the
DEVOLUTION of UBERBEAT
A
Monks Discography & Videography
Or
Back to
the water, boys, land sucks!
By
Will Shade
The
Torquays were a generic early 60s rock n roll band,
comprised of five American soldiers stationed in Germany.
Upon leaving the service, they decided to stay in
Germany to earn their living playing music.
As
The Torquays:
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals, guitar; Larry Spangler: organ,
vocals;
Dave Havlicek: guitar, vocals; Roger Johnston: drums,
vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals.
The
Torquays' live set consisted of many covers, including
Johnny Kidd & the Pirates' " Shakin' All
Over" and Little Richard's "Long Tall Sally."
There were also a number of original vocal and instrumental
songs that The Torquays played live. Some of these
were "Boys Are Boys," "Mox-Nix Blues,"
"There She Walks," "Jumped Out The
Window," "Love Came Tumblin' Down,"
and "Paradox."
In
late 1964, The Torquays entered the studio to record
and release a self-financed single. 500 copies were
pressed and Larry Spangler would sell them at gigs,
using the top of his organ to conduct business.
There
She Walks
b/w Boys Are Boys (SP)
(Gary Burger/David Havlicek)
Produced by The Torquays
Recorded: Heidelberg, Germany (late 1964)
Released: independently
SOUND
FILE: There
She Walks
The
two songs are interesting footnotes in beat music
history, but barely hint at shapes of things to come.
At this point, Gary Burger and Dave Havlicek handled
most of the songwriting chores. Further, Havlicek
was still playing rhythm guitar. Things were about
to change, though.
As
The Monks:
With
the addition of a German management team, strange
mutations began to occur, both musically and sartorially.
As Gary Burger has pointed out, the process was painfully
slow, taking over a year. To make the metamorphosis
complete, Havlicek and Spangler adopted the stage
names of Day and Clark. Dave Day dumped his guitar
in favor of a six-string banjo. The band itself began
to concentrate on aboriginal rhythms, dispensing of
melody in the process. They were intent on altering
rock n roll's basic DNA. Gary Burger's groundbreaking
experimentation with feedback and fuzztone was another
vital element in the progression from beat to uberbeat,
which is a German-English bastardization meaning "overbeat."
In long daytime rehearsals, The Torquays wrote Monk
songs and practiced them, not playing them at nightly
gigs, for almost a year before they were ready to
be recorded. The most important part of the sound
was the minimalistic music, simple lyrics and the
uberbeat. Roger Johnston played only the drums with
no cymbals. Dave Day thrashed away at a banjo (the
Downliners Sect used a banjo around this time, but
they used it in a conventional manner). Eddie Shaw
nailed the beat to the floor with his bass and Larry
Clark made the organ a rhythm instrument with his
repetitive chords and then frantic solos. The Monks
were, in affect, a five piece rhythm section. Last,
but not least, all the members of the band now participated
in the songwriting process.
Uberbeat
was a distinctive sound and very difficult to record.
Nevertheless, mid-1965 found The Monks trying to acheive
just that. They entered a studio in Ludwigsburg, Germany
and laid down ten original tracks. The sessions, which
weren't released at the time, were used as a demo
tape. Some new songs had been written while others
had evolved. As an example, the instrumental "Paradox"
was now a tune with a few lyrics, "Pretty Suzanne."
At
this point, The Monks finally donned their beloved
wardrobe, dispensing with the Beatle-style haircuts
in favor of tonsures.
Meanwhile,
The Monks' managers had been shopping the demo around
to various record companies, including Phillips and
Ariola. Finally in late 1965, Polydor agreed to take
the band on. The Monks entered the studio with a young
producer named Jimmy Bowien. What emerged, of course,
is a timeless classic.
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals guitar; Larry Clark: organ,
vocals;
Dave Day: electric banjo, vocals; Roger Johnston:
drums, vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals.
Black
Monk Time (LP)
Monk Time; Shut Up; Boys Are Boys; Higgle-dy Piggle-dy;
I Hate You; Oh, How To Do Now; Complication; We Do
Wie Du; Drunken Maria; Love Came Tumblin' Down; Blast
Off!; That's My Girl.
All tracks written by Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David
Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas Shaw
Produced by Jimmy Bowien
Recorded: Koln, Germany (November 1965)
Released: Polydor [Germany] album #249900 (March 1966)
SOUND
FILE: Monk
Time
Most
startling for the era is the lack of covers. What
other band can boast of a debut album featuring
all original material from 1965? "Shut Up"
and "Complication" were two of the newer
tunes. "Blast Off!" had formerly been
called "Space Age." Two other originals,
"Pretty Suzanne" and "Hushie Pushie,"
didn't make it onto the album, but both remained
an intregal part of The Monks live set. In keeping
with the spartan song structures, the cover was
a stark black design, beating out the Beatles White
Album by over two years.
The
Monks also released two of the album tracks as a single.
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals guitar; Larry Clark: organ,
vocals;
Dave Day: electric banjo, vocals; Roger Johnston:
drums, vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals.
Complication
b/w Oh, How To Do Now (SP)
(Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas
Shaw)
Produced by Jimmy Bowien
Recorded: Koln, Germany (November 1965)
Released: Polydor [Germany] single #52951 (March 1966)
SOUND
FILE: Complication
Neither
the album nor single made much headway in the charts.
Playing live, The Monks did mostly original material.
However, a few choice covers still made it into
their set. As an example, Gary Burger would play
a 12 string guitar when the Monks covered The Yardbirds'
gem, "For Your Love."
Two
final singles were released in late 1966 and early
1967. The four new recordings were more pop-oriented
and showed that The Monks were losing direction. In
fact, "He Went Down To The Sea" featured
Clark on bells and piano, Burger on 12 string guitar,
Day on rhythm guitar and Shaw playing bass and trumpet.
I
Can't Get Over You
b/w Cuckoo (SP)
(Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas
Shaw)
Produced by Jimmy Bowien
Recorded: Koln, Germany
Released: Polydor [Germany] single #52957 (1966)
SOUND
FILE: Cuckoo
Love
Can Tame The Wild
b/w He Went Down To The Sea (SP)
(Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas
Shaw)
Produced by Jimmy Bowien
Recorded: Koln, Germany
Released: Polydor [Germany] single #52958 (1967)
Some
final recording sessions were also attempted in Hamburg's
Top Ten Club. They have never been released. Dave
Day had apparently abandoned his banjo for good in
favor of a guitar on these tunes. The songs included
"Yellow Grass," "P.O. Box 3291"
and "I Love You Schatzi." Only the instrumental
track was recorded on the latter.
The
Monks also appeared on several radio shows in the
mid-60s. They made three appearances on Radio Luxembourg.
These broadcasts reached behind the Iron Curtain,
converting many East Germans to the band's music.
Although these fans could not see the band play live,
the Monks did receive postcards from their follwers
behind the Berlin Wall. The Monks also did a radio
show on Swedish radio during their ill-fated 1967
tour. Unfortunately, attempts to track down these
shows have come to naught.
The
Monks broke up in 1967. The rest of the story is included
elsewhere on this website or one can read Eddie Shaw's
book, "Black Monk Time," which is available
from carsonst@sierra.com.
Black
Monk Time has been re-released several times throughout
the years, both on vinyl and CD. Some of the releases
are official while others are outright bootlegs. Repertoire
Records released a version of the album in 1994 on
CD. It comprises the original album along with the
two last singles. The original liner notes are included
in both English and German. Horrendous new liner notes
were written by Mark Brennan. This is still available,
but it appears to be quasi-legal. Repertoire claims
they licensed it from Polydor. Polydor's legal department
insists they know nothing about it. The rumor is that
an employee took it out of the archives, made a copy
from the master before returning it to the archives.
The Monks get no royalties from it because no one
can track it, even though Repertoire openly sells
it - illegally according to Polydor who does nothing
to stop it. Repertoire's version has been reissued
as recently as May, 2000. Unfortunately, The Monks
don't make a penny off it. Avoid it if you can't find
another copy.
The
most comprehensive re-release was Infinite Zero's
1997 CD version. It included the entire album along
with the two last singles, a mesmerizing live track
and two demos. Along with the original English liner
notes, Mike Stax's short history of the band rounded
out a most satisfying introduction to The Monks for
novitiates. Sadly, it is no longer in print.
The
1990s spurred a revival that left everyone, including
The Monks, awed. A German filmmaker, Dietmar Post,
began filming a documentary on the group. Called The
Transatlantic Feedback, it is still in production
(a trailer from the film may be viewed at www.playloud.org).
An obligatory website was established, attracting
converts from every continent, and Eddie Shaw's autobiography
was optioned by a movie company.
Bootlegs
Numerous
bootlegs of two 1966 appearances on German television
also became easily available.
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals guitar; Larry Clark: organ,
vocals;
Dave Day: electric banjo, vocals; Roger Johnston:
drums, vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals.
Beat
Club (bootleg video)
Boys
Are Boys; Monk Chant; Oh, How To Do Now.
All tracks written by Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David
Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas Shaw
Recorded: Bremen 1966
Released: various
Beat
Beat Beat (bootleg video)
Complication;
I Can't Get Over You; Cuckoo.
All tracks written by Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David
Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas Shaw
Recorded: Frankfurt 1966
Released: various
The
videos are usually good quality, probably having been
pirated from the masters. It is inexplicable why German
television has not legally reissued these particular
performances or other dynamic appearances by bands
like The Move from the mid-60s.
The
Monks apparently performed "Blast Off!"
on a very futuristic set during a 1967 appearance
on the Swedish television show, Drop In. Sadly,
it is rumored to have been destroyed by SVT during
an annual tape clean-up.
But
new fans wanted the real thing, not a cyberspace or
celluloid approximation. Their appetite was further
whetted when Omplatten Records released the entire
1965 demo recordings in early November, 1999.
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals guitar; Larry Clark: organ,
vocals;
Dave Day: electric banjo, vocals; Roger Johnston:
drums, vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals.
Five
Upstart Americans (CD)
Monk Time; We Do Wie Du; Boys Are Boys; Pretty Suzanne;
Higgle-dy Piggle-dy; Hushie Pushie; Love Came Tumblin'
Down; Oh, How To Do Now; Space Age; I Hate You. Bonus
tracks: The Torquays' single There She Walks and Boys
Are Boys.
All tracks written by Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David
Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas Shaw
Liner notes: Eddie Shaw and Gary Burger.
Executive producers: Johan Kugelberg and Jeff Gibson
Recorded: Ludwigsburg, Germany (mid-1965)
Released: Omplatten [American] Fjord 005 (November
1999)
Once
again, note the lack of covers. Some of the songs,
notably "I Hate You," are even more primitive
than those that appeared on the original Black
Monk Time album.
A
few days after Five Upstart Americans release,
the Monks arrived in New York for their inagural American
gig. It was also the first time they had played together
in 32 years. Expectations were dangerously high. There
was nothing to fear, though. Well, that's not entirely
true. There was one panic striken moment when Gary
Burger announced he had bronchitis. His trademark
brimstone-gargling vocals were intact, but he couldn't
hit the glorious Four Freshmen falsettos he is notorious
for. But hey, "I'm a monk! You're a monk! We're
all monks!" proved to be prophetic. The Monks
took the stage with a fan, one Mike Fornatale. He
replicated Gary Burger's high vocal harmonies to a
T as the band transported the entire audience to the
Checkpoint Charlie circa 1966. An ice Cold War blast
of Teutonic rock gripped the Big Apple's Cavestomp
festival by the gonads. The band ground out most of
their repertoire as well as a made-up-on-the-spot-brand-new-Monks-song.
The Blues Explosion's Jon Spencer could only watch
and wish. Two other garage legends at the festival,
the Chocolate Watch Band and the Standells, didn't
stand a chance. No mention was made of them in the
Monday morning papers. Not so The Monks. "The
New York Times" (who are never notably charitable
to middle-aged rockers) sang hosannas, writing "Mr.
Burger's lead guitar lines skidded and wailed; Mr.
Clark's organ shifted between staccato chords and
gusty dissonances. The music was a freshly unearthed
relic and it was still sharp to the touch." Indeed.
The Monks had come home to roost.
Then
there was silence. In October, 2000, a CD of the live
show was released. Entitled Let's Start A Beat,
the album also embraced new technology by including
three songs that could be viewed on a computer. Along
with the German television bootlegs, this is the only
document as to what uberbeat sounds and looks like
live.
PERSONNEL
--
Gary Burger: vocals guitar; Larry Clark: organ,
vocals;
Dave Day: electric banjo, vocals; Roger Johnston:
drums, vocals; Eddie Shaw: bass, vocals; Mike Fornatale:
vocals.
LET'S
START A BEAT (ECD)
Monk Time; Oh, How To Do Now; We Do Wie Du; Boys Are
Boys; Pretty Suzanne; Hushie Pushie; Cuckoo*; Complication*;
That's My Girl; Higgle-dy Piggle-dy; Shut Up*; I Hate
You; I Can't Get Over You; Blast Off!; Monks Jam;
Inspirational Message. *video enhanced
All tracks written by Gary Burger/Larry Spangler/David
Havlicek/Roger Johnston/Thomas Shaw
Liner notes: Will Bedard, Mike Fornatale & Genesis
P-Orridge.
Produced by Jon Weiss, David Mann, and Mike Fornatale
Recorded: New York City, United States (November 1999)
Released:Cavestomp!/Varese Sarabande [United States]
album #302 066 193 2 (October 2000)
SOUND
FILE: Shut
Up
A
year later, there's still no word from the band itself.
Gary Burger recently received The Pretty Things 1999
comeback album, Rage Before Beauty. One could
almost hear his mind whirring as he talked about its
arrangements, perhaps wondering if The Monks could
pull a magic cockatrice from a hat. What's next for
these grizzled old rock n roll soldiers? Hopefully
there won't be another three decade wait to find out!
All
contents copyrighted by the Monks
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