REVIEWS
five
upstart
americans
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Review
of FIVE UPSTART AMERICANS by Jordan N. Mamone from
CMJ New Music Report Issue: 645 - Nov 29, 1999
Listen up, jerk, it's black Monk time all over again!
Five Upstart Americans collects the 1965 demos by
the Monks, that storied, proto-punk garage rock platoon
comprised of five renegade American GIs stationed
in Germany. These sessions aren't really that raw
by today's standards (or compared to, say, Stooges
bootlegs), but they are grimier and more cavernous
than the band's crucial, lone album, the 1966-issued
(since reissued) Black Monk Time. Considering the
year and the locale in which they were created, the
songs on this archival effort are pretty damn bold.
Dig singer Gary Burger's mental-ward sermonizing or
his gnarled, no wave-ish guitar solos. Feel the primal
pulse of his buddies' burbling bass, cheesy-cum-sinister
church organ, silly electric banjo and tubby, tom-heavy
drums. The Monks, whose Reeperbahn-fueled delusions
inspired them to shave tonsures into their heads and
wear robes, played the most brilliantly stupid, stripped-down
music of the day. They were the self-proclaimed anti-Beatles
-- unmelodic, rhythm-based, simplistic and anything
but cute. Just listen to the way Burger growls, "Baby,
I hate you!," and you'll get the message, loud
and clear.
Review
of FIVE UPSTART AMERICANS by Andrew Male from MOJO
Issue: 74 - January 2000
Reissue Of The Month: The legend of The Monks begins
in 1965 when Gary, Larry, Roger, Eddie and Dave, five
bored American kids serving in the US army in Frankfurt,
decide to form a band and let off steam. It's the
beat group boom, but this edgy quintet, initially
touring as The Torquays, don't want to play covers
about cars, girls and holding hands. Under the leadership
of vocalist/guitarist Gary Burger they sing about
themselves, about hate and about space travel. They
solve the language barrrier by repeating their lyrics
over and over again. They discover the feedback effect
of cheap clubs, crafting a sound that bassist Eddie
Shaw describes as "a minimalist and blunt punk
chant" with howling guitar, pounding tom-toms,
keyboards and electric banjo. They tell their fans
"come to us if you love abuse, 'cos we ain't
playing covers no more."
Thirty three years after the release of their scorchingly
deranged debut album, 1966's BLACK MONK TIME , The
Monks have been credited with planting the seeds for
both punk rebellion and the hypnotic groove of Krautrock.
FIVE UPSTART AMERICANS is the earliest document of
their minimalist path. Recorded a month after the
band were formed, in Stuttgart's Ludwigshafen Studios,
it veers from psychotic nursery-rhyme relentlessness
(We Do Wie Du) to distorted psychofolk (Pretty Suzanne).
However, in the end it's nothing more than a fascinating
blueprint for the true deranged genius of BLACK MONK
TIME itself. Recently re-formed, The Monks played
their first ever US date in November, a date which
MOJO spies described as "incredible." As
Gary Burger puts it in the linernotes to FIVE UPSTART
AMERICANS, "We knew we had a different sound
with the banjo-drums-feedback-repetition approach.
People had to take notice. We didn't know it would
take 30 years for it to happen."
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