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Beasts of Bourbon

 
Artist: Beasts of Bourbon
Beasts of Bourbon

Group Members:

Spencer P. Jones, Charlie Owen, Tex Perkins, Boris Sujdovic, James Baker, Tony Pola, Kim Salmon, Brian Hooper

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Formal Connection With:

Lubricated Goat, Scientists, Salamander Jim, The Cramps, Thug, Butcher Shop
  • Formed: 1983, Sydney, Australia
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Sour Mash", "The Low Road", "From the Belly of the Beasts
  • Representative Songs: "Let's Get Funky", "Hard for You", "Psycho

Biography

The Beasts of Bourbon grew from simply being a side project to become a true supergroup of the Australian pub rock scene. Forming in Sydney in 1983, the original Beasts lineup comprised Tex Perkins (vocals, later of the Cruel Sea), Spencer Jones (guitar, also with the Johnnys), James Baker (drums, and a Hoodoo Guru) and a pair of Scientists in guitarist Kim Salmon and bassist Boris Sudjovic. The band began playing together in small venues in Sydney, recording their first album, The Axeman's Jazz, in a single afternoon in 1984. Despite the album becoming an underground success, the Beasts continued to be just a side project for its members. It wasn't until 1988 that this situation began to change. With both the Johnnys and the Scientists imploding, the Beasts reformed to record arguably their best album, Sour Mash. The swamp-rock of The Axeman's Jazz had given way to a fusion of blues-based pub rock and punk with great effect. 1990's Black Milk expanded on this idea. 1991's The Low Road saw the addition of two new members. Baker and Sudjovic left the group to concentrate on their band the Dubrovniks, and were replaced by Tony Pola and Brian Hooper from Salmon's then band the Surrealists. In 1993, a double album (From the Belly of the Beasts) was released to mark the group's ten years together, and the group toured extensively in support of the album. Following the tour, it appeared as if the Beasts would announce their demise. Salmon left the group to concentrate on the Surrealists and Perkins' group the Cruel Sea was achieving huge success with their album The Honeymoon is Over. However, the group reformed in 1996 with former Divinyl Charlie Owen on guitar and released Gone in 1997. The album received lukewarm reviews, but managed to produce a minor single in the form of "Saturated". ~ Jonathan Lewis, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Beasts of Bourbon
Top
Beasts of Bourbon
Origin Sydney, NSW, Australia
Genres Alternative rock
Years active 1983 - 2008
Labels Red Eye, Albert Productions
Associated acts The Cruel Sea
Members
Tex Perkins, Spencer P. Jones, Tony Pola, Brian Hooper, Charlie Owen
Former members
Kim Salmon; James Baker, Brad Shepherd

Beasts of Bourbon were an Australian alternative rock band formed in 1983, with a line-up that has changed as the band splintered and reformed several times [1]. Although they received limited commercial success, they are critically acclaimed.[neutrality disputed] They helped define Australian swamp rock[citation needed].

Contents

History

Beginnings

The group were thrown together by vocalist Tex Perkins to fulfill a booking his previous band, Tex Deadly and the Dum-Dums, could no longer make. The band began playing together in small venues in Sydney. The initial version of the group included Spencer P. Jones of The Johnnys, Boris Sudjovic and Kim Salmon of The Scientists and James Baker of Hoodoo Gurus. Recruited in large part because they were often found in the Southern Cross, an inner-city Sydney bar, these members form what is considered by some[who?] to be the 'classic'[neutrality disputed] line-up. This lineup was featured on the band's first album, The Axeman's Jazz, recorded in 1984 in a single afternoon for one hundred dollars by Tony Cohen. The album was an excursion into deranged Gothic country and western,[citation needed] with a strong sense of irony and irreverence toward country music's clichés.[citation needed] A cover of "Psycho" was a hit on alternative radio.[citation needed] Although the album became an underground success, the band continued, for the time being, to be a side project for its members until 1988.

Later years

The Beasts of Bourbon grew from being a side project to become a true supergroup of the Australian pub rock scene. The original line-up fell apart in 1984 when the Scientists left Australia to tour overseas; fill-ins included Stu Spasm of Lubricated Goat and Brad Shepherd of Hoodoo Gurus. When both the Johnnys and the Scientists fell apart, however, the original line-up reunited in 1987, to record another album, Sour Mash in 1988. The swamp-rock of The Axeman's Jazz had given way to a fusion of blues-based pub rock and punk with great effect.[neutrality disputed] Black Milk, recorded in 1990, expanded on this idea.

The band grew particularly confident and powerful while touring Europe on the back of Sour Mash and grew in popularity.[citation needed] In 1991, Baker and Sujdovic left to be replaced by Brian Hooper and Tony Pola - the bassist and drummer of Kim Salmon's new band, The Surrealists. This line-up (considered by other fans to be the 'classic' line-up[neutrality disputed]) recorded the highly popular album The Low Road in 1991. The band disintegrated in Europe while touring to support the album.

A double album of live tracks and rarities, titled The Belly of the Beasts - Live '91 & '92 and Shit We Didn't Put Out the First Time was released to mark the group's ten years together, and the group toured extensively in support of the album. Following the tour, it appeared as if the Beasts would announce their demise. Salmon left the group to concentrate on the Surrealists and Perkins' group The Cruel Sea was achieving huge success with their album The Honeymoon is Over [2].

In 1996, the group reformed with former Divinyl Charlie Owen on guitar and released Gone in 1997. The album received lukewarm reviews, but managed to produce a minor single in the form of Saturated. In 1997 the band went on hiatus.

In 2003, they reformed to record a live album, Low Life, released on Spooky Records. In 2006, they reformed to play in the Big Day Out Festival around Australia and New Zealand.

In late December 2006 it was announced that Albert Productions had signed an exclusive worldwide recording deal with the band and they are set to release their new album 'Little Animals' on April 21, 2007.

Tex Perkins said, "The Alberts label releases have been a huge influence on the Beasts of Bourbon, so to be signed to this legendary label is not only a great honour and the start of an exciting new chapter in the bands history, it feels like…..Destiny".[citation needed]

The group played with Australian bands and artists at the Rockin' for Rights concert, which protested the unfair Workchoices legislation of the Howard Government.

After a show in Berlin in April 2008, the group cancelled their remaining tour dates and ended the band. Rumours say that a heated drunken argument between Tex Perkins and Spencer P Jones forced Spencer to return to Australia immediately with no intention of continuing the Beasts project.

Style

The Beasts of Bourbon's music has often been compared[who?] to that of a rougher Rolling Stones (whose "Cocksucker Blues" they covered),[citation needed] The Gun Club[citation needed] (who they played with and who some Beasts of Bourbon members filled in for) and The Birthday Party.[citation needed] In Germany, the band were described as "Muddy Waters on crack".[citation needed] Their music is an amalgam of country music, blues, rock and roll and punk rock parsed through the garage sound of The Stooges and the drunken mayhem[citation needed] of Australian pub rock. It often touches on themes of depravity, morbidity, despair, drug abuse and violence.

Members

  • 1983
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Terry Doolan, Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon, George Spencer
    • Bass: Mark Ferrie, Boris Sujdovic
    • Drums: James Baker, Johnny Freidenfelds, Richard Ploog
  • 1984
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon, Brad Shepherd, Stu Spasm, Tony Thewlis
    • Bass: Graham Hood, Boris Sujdovic
    • Drums: James Baker, Brett Rixon
  • 1985
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Stu Spasm
    • Bass: Graham Hood
    • Drums: James Baker
  • 1988
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon
    • Bass: Boris Sujdovic
    • Drums: James Baker
  • 1989
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon
    • Bass: Boris Sujdovic
    • Drums: James Baker
  • 1990
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon
    • Bass: Brian Hooper, Boris Sujdovic
    • Drums: James Baker, Tony Pola
  • 1991-1993
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Kim Salmon
    • Bass: Brian Hooper
    • Drums: Tony Pola
  • 1996-1997
    • Vocals: Tex Perkins
    • Guitar: Spencer Jones, Charlie Owen
    • Bass: Brian Hooper
    • Drums: Tony Pola

Discography

  • The Axeman's Jazz (1984)
  • Sour Mash (1988)
  • Black Milk (1990)
  • The Low Road (1991)
  • From The Belly Of The Beasts (1993)
  • Europe 1992 (1994)
  • Gone (1996)
  • Low Life (2005)
  • Little Animals (2007)

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Vipers (Rock Band, 2000s)
Sour Mash (1989 Album by The Beasts of Bourbon)
The Cruel Sea (Rock Band, '90s, 2000s)

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