gratified wrote:the ideas on hissing prigs are witty and kind of ahead of their time, but it hops around so much, i find that record completely unlistenable, i seriously find more sense of structure in borbegatomus or the flying luttenbachers.
"set your boss gt5 to triple octave flange overdriven with wah option, riff out this maiden riff butt in major not minor, but add a reverse right handed hammer on, count to 27 backwards in variables of five for the chorus, and ill moog around with this pager going off in the background through an oscillator, and then well stop after 13 seconds and bleep a cheesy minor chord synth that repeats itself by pi for the rest of the track except for the last 13 seconds, then ill yodel while that dog barks - wait the lyrics......ok read that microwave manual but collage a few newspaper clippings from the classifieds, sample in a rocket going off that morphs into r2d2 singing lucy in the sky, but backwards of course and with that Trans feel, then segue into track 2 after the 7th gong"
Dude! Are you listening to the same album? Maybe you got a copy of "Electro-Shock For President" instead (a record which I DO find unlistenable).
I say that some of the "noise" interludes aren't the most fun to listen to when taken out of the context of the rest of the album, but that's like, what? Two tracks out of thirteen?
Give it another shot. "Indian Poker Part 3" isn't like what you described, nor are "Pussyfootin'," "Vincent Come On Down," "This Little Piggy," "Hot Seat Can't Sit Down," "Kiss Me You Jacked Up Jerk," "70 KG Man," "Nothing Ever Changes," or "I Am A Cracked Machine!" Those are all songs with verses, choruses, bridges, and relatively straight-up drumming and guitar playing (albiet ran through maybe two-dozen effects!), I actually think a lot of stuff on "Bonsai Superstar" is a lot more far-out!
As for Smack Bunny Baby, it's an okay, but kind of run-of-the-mill early 90's alt-rock album. There's a couple pretty great tracks, but nothing as life-changing as "Vincent Come On Down" or "Nothing Ever Changes."