Black
Monk Time
By Thomas Edward Shaw
& Anita
Klemke
Published by Carson Street Publishing
Review
by Douglas Wolk from CMJ NEW MUSIC MONTHLY: November
1995
When the Monks first appeared in public - furiously
bashing out songs like "I Hate You" and
"Shut Up," cutting their hair into tonsures,
making their instruments screech with feedback -
the world was nowhere near ready for them. It was
the mid-'60s in Germany, the Cold War was all that
was on anyone's mind, and punk wasn't going to happen
for another decade. On the German tour circuit,
the Monks were billed as "stars from the U.S.A."
- though they never had a record that charted, and
never played outside of Europe. Thomas "Eddie"
Shaw was their bass player, an ex-GI driven by a
vague grasp of Ayn Rand and an unstoppable desire
to be a rock star. Black Monk Time tells the band's
story, from its origins as a GI cover band endlessly
cranking out "Green Onions," through its
constant stumbling onto genius (they basically did
what they did to meet girls), to its break-up right
before a proposed tour of Vietnam. What the book
is most valuable for, though, is its look at the
grueling life of a touring band then, when a group
would take up a residency at a club for a month
and play 8 hours a day, 7 days a week - the same
crucible in which the Beatles and dozens of other
better-known bands were forged. And if you see a
copy of the Monks' album, also called Black Monk
Time, grab it - it's amazing stuff.
Buy
a copy of BLACK MONK TIME