THE JACK AND JIM SHOW
''LOCKED IN A DUTCH COFFEESHOP''
1993
54:02
**********
01 - Dropped Another Needle 04:18 (Eugene Chadbourne)
02 - Big Boss Man 05:14 (Jimmy Reed)
03 - B.y.o.b. Klub 05:42 (Eugene Chadbourne)
04 - Captain Beefhart Medley 05:20 (Don Van Vliet)
a - Neon Meate Dream Of An Octafish
b - Sheriff Of Hong Kong
c - The Blimp
05 - The Umbrella 03:03 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
06 - Expense Account Meeting 01:19 (Eugene Chadbourne)
07 - Call To Opal 00:45 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
08 - Que Paso 02:52 (Augie Meyers)
09 - Dawn Of The Living Dread 04:01 (Black Uhuru, Eugene Chadbourne)
10 - Colorado Kool-Aid 04:18 (Johnny Paycheck)
11 - Fresh Garbage 05:41 (Jay Ferguson, Randy California)
12 - Prelude To Chili In Navajo Taco 02:16 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
13 - Le Hippie Dogg 01:13 (Eugene Chadbourne)
14 - Ethnic Cleansing 07:13 (Eugene Chadbourne)
15 - Crybaby Umbrella 00:40 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
**********
Banjo, Guitar, Vocals – Eugene Chadbourne
Drums, Vocals – Jimmy Carl Black
On Track 04:
Banjo - Tony Trischka
Flute (Wood) - Brian Ritchie
Harmonica - Chris Turner
Keyboards, Vocals - Don Preston
Percussion - Murray Reams
Sitar - Ashwin Batish
**********
These recordings were captured the on the spring 1993 DUTCH COFFEESHOP TOUR of "The Jack and Jim Show" at various live shows in Europe for the Danish National Radio, Copenhagen Denmark, except track 4: "Captain Beefheart Medley" recorded at the 1988 Moers festival.
**********
REVIEW/AMG
François Couture
Locked in a Dutch Coffeeshop was released in 1993 on Fundamental and reissued on CD-R by Eugene Chadbourne's home label, House of Chadula. It was the first album to document his collaboration with ex-Mothers of Invention drummer Jimmy Carl Black, billed as "The Jack and Jim Show." This material was recorded in the spring of 1993 at various live shows in Europe, with the exception of a few home sound collages and a rendition of Captain Beefheart's "Neon Meate Dream of an Octafish," coming from a 1988 concert with Don Preston, Ashwin Batish, Chris Turner, Brian Ritchie, Tony Trischka, and Murray Reams. The duo performs some of the Doctor's avant-country songs (the best ones being "Dropped Another Needle" and "B.Y.O.B. Klub"); covers of Beefheart, Lou Reed, and Black Uhuru ("Night of the Living Dread," no kidding); and comedy routines/stage craze. Fans of the Mothers of Invention will get reacquainted with Opal ("Call to Opal"), the "hot little bitch" that became one of Black's catch phrases during his days with Frank Zappa. His agile but straightforward drumming and Chadbourne's banjo can sound a bit thin at times, but what it lacks in instrumentation is made up in energy and good humor; the renditions of "Que Paso?" and "Sheriff of Hong Kong" are exemplary.
**********
BIOGRAPHY/AMG (EUGENE CHADBOURNE)
Jason Ankeny
A seemingly endless -- and endlessly eclectic -- series of releases made the innovative guitarist Eugene Chadbourne one of the underground community's most well-known and well-regarded eccentrics. Born January 4, 1954 in Mount Vernon, NY, Chadbourne was raised in Boulder, CO, by his mother, a refugee of the Nazi death camps. At the age of 11, the Beatles inspired him to learn guitar; later exposure to Jimi Hendrix prompted him to begin experimenting with distortion pedals and fuzzboxes. Ultimately, however, he became dissatisfied with the conventions of rock and pop, and traded in his electric guitar for an acoustic one, on which he began to learn to play bottleneck blues.
Perhaps Chadbourne's most significant formative discovery was jazz; initially drawn to John Coltrane and Roland Kirk, he later became an acolyte of the avant excursions of Derek Bailey and Anthony Braxton. Despite the huge influence music exerted over his life, however, Chadbourne first studied to become a journalist, but his career was derailed when he fled to Canada rather than fight in Vietnam; only President Jimmy Carter's declaration of amnesty for conscientious objectors allowed the vociferously left-wing Chadbourne to return to the U.S. in 1976, at which time he plunged headlong into the New York downtown music scene. After releasing his 1976 debut, Solo Acoustic Guitar, he began collaborating on purely improvisational music with the visionary saxophonist John Zorn and the acclaimed guitarist Henry Kaiser.
Quickly, Chadbourne carved out a singular style, comprised of equal parts protest music, free improvisation, and avant-garde jazz, topped off with his absurd, squeaky vocals. A complete list of Chadbourne's countless subsequent collaborations and genre workouts is far too lengthy and detailed to exhaustively document, although in the early '80s he garnered some of his first significant attention as the frontman of Shockabilly, a demented rockabilly revisionist outfit which also featured the well-known producer Kramer. Following the group's breakup, Chadbourne turned to his own idiosyncratic brand of country and folk, accurately dubbed LSD C&W on a 1987 release, the same year he joined the members of Camper Van Beethoven for a one-off covers project. In addition, he recorded with artists ranging from Fred Frith and Elliott Sharp to Evan Johns and Jimmy Carl Black, the original drummer in the Mothers of Invention; in between, he continued exploring unique styles inspired by music from the four corners of the globe, all the while issuing a seemingly innumerable string of records, most of them on his own Parachute label.
**********
BIOGRAPHY/AMG (JIMMY CARL BLACK)
Eugene Chadbourne
Jimmy Carl Black was an unusual figure in American rock music, as he achieved lasting fame primarily for a single ad-libbed line on the third album by the Mothers of Invention: "Hi boys and girls, I'm Jimmy Carl Black and I'm the Indian of the group." Of course, there was more to it than just this line, as bandleader Frank Zappa exploited the eccentric character of this Cheyenne Indian musician, realizing that his personality would be fascinating to certain listeners and quite a departure from the usual rock stars of that day. Black also had roots as a Texan, hailing from a town on the border of that state and New Mexico. This birthplace was almost a symbolic indicator of how Black would straddle different musical geographies. Although famous for his avant-garde work with Zappa, he was really more of a roots musician and worked extensively in blues, Tex-Mex, and country-rock. He came from a generation of musicians for whom working in a rock & roll band meant playing for strippers, four or five sets per night with more than one version of "Wooly Bully."
All this would change in 1964 when his band, the Soul Giants, auditioned a young man named Frank Zappa for lead guitarist. Zappa could smell change in the wind big time and eventually suggested the band quit doing covers and let him write some songs specifically for them. The idea was to create an image of the band as the ultimate set of freaks, to cash in on the peace-and-love hippie era while simultaneously making fun of it, and everything else that came to mind. Zappa also envisioned himself as an avant-garde composer creating works along the lines of Edgar Varese. It was all a tall order, but with the band's name changed to the Mothers of Invention and the 1965 release of the first double album in rock history, Zappa's twisted dream became a reality.
Black went from backing up bumping and grinding to playing at Royal Festival Hall in a few years, but was dumped back out on the street when Zappa decided to disband his original group of Mothers and embark on a solo career in 1970. By then Zappa and the band had released their first and only full-length commercial film, 200 Motels, in which Black was prominently featured in what came to be one of his signature songs, "Lonesome Cowboy Burt." Black and several other members of the Mothers rebounded with a new band, Geronimo Black. The group's direction was less of a freakout and more rock and blues, and Black wrote several classic Native American protest tunes for the band's debut album. Black and the group were based out of California up until 1973. A shift in record company management led to the band being dumped, beginning several decades of struggle for Black as he moved around the Western United States, almost always having to work at some job other than music in order to survive and support his five children.
For Black, being impoverished wasn't just a private matter. His former boss, Zappa, had recorded band meetings and arguments, inevitably about money and the lack of it, and had edited these spoken word bits into several Mothers releases. This material had an enlightening effect on many young listeners who thought all rock bandmembers were rolling in amassed wealth and hadn't a care in the world, certainly not the worries that plagued middle-class adults raising families. But no matter how hard times became, Black always remained involved in some kind of musical project. From 1973-1982 Black lived in New Mexico and Texas. He performed in a group called the Lotus Family with the banjo player Jim Bowie. Other Black groups from this period were Captain Glasspack and the Magic Mufflers and Big Sonny and the Lo Boys. In 1975, Black joined the band of another avant-garde rock legend, Captain Beefheart, as one of a set of double drummers. He stayed with the group for less than a year, performing on the Chicago-based Soundstage television program and at the Nepworth Pop Festival in the United Kingdom. He was asked to do some guest vocals on a Zappa album in 1981, producing the off-color country song "Harder Than Your Husband." But this friendly association with Zappa ended when most of the original Mothers decided to sue for unpaid back royalties, winning the case but not allowed to discuss the outcome with the press.
In 1982 he moved to Austin, TX, a town with a promising music scene that led to some new relationships, including one with the British singer Arthur Brown, another individual attempting to survive on a few moments of '60s fame, in his case a bizarre hit single entitled "Fire." That Black and Brown would eventually combine their talents as house painters as well as musically says more about the lack of sufficiently paid musical employment in the Austin area than it does about these men's versatility. Throughout this period there had been attempts to revive the original Mothers, sans Zappa, as the Grandmothers. Most frequent partners in these ventures would be keyboardist Don Preston and reed player Bunk Gardner. While living in Austin, Black also began a Texas-based version of the group, and began to incorporate not just senior ex-Mothers but young Zappa fanatics eager to take part in a repertory company of Zappa music alongside their hero's former sidemen.
In 1991, Black and Preston were both invited to perform at the Moers Jazz Festival in a 12-piece grouping of musicians from different genres organized by guitarist Eugene Chadbourne. One year later Black had the opportunity to relocate in Europe when his wife was offered a job teaching on a military base in Vicenza, Italy. The Army wasn't particularly fond of the Blacks and wanted to send them back to Texas, but they opted to stay in Europe, relocating to the Stuttgart area of Germany where, in collaboration with the Muffin record company, he began an intensive effort to expand work possibilities for the Grandmothers. At the same time, Black continued his relationship with Chadbourne. The two formed a duo named the Jack and Jim Show after a painting Beefheart had done of Black with a jackrabbit. Black began getting enough work in Europe to survive as a musician, backing up a variety of blues singers in a band led by guitarist and harmonica player Rick Farrell and also appearing from 1994 onward as a guest vocalist with the British band the Muffin Men.
Concentrating more on singing than drumming, Black became known as one of the best interpreters of classic Zappa and Beefheart material. Despite threats of legal action from Zappa's widow, Gail, the Grandmothers continued to increase their activity. In 2000 the band embarked on a two-month tour of the United States, playing 60 shows in 66 days. Black continued in the life of a journeyman musician. "I'm famous, but I don't have a pot to piss in," he was fond of saying. The University of Liverpool Press planned to publish a biography of Black in 2002, to be written by Black and Rod Gilliard of the Muffin Men. Jimmy Carl Black passed away November 1, 2008, after a bout with cancer.
**********
WIKIPEDIA
**********
TO THE TOP
********************
''LOCKED IN A DUTCH COFFEESHOP''
1993
54:02
**********
01 - Dropped Another Needle 04:18 (Eugene Chadbourne)
02 - Big Boss Man 05:14 (Jimmy Reed)
03 - B.y.o.b. Klub 05:42 (Eugene Chadbourne)
04 - Captain Beefhart Medley 05:20 (Don Van Vliet)
a - Neon Meate Dream Of An Octafish
b - Sheriff Of Hong Kong
c - The Blimp
05 - The Umbrella 03:03 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
06 - Expense Account Meeting 01:19 (Eugene Chadbourne)
07 - Call To Opal 00:45 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
08 - Que Paso 02:52 (Augie Meyers)
09 - Dawn Of The Living Dread 04:01 (Black Uhuru, Eugene Chadbourne)
10 - Colorado Kool-Aid 04:18 (Johnny Paycheck)
11 - Fresh Garbage 05:41 (Jay Ferguson, Randy California)
12 - Prelude To Chili In Navajo Taco 02:16 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
13 - Le Hippie Dogg 01:13 (Eugene Chadbourne)
14 - Ethnic Cleansing 07:13 (Eugene Chadbourne)
15 - Crybaby Umbrella 00:40 (Eugene Chadbourne, Jimmy Carl Black)
**********
Banjo, Guitar, Vocals – Eugene Chadbourne
Drums, Vocals – Jimmy Carl Black
On Track 04:
Banjo - Tony Trischka
Flute (Wood) - Brian Ritchie
Harmonica - Chris Turner
Keyboards, Vocals - Don Preston
Percussion - Murray Reams
Sitar - Ashwin Batish
**********
These recordings were captured the on the spring 1993 DUTCH COFFEESHOP TOUR of "The Jack and Jim Show" at various live shows in Europe for the Danish National Radio, Copenhagen Denmark, except track 4: "Captain Beefheart Medley" recorded at the 1988 Moers festival.
**********
REVIEW/AMG
François Couture
Locked in a Dutch Coffeeshop was released in 1993 on Fundamental and reissued on CD-R by Eugene Chadbourne's home label, House of Chadula. It was the first album to document his collaboration with ex-Mothers of Invention drummer Jimmy Carl Black, billed as "The Jack and Jim Show." This material was recorded in the spring of 1993 at various live shows in Europe, with the exception of a few home sound collages and a rendition of Captain Beefheart's "Neon Meate Dream of an Octafish," coming from a 1988 concert with Don Preston, Ashwin Batish, Chris Turner, Brian Ritchie, Tony Trischka, and Murray Reams. The duo performs some of the Doctor's avant-country songs (the best ones being "Dropped Another Needle" and "B.Y.O.B. Klub"); covers of Beefheart, Lou Reed, and Black Uhuru ("Night of the Living Dread," no kidding); and comedy routines/stage craze. Fans of the Mothers of Invention will get reacquainted with Opal ("Call to Opal"), the "hot little bitch" that became one of Black's catch phrases during his days with Frank Zappa. His agile but straightforward drumming and Chadbourne's banjo can sound a bit thin at times, but what it lacks in instrumentation is made up in energy and good humor; the renditions of "Que Paso?" and "Sheriff of Hong Kong" are exemplary.
**********
BIOGRAPHY/AMG (EUGENE CHADBOURNE)
Jason Ankeny
A seemingly endless -- and endlessly eclectic -- series of releases made the innovative guitarist Eugene Chadbourne one of the underground community's most well-known and well-regarded eccentrics. Born January 4, 1954 in Mount Vernon, NY, Chadbourne was raised in Boulder, CO, by his mother, a refugee of the Nazi death camps. At the age of 11, the Beatles inspired him to learn guitar; later exposure to Jimi Hendrix prompted him to begin experimenting with distortion pedals and fuzzboxes. Ultimately, however, he became dissatisfied with the conventions of rock and pop, and traded in his electric guitar for an acoustic one, on which he began to learn to play bottleneck blues.
Perhaps Chadbourne's most significant formative discovery was jazz; initially drawn to John Coltrane and Roland Kirk, he later became an acolyte of the avant excursions of Derek Bailey and Anthony Braxton. Despite the huge influence music exerted over his life, however, Chadbourne first studied to become a journalist, but his career was derailed when he fled to Canada rather than fight in Vietnam; only President Jimmy Carter's declaration of amnesty for conscientious objectors allowed the vociferously left-wing Chadbourne to return to the U.S. in 1976, at which time he plunged headlong into the New York downtown music scene. After releasing his 1976 debut, Solo Acoustic Guitar, he began collaborating on purely improvisational music with the visionary saxophonist John Zorn and the acclaimed guitarist Henry Kaiser.
Quickly, Chadbourne carved out a singular style, comprised of equal parts protest music, free improvisation, and avant-garde jazz, topped off with his absurd, squeaky vocals. A complete list of Chadbourne's countless subsequent collaborations and genre workouts is far too lengthy and detailed to exhaustively document, although in the early '80s he garnered some of his first significant attention as the frontman of Shockabilly, a demented rockabilly revisionist outfit which also featured the well-known producer Kramer. Following the group's breakup, Chadbourne turned to his own idiosyncratic brand of country and folk, accurately dubbed LSD C&W on a 1987 release, the same year he joined the members of Camper Van Beethoven for a one-off covers project. In addition, he recorded with artists ranging from Fred Frith and Elliott Sharp to Evan Johns and Jimmy Carl Black, the original drummer in the Mothers of Invention; in between, he continued exploring unique styles inspired by music from the four corners of the globe, all the while issuing a seemingly innumerable string of records, most of them on his own Parachute label.
**********
BIOGRAPHY/AMG (JIMMY CARL BLACK)
Eugene Chadbourne
Jimmy Carl Black was an unusual figure in American rock music, as he achieved lasting fame primarily for a single ad-libbed line on the third album by the Mothers of Invention: "Hi boys and girls, I'm Jimmy Carl Black and I'm the Indian of the group." Of course, there was more to it than just this line, as bandleader Frank Zappa exploited the eccentric character of this Cheyenne Indian musician, realizing that his personality would be fascinating to certain listeners and quite a departure from the usual rock stars of that day. Black also had roots as a Texan, hailing from a town on the border of that state and New Mexico. This birthplace was almost a symbolic indicator of how Black would straddle different musical geographies. Although famous for his avant-garde work with Zappa, he was really more of a roots musician and worked extensively in blues, Tex-Mex, and country-rock. He came from a generation of musicians for whom working in a rock & roll band meant playing for strippers, four or five sets per night with more than one version of "Wooly Bully."
All this would change in 1964 when his band, the Soul Giants, auditioned a young man named Frank Zappa for lead guitarist. Zappa could smell change in the wind big time and eventually suggested the band quit doing covers and let him write some songs specifically for them. The idea was to create an image of the band as the ultimate set of freaks, to cash in on the peace-and-love hippie era while simultaneously making fun of it, and everything else that came to mind. Zappa also envisioned himself as an avant-garde composer creating works along the lines of Edgar Varese. It was all a tall order, but with the band's name changed to the Mothers of Invention and the 1965 release of the first double album in rock history, Zappa's twisted dream became a reality.
Black went from backing up bumping and grinding to playing at Royal Festival Hall in a few years, but was dumped back out on the street when Zappa decided to disband his original group of Mothers and embark on a solo career in 1970. By then Zappa and the band had released their first and only full-length commercial film, 200 Motels, in which Black was prominently featured in what came to be one of his signature songs, "Lonesome Cowboy Burt." Black and several other members of the Mothers rebounded with a new band, Geronimo Black. The group's direction was less of a freakout and more rock and blues, and Black wrote several classic Native American protest tunes for the band's debut album. Black and the group were based out of California up until 1973. A shift in record company management led to the band being dumped, beginning several decades of struggle for Black as he moved around the Western United States, almost always having to work at some job other than music in order to survive and support his five children.
For Black, being impoverished wasn't just a private matter. His former boss, Zappa, had recorded band meetings and arguments, inevitably about money and the lack of it, and had edited these spoken word bits into several Mothers releases. This material had an enlightening effect on many young listeners who thought all rock bandmembers were rolling in amassed wealth and hadn't a care in the world, certainly not the worries that plagued middle-class adults raising families. But no matter how hard times became, Black always remained involved in some kind of musical project. From 1973-1982 Black lived in New Mexico and Texas. He performed in a group called the Lotus Family with the banjo player Jim Bowie. Other Black groups from this period were Captain Glasspack and the Magic Mufflers and Big Sonny and the Lo Boys. In 1975, Black joined the band of another avant-garde rock legend, Captain Beefheart, as one of a set of double drummers. He stayed with the group for less than a year, performing on the Chicago-based Soundstage television program and at the Nepworth Pop Festival in the United Kingdom. He was asked to do some guest vocals on a Zappa album in 1981, producing the off-color country song "Harder Than Your Husband." But this friendly association with Zappa ended when most of the original Mothers decided to sue for unpaid back royalties, winning the case but not allowed to discuss the outcome with the press.
In 1982 he moved to Austin, TX, a town with a promising music scene that led to some new relationships, including one with the British singer Arthur Brown, another individual attempting to survive on a few moments of '60s fame, in his case a bizarre hit single entitled "Fire." That Black and Brown would eventually combine their talents as house painters as well as musically says more about the lack of sufficiently paid musical employment in the Austin area than it does about these men's versatility. Throughout this period there had been attempts to revive the original Mothers, sans Zappa, as the Grandmothers. Most frequent partners in these ventures would be keyboardist Don Preston and reed player Bunk Gardner. While living in Austin, Black also began a Texas-based version of the group, and began to incorporate not just senior ex-Mothers but young Zappa fanatics eager to take part in a repertory company of Zappa music alongside their hero's former sidemen.
In 1991, Black and Preston were both invited to perform at the Moers Jazz Festival in a 12-piece grouping of musicians from different genres organized by guitarist Eugene Chadbourne. One year later Black had the opportunity to relocate in Europe when his wife was offered a job teaching on a military base in Vicenza, Italy. The Army wasn't particularly fond of the Blacks and wanted to send them back to Texas, but they opted to stay in Europe, relocating to the Stuttgart area of Germany where, in collaboration with the Muffin record company, he began an intensive effort to expand work possibilities for the Grandmothers. At the same time, Black continued his relationship with Chadbourne. The two formed a duo named the Jack and Jim Show after a painting Beefheart had done of Black with a jackrabbit. Black began getting enough work in Europe to survive as a musician, backing up a variety of blues singers in a band led by guitarist and harmonica player Rick Farrell and also appearing from 1994 onward as a guest vocalist with the British band the Muffin Men.
Concentrating more on singing than drumming, Black became known as one of the best interpreters of classic Zappa and Beefheart material. Despite threats of legal action from Zappa's widow, Gail, the Grandmothers continued to increase their activity. In 2000 the band embarked on a two-month tour of the United States, playing 60 shows in 66 days. Black continued in the life of a journeyman musician. "I'm famous, but I don't have a pot to piss in," he was fond of saying. The University of Liverpool Press planned to publish a biography of Black in 2002, to be written by Black and Rod Gilliard of the Muffin Men. Jimmy Carl Black passed away November 1, 2008, after a bout with cancer.
**********
WIKIPEDIA
**********
TO THE TOP
********************