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Extemporaneous

 
Album Review: Extemporaneous

  • Artist: Brute Force
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1971
  • Type: Live
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Achieving cult status is rarely an artist's initial goal, but in the case of Brute Force, born Stephen Friedland, it was inevitable. As the composer of the controversial oddity "King of Fuh" -- "in this land there was a king/and everybody called him the 'Fuh' king" -- a track that was championed by George Harrison and is officially the rarest single on the Beatles' Apple label, as well as the writer of hits for the Chiffons, Del Shannon, the Creation, and the Tokens -- he was a member of the latter -- the artist was by no means a stranger to the business. After debuting with the heavily arranged and orchestrated Confections of Love, Brute decided to cut the record that would cement him in the obscuro genre forever. The aptly titled Extemporaneous, recorded live in the studio with minimal piano accompaniment before a very small and enthusiastic audience, is an eccentric, meandering, and whimsically banal collection of comedy, folk, and improvisation that aims for profundity but ends up hitting novelty square in the jaw. Though he lacks William Shatner's bombast and agreeable narcissism, Brute's overwhelming sincerity is the only reason anything on the album works. With each burst of uncontrollable laughter at such generic double-entendres as "Uranus," Brute's excitement escalates, rushing from one topic to the next with lunatic zeal -- there is an element of narcotic giddiness to the audience's frequent and explosive giggles, like they just wandered in off of the street unaware, discovered it was happy hour, and politely stayed through to the end. Like Shel Silverstein, he peppers his stories, songs, and poems with mystical wit, the occasional political jab, and a whole lot of thinly veiled sexual innuendo -- this is the late '60s -- but lacks the poet's mischievous forked tongue and utopian prescience. Brute has a reputation for on-stage physicality, and there are moments here where the audience must be taking in a spectacle that listeners can only imagine, as there is nary a moment of quiet observation, but for the most part the whole affair is nearly impossible to connect with. Popular culture loves its jesters and Brute Force is more than happy to wear the funny hat, but the immediate experience provided by Extemporaneous is one of uncomfortable fidgeting -- not unlike listening to a Neil Hamburger stand-up routine -- and its success depends entirely on the listener's sense of the absurd and overall artistic stamina. [In 2004, Rev-Ola reissued Extemporaneous with exhaustive liner notes from writer Steve Stanley and Brute himself, as well as five bonus tracks, including the singles "World...," "Tapeworm of Love," "Vicky," "Nobody Knows What's Goin' On in My Mind but Me," and the legendary "King of Fuh."] ~ James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Overture/Hello Brute Force Brute Force (3:47)
I Love to Hear a Baby Cry/King of Fuh Brute Force Brute Force (3:52)
And Now, As We Get Serious/Astronauts/Dockin' Brute Force Brute Force (3:57)
Sufferin' Surfin' Brute Force Brute Force (:49)
Commercial: Surfer Sam/Subway Lines Brute Force Brute Force (2:46)
The Sirens Cry/The Gun/W.A.R/Bearer of Somber News Brute Force Brute Force (4:15)
The Big Burp Theory/Six Interrogatives of Existence Brute Force Brute Force (2:06)
Five Minutes for Peace Brute Force Brute Force (1:07)
Dwayne of the Upper Regions/Schma/The Lord Is One Brute Force Brute Force (5:23)
Growth of Hair/Hail the Hare/Now You're Gettin' the Message Brute Force Brute Force (4:56)
I Like to Drink Honey/The Hexagon/The Beauty of Creation Brute Force Brute Force (2:09)
Topics Brute Force Brute Force (3:17)
Nutty, Fragrant Something to See/I Want to Say "Peace on Earth" Brute Force Brute Force (1:51)
Don't Paranoi It, Enjoy It/The Reds Are Yellow/Thank You All Brute Force Brute Force (3:52)
Hello (Reprise) Brute Force Brute Force (1:01)
The World... [*] Brute Force Brute Force (2:47)
Tapeworm of Love [Alternate Version][*] Brute Force Brute Force (2:21)
King of Fuh [Single Version][*] Brute Force Brute Force (3:04)
Nobody Knows What's Goin' on in My Mind But Me [Single Version][*] Brute Force Brute Force (2:58)
Vicky [*] Brute Force Brute Force (2:15)

Credits

Alan Brownstein (Project Assistant), Eric Dawson (Project Assistant), Steve Stanley (Photo Research), Rusti Wolintz (Project Assistant), Brute Force (Project Assistant), J. Edgar Hovey (Project Assistant), Brute Force (Arranger), Steve Stanley (Art Direction), Nick Robbins (Sound Machine), Steve Stanley (Layout Design), Mitch Margo (Project Assistant), Carolyn Edwards (Project Assistant), Joe Foster (Producer), The Tokens (Producer), Lilah Freedland (Project Assistant), Valerie Watson (Proof Reading), Steve Stanley (Liner Notes), Valerie Watson (Copy Editing), Jay Warner (Project Assistant), Steve Stanley (Producer), Hal Wilson (Photography), Joe Foster (Sound Machine), Brute Force (Liner Notes), Valerie Watson (Project Assistant), Brute Force (Illustrations), Phil Margo (Project Assistant), Brute Force (Producer)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more