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 If
you start in the middle, then that would bring you to Horsey (America made them
call themselves "Good"). The Good Horsey record (and handful of singles) had Tom
Rapp tied up with the ex-Liontamers going no-wave on his ass (how's that for point-of-no-reference
references). Too short-lived and sporadic for most of us, we compromised and called
them seminal. One of 'em (Mark Szabo) has digitally re-emerged, with the help
of Good Horsey drummer Max Lee, amongst others, under the guise of Mark, and some
things change and some things stay the same. The music operates under a softer
light here; an acoustic warmth which will surely get "singer-songwriter" launched
at it. Though Pearls Before Swine and those other ESP folkies no one's heard of
do spring to mind, I'm also reminded of Blue Mask-era Lou Reed: domesticity
and fierce matter-of-facts somehow turn real poetic in Marks hands (jarringly
so), much like on that record. The weirdest thing to me, though, amidst the jittery
baroque melodies and chicken scratch folk-skronk guitar Mark has patented (check
out 'By A Nose', for Mark's guitar alone a revelation), is the pervading
Randy Newman-ness of the record (an influence I'd heard mentioned but never quite
understood). There is portraiture and satire going on here at a level seldom aimed
at, or attained, in the songs of these bit-oriented days. But don't get me wrong;
this isn't 'literary' music. This is pill music, first and foremost. The pills
Ronee Blakely collapsed with mid-song in Nashville are the same ones they
force-fed Marcy on 'Daytime Emmy' And listen to the creaking chairs and the disembodied
voices way out back, they are as important as the piano pounding out the world's
last notes. You see, listening to 'The End of History' (Chocolate Covered
Bad Things' last song, and very own eulogy), I'm reminded of the balance between
beatitude and severity that life is perched upon while we're living it. I think
this is a sign of very good music. Dan Bejar, Destoyer Edition of
1000 copies. Standard jewel cases with 4-color process printing. | |     Purchase
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 By
A Nose (2.5Mb)  
 Puncture
Interview/Overview by Franklin Bruno
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