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Caroliner

 
Artist: Caroliner

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Rubber O Cement, Commode Minstrels in Bull Face
  • Formed: 1983, San Francisco, CA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Our American Heritage, Vol. 1," "Rise of the Common Woodpile"

Biography

Part of a long line of avant-garde weirdoes from the Bay Area, Caroliner -- aka Caroliner Rainbow -- often described itself as "industrial bluegrass," which was likely the closest anyone ever came to pegging their uncategorizable sound. Their songs were rooted in 19th-century Americana and the sort of primitive folk found on the Harry Smith Anthology, but usually came wrapped in a thick crust of experimental noise and a bone-dry, dadaist sense of humor. Their records were just as likely to recall musique concrète or early industrial as country, folk, and bluegrass; everything in between was fair game as well, from early jazz to Eastern music to electronics. Their arrangements tended toward the minimal -- usually centered around banjo, violin, organ, and bass -- but often veered into noise-rock or elaborate orchestrations as well. Often sung by tape-altered voices, Caroliner lyrics were littered with pioneer and cowboy imagery from the Old West, but from a distinctly twisted perspective, with a flair for the macabre. The results often drew comparisons to Bay Area peers like the Residents and Sun City Girls, not to mention Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 (with whom they shared personnel); other commonly cited influences were Throbbing Gristle and Captain Beefheart, and members of Mr. Bungle was rumored to be involved with Caroliner as well.

Although Caroliner didn't guard their identities as jealously as the Residents, they were perhaps even more obscure in practice. Members did hide behind an ever-shifting array of ridiculous stage names, and the band's name changed from album to album -- the first two words were always Caroliner Rainbow, followed by an inscrutable phrase from one of the album's lyrics or titles (Caroliner was the official fallback name, however). Their live performances were low-budget theatrical extravaganzas with elaborate costumes and Day-Glo stage decorations augmented with blacklight. Their albums were released on vinyl only, usually on the Nuf Sed label, and were pressed in limited quantities. Each album was packaged individually with its own handmade art and hand-written lyric sheet, and usually arrived in some found-object packaging (pizza boxes and diaper disposal bags were two of the most notorious). In keeping with their Western Gothic concept, Caroliner even created its own mythic folklore to explain their origins. The group claimed to have inherited its entire repertoire from Caroliner the Singing Bull, a magical 19th-century creature whose owner took it from town to town, where it performed and learned new songs from the locals. When the owner was forced to eat the bull one lean winter, the remnants of its carcass continued to sing.

Caroliner was founded in San Francisco in 1983 by a lead singer commonly known only as Grux (though he, too, switched aliases at will). The original band was a trio including a percussionist who played a bucket, but the ranks soon swelled to normally include six to eight members at a performance or recording session. Personnel came and went freely, and those who stayed changed their aliases from album to album. Their first record, Rear End Hernia Puppet Show, arrived around 1985, and kicked off a rise to local-legend status that peaked by the early ‘90s; their reputation slowly spread to a wider experimental-music audience, helped by periodic tours of the U.S. and one of Japan. Their next three albums -- I'm Armed With Quarts of Blood, Rise of the Common Woodpile, and The Cooking Stove Beast -- were generally noisy affairs, but their fifth, Strike Them Hard, Drag Them to Church, began to bring out their quieter, folkier side, resembling an Asian-tinged Palace. The orchestrated yet chaotic The Sabre Waving Saracen Wall came next, followed by Banknotes, Dreams and Signatures, which featured one of the band's most-quoted songs in "Old Eggwipe" (about a horse that was half scrambled eggs). By this time, some of the band was also active in a side project called Commode Minstrels in Bull Face. Eighth album Rings on the Awkward Shadow was a double LP, and was followed in 1995 by Sell Heal Holler, the notorious diaper-bag album. The live compilation Our American Heritage, Vol. 1 appeared in 1996 or 1997 and wound up with greater distribution than most Caroliner releases. Lower Intestinal Clocks & Gut featured two side-long tracks, and was followed by the quiet and haunting Toodoos in 1998.

Cheated by an unscrupulous printer during the production of Lower Intestinal Clocks & Gut, Caroliner temporarily went bankrupt and was forced to take a four-year hiatus. During that time, several members embarked on independent side projects; Grux performed with Rubber O Cement, while Chris Cooper started the solo noise project Angst Hase Pfeffer Nase and also played with Deerhoof. Guitarist Brandan Kearney, who'd played on the vast majority of the band's records, joined Amarillo Records honcho Gregg Turkington in the mock death metal band Faxed Head. Caroliner finally returned in 2002 with the double LP Wine Can't Do It, Wife Won't Do, and embarked on their first tour of the new millennium. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Caroliner
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Caroliner

Background information
Origin San Francisco, CA, United States
Genre(s) Industrial/Bluegrass/Experimental/Noise
Years active 1982–present
Label(s) Subterranean Records 'Nuf Sed
Members
Unknown

Caroliner (formed in 1982, in San Francisco) is an Industrial Bluegrass/Experimental/Noise conceptual art Costume Rock band, dedicated to creating a fever dream of American psychedelia - utilizing bluegrass music instruments, weird effects, other-worldly pageantry, and day-glo character outfits similar to those of a "Disneyland ride with a Spike Jones and his City Slickers sense of individuality." For example, band member Puppy Whowoundup built an actual spinning heliotrope animatic cap that revolved on top of her head. Member The Brazen and Meticulous Pintle sports a spinning Brittleback wheel as a codpiece for her stringed instrument.

Jamie Rake, in Sound Choice, described Caroliner's music succinctly:

"Caroliner is the sound of atrophy, the noise of salvation and damnation's collision in a parallel dimension to purgatory, the random rumbling of the bowels of the universe turned inside out to become a semblance of music complete with lyrical vantage points so convolutedly arcane to make comprehending them impossible, save for the few gnostically inclined aspirants bent in similar psychic permutations." [1]

According to the band, "Caroliner formed as a tribute band to the singing bull of the 1800s who had the same name. Influences include most and foremost The Skillet Lickers, Barrel Gordon Trio, and Dock Boggs, also making nods along the way to The Hoosier Hotshots, Spike Jones, Tiny Tim, and buckets of nails being kicked down the stairs. The Caroliner name stands alone (as seen on the cover of the organ based long play record "Toodoos"), to represent the band on most printed materials. The following "rainbow" word is only used when it is in conjunction with a line from Caroliner lyrics. The possibilities are endless: "Caroliner Rainbow Charlie Stink Creek", "Caroliner Rainbow Bowed Wart at the Turn", "Caroliner Rainbow Moth in the Waves", " Caroliner Rainbow Double Snap-Passion of Vaunted Elderly Fashion." Every 10 LPs results in a 'live' LP that sums up the next ten albums with some "songs in progress" between the live "hits"."

Doey Didduoghlbulch, a "Caroliner Rainbow Legs Tied Round the Ankles" member for the last 10 years, described the band as such:

"We are a tribute band to Caroliner the Singing Bull of the 1800s. If we were singing something from the Dampton Lice Brother's hymn book we would figure out another name. If we did a modern fuzzy hullybaloo thing, like that music you hear in a showy window shoppe, that would be a band called Fuzzy Hullybaloo Thing."

Alex Ross of The New Yorker noted:

"On top of the visual extravagance, Caroliner has somehow forged an original musical style. The songs typically fuse together a grinding, relentless bass line, country-ish banjo strummings, spastic vocals ranging across several octaves, a wheezing organ drone, and screeching violin tremolos. Despite the splintered aesthetic, a lumbering grandeur gathers ...... Space does not permit a description of the lyrics, which purport to interpret the prophecies of a 19th-century Wisconsin cow." [2]

Successful tours of Europe and Japan resulted in "stick to your gums" USA tours. The band is reportedly awaiting the "building of a horticulture twist spindle farm of 1844" for the next tour that will "hopefully include face roulettes", and "fantastic new deformed sheep faced instrumentalists".

Discography

Studio Albums

  • (1985) Caroliner Rainbow Hernia Milk Queen - "Rear End Hernia Puppet Show" (Subterranean Records)
  • (1986) Caroliner Rainbow Stewed Angel Skins - "I'm Armed With Quarts of Blood" (Subterranean Records)
  • (1988) Caroliner Rainbow Open Wound Chorale - "Rise of the Common Woodpile" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1989) Caroliner Rainbow Susans and Bruisins - "The Cooking Stove Beast" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1992) Caroliner Rainbow Wire Thin Sheep Legs Baking Exhibit - "Strike Them Hard - Drag Them to Church" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1993) Caroliner Rainbow Fingers of the Underworld & Their Unbreakable Bones - "The Sabre Waving Saracen Wall" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1993) Caroliner Rainbow Scrambled Egg Taken For a Wife - "Banknotes, Dreams and Signatures" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1994) Caroliner Rainbow Grace Blocks Used in the Placement of the Personality - "Rings on the Awkward Shadow" [double LP] (BullsHit)
  • (1995) Caroliner Rainbow Customary Relaxation of the Shale - "Sell Heal Holler"(BullsHit)
  • (1996) Caroliner Singing Bull of The 1800 Memorial Band "Our American Heritage, Vol. 1"'' [live recordings](BullsHit)
  • (1998) Caroliner Rainbow Stand Still or Fight Beans and Sunstroke - "Lower Intestinal Clocks b/w Gut" (7" as a 12") (BullsHit)
  • (1999) Caroliner -"Toodoos"(BullsHit)
  • (2003) "Wine Can't Do It, Wife Won't Do!"[double LP] (BullsHit)
  • (2004) "1800 An Instrumental Revue"(BullsHit)
  • (2005) "Transcontinental Pinecone Collector"(BullsHit)
  • (2006) "Smoke Tour For Lunation (7"as a 12"/Woodpatty Chickenclimber"(BullsHit)


7" Singles

  • (1993) Caroliner - "Bead Trail to Jardunne" b/w "The Cooking Stove Beast" (Nuf Sed)
  • (1993) Caroliner - "Legs Go, Mind Goes, Lungs Go" b/w "The Ballad of Hamdrags" (live) / River Wearing Children Limbs" (instrumental) (Vertical Records)
  • (1994) (split) Caroliner Rainbow Tongue On The Fingermill of the Paste Demon - "Wrap Your Rattler, Bring Your Coat" or "The Bringing of Electricity to Monclova County" b/w Eeyore Ass Guzzler (a.k.a. Eeyore Power Tool) - "Broken Fence of the Battered and Buried"
  • (1995)) (split) Caroliner / Culturcide (Birdman)
  • (199?) (split) Caroliner Rainbow Gumcuppers - "Fixing and Mixing Cracked Skulls" b/w Commode Minstrels in Bullface - "Theme From the Destruction of the Turd Man" (P Tapes)

External links


 
 
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Rubber O Cement (Electronica Band, 2000s)
Caroliner (Rock Band, '80s-2000s)
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