Bongwater (band)
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Bongwater was an often trippy college rock band formed by Ann Magnuson and Mark Kramer (founder of the Shimmy Disc record label) in 1985 and dissolved in 1992. The group also featured drummer Dave Licht and guitarists Dave Rick and Randy Hudson. Guests included Fred Frith, Peter Stampfel and Fred Schneider.
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[edit] Overview
Earlier recordings consisted of psychedelic-era cover songs, sound collages and originals in an abrasive and/or abstract, dense and sludgy experimental style with often punishing vocals by Magnuson on the songs "Frank" (a sardonic "tribute" to Frank Sinatra) and "Dazed and Chinese" (Led Zeppelin's "Dazed and Confused", sung in Mandarin). The band's style ultimately evolved into a more poppy, sexy approach which still retained an experimental edge as well as retaining the surreal and wicked, often self-deprecating wit which had distinguished the group's earlier releases. Lengthy sound collages would often terminate or begin the songs and without warning, a spoken word monologue might cut into the music.
They distinguished themselves as interpreters of songs by other artists, particularly those working in the vein of 1960s psychedelic rock, although they also covered occasional oddities like "Bedazzled" by Dudley Moore. They made "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" by The Weavers and "You Don't Love Me Yet" by Roky Erickson into virtual signature tunes, the former made into a tribute to Bobby, Magnuson's late beloved brother, and others lost to AIDS, obliquely referred to in several of the songs, including their arguably biggest college radio hit, "Folk Song".
The group created a number of arty low budget home movie-style music videos, three directed by Magnuson's boyfriend at the time, Brad Dunning. However a more slick and polished example, "The Power of Pussy", perhaps strangely, aired on the Playboy Channel, which also financed its production. (The video features Cristina Martinez writhing about during the opening moments.)
Bongwater had two major college radio hits, "The Power of Pussy" and the marathon-length "Folk Song", and some college radio chart success until personality clashes and money issues caused the duo to split up with much acrimony.
[edit] Partial list of found sounds used in the songs
- Speeches by Richard Nixon ("So Help Me God")
- Stage banter from Iggy Pop & The Stooges Metallic KO album ("Crime", Double Bummer)
- A lengthy excerpt from a Radio Tokyo World War II-era propaganda broadcast directed at American GI's stationed in the Pacific theatre
- Christian puppet character Lil Markie
- A Lenny Bruce comedy routine concerning Adolf Hitler (featuring some of the same lines of the routine also sampled by Chumbawumba)
- The somewhat notorious self-promotional audio tape by "J&H Productions" the talent agency of an unknown man living in Cincinnati, Ohio sent to the entertainment industry; he claimed to represent "star after star after star"
- Portions of The GTOs 1969 album Permanent Damage
[edit] Select discography
[edit] Singles and EPs
- "Breaking No New Ground"
- The Peel Session
[edit] Full length
- Too Much Sleep
- Double Bummer
- The Power of Pussy
- The Big Sell-Out
[edit] Compilations of Material
- Double Bummer/Breaking No New Ground (also contains "Breaking No New Ground")
- Box of Bongwater (contains all but a few songs)
[edit] Bootleg recording
- Bongwater Live in New York City '90