Black
Monk Time
By Thomas Edward Shaw
& Anita
Klemke
Published by Carson Street Publishing
Review
by Richard Proplesch from JAM MAGAZINE: August 16,
1996
This autobiographical account of one of music's
most misunderstood bands, The Monks, is so eerie
and filled with dark irony that the late Rod Serling
could have easily adapted it for an episode of The
Twilight Zone. It's a compelling yarn, set in mid-'60s
Germany, about rock 'n' roll's most cantankerous
punk band - a group of American ex-GI's who performed
a scathing and rebellious noise that was unprecedented
for its time. Their music was a furious display
of anti-social feelings that pre-dated the angry
squalor of the Sex Pistols by nearly a decade and
a half. It was a sound so far ahead of its time
that the band members were ignored and avoided as
foreign outcasts by the European crowds who saw
them. While Shaw and Klemke's book plunges the reader
into those outlandish musical times, it's also a
story filled with Cold War political intrigue and
clashing nationalist ideals.
Shaw
was an American serviceman stationed overseas who
formed an afterhours bar band, The Torquays, with
several fellow soldiers. They were a bunch of greenhorned
garage rockers clanging out Chuck Berry covers,
eventually working the same Hamburg beerhouse circuit
that toughened The Beatles just a couple years earlier.
With their military obligation over, Shaw and the
group (now christened The Monks) wormed their way
up through Germany's seamy music industry, becoming
disillusioned and impatient with their moderate
success.
It
may have been the band's isolated lifestyle - playing
all night to drunken and angry Germans, mingling
with people that held strong communist and fascist
beliefs during the flashpoint political '60s - but
something snapped musically within the band. As
a reaction to all of the jangly, mop-top pop and
weak beat music The Monks were forced to cover during
their five sets a night, Shaw and his friends stripped
all of the friendly melodies and human passion from
their own original work and churned out some of
the most primitive noise imaginable.
What
emerged is probably some of the most deranged, demented
ramblings ever committed to vinyl. The band's album,
also titled Black Monk Time, is a unique experience
of raw staccato bursts cradled in feedback, a pre-Devo
mechanization of sound coupled with shrieking, venomous
vocals and jagged rhythms. It's easy to understand
the harsh judgment of crowds that witnessed a shaven-headed
band in the '60s who taunted audiences and provoked
confrontation onstage with cynical lyrics like,
"My hate is everlasting, baby."
While
Shaw recreates all of the conflicts and antics of
his bandmates, his wife, co-author Anita Klemke,
neatly compliments with her own story - a proud
East German girl who fled oppression, trying to
absorb all of her newfound freedoms while falling
in love with Shaw and travelling with his band.
It's a love story set among a test of wills: between
frustrated group members, girlfriends, and assorted
hangers-on pulling the band in different directions;
between aggressive post-World War II Germans and
Shaw's military propaganda beliefs; and between
a brazen band bent on breaking all of the musical
rules and audiences that were unwilling to accept
(or acknowledge) their radical sound.
Since
chances are you've probably never heard of The Monks
(original copies of their German only album now
trade among collectors for sums nearing the national
debt), Black Monk Time is one of the few rock band
historical accounts that unfolds like a suspense-filled
novel. Shaw and Klemke share their experience of
being at the center of an unsung moment of hysteria
- the rise and fall of an influential group that's
just now being rediscovered.
Considering
all of the celluloid hoopla over fictitious groups
like Spinal Tap, The Rutles, Eddie and The Cruisers,
and Tom Hanks's forthcoming The Wonders, it seems
like an obvious question: when can we expect to
see a screen version of this truly riveting story?
Maybe we should ask Rod Serling.
Buy
a copy of BLACK MONK TIME