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Not Available

 
Album Review: Not Available

  • Artist: The Residents
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1978
  • Total Time: 35:21
  • Genre: Rock

Review

This is one of the strangest and most interesting recordings in rock history, which speaks volumes coming from one of the strangest and more interesting bands in rock history. Not Available used what was referred to as "the theory of obscurity" (which called for the album to not be released until its makers literally forgot about its existence). It is said to be, questionably, the Residents' second recorded album (in 1974, only to be released in 1978 after utilizing "the theory of obscurity"). A highly underrated and forgotten achievement in the Residents' body of work, Not Available is such an incredible recording to experience that it simply and truly cannot be classified as being like another. While the Residents have experimented within the confines of rock throughout their entire careers, with the exceptions of Eskimo, The Commercial Album, and God in Three Persons, this album achieves like no other. A surreal rock opera resulting in an incredibly weird circus of sound, it is one that simply must be heard to be believed. ~ Michael G. Breece, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Edweena Residents Residents (9:29)
The Making of a Soul Residents Residents (9:59)
Ship's A'going Down Residents Residents (6:34)
Never Known Questions Residents Residents (7:00)
Epilogue Residents Residents (2:21)

Credits

Residents (Arranger), Residents (Engineer), Residents (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Not Available
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Not Available
Studio album by The Residents
Released 1978
Genre Avant-garde
Experimental rock
Length 35:21
Label Ralph Records
Professional reviews
The Residents chronology
Duck Stab!
(1978)
Not Available
(1978)
Duck Stab/Buster & Glen
(1978)

The Residents' album Not Available was originally recorded as a follow-up to 1974's Meet the Residents. However, following the Theory of Obscurity, it was immediately locked away in a bank vault with no plans to issue it until the members of the band had completely forgotten about its existence. It did surface in 1978 due to continued delays on the Eskimo album and the Cryptic Corporation's desire to have some sort of Residents release [1], as the re-release of the single "Satisfaction" the same year had garnered some attention in Europe. The album itself is a dense concept album featuring a more musical and cohesive approach than that found on most Residents albums from the '70s.

Contents

History

In 1978, the "official" word was that The Residents had stated that Not Available could never be released. The group claimed that they had recorded the album in secrecy as a way of exercising their "theory of obscurity" to its fullest, and, in strict accordance with the theory, the work could never be released until its creators no longer recalled its existence. However, the reissued album's liner notes state that the album was an exercise in group therapy, and the Residents didn't want to release it because they felt it was too personally revealing.

Concept

The concept, vague as it may be, is described in the reissued albums liner notes like so:

By enacting this pseudo drama within a psycho drama, the internal conflict, still not completely understood by all of the participants, became much more clear, as the player characters instinctively acted out their roles. The love triangle between Edweena, Porcupine and Catbird became obvious ("Can two be more than three?") as well as Remus's role as the distant and objective commentator ("The aching and the breaking are the making of a soul."). The purpose of the Enigmatic Foe was of course still unclear when the rehearsals began, but once the Porcupine's breakdown was known ("He thought the end was overdue, but day broke him instead..."), the role of the noble Foe, as Porcupine's stand-in for the operetta's climatic duel scene, became clear.

As the faux piece reached its peak, the trio - two holding pistols while the third hid in a bush - came to a realization that the lovely young Edweena had eloped with the independently wealthy and no longer uninvolved Uncle Remus. At this point, the tension, previously thicker than frozen mayonnaise, was shattered by the Porcupine, emerging from the shrubbery to paraphrase Shakespeare ("To show or not to be shown...").

With illusions of love shattered, the three were then able to forgive, embrace and even welcome the traitorous Remus back to the fold, once he had returned from his less than blissful honeymoon.

Track listing

  1. Part One: Edweena
  2. Part Two: The Making of a Soul
  3. Part Three: Ship's a'Going Down
  4. Part Four: Never Known Questions
  5. Epilogue

The 1987 CD reissue features the tracks The Residents recorded for their collaboration with Renaldo and the Loaf, Title In Limbo.

  1. Intro: Version
  2. The Shoe Salesman
  3. Crashing
  4. Monkey and Bunny
  5. Mahogany Wood
  6. The Sailor Song

External links

  1. ^ [1]

 
 

 

Copyrights:

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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Not Available" Read more