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Thin White Rope

 
Artist: Thin White Rope
Thin White Rope

Group Members:

Jozef Becker, Guy Kyser, Stephen Tesluk, Joe Becker, Matthew Abourezk, Roger Kunkel, John Von Feldt, Kevin Staydohar

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

The Velvet Underground, The Count Five, Television, Johnny Cash, Pere Ubu, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, Tom Waits, Captain Beefheart, Roky Erickson & The 13th Floor Elevators, Neil Young, Can, Lee Hazlewood

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Jozef Becker, Guy Kyser, Roger Kunkel, Matthew Abourezk

Formal Connection With:

Acme Rocket Quartet
  • Formed: 1984, Davis, CA
  • Disbanded: 1992
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Moonhead", "Sack Full of Silver", "The Ruby Sea
  • Representative Songs: "Red Sun", "Disney Girl", "Mr. Limpet

Biography

Copping their name from William S. Burroughs' euphemism for ejaculation, Thin White Rope was founded in Davis, California in 1984; although the time and place of their formation aligned them with both the Paisley Underground and roots-rock movements, the group quickly staked out its own musical territory, divining their own unique brand of dark, surreal desert-rock. Thin White Rope was led by singer/guitarist Guy Kyser, whose harsh, tightly-coiled vocals and unsettling lyrics combined to give the band its edge; in the group's first incarnation, Kyser was joined by guitarist Roger Kunkel, bassist Kevin Staydohar (soon replaced by Steven Tesluk) and drummer Jozef Becker.

While Thin White Rope's 1985 debut Exploring the Axis flirted with neo-psychedelia, the 1987 follow-up Moonhead upped the ante by allowing the desperation of Kyser's lyrics to take full command of the music: unrelentingly grim and harrowingly provocative, the album's best songs -- like "Crawl Piss Freeze" and "If Those Tears" -- were postcards from the edge. Following the addition of new bassist John von Feldt, 1988's In the Spanish Cave continued along the same path, albeit with a renewed sense of humor ("Mr. Limpet") and more oblique wordplay.

Though garnering little notice stateside, Thin White Rope earned a solid fanbase in Europe, and even became the first American independent-label act to tour the Soviet Union. 1990's Sack Full of Silver, a collection of songs written while on tour abroad, featured new drummer Matthew Abourezk as well as a newly-focused sonic attack; the album also featured a left-field rendition of Can's "Yoo Doo Right," a hint of things to come on the 1991 all-covers EP Squatters' Rights.

1991's full-length The Ruby Sea, a dense, atmospheric work highlighted by the riveting "Clown Song," proved to be Thin White Rope's studio swan song: in 1992 the band split, and while most of the players continued performing in various musical projects, Kyser devoted himself to a career as a botanist. The posthumous The One That Got Away 6-28-92 Ghent, a two-disc live set recorded in Belgium peppered with odd covers of Lee and Nancy's "Some Velvet Morning," Bob Dylan's "Outlaw Blues" and Hawkwind's "Silver Machine," appeared in 1993; Spoor, a collection of demos, remixes and rare tracks, followed two years later. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Thin White Rope
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TWR Logo

TWR performing in Davis, California.
Background information
Origin Davis, California, USA United States
Genres Desert rock
Experimental rock
Alternative rock
Years active 1984–1992
Labels Frontier Records
RCA
Former members
Guy Kyser
Roger Kunkel
Stephen Tesluk
Joseph Becker
John von Feldt
Matthew Abourezk
Frank French
Stooert Odom

History

Thin White Rope (TWR) was an American rock band fronted by Guy Kyser and related to the desert rock and paisley underground sub-genres. It was formed in Davis, California in 1984, and released five albums to critical acclaim.

The band was largely based on singer/songwriter/guitarist Guy Kyser and guitarist Roger Kunkel, with a changing line-up of drummers and bass guitarists. It was noted for its twin guitar attack (compare Television), innovative use of feedback structures and oblique lyrics.

TWR disbanded in 1992. The double live LP The One That Got Away chronicles its epic last show in Ghent, Belgium, on 28 June of that year.

The name "Thin White Rope" derives from a William S. Burroughs description of human semen.

Discography

Studio Albums

Live Album

Compilation Albums

  • When Worlds Collide (1994)
  • Spoor (1995)

EPs

Singles

  • "Skinhead" (1988)
  • "Ants Are Cavemen" (1990)
  • "Eye" (1991)
  • "Moonhead (live)" (1993)

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. 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 "Thin White Rope" Read more

 

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