Yes, that's Labat. The band is the second iteration of Utopia.
Rundgren's appearance is said to have lost him a load of fans after this, although they were probably mostly the new fans who only knew of him because of the belated release of Hello It's Me as a single that got to No. 5 in the chart. I suppose he'd already shed some other fans earlier in the year with the release of A Wizard A True Star.
From a Record Collector interview:
"Hello It’s Me was one of three songs we did live on a Sunday afternoon [for Side 4 of Something/Anything]. But none of them were recorded with the expectation that any would be a single.
One thing that releasing this as a single did was, it pushed the album into the gold record sphere. Then I appeared on the Midnight Special in my Birdman Of Alcatraz costume by this guy, Nicky Nichols, who did outfits and makeup for me. He was on this use-me-as-a-piece-of-art kick. I didn’t really know what was going on until he was done, which was moments before I had to go on. I thought it was pretty cool except for what he did to my hair. He gave me some kind of Mary Tyler Moore flip with a hot curler. That was weird."
I like it, but it's seen as yet another self-harming retrogressive move coming hot on the heels of Adventures in Utopia, their most successful album yet (that includes the hit single Set Me Free).
I think Neil Innes's songs for The Rutles were better pastiches, but there's some clever stylistic imitations on Deface the Music - most of the tracks each parody two Beatles songs at the same time.
For anyone who doesn't know the origin, Rundgren was asked to come up with a song for the movie 'Roadie' that starred Meat Loaf (and featured Utopia), but the one he came up with - I Just Want to Touch You - was rejected as sounding too much like The Beatles, who might possibly sue. Rundgren argued that legal action would be good publicity and then decided to do a whole album independent of the movie, partly hoping Utopia would be sued!
Arena also has a pastiche of some metal bands....AC/DC for one. Todd's a clever one!
I think Deface the Music was also a bit of a stopgap, since Warners didn't want to release the album they completed (Swing to the Right).
Also his Gilbert & Sullivan pastiche, "Song of the Viking." (But not "Lord Chancellor's Nightmare Song" as some have erroneously said; that's a cover. I believe it's from Iolanthe.)
Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...
No, Deface the Music was released in 1980 and Swing to the Right was recorded afterwards in 1981.
You're right about the long delay in releasing Swing to the Right though. That and the solo album The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect was the end of Rundgren/Utopia's contract with Bearsville, which couldn't come soon enough for them. (That should have been a new beginning, with a TV documentary about Todd and a great power-pop self-titled album by Utopia, but again they had record label troubles and everything disintegrated.)
Great songs, ruined (for me) by the arrangements and production. It sounds like a Beatles cover band had a friend with a cheap keyboard who insisted on joining in. It's really weird when the songs themselves are such good pastiches. I know it's the band they had but I just can't get over the sounds.
My Utopia hot take is that the 1982 self-titled three-sided album is one of the high points of 1980s pop. Pure perfection from beginning to end.
agreed on both counts - Deface the Music almost works but you can tell they maybe didn't think the idea was good enough to spend a lot of time on. they sound like demos.
the three-sided album indeed is one gem after another, though I kind of agree with a review I read that called it "microwave pop with a still-frozen center"...there's something cynical about it
Critter Jams "album of the week" blog: http://critterjams.wordpress.com
Almost every Utopia album has some element or other that is sort of a questionable sonic choice. I haven't heard the self-titled one in quite some time though. Strangely, when I hear Deface The Music I feel like, whatever it has going on, it works better for me than some of their albums.
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I don't hear anything cynical in Utopia (1982). It's the sound of a band with a lot of good songs freed from the shackles of Bearsville. Unfortunately a 3-sided album was a stupid idea at the time and the record label didn't last long.
Deface the Music is clever but sounds weird as a Beatles pastiche partly because of having to find a place for Roger Powell's keys. One of Rundgren's bee-in-the-bonnet projects.
Then Swing to the Right where they really didn't have enough decent material and wanted to get it over with quickly to end their Bearsville contract.
Their best-sounding album was Adventures in Utopia. If they'd followed that up with something similar I think they'd have been much bigger.
What we feel we have to solve is why the dregs have not dissolved.
I think the first commercially released three-sided album was Johnny Winter’s Second Winter in 1969. It was not a gimmick cut like the Monty Python, but a two-record set with side four blank. Nowadays they do three (or five or seven) sided albums by putting etchings on the non-music side.
Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Joe Jackson's Big World was another one, a few years after the Utopia record.
Also in jazz there were three-sided albums by Rahsaan Roland Kirk and Keith Jarrett. (The Kirk was a weird concept piece, while the Jarrett was just a concert with only enough music for 3 sides.)
I think the first multi-groove record was "The Chariot Race Game" from 1959, which explained the rules of the game on the A-side, and had five parallel grooves on the flip. But I think the first one most people remember was the "It's a Super Spectacular Day" (or whatever it was called) flexidisc that came in a 1960s issue of Mad Magazine. There were a bunch of toys based on the concept, like The Farmer Says, or Electronic Talking Football.
Probably that RMI Keyboard Computer, which was anything but cheap. Which I guess explains why Todd kept using it until well into the 80s (it was kind of a defining feature of his sound ever since Initiation, which is smothered in it). I'm convinced the reason Todd wound up producing New England was that he and Jimmy Waldo went to the same keyboard tech (Waldo used an RMI as well).
Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...
Oh, it's brilliant. A fun Utopia pop-fest in it's own right but really a perfect Beatles pastiche. I love it from beginning to end, so good imho ymmv yada yada.
Crap. Now i have to put that one on. It's been awhile :P
Take It Home!
Yeah, that all killed live (as is often true) but the album originally left me kind of cold. Possibly because i heard it first all on the tour and bought the CD at the show
It grew on me more though. "Courage" alone was worth the price of admission, in my mind. I love that song way too much. Again, though, perfect pastiches. That is his specialty.
K
And the code is a play, a play is a song, a song is a film, a film is a dance...
On France Culture this week, an interview in five parts with M. Frog Labat :
https://www.radiofrance.fr/francecul...ebelle-7274763
cf an older one here :
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1080845q
There was a fascinating interview in Brain Magazine in 2017, no longer available online.
His book :
labat.jpg
(insane !)
Last edited by unclemeat; 1 Week Ago at 05:18 PM.
Never liked the "M. Frog" album much, but loved "Underwater Electronic Orchestra" (his next album "Transition #1" had most of the same tracks, with a couple of substitutions, not sure what the reasoning was for that). I'm pretty sure Todd Rundgren played an uncredited guitar on one track
I wonder if it's at all related that Todd aligned himself with that ill-fated Phillips Interactive console-thing, to the point where he did an album under the moniker TR-I (for Todd Rundgren-Interactive), and SIGNED HIS NAME THAT WAY when I met him at a record store event for the device. Well, he's still God!
Last edited by unclemeat; 1 Week Ago at 04:17 AM.
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