Butthole Surfers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Butthole Surfers | |
---|---|
Origin | San Antonio, Texas, USA |
Genre(s) | Alternative rock, punk, noise rock, experimental music, neo-psychedelia |
Years active | 1981 – present |
Label(s) | Alternative Tentacles, Touch and Go, Latino Buggerveil, Rough Trade Records, Capitol Records, Surfdog Records |
Associated acts | Daddy Longhead, Drain, Honky, The Hugh Beaumont Experience, The Jackofficers, P |
Website | www.buttholesurfers.com |
Members | |
Gibby Haynes Paul Leary King Coffey Nathan Calhoun |
|
Former members | |
Jeff Pinkus Teresa Nervosa Trevor (Dugay) Malcolm Terence Smart Bill Jolly Quinn Mathews Scott Mathews Andrew Mullins Scott Stevens Brad Perkins Jason Morales Josh Klinghoffer Kyle Ellison Owen McMahon Kathleen Lynch Cabbage Mark Kramer Juan Molina |
Butthole Surfers is an American alternative rock band formed by Gibby Haynes and Paul Leary in San Antonio, Texas in 1981. The band has had numerous personnel changes, but the core lineup of Haynes, Leary, and drummer King Coffey has been together since 1983. Teresa Nervosa served as second drummer between 1983 and 1985 and 1986 and 1989, and they have employed a variety of bass players, most notably Bill Jolly and Jeff Pinkus.[1]
The Buttholes are best known for their black humor, a sound that incorporates elements of punk rock, psychedelia, heavy metal, noise rock, and electronica, as well as their use of sound manipulation and tape editing.[2] Acclaimed for their chaotic live shows, the Buttholes have a well-reported appetite for recreational drugs, particularly psychedelics, an evident influence on their sound.[3]
Although they were respected by their peers and attracted a devoted fan base, the Butthole Surfers had little commercial success until 1996’s Electriclarryland, their only gold record to date.[4] The album contained the hit single “Pepper,” which climbed to number one on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart that year.[5]
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Pre-history
The Butthole Surfers had their genesis at San Antonio, Texas’ Trinity University in the late 1970s, when students Gibson “Gibby” Haynes, and Paul Leary Walthall (later just Paul Leary) met for the first time.[6] Though it was their overall strangeness and shared taste in non-mainstream music that caused them to become fast friends, both appeared to be headed for very conventional careers. Haynes, as captain of Trinity's basketball team, as well as the school's "Accountant of the Year," soon graduated to a position with a respected Texas accountancy firm, while Leary remained in college working on his MBA degree.[7]
In 1981, Haynes and Leary published the fanzine Strange V.D., which featured photos of abnormal medical ailments, coupled with fictitious, humorous explanations for the diseases.[8] After being caught with one of these pictures at work, Haynes left the accountancy firm, and moved to Southern California. Leary, at the time one semester shy of his degree, dropped out of college and followed his friend. After a brief period spent selling homemade clothes and linens emblazoned with Lee Harvey Oswald's image, the pair returned to San Antonio, and launched the band that would eventually become the Butthole Surfers.[9]
[edit] Early years (1981-1984)
Haynes and Leary played their debut show at a San Antonio art gallery in 1981; at that time they had not yet settled on the title Butthole Surfers. By 1982, the band were backed by the sibling rhythm section made up of bassist Quinn Matthews and his brother, drummer Scott Matthews. The band did not gain a following in San Antonio, and purchased a van to return to California later that summer.[10]
During a brief concert at the Tool and Die club in San Francisco, Dead Kennedys frontman and Alternative Tentacles overseer Jello Biafra witnessed their performance and became a fervent fan.[11] Biafra invited the group to open for the Dead Kennedys and T.S.O.L. at the Whisky a Go Go in Los Angeles, and soon made an offer that would launch their recording career: if they could get someone to loan them studio time, Alternative Tentacles would reimburse the studio when the album was complete. The band then returned to San Antonio to record at BOSS Studios (a.k.a. Bob O'Neill's Sound Studios, a.k.a. the Boss).[12] However, the Matthews brothers did not enter the studio with Haynes and Leary; the two had quit following a physical altercation between Scott Matthews and Haynes. The bass position was taken over by Bill Jolly, who would play on the Surfers' next two releases, and a number of drummers participated. The last of these, King Coffey (born Jeffrey Coffey), is still with the band to this day.[13]
Released on Alternative Tentacles in July 1983, the resulting EP, Butthole Surfers (also known as Brown Reason to Live and Pee Pee the Sailor), offered songs with provocative titles like "The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey's Grave" and "Bar-B-Q Pope," alternately sung by Haynes and Leary. (Haynes would become the band's primary singer by the time of their first LP.) The album cover, like the many bizarre illustrations that would accompany the Surfers' succeeding work, was designed by the band itself.[14] Teeming with humor, Butthole Surfers laid the foundation for what was to come.[15] It influenced at least one future superstar in Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain, who listed it as one of his top 10 favorite albums in his Journals.[16] Cobain would later meet his wife, Courtney Love of Hole, at a Butthole Surfers/L7 concert in 1991.[17]
Soon after the release of Butthole Surfers, the band recruited a second drummer, Teresa Nervosa (born Teresa Taylor), who had previously played with Coffey in a number of high school marching bands in the Texas' Fort Worth and Austin areas.[18] She and Coffey would drum in unison on separate, stand-up kits, adding to the spectacle of the Surfers' ever-evolving stage show. Though Nervosa and Coffey repeatedly referred to themselves, and were referred to, as siblings, it has since been revealed that the two only presented themselves as such due to their similar appearances, and are not actually related.[19] With her arrival, the band's core "classic lineup" – Haynes, Leary, Coffey, and Nervosa – was in place. With the exception of a number of different bass players and Nervosa's brief sabbatical from late 1985 to 1986, it remained largely unchanged until her final departure in 1989.[20]
In September 1984, the Surfers issued a second EP on Alternative Tentacles, Live PCPPEP. Primarily featuring live performances of songs from their debut, it prompted some critics and fans to joke that they had released the same album twice.[21] What many didn't realize, however, is that the band had already returned to BOSS Studios to record enough material for a full-length album months before Live PCPPEP's release. (Jolly left shortly after these sessions, but did perform on the live EP). Moreover, they had started a second album at the same studio. Both were originally offered to Alternative Tentacles, with Psychic... Powerless... Another Man's Sac arriving first.[22]
Before either album could be released, though, Alternative Tentacles had to acquire the master tapes from Bob O'Neill, BOSS Studios' namesake and owner. He refused to release them until he'd been reimbursed for the sessions, and Alternative Tentacles couldn't immediately afford to pay. After waiting months, the band issued Live PCPPEP out of financial desperation, and O'Neill was preparing to release Psychic... on his own Ward 9 label to recoup his expenses.[23]
[edit] Legend grows (1984-1987)
With some members working as dishwashers, the group was apparently not thrilled with the album being released on Ward 9. Terry Tolkin, a friend and their east coast booking agent, signed the band to Corey Rusk's then-nascent Touch and Go Records in Detroit. Psychic... Powerless... Another Man's Sac was released in 1984.[24] Building on their first EP, the Surfers made psychedelia a much bigger part of their sound on this release, which made full use of the tape editing, non-traditional instrumentation, and sound modulation that came to define their studio recordings.[25]
Just before Psychic...'s debut, and with new bassist Terence Smart in tow (the first of many through 1986), the band commenced their first nationwide tour. It was on this outing that they truly established a national presence, starting at Touch and Go's early headquarters in Detroit before heading to New York City, where they impressed members of Sonic Youth, as well as Shockabilly (and future Butthole Surfers) bassist Mark Kramer. They then crisscrossed the country for several months, including a show in Seattle, that made a fan of future Soundgarden guitarist Kim Thayil. While in San Francisco at the end of the tour, and without a place to live, the band collectively decided to move to Winterville, Georgia, where they admittedly made a hobby of stalking members of R.E.M.. Smart quit after falling in love with a friend of the band, and Trevor Malcolm, a young Canadian musician recommended by Touch and Go, replaced him on bass.[26]
Word was spreading about the band's bizarre stage show by the time they hit the road again, resulting in ever-larger audiences at their concerts.[27] Not long after Malcolm's arrival, the Surfers recorded their act for posterity by filming two concerts at Detroit's Traxx club. Some of this footage was eventually packaged as Blind Eye Sees All, their only official video release to date. They purchased their first 8-track recorder at this time, and used it to record two songs later used on the A-side of Cream Corn from the Socket of Davis.[28]
Reportedly unhappy with life in the band, Malcolm quit in the early summer of 1985.[29] A friend of the band's from Athens, Juan Molina, was brought in for a brief U.S. tour, but was not interested in becoming a full-time member.[30] Without a permanent bassist and a quickly approaching European tour looming – the band's first – they contacted Kramer, who quickly agreed to join.[31] Meanwhile, their second LP, which had been submitted to Alternative Tentacles as Rembrandt Pussy Horse, was still in limbo. The reasons for Alternative Tentacles' actions are unclear, but it is known that the label delayed a decision for about a year before ultimately refusing to publish it.[32] While waiting, the band released the four-song Cream Corn from the Socket of Davis EP on Touch and Go in late 1985. Once Alternative Tentacles finally declined, the group went back into the studio to record two new tracks to replace "To Parter" and "Tornadoes," which were originally intended for Rembrandt... before appearing on the Cream Corn... EP's B-side.[33]
Following the European tour, the Surfers experienced more upheaval when Nervosa left around Christmas 1985, as she was tired of the living conditions associated with constant touring and had a desire to be with family.[34] She was replaced by another female drummer, known as Cabbage, who in turn introduced the band to their legendary "naked dancer," Kathleen Lynch (a.k.a. Kathleen, a.k.a. Ta-Da the Shit Lady). Kramer left during this period and was replaced by Jeff Pinkus, who gave the band's bass position its longest period of stability by staying until 1994.[35]
Their second LP was finally issued as Rembrandt Pussyhorse on Touch and Go in April 1986. Coming out some two years after the original sessions, it featured a different mix and song selection than Alternative Tentacles' unreleased version.[36] Best known for its minimalist reworking of The Guess Who's "American Woman," it is one of the most experimental albums in the Surfers' heavily experimental career.[37] Following a particularly out-of-control tour, even by Butthole Surfers standards, the band semi-settled in Austin, Texas in the summer of 1986. Nervosa rejoined them (Cabbage having been fired months earlier), and they went to work on crafting their first home studio in a rental house on the outskirts of town. Before long, they started a leisurely recording session for their third full-length project.[38] Released in March 1987, Locust Abortion Technician is one of the heaviest Butthole Surfers albums, and it is often considered their finest to date.[39] Harnessing aspects of punk, heavy metal, and psychedelia, its unique sound produced a number of grinding, slower-paced songs, arguably making it an early precursor of grunge.[40]
[edit] Evolution (1987-1991)
Around the time of Locust Abortion Technician's debut, the group bought a home in Driftwood, Texas, approximately 30 miles (48 km) outside Austin. It was a ranch house built into the side of a hill, with five acres of surrounding property. As with the rental home, the compound was turned into a de facto recording studio. They did not live together in the new house for long, though, with Coffey being the first to move out and get his own place. They all had separate residences by 1991.[41]
In early 1988, the Surfers were ready to record a new album and wanted to use a modern studio for the first time, choosing a state-of-the-art facility in Texas. The following sessions took only one week, as the band had been performing most of the material for years.[42] The band opted to follow this album's blueprint on future projects. In contrast, songs on their earlier recordings had undergone far more in-studio development and experimentation. Pinkus has expressed the opinion that the later, better-organized sessions stifled much of the spontaneous creativity that had propelled their earlier releases.[43]
Hairway to Steven was issued in April, and marked a midway point between the band's punk rock roots, and the more accessible recordings that would follow. While half of the material is as extreme sounding as their earlier work, other songs are more conventional. This was the first Surfers album to make extensive use of acoustic guitar. Hairway to Steven did not have song titles when first released, and instead represented each track with an absurdist, often scatological, cartoon.[44] The band traveled widely in support of the album over the next year, including a very successful tour of Europe (helped in part by the influence of new UK distributor Blast First). Like their studio recordings, their live shows were beginning to lose much of their earlier chaos.[45]
While touring during the winter of 1988, the Surfers used a portable DAT recorder to tape various concerts. The strongest of these recordings were packaged as Double Live, a limited edition double album released on vinyl and cassette in 1989, and on CD the following year. This was the first release on the band's Latino Buggerveil label. Though the album, as of spring 2007, is out of print, its songs are available as free MP3 downloads on the band's official website. Issued in response to widespread, for-profit bootlegging of their live shows, it contained performances of songs from all of their previous studio albums and EPs.[46]
Double Live was to be the last Surfers album to feature Nervosa, who left early in 1989. Shortly after leaving, she was diagnosed with an aneurysm, and was forced to undergo brain surgery. She further began to suffer from strobe light-induced seizures.[47] In 1991, Nervosa (who has gone by Teresa Taylor since her retirement) had a small role in Richard Linklater's film Slacker. She was employed at the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired as recently as 1995.[48]
The Surfers did not seek to replace her at the time, and opted to continue as a quartet. Following a final EP for Touch and Go –1989's Widowermaker– the band left their longtime recording partners to sign with longtime supporter Terry Tolkin at Rough Trade Records who had also brought them to Touch and Go , for a reportedly generous one-album deal.[49] Prior to the new LP's debut, Rough Trade talked the band into first releasing 1990s The Hurdy Gurdy Man, which previewed material from the coming release. The same year, Rough Trade issued Digital Dump by The Jackofficers, Haynes and Pinkus's psychedelic house music side project.[50]
piouhgd (pronounced "p.o.'ed," as in "pissed off") was the band's fifth full-length studio album, and their first for Rough Trade. Released in April 1991, it featuring more electronic instrumentation, but was largely viewed as a disappointment in comparison to past recordings. Both Haynes and Leary have since expressed displeasure with the album.[51] Regardless, the band was invited to be part of that summer's inaugural Lollapalooza tour.[52] Around this time Haynes collaborated with Ministry, contributing vocals on their 1991 single "Jesus Built My Hotrod", which was later included on 1992's Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs.
[edit] Mainstream recognition (1991-1999)
Rough Trade filed for bankruptcy in 1991, but not before releasing Leary's solo project, The History of Dogs. The following year, The Surfers shocked many fans and critics by signing with the major label Capitol Records.[53] Capitol immediately reissued piouhgd and paired the band with their first big-name producer, John Paul Jones, best known as the bassist for Led Zeppelin.[54] The fruit of their partnership, 1993's Independent Worm Saloon, featured a more straightforward rock approach at Jones's insistence.[55] This paid off for the Surfers, giving them their first minor radio hit, "Who Was In My Room Last Night?" It reached number 24 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks singles chart, while the album peaked at number 124 on the Billboard 200.[56] Two of the new songs were featured on episodes of MTV's Beavis and Butt-head.[57]
When Pinkus left in 1994,[58] the remaining members enlisted a series of fill-in musicians, and continued to tour sporadically, even as all three pursued side projects. Haynes was working with Johnny Depp, Bill Carter, Sal Jenco, Flea, and others in a new group, P. In 1993, Haynes played with this band in Los Angeles' Viper Room, on the night the actor River Phoenix died of a drug overdose.[59] Meanwhile, Leary was building a reputation as a skilled music producer, while Coffey set up his own record label Trance Syndicate.[60] According to Leary and industry insiders, Haynes was increasingly dependent on hard drugs at this time, though Haynes has downplayed their concerns.[61]
In 1995, the band contributed a cover of the Underdog theme song to MCA's Saturday Morning compilation.[62] Later that year, Haynes's side project, P, issued an eponymous LP on Capitol, while Coffey's Trance Syndicate label released the first Butthole Surfers compilation album.[63] Titled The Hole Truth... and Nothing Butt, it was mostly comprised of live tracks recorded at different venues from 1985 to 1991.[64] In December, the Surfers initiated what would become an extended legal battle with Touch and Go. At first they were seeking to increase their profits from the albums released by the label, because the label chose a strategy of non-promotion. The case quickly became a fight for all ownership rights that dragged on for more than three years.
Pepper Image:Pepper.ogg
In 1996, Capitol released the Surfers' only gold record to date, Electriclarryland, which climbed to number 31 on the Billboard 200; the single “Pepper” topped the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[65] Their songs started appearing on the soundtracks of major Hollywood movies, including Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet and John Carpenter's Escape from L.A.[66] Despite improved sales with their second Capitol album, the group's relationship with the label was increasingly troubled. A planned 1998 project, After the Astronaut, was scrapped and the Surfers acrimoniously split with their manager, Tom Bunch.[67] In 1999, the Surfers won their lawsuit against Touch and Go.[68] Despite the outcome, several of the Surfers' peers in the alternative music community, including Fugazi and Minor Threat lead singer Ian MacKaye, criticized them for having pursued the lawsuit. Haynes and others said they wouldn't have initiated the proceedings if they felt Rusk's dealings had been honorable. Rusk provided the band with indecipherable accounting statements. Rusk continued to insist his actions were honest even though the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit found otherwise.[69] With the case resolved, the band reissued Psychic... Powerless... Another Man's Sac, Rembrandt Pussyhorse (with the Cream Corn... EP), Locust Abortion Technician, and Hairway to Steven on their Latino Buggerveil label.[70]
[edit] Recent years (2000-present)
In 2000, the band hired Nathan Calhoun as bassist. Having resolved their dispute with Capitol, the Surfers re-recorded most of After the Astronaut's songs for Weird Revolution, on the Hollywood Records/Surfdog Records imprint. The album was released in August 2001, and reached number 130 on the Billboard 200. It was their most electronic album to date,[71] and the single "The Shame of Life" peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[72]
Since then, the group has released two compilations on Latino Buggerveil: 2002's Humpty Dumpty LSD is a compilation of studio outtakes, while 2003's Butthole Surfers/Live PCPPEP, combines their first two Alternative Tentacles EPs.[73] In 2004, Haynes formed Gibby Haynes and His Problem, who released an eponymous album on Surfdog Records later that year. While promoting the side project, Haynes indicated that another Butthole Surfers studio album was likely, and remarked that it would be "noisy."[74] However, no release date has been announced.
The band will tour the east coast and Europe with Jeff Pinkus and Teresa Nervosa in the Summer of 2008. This will be the first time this line up has played together since 1989. However, Paul Leary will not be playing with them on the European dates.[75]
[edit] Name
The band did not begin as the Butthole Surfers, although they did have a song of that title, possibly an early version of 1984's "Butthole Surfer". This changed at their first paid concert, when an announcer forgot what the band was called and used the song title for the group’s name. They decided to keep the moniker, and have largely been billed as such ever since.[76] Prior to that, the Surfers performed under a different name at every live show. Early aliases included the Dick Clark Five, Nine Foot Worm Makes Own Food, the Vodka Family Winstons, and many others.[77]
The name has long been a source of trouble for the band. Many clubs, newspapers, radio, and TV stations refuse to print or mention their full name, and instead opted to use "B.H. Surfers", or other abbreviations.[78]
[edit] Live performances
In the 1980s, the Butthole Surfers earned a reputation for putting on particularly wild, often disturbing live performances that were both decadent and violent. As a result, they began to attract a wide range of curiosity seekers within a few years of their debut, in addition to traditional fans of punk rock who had supported them from the beginning.[79] A staged reproduction of the band's live show was filmed for 1988's Bar-B-Que Movie, a short Super 8 movie directed by Alex Winter, best known as "Bill S. Preston, Esq." from 1989's Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and its sequel.[80] A spoof of 1974's The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, the film ends with a music video-style performance of the song "Fast" (a.k.a. "Fart Song"), featuring Haynes, Leary, Coffey, Nervosa, and Jeff Pinkus, as well as Lynch. The track displayed many of the band's stage gimmicks, such as the burning cymbal, strobe lights, films, and smoke.[81]
By the time dancer Kathleen Lynch left in 1989, the Surfers' stage show had become more predictable, with previously random shockers being done at the same point in each night's performance. Teresa Nervosa quit for good around the same time, and King Coffey became the band's sole percussionist. Strobe lights, smoke machines, and even Gibby Haynes' burning cymbal are still part of the presentation, but the chaotic spontaneity of their 1980s performances is no longer on display.[82]
[edit] Band
Lead vocalist and saxophonist Haynes (who sometimes sang through a bullhorn), guitarist Paul Leary, dual drummers Coffey and Nervosa (the latter briefly replaced by Cabbage), and whichever bassist happened to be filling in at the time. Then came the visual aspect, beginning with the musicians themselves. As with their music, their appearance was exceptionally non-conventional in the early days, including sideways mohawks, dreadlocks, unnaturally colored hair, and the like.[83]
Known for taking the stage at early concerts with hundreds of clothespins attached to his hair and clothes, Haynes would often strip throughout a show until he was down to his underwear, or less, by the end. Other attire included flasher-style trenchcoats over his nakedness, ridiculously home-styled wigs and cross-dressing; often enjoying a skirt made of an American flag and a large 60's torpedo-style stuffed bra. At other times he would hide condoms full of stage blood in his clothes and repeatedly fall to the floor, appearing to bleed profusely. Some of Haynes' other favorite tricks involved throwing handfuls of photocopied cockroach images into the crowd, rolls and rolls of toilet paper tossed across the audience, as well as filling an inverted cymbal with lighter fluid, setting it (and sometimes his hand) on fire, and repeatedly hitting it with a mallet. As previously mentioned he would sing through most anything that would alter his voice, including toilet paper rolls and megaphones early on, which eventually evolved into "Gibby's kit," a.k.a. "Gibbytronix;" a rack of vocal effects stacked as high as he could reach, before which he would often stand for the majority of the show in later performances. Adding to the spectacle were Coffey and Nervosa, who played in unison on stand-up drum kits; behind which they would collapse onto the floor and out of eyeshot, to collect their breath and strength before rising just in time to play the next song. Finally, the whole band would often tear apart stuffed animals while on stage.[84]
In 1986, they first met Lynch (a.k.a. Kathleen, a.k.a. Ta-Da the Shit Lady), who was then working at a strip club called Sex World in New York City.[85] Though never an official member, she became the Surfers' famous "naked dancer," performing intermittently with them through 1989.[86] One show in Washington D.C. with G.W.A.R. saw Kathleen take the stage to dance in nothing but gold body paint and antique wooden snow shoes. And at another particularly wild concert in 1986, Haynes and Lynch reportedly engaged in sexual intercourse while on stage, as Leary used a screwdriver to vandalize the club's speakers. This came after only five songs, during which time Haynes had started a small fire.[87]
[edit] Equipment
The Surfers began to take the collection of visual equipment seriously following Coffey's recruitment in 1983, when he added a clear plastic drum fitted with a strobe light to their show. Shortly afterwards, the band purchased what was reported as several thousand dollars-worth of stolen strobe lights at a bargain rate, and their visual equipment soon took up more space than their instruments. Smoke machines were later added.[88] Equally memorable was the band's propensity for projecting a variety of films behind them as they played, beginning with one 16-millimeter projector, before adding others. This set-up allowed them to play a number of overlapping movies at the same time which were often strangely-angled, upsidedown or played in reverse. . Combined with the increasing number of strobe lights, the effect created a visually disorienting atmosphere, which occasionally caused epileptic seizures in audience members.[89] The films' subject matter was often as disturbing as the manner in which they were played; with images of accidents, nuclear explosions, meat processing, spiders & scorpions stalking prey, gory drivers education films, and penis reconstruction surgery.[90] Not all of the movies were horrific, and they often included nature, wildlife, and aquatic footage; as well as a color negative of a Charlie's Angels episode.[91]
[edit] Band members
Though the Butthole Surfers have been through numerous official and unofficial members since 1981, current members Gibby Haynes, Paul Leary, and King Coffey have been together since 1983.
Name | Position | Tenure |
---|---|---|
Gibby Haynes | lead vocals, guitar, saxophone | 1981–present |
Paul Leary | guitar, vocals | 1981–present |
King Coffey | drums | 1983–present |
Nathan Calhoun | bass | 2000–present |
Name | Position | Tenure |
---|---|---|
Jeff Pinkus | bass | 1986–1994 |
Teresa Nervosa | drums | 1983–1985, 1986–1989 |
Trevor Malcolm | bass | 1985 |
Terence Smart | bass | 1984–1985 |
Bill Jolly | bass | 1982–1984 |
Quinn Matthews | bass | 1982 |
Scott Matthews | drums | 1981–1982 |
Andrew Mullin | bass | 1981–1982 |
Scott Stevens | bass | 1981 |
Name | Position | Tenure |
---|---|---|
Jason Morales | [additional drummer] | 2002 |
Josh Klinghoffer | guitar, drums | 2001 |
Kyle Ellison | guitar | 1996 |
Owen McMahon | bass | 1996 |
Kathleen Lynch | dancer | 1986–1989 |
Cabbage | drums | 1985–1986 |
Mark Kramer | bass | 1985 |
Juan Molina | bass | 1985 |
Terence Smart | bass | 1984-1985 |
[edit] Discography
- Further information: Butthole Surfers discography
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 289.
* Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle vol. 18 #52. - ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 274-311.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 274-311.
* Gold & Platinum Record Database, RIAA. - ^ Charts & awards – Billboard singles, All Music Guide.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 276.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish: An Oral History of the Butthole Surfers", SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 277.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
* Azerrad, Our Band, p. 277. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 277-278.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 278.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, pp. 275, 288, 294.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
- ^ Cobain, Journals.
- ^ Kelly, "Kurt and Courtney Sitting in a Tree", Sassy Magazine.
- ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
* Interview, Flipside #46. - ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
* Interview, Flipside #46
* Interview (King Coffey), SonicNet.com.
* Azerrad, Our Band, p. 280. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 280-309.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
- ^ Interview, Forced Exposure #11.
- ^ Paytress, "The Butthole Surfers: Mark Paytress Unravels the Career of the Cult American Band", Record Collector #114.
- ^ The Baffler, Volume 4.
* Azerrad, Our Band, p. 292.
* Interview, Forced Exposure #11. - ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 291-292.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 292.
- ^ Interview, Forced Exposure #11.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 295.
- ^ Interview, Forced Exposure #11.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 295.
- ^ Paytress, Record Collector #114.
- ^ Interview, Forced Exposure #11.
- ^ Inteview, Tripping Yarns #2, interview conducted 1987.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 299.
- ^ Paytress, Record Collector #114.
- ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 303.
- ^ Locust Abortion Technician review, All Music Guide.
- ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 306.
- ^ Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle.
- ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
* Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 307-308.
- ^ Double Live MP3 download page, Butthole Surfers.com.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Slacker page, IMDb.com.
* Interview (King Coffey), SonicNet.com. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 309.
- ^ Orr, "Journey to the Sphincter of Your Mind or... Cowabunghole", Reflex Magazine.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers biography", RollingStone.com.
* Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
* Nunez, "The Hole Truth... and Nothing Butt", Fiz Magazine. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 311.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 311.
* Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press. - ^ Leland & Robbins, "Butthole Surfers biography", Trouser Press.
- ^ Cohen, "In Through the Back Door: The Butthole Surfers are the certified shock jocks of the next wave", Rolling Stone.
- ^ Charts & awards – Billboard singles, All Music Guide.
* Charts & awards – Billboard albums, All Music Guide. - ^ Butthole Surfers page, IMDb.com.
- ^ Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle vol. 18 #52.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle vol. 18 #52.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Track listing & liner notes, Saturday Morning (album), 1995.
- ^ P, 1995.
* The Hole Truth... and Nothing Butt (album), 1995. - ^ Liner notes, The Hole Truth... and Nothing Butt (album), 1995.
- ^ Gold & Platinum Record Database, RIAA.
* Charts & awards – Billboard albums, All Music Guide
* Charts & awards – Billboard singles, All Music Guide. - ^ Butthole Surfers page, IMDb.com.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers Resurface: Austin Iconoclasts Exit Legal Morass, Sign to Surfdog/Hollywood", Billboard Magazine.
- ^ Young, "Butthole Surfers Resurface: Austin Iconoclasts Exit Legal Morass, Sign to Surfdog/Hollywood", Billboard Magazine.
- ^ Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle vol. 18 #52.
- ^ Lieck, "Reissuing the Butthole Surfers: Tongue-in-Cheek Terror", Austin Chronicle vol. 18 #52.
- ^ Charts & awards – Billboard albums, All Music Guide.
* Kennedy, Weird Revolution review, All Music Guide. - ^ Charts & awards – Billboard singles, All Music Guide.
- ^ Track listing & liner notes, Humpty Dumpty LSD (album), 2002.
* Track listing & liner notes, Butthole Surfers/Live PCPPEP (album), 2003. - ^ Rock, "Dr Rock VS Gibby Haynes", PlayLouder.com.
- ^ Butthole Surfers 2008 tour dates [1]
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 277.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 277.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 293.
- ^ Bar-B-Que Movie page, IMDb.com.
- ^ Bar-B-Que Movie, YouTube.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 288-289, 309.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 282.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 288-289.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 299, 301.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 300.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 289, 293.
- ^ Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine.
- ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 293.
* Morthland & Patoski, "Feeding the Fish," SPIN Magazine. - ^ Azerrad, Our Band, p. 294.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Official Butthole Surfers website
- Butthole Surfers at Alternative Tentacles
- Butthole Surfers collection on the Internet Archive's live music archive.
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