perfection. If it had been released in 1966, it could have been a smash and a popular landmark, but a decade later, the Spector-loving sound and Beatle-loving songcraft (they even covered “Misery”) sank like a stone in the marketplace. It would be one thing if the record merely aped an era the band had spent playing other music, but the Groovies had the songs and nuanced understanding of the music needed to elevate themselves above pastiche.’


Shake Some Action (1976)

 

Undertones
‘The Undertones slam-bang punk-pop drew its strength from one simple fact: you didn’t need a secret handshake to enjoy it. John and Damian O’Neill mated infectious guitar hooks to ’60s garage, ’70s glam rock, and Feargal Sharkey’s signature vocal quaver. Those qualities came together on their breakout hit “Teenage Kicks,” whose simplicity harked back to ’60s ideals of when the song was king.’


Jimmy Jimmy (1979)


My Perfect Cousin (1980)

 

The Bongos
‘Hoboken’s Bongos — founded as a trio consisting of Richard Barone (guitar, vocals), Rob Norris (bass), and Frank Giannini (drums, vocals) — made no pretense of being anything other than a pop band; fortunately, they were a good pop band, covering guitar pop from the Byrds to T. Rex, all of it pulled together by Barone’s original songs.’


Bulrushes (1981)

 

The Neighborhoods
‘Led by singer and guitarist David Minehan, the Neighborhoods were a Boston-based rock band whose sound and approach found them residing in several camps at once, fusing the tuneful approach of a power pop group, the rebellious attitude of a punk band, and the big sound and swagger of a traditional hard rock act.’


Prettiest Girl (1979)

 

The Diodes
‘The first Canadian punk band signed to a major label, the Diodes are best-remembered for their moody, head-banging hit “Tired of Waking Up Tired” and their hard-hitting interpretation of the Paul Simon-penned tune “Red Rubber Ball.” With vocalist Paul Robinson backed by guitarist John Catto, bassist Ian MacKay, and drummers John Hamilton and, later, Mike Lengyell, the Toronto-based band roared with unabashed intensity.’


Tired of Waking Up Tired (1977)

 

Great Buildings
‘Great Buildings were a power pop/new wave group formed in the early ’80s by Danny Wilde (vocal/guitar), Richard Sanford (drums), Philip Solem (guitar/vocals), and Ian Ainsworth (bass/keyboard/vocals). They recorded one album for Columbia in 1981 before breaking up a short time later. Wilde went on to release one solo album in 1989 for Geffen before teaming up again with Solem to form the Rembrandts the following year.’


Another Day in My Life (1981)

 

The dB’s
‘Playing sharp, tuneful songs with a hint of psychedelia and some challenging melodic angles, the dB’s were the band that bridged the gap between classic ’70s power pop (defined by bands such as Big Star, Badfinger, and the Scruffs) and the jangly new wave of smart pop, personified by R.E.M. And while the dB’s spent the bunk of their career living and working on the East Coast, they were the among the first and most important representatives of the Southern branch of the new wave; most of the group’s members hailed from North Carolina, bringing a Southern warmth to music that sometimes sounded cold and spare in the hands of others.’


Black and White (1981)


Neverland (1982)

 

Milk ‘n’ Cookies
‘Milk ‘N’ Cookies were a band in the wrong place at the wrong time. If they’d shown up a few years later, they could have been part of the poppy end of the late-’70s/early-’80s punk/new wave explosion. If they’d made their name a year or two earlier, they could have been part of the glam explosion that inspired them. And if they’d been from Los Angeles or the U.K., they’d probably have found friendlier press. But it was their fate to emerge in Long Island, New York in 1974, where they didn’t fit in with the sound of the day. They had to settle for being an influential and revered cult item instead of achieving genuine rock stardom.’


(Dee, Dee You’re) Stuck On A Star (1975)


I’m Just a Kid (1976)

 

Teenage Radio Stars
‘Singer/guitarist Sean Kelly’s first band was Spred, which he formed in Melbourne (Australia) in 1977 with his school chum James Freud (born Colin McGlinchey). The band made its live debut on New Year’s Eve as part of a festival called ‘Punk Gunk’ (alongside The Boys Next Door). After joining the independent Suicide label (a Mushroom subsidiary through RCA) they changed the name of the band to Teenage Radio Stars. With a new rhythm section of Pierre Voltaire (bass) and Dave Osbourne (drums), Teenage Radio Stars contributed two tracks to Suicide’s punk compilation Lethal Weapons. The band also issued the single Wanna Be Ya Baby (April 1978) and appeared on TV pop show Countdown to promote its release.’


Sweet Boredom (1979)

 

Rezillos
‘Although frequently aligned with the punk movement, the Rezillos’ (later known as the Revillos) irreverent glam rock image and affection for campy girl group iconography set them distinctly apart from their peers. Formed in 1976 in Edinburgh, Scotland, the group was initially a fluid and highly informal collective centered around lead vocalists Eugene Reynolds (born Alan Forbes) and Fay Fife (Sheila Hynde), and fleshed out by lead guitarist Luke Warm (Jo Callis), second guitarist Hi-Fi Harris (Mark Harris), Dr. D.K. Smythe on bass, drummer Angel Paterson (Alan Patterson), and backing vocalist Gale Warning.’


Top of the Pops (1978)

 

Wreckless Eric
‘A gifted songwriter whose style is informed by playful eccentricity as well as “regular guy from the pub” wisdom, Wreckless Eric first earned recognition as part of Stiff Records’ willfully quirky roster of punk and new wave artists during the late ’70s. Early on, Eric bashed out a series of ragged, three-chord punk-pop singles driven by his pent-up energy and a knack for melodic pop hooks. Tunes like “Whole Wide World,” “Semaphore Signals,” and “Take the Cash (K.A.S.H.)” made him a cult hero due to his engaging sense of humor and fondness for simple rock & roll.’


Whole Wide World (1976)

 

The Quick
‘The key component of The Quick’s sound was its guitarist and leader, Steven Hufsteter, a Jagger-esque figure whose playing combined a slashing Townsend style attack with a fussy, classically influenced melodicism. It seems that Hufsteter’s mission on Earth was to meld the Teutonic bombast of Wagner and Mahler with the power chord driven sound of mod era groups like The Move and The Creation. A trademark example of this is the band’s thundering cover of the Beatle’s “It Won’t Be Long”, into which Hufsteter worked melodic lines from Rossini’s “William Tell Overture.” Unlike more mainstream classical rocks acts like ELO, however, Hufsteter wished only to incorporate classical music’s grandeur and drama, but not it’s gentility. His method was not to put a respectable face on rock, but to give classical music a much needed dirtying up.’


It Won’t Be Long (1976)


My Purgatory Years (1976)


Pretty Please (1978)

 

Tommy Keene
‘Keene first received critical acclaim with his pioneering pop band The Razz, who released several local independent singles. His 1984 EP Places That Are Gone became one of the year’s top selling independent releases. The EP garnered a four-star review in Rolling Stone, and was voted the No. 1 EP in the following year’s Village Voice Pazz & Jop Poll. Keene recorded and released numerous albums on such labels as Dolphin, Geffen and Matador Records. He worked with producers T-Bone Burnett, Don Dixon, and R. Walt Vincent. He continued to record and tour and released an album with Robert Pollard, of Guided by Voices, as ‘The Keene Brothers.’ Keene also played guitar on the Goo Goo Dolls’ hit song, “Broadway”, on their 1998 album, Dizzy Up The Girl.’


Places That Are Gone (1984)

 

The Flys
‘The Flys were a British pop punk rock band that originally formed in 1976 in Coventry, England. After the self-release of their initial EP, Bunch of Fives, they were signed by EMI Records. With EMI they released the albums Waikiki Beach Refugees and Own. In 1980 they changed labels to Parlophone but soon disbanded.’


Name Dropping (1979)

 

The Dickies
‘The Dickies were the clown princes of punk, not to mention surprisingly longstanding veterans of the L.A. scene. In fact, by the new millennium, they’d become the oldest surviving punk band still recording new material. In contrast to the snotty, intentionally offensive humor of many comedically inclined punk bands, the Dickies were winningly goofy, inspired mostly by trashy movies and other pop culture camp. Their covers were just as ridiculous as their originals, transforming arena rock anthems and bubblegum pop chestnuts alike into the loud, speed-blur punk-pop — basically the Ramones crossed with L.A. hardcore — that was their musical stock in trade. As the band got older, their music slowed down little by little, but their sound and their sense of humor stayed largely the same, and they were an avowed influence on new-school punkers like Green Day and the Offspring.’


Fan Mail (1979)


I’m Stuck in a Pagoda with Tricia Toyota (1979)


Manny, Moe, and Jack (1979)

 

Pezband
‘Hailing from the same state as Cheap Trick (Illinois), the Pezband was a mostly fine, occasionally wonderful, power pop band that specialized in hook-filled hard rock with sweet multi-part harmonies. Led by the strong, blues-inflected singing of Mimi (a guy) Betinis and the rampaging Jeff Beck-influenced guitar playing of Tommy Gawenda, the Pezzers’ first LP (released in 1977) was not as hard and heavy as Cheap Trick, nor did it exhibit the berserk panache of their fellow Illinoisans. But that all changed with their second LP, Laughing in the Dark, which contained a high quotient of good-to-great songs, excellent production by Jesse Hood Jackson, and a wonderful lack of smugness and calculation that was slowly infiltrating every power pop band in America.’


Love Goes Underground (1978)

 

Big Star
‘If the short-lived but fondly remembered Big Star could have experienced popular success in direct proportion to its posthumous influence, the rangy Memphis rock quartet would have lived up to its ambitious name, and then some. With the possible exception of the Velvet Underground (which enjoyed considerably more notoriety in its heyday), no other underground pop band has left such a lasting and indelible legacy. Although its original four members recorded only one album, #1 Record, and the group was dissolving rapidly when the second, Radio City, was completed, those records have influenced countless ‘80s and ‘90s rockers on both sides of the Atlantic, from the Replacements and REM to England’s Primal Scream and Scotland’s Teenage Fanclub.’


September gurls (1974)


She’s a Mover (1974)


Kizza Me (1978)

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** tomk, Hi, Tom! I’m surviving winter but it’s getting really dreary and repetitive. I listened to/saw your Zeischegg interview. Nice! That’s such amazing news about the French and Spanish translations. Dude, it’s so fucking heartening to see your work getting such long deserved attention and respect! RT will be streaming only in France starting in late March. Our plan is for it go to streaming elsewhere in early summer because we want to keep screening it for a while. We’ve been trying and trying to set up a London screening, but no luck so far. It’s very strange actually. But we’re still trying. Great to see you, pal! ** _Black_Acrylic, And how did find ‘Bride of Chucky’? ** l@rst, Hi, L. I think ‘Malina’ is an amazing novel. What’s your bookclub like, or I guess I mean how does it work? ** Thom, Cool, score. Keeping up with Pollard is a full time gig, for sure. Unfortunately the girth of work keeps a lot of people who would be amazed away. ‘A Crick Uphill’, what a cool choice. I have so many favorites. I dare not even start to list them. Radiguet is really interesting, yeah, writer and figure. ‘The Devil in the Flesh’ is terrific, I agree. ‘Le Bal du comte d’Orgel’ is very interesting too. What a cool place to start loving novels. Have a sweet weekend. ** Steeqhen, It’s interesting that outside of France Topor seems to be mostly known for ‘Fantastic Planet’. He was super famous here in his time, I think mostly for his drawings. I believe it has rained here every day since New Years as well. It has gotten very, very old. Good news about that person, obviously. ** Carsten, No, KCP solicited me to join the fan club like he did with basically everyone, but I was fine being a Ramones fan without that affiliation. As for your question, it depends on what you mean by mainstream and artwork, I guess. Mainstream to me means something that at least partly has the intention or hope of being popular and successful? My definition of what constitutes an artwork is pretty broad. If that’s the case, then I think I like quite a lot of things with that tag: home haunts, amusement parks, disaster movies, the music in the post this weekend, early Kinks, Rolling Stones, The Who, Beach Boys, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, etc. I could go on and on. Is that what you mean? ** Steve, I haven’t seen the Chucky TV series. I guess I was kind of wary of it. Yes, I’m in the throes of the visa application. It’s a big hassle. I’m hoping my extension visa will be for longer than a year, but I don’t know. More snow, wild. ** kenley, Hey, k! The minimalist haunts, which are often also high tech haunts, are more interesting to use to study how horror and fear work and don’t work than being actually exciting. They tend to be very ‘theater’ with some self-styled ‘artfulness’ in the backgrounds. I missed Halloween haunt season last because we were at a film festival over here, so I’m not up to the minute on the trends. It’s usually that some new reference point or special effect will come along that a lot of the haunts use that year. The last time I did the LA haunt trawl there were a lot of ‘Terrifier’ masks and costumes involved. And there was this special effect that involved lasers protecting a kind of water-like illusionary surface low to the ground that you walked through. So the changes are mostly in the details. The visa stuff is very stressful, but hopefully it’ll work. Thanks! ** Joshua, Hi! Welcome back! I’m so happy you got to see ‘RT’ at the Cleveland screening, and I’m obviously even happier that you liked it so much. Thank you, that’s so good to hear. And the things you liked were things we were hoping would be alluring. We’re really against the massive trend of way over-saturating films with music/score. We only use music that the characters themselves can hear. Yes, the song Andre sings was actually composed by the guy who played Paul the janitor, Chris Olsen. He has albums on bandcamp, and they’re terrific. We’re planning for a physical release and streaming, probably in the early summer. Thank you!! It wouldn’t hugely surprise me if the ‘Silent Hill’ designers knew Topor’s work, yeah. Great to talk with you too. How are you and what are you up to, if you feel like telling? ** HaRpEr //, My first few ‘books’ were poetry chapbooks that I self-published. It seemed to work. I occasionally will find some really old thing I wrote that I never finished because it wasn’t working and I’ll go back and finish/revise it. That’s a good way to get through the periods when I don’t have any fresh ideas that seem good enough. ** DonW, Hi! Yeah, Topor was one of those multi-talented guys. Like Cocteau but a lot more interesting. Ugh, sorry about your stomach thing. Coddle it. ‘RT’ screened in Seattle a few weeks ago. We approached a couple of venues in Portland, but they didn’t accept, sadly. Might try there again if another good prospect pops up. Take care, you. ** darbz (⊙ 0⊙ ), I’ve never had a Playstation system ever. Strange, I guess. That Neutral Milk Hotel video is blocked in France. Oh, well. Dude, looking younger is a good thing, I swear. You’ll come to appreciate it, I swear again. The art you sent … I think so? You mean on insta? I’ll go recheck. Great about the Dominoes gig! What’s your specific job? I’ve never watched Anthony Bourdain’s show, but I watched the documentary about him. I’ll probably just the eat the usual stuff this weekend unless I can coax a friend into going to a restaurant. ** horatio, Cool, glad you liked his stuff. Mushrooms are a frequent go-to meaty substitute. I’ll try that. Make some for yourself! Yikes, three sicknesses in a row? Hopefully it’s just the invasive, soon-to-be dead winter. Haha, the leather cap and jacket. My mind’s eye illustrated that with no problem. I hope that seemingly interested guy knows which side his bread is buttered on, as it were. I’ve seen no new movies that are good. I saw ‘Send Help’, which was very blah, and ‘Train Dreams’, which I thought was very boring. Splendiferous weekend! ** hagai aviel, Hi. You’re right, that is strange. Good eye there. ** Poecilia, Haha: grate. Oh, my god, those drawings are amazing! Wow, thank you. Assuming it’s okay, I’ll going to send or message them to Benjamin (Roman), Milo (Leon’s Friend), and Sylvain (Guillaume). I would send that one to ‘Ollie’ but I’ve lost track of him. Thank you. Such a beautiful honor!! <3 ** Laura, Sunny hello. Cool about your lingering fondness for Heikens’ stuff. Yikes, ixnay on that friend of a friend. Intense. ‘Hogg’, haha, yeah, I’ve read it. I haven’t read Delany’s sci-fi stuff because that’s not my genre, but, from what I have read, ‘Hogg’ is kind of the one. Don’t remember if the kid gets a name. I’m writing women in Zac’s and my films, if that counts. Today doesn’t seem like it’s going to be especially good to me, but it’s still early on. Weekend of bliss and plaudits to you. ** Right. So I went down a Power Pop rabbit hole the other day as it’s a genre/form that I’m a bit of fetishist about, and said journey lead me to restore this old Power Pop gig for you. If you don’t like Power Pop, you’re in trouble around here for the next two days. See you on Monday.

Roland Topor’s Brain

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‘Roland Topor was the modern enfant terrible of French art and letters. He was short and leprechaun-like, giving the impression of constant, untiring activity. He dabbled in films, produced art derived from Surrealism, and could seldom be accused of good taste. In 1962, he created the Panic Movement (mouvement panique), together with Alejandro Jodorowsky and Fernando Arrabal. Inspired by and named after the god Pan, and influenced by Luis Buñuel and Antonin Artaud’s Theatre of Cruelty, the group concentrated on chaotic performance art and surreal imagery. Among the films made from Topor’s written work was Roman Polanski’s The Tenant (1976), which was recently reissued in 2006 with an introduction by the writer Thomas Ligotti. Topor also worked as an actor, his most famous part being Renfield in Werner Herzog’s Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht (1979).

‘His greatest success was as a macabre cartoonist. He used his work to illustrate his novels, plays and other writings, produced many volumes of graphics, and exhibited his work widely in galleries both in France and abroad. His drawings in many ways resembled the graphic novels of Max Ernst and the similarly grim work of the Alsatian artist Tomi Ungerer, but the humour was always there in the absurd situations he depicted, many based on fantastical images of the deeper associations of sex and erotica, others on pictures that linked mankind to the world of worms and insects or reptiles.

‘Although ebullient in public, it was known among his friends that he had black periods of extreme depression, and the bizarre fantasies that he drew and painted undoubtedly reflected a mind that brooded on death and decay and the many germs and viruses that live in our bodies. His novels tackled the same themes, cruelty and metamorphosis being depicted in a matter-of-fact, unemotional way, his characters Rabelaisian and his plots stretching the imagination to its limits. Coprophagy is a frequent theme and religion a favourite target in much of his work. Giving offence came so naturally to Topor that he was almost unaware of the shocked reactions he was likely to get, as for instance from the series of dialogues, accompanied by drawings, examining all the possible uses of a baby, starting by nailing one to your front door.

‘Toward the end of his life, Topor wrote the screenplay for the cultishly revered film Marquis (1989), directed by Henri Xhonneux and loosely based on the life and writings of Marquis de Sade. The cast consisted of actors in period costumes with animal masks, with a separate puppet for de Sade’s anthropomorphised “bodily appendage.” He also co-wrote and was the production designer of the innovative and popular animated film Fantastic Planet, directed by René Laloux. At the age of 59 Topor suffered a massive stroke and brain haemorrhage in 1997, having appeared until then in the best of health.’ — collaged from various sources

 


Roland Topor’s self-designed grave marker

 

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Further

Topor et moi: A Roland Topor Resource
Roland Topor Page @ Facebook
Books in English by Roland Topor
Roland Topor’s books @ goodreads
A Roland Topor Photo Gallery
Roland Topor posts @ Thomas Ligotti Online
‘Roland Topor, a Graphic Wit’ @ The New York Times
‘The Wilder Planet of Roland Topor’

 

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Portrait Gallery

 

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Films

Les Escargot (1965) was a collaboration between Roland Topor and director Renee Laloux, but it is Topor’s distinctive visual sensibility that dominates. Les Escargot is apocalyptic, teeming with allegory of self-perpetuated human destruction. Like in other works by Topor, the ordinary is blown up to monstrous and absurd proportions. Fed by plants stimulated by human tears, enormous garden snails run amok, destroying the cities.’ — Ashcan Magazine

 

‘What is man ? Man makes war, man kills man, man hunts, man is executed. Les Temps Morte (1966) is montage film mixing original drawings by Roland Topor and direction by Rene Laloux involving both original shots and stock shots that ironically analyze what man is.’ — worldnews

 

‘Roland Topor and René Laloux’s Fantastic Planet (1973) is a sci-fi epic like none you’ve ever seen. A 70’s euro-funk soundtrack backs the eerie psychedelic visuals of an alien world. On the fantastic planet, humans are kept as pets by the gigantic Oms, a blue-skinned humanoid species who live for thousands of years and have a highly evolved culture and technology. Revolutionary metaphors abound, and like much science fiction literature, but unlike most science fiction movies, the film is really about our contemporary situation despite the fantastical setting.’ — Justin Allen


Trailer


Excerpt


Roland Topor: The Unrecognizable Genius Behind FANTASTIC PLANET

Watch the film here

 

‘Roland Topor and Henri Xhonneux’s Marquis (1989) is an audacious rendering of the political, social and sexual manners of the ancien regime and the class division and social disruption that produced the French Revolution. Adapted from the writings of the Marquis de Sade, this witty film uses elaborate puppets in human form to act out erotic and sexual decadence. Marquis is an elegantly naughty film with wry, intellectual satire that plays out all manner of human desire.’ — J. Hoberman

Watch the film here

 

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Miscelaneous


Roland Topor in Herzog’s ‘Nosferatu’


Roland Topor [1983] : Les archives de Radio Nova


Roland Topor, un petit film

 

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100 Good Reasons to Kill Myself Right Now
by Roland Topor

 

1) Best way to make sure I’m not dead already.
2) It’ll throw off the last census.
3) They’re waiting on me down below to start the party.
4) They shoot horses, don’t they?
5) I’ll rise in the esteem of my peers.
6) I’ll no longer dread the millennium.
7) Just like Werther! They won’t call me ill-read anymore.
8) I’d make a fool of my cancer.
9) I’d make a liar of my horoscope.
10) To be my therapist’s ruin.
11) To get out of voting.
12) An infallible cure for baldness.
13) To make a fresh start!
14) Death ennobles: knighthood at last!
15) I’d feel less alone.
16) I’d be fêted next All Saints’ Day.
17) The cost of living rises, but death remains affordable.
18) Good way to find your roots.
19) Finally, a martial arts move I can manage.
20) To be green and fertilize the lawn.
21) To mark the day with a white stone.
22) Others could put my organs to better use.
23) To make way for youth.
24) At last, a starring role!
25) To take advantage of the exhibitionism inherent in dissection tables.
26) To taste the subtle delights of reincarnation.
27) The nightmare of leap years, over at last!
28) To give my body of work a moral dimension.
29) To make people think I’m honorable.
30) To turn this list into a last will and testament.
31) I’ll become a citizen of the world.
32) Euthanasia wasn’t made for dogs.
33) I’ll have the last word.
34) 67% of French people support the death penalty.
35) ‘Cause it’s a good way to quit smoking.
36) To simplify my duality: I’ll see things more clearly with only one of me left.
37) A deliverance less laborious than a delivery.
38) There’s nothing left to do.
39) I don’t want to aggravate my lack of social security.
40) To kill a Jew, like everyone else.
41) To join the silent majority. The real one.
42) To leave behind a widow simply bursting with youth.
43) I can’t live in worry now that my deodorant’s stopped working.
44) To dodge the general draft.
45) To preserve the mystery surrounding me.
46) To prove the neutron bomb can’t hurt me.
47) To lose weight without a diet, or even lifting a finger!
48) I insist on complying with the federal plan for staggered vacations.
49) I’m trying to spare someone else the unfortunate consequences of an assassination.
50) To save energy, coffee, and sugar.
51) So I won’t be ashamed to look in the mirror anymore.
52) What if I’m immortal? Might as well find out as soon as possible.
53) One less mouth to feed.
54) To prove to EVERYONE that I’m no coward.
55) To count how many people cry at my funeral.
56) To see, from the other side, if I’ve made it over.
57) Instead of tearing my gray hairs out one by one, might as well tear my head off all at once.
58) With a revolver: to be noisy after 10pm.
59) With gas: to savor the charms of that last cigarette.
60) By hanging: to turn an ordinary rope into a delightful good luck charm.
61) Under a train: to extend other people’s vacations.
62) With barbiturates: think I’ll sleep in tomorrow morning.
63) By electrocution: to shake things up a little.
64) By defenestration: to escape my fear of elevators.
65) I’ve heard death is an easy lay. I’m gonna have me some good times.
66) If I put my subscriptions on hold, I won’t miss a thing.
67) To be good with (tiny) animals.
68) To die the same year as Elvis.
69) To skip out on taxes.
70) To skip out on rent.
71) To stop snoring.
72) To come back in the wee hours and tug on my enemies’ feet.
73) To keep from ripping myself off as I get older, like de Chirico.
74) Because I’m an endangered species and no one is protecting me.
75) Because I’ve prepared a choice phrase for the final moment, and if I wait too long I’ll forget it.
76) To sever my umbilical cord once and for all.
77) To be the founder of a new style: Dead Art.
78) To watch the movie of my life at a very exclusive screening.
79) To see if there are any virgins left on the other side.
80) So they’ll deck me out when they lay me out.
81) Because I can’t wait to use the amusing epitaph I made up: GOOD RIDDANCE.
82) To see if paralytics will be healed on my tomb.
83) So the twentieth century will finally contain an important event.
84) To feast on the exquisite blood of young women, once I’m a vampire.
85) Because I’ve always wanted to speak a dead tongue.
86) So I can, quite strikingly, inform everyone of my position on suicide.
87) Because Paris just isn’t what it used to be.
88) Because Groucho Marx is dead.
89) Because I’ve read all the adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
90) Because weather forecasts let me down.
91) So others will follow my example.
92) To start a revolution.
93) To prove my skill, if I don’t miss.
94) For a change of friends.
95) For a change of scene.
96) To be above the law.
97) Because a well-done suicide is worth more than an average lay.
98) So I won’t die at a hospital.
99) So my blood will make a nice stain on a canvas.
100) Because I’ve got 1,000 good reasons to hate myself.

 

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Drawings & paintings


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*

p.s. Hey. ** l@rst, For sure. Hey, L! ** _Black_Acrylic, I love the Chucky movies. I wish they’d make a new one, but they’d probably use AI and fuck it up. I remember ‘Bride of Chucky’ being especially fun, but I don’t know. ** kenley, Good morning to you, kenley! Yeah, the immersive art thing is just high tech banality from everything I’ve seen. They make you appreciate how great windows are. Um, I’ve been to theater pieces where you walk through a space or building and the piece unfolds as you move around. I went to that famous one where you’re a guest at, I think, Tony and (someone’s) wedding. That was irksome. And of course some haunted houses that do that — minimalist with lots of projections and effects and ‘scary’ monologues, as they were quite the trendy Halloween thing for a while. I like old school haunted houses where there’s a kind of theater element. Where your traversing of the haunt is interrupted with little play-like scenes that give the experience a kind of narrative. So, in that sense, I have, I guess. And I do think haunts are the best context for that kind of thing. I’ll be onto Peter  Vack as soon as I finish having to reapply for my French visa, as that’s kind of eating my brain and stressing me out at the moment. Thanks! ** Carsten, I did read his Wenders thing, yeah, nice. I’m ok with Wenders up through ‘Wings of Desire’, but nothing since then. And I never thought he was remotely great. I like Kid Congo Powers. I’ve peripherally known him since he was the President of the LA chapter of The Ramones Fan Club when he was a teen. They showed a whole bunch of Frampton’s films. The ones I can remember at the moment were ‘Pas de Trois’, ‘Public Domain’, ‘Cadenzas I & XIV’, and ‘Gloria!’. ** Dominik, Hi!!! I’m so happy you liked it. I have a hard time with TV series anyway, and I have a hard time settling for better than average shows, and it’s probably also because the two main actors in the show look so blandly conventionally clean cut ‘attractive’ that I can’t imagine being interested in whoever they play. I like winter, but it’s been chilly and rainy here every day for way too long. It’s the sameness that’s getting kind of crazy making, I guess. I volunteer to be a consultant on love’s true crime show. Love wondering what it’s like to take a bubble bath but not enough to actually take one, G. ** Thom, Thanks, Thom, I look forward to listening! I’ll put on my conceptual cap while I listen. I like pop songs, or, well, attempts to ace ones. (see: this weekend’s post) Robert Pollard is my living god, after all. If the ‘Glossolalia’ album is there, I’ll hit that up too. Thank you about ‘God Jr’. Short novels rule. It’s stupid that in the US novels are rarely taken seriously by the literary cognoscenti unless they’re giant-sized. Yeah, Heikens’ isn’t my usual thing, but something about them made me itchy. Happy day! ** Steve, I ate at the defunct Chinese place the previous time I was in NYC, and it was packed. ‘Iron Lung’ isn’t here yet, and I haven’t found it on the free sites so far. I saw ‘Goodbar’ when it was released, and I hardly remember it other than not being as disturbed by it as it clearly intended. I’d be curious to visit it again now, yeah. ** Bill, Yeah, ‘It Was Just an Accident’ snuck through. ‘Reflections in a Dead Diamond’: nice title. ** Uday, That’s understandable. Great, just enjoy NYC’s vast and uneven pleasures. Breakfast … no, not normally. Just coffee. Although I do like breakfast for dinner sometimes. I like omelettes and hash browns and buttered toast. ** HaRpEr //, At their best they’re kind of like G-rated Guro. Now I have to go watch ‘The Trial’ so I can see that bedroom. I was just reading about ‘Actors’. How strange. Maybe it was programmed at the Berlinale? I can’t remember. Poetry chapbook, cool. Kind of a lost great form, I think? ** horatio, Hey! Thank you, thank you for your letter/care package! The collages have been staring at me from atop a stack of unread books at the back of my desk for days now. They’re wonderful. And thank you for the recipe. I’m going to have to see if I can do it without the salmon because I’m vegetarian, but I’m sure I can sort out an alternative. Anyway, that was and is so great of you! Thank you, my friend! Yeah, when I wrote ‘Closer’ I had this idea that the equal length/size paragraphs would have this kind of trancey effect, like a train going over train tracks or something, that would counteract the attention the reader had to pay to the characters and story and so on and create a kind of crosshatched effect. It was a style I was super into for a while. Thank you for noting it. How are you? What’re you doing of late? ** darbz (⊙ 0⊙ ), Oh, gosh, how did the interview go? No news on the possible NC screening yet, but I hope to hear something soon. We just set up screenings in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, but that won’t help you. I love the pix of you! You look very, very cool! Big up about the Machinegirl gig. Oh, I missed your question? I guess they either duck under a very tall tree or they just tough it out? Good question. ** Okay. I did a post here about Roland Topor years ago, and I went back to restore it, and I thought it was crappy, so I just made a whole new Roland Topor post. A bit of behind-the-scenes trivia for you there. See you tomorrow.

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