A classic for those hoary hairy hippies among us who remember our Beatles
lyrics. This first Firesign album was released at the Haight, sorry, the
height of the Revolution on the 38th of Cunnegonde, 1968. On side one Dr.
Tim treats us to a paisley sunrise but can't find anything for his acid
stomach. Then the revolutionary government seeks to correct all that is
unhip, mandating all to drop out, even subjecting Nigeria to a bombardment
of "The Naked Lunch" to enforce its grooviness. The supremely Kafkaesque
title piece occupying all of side two (TFT's first extended piece and a
breakthrough in recorded comedy) takes a confused tourist into a shadowy
world of Byzantine fascists. Strangers in an elevator speak first in
Russian, reply in French and somehow still understand each other. Lord
Kitchener is overthrown. Our traveler escapes the Winter Palace only to be
thrown in prison where he must Beat the Reaper to survive the plague and
escape, ending up breathless on side six for another lesson in Turkish.
Perhaps the most poignant and lasting piece is the first, a short history
of the American Indians, Temporarily Humboldt County. Few vinyl copies of
Electrician survive because most had to be returned for regrooving.
Beautifully recorded and worth repeated listenings on headphones,
Electrician still has the power to amuse, amaze and mystify after thirty
years. (Available in CD format, collector's item in vinyl.) -
(Rusty Pipes)
This is the clear choice of most Firesign fans when it comes time to try
to convert a friend to the ways of the 4 or 5 guys. Reason? Because one
side is as close to conventional humor as Firesign would ever step. Nick
Danger, 3rd Eye, may be based on Phillip Marlowe, but in this world you
can count on the plot twists being almost more than your mind can absorb.
A witness to a murder exclaims "at the last possible moment, he stopped
on a dime! ...Unfortunately, the dime was in Mr. Rococo's pocket." Young
men grow old in seconds via time machines, cornstarch tires are advised,
and Roosevelt throws in the towel. Once your friend is open to suggestion,
flip it over and allow the full force of Firesignian wit blow him or her
away. How Can You Be In Two Places At Once (When You're Not Anywhere At
All) puts you in the driver's seat of a motorhome like no other. Our
advice? Keep your hands off the Climate Control, take the old Antelope
(exit 1/128th mile) and head out for an adventure in psychotic America.
No matter which side you drop the needle on, you've got yourself some
thinking to do. (Available in CD format, collectable in vinyl.) -
(DJ Johnson)
This special edited version of Nick Danger was made available to radio
stations to promote airplay. The original story was broken up into eight
chapters with short intros by Ossman and Bergman. Each chapter was given a
name that had nothing to do with the story like "The Asphalt Arab." The next
chapter's name was mentioned in the outro and the last chapter lead back to
the first making it maddenly circular as the Roosevlet ending on the original
was not included. (Collector's item in vinyl only) Columbia DJS 29 -
(Rusty Pipes)
Having closed out the 60s with a pair of comic masterpieces that were
drawing comparisons to no less than James Joyce, the Firesign Theatre
had to enter the 70s with a bit of trepidation. Expectations were
almost as high as their audience. Well, why not roll out a comprehensive
overview of a half a century or so of popular culture, filtered through
the dreams, visions and viewing habits of a new installment of the
Firesign everyman, George Tirebiter. Why not, indeed. So they did,
and along the way came up with the album that has been lauded as their
creative peak and attacked as an indecipherable riddle sans punch line
For the hardcore, it's precisely the album's initial inaccessibility
that makes it great. For the casual listener, it's probably not the
best starting place. But like any fun house, you just won't get the
full effect without spending some time in the hall of mirrors. Don't
Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers is an album every Firesign fan
has to come to eventual grips with. The good news is that it's worth
every ounce of effort.
(Shaun Dale)
One of the best and most profound Firesign albums. Take a stroll on the
Funway with Clem and Barney, stand on that yellow rubber line and, if you
ask the right questions, the President may answer. In this theme park of
the future, it's all laid out in easy to swallow government inflicted doses,
but the metaphor is clearly pointing to the real time, screwed up world of
American bureaucracy circa 1971, and it's just as relevant in 1998. Clem's
clone finally breaks through and asks the big question, and then it's back
to the shadows again. This one is so deeply layered you could go nuts trying
to catalog the events. And that's good.
(DJ Johnson)
Beware, listening to this one might give you Globner's disease! In the
early 70's many progressive rock stations played twelve one-hour Firesign
radio shows collectively called Dear Friends. Originally broadcast live on
KPFK in Los Angeles, short pieces from these shows compose the 1971 Dear
Friends double album. There's no extended plot lines, instead Dear Friends
has an immediate, homey kind of wit, almost like they've come over to your
house and are cutting up over after dinner coffee. Some of it is
improvised, some of it is small sketches. The gems include "40 Great
Unclaimed Melodies," "Mark Time" (a prototype for Ossman's album How Time
Flies), "Giant Toad Supermarket," and my fall-down-funny favorite, "The
Chinchilla Show." Great fun and a good alternate starting point for getting
into TFT's work. (Available in CD format, collector's item in vinyl.)
(Rusty Pipes)
September, 1970 through February, 1971, 21 Dear Friends shows were broadcast
live on KPFK in Los Angeles. These shows were condensed down to twelve one-
hour shows for radio syndication. According to David Ossman, only 100 pressings
of the 12 album set were made, making these perhaps the rarest of all Firesign
releases. Between November 1971 and March 1972 another show called Let's Eat
was aired. Another limited pressing of five one-hour shows was made from this
series. No special covers were made and the record labels do not reflect
Columbia. (Collector's item in vinyl only, see above for the best of Dear
Friends commercial release. See below for a list of the individual records
in the Dear Friends radio series.)
(Rusty Pipes)
Dear Friends Volume 01 "Live at the Ash Grove"
Dear Friends Volume 02 "Power is Trouble and Trouble's Not Funny!"
Dear Friends Volume 03 " . . . I Could Always Shoot Him with a Camera"
Dear Friends Volume 04 "Somebody Put a Mickey in the Ground Zero!"
Dear Friends Volume 05 "All We Have to Fear is Me"
Dear Friends Volume 06 "Deputy Dan Will Find Us No Matter Where We Go"
Dear Friends Volume 07 "Was There a Cow on the Moon?"
Dear Friends Volume 08 "Being On Radio is More Fun than Watching TV"
Dear Friends Volume 09 "Dr. Memory's Laff-A-While News"
Dear Friends Volume 10 "All Nite Images"
Dear Friends Volume 11 "Welcome to Microorganism State Park"
Dear Friends Volume 12 "Is This the Machine That Registers No 'n' Yes?"
You might find this one with a rusty plastic dagger embedded in it. Coming
after Bozos in late 1972, Not Insane or Anything You Want To is the album
version of their movie, The Martian Space Party, so it's mostly recorded in
live performance. Not Insane doesn't have a single story line, it's three or
four long sketches rolled into one, full of spacey sound effects, a radio
prison, psuedo-Shakespeare and political humor. It even features a Bergman
lead vocal on the blusey title song. A standout part is George Papoon's
nomination for President by the Surrealist Party, running on a platform six
inches high so no one falls off, while Glutamoto fights to keep the current
president from getting off. If you don't like it we're Not Responsible.
(Collector's item in vinyl only)
(Rusty Pipes)
A promotional release for Not Insane that came out around the 1972 election, A
Firesign Chat with Papoon is really the first Proctor & Bergman album. Done
in an interview format with Steve Marshall from KNX in LA, side one is pre-
election and side two is post-election. It includes everything you wanted to
know about the Surrealist Party, plus after the nation decided to stick it out
with President Dick, there's a concession speech by Papoon to his animal
constituents. Full length and very rare, it had only a white cardboard cover.
(Collector's item in vinyl only) Columbia AS 41 - (Rusty Pipes)
TFT's 7th album is a Holmesian, er, Stonesian mystery set in 1921
that sounds almost like it could be performed onstage. Hemlock Stones and
his partner Flotsom need to write another penny dreadful to pay the rent
when a new case arrives in a cloud of Uncle Sigmund's Peruvian Coco Powder.
The first clues lead our heroes to a filthy pirate pub in the skies, er,
our heroes go to the pub in disguise. Soon after they encounter The
Electrician, who steals the Zeppelin Tube, the amplifier of unlimited
power. And who is the Electrician anyway? Is he the fair-headed pharaoh of
industry, Jonas Acme? Is it his ward, Spad pilot Frank Acne Jr.? Gangster
Harold the Hawk Lungett? That ingenue I knew, Violet Dudley? Have an oiled
beer while you try to find the solution to your head code distress, though
it may not be quite the solution you expected. Rusty Pipes' personal
favorite! Get it anyway. (Collector's item in vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)
After dedicating a half a decade to crafting albums designed to make you
wonder if you knew anything at all, the Firesign Theatre announced that
Everything You Know Is Wrong! As if you didn't know that all along...
This time the fellas take a peek through the reality tunnel of a desert
dwelling broadcaster obsessed with aliens, conspiracies and various other
curious phenomena. Happy Harry Cox seems to have tapped the space/time
continuum himself, channeling Art Bell way back in '73. As Harry
himself might say, "Could be, could be!" One of the great Firesign
performances, Everything You Know was buried amidst a rush of solo and
duet projects and a couple of their less successful efforts. It's worth
uncovering. - (Shaun Dale)
Another of the great channel-flipping mind trip albums from Firesign
Theatre. In THIS world, we're introduced to lonely police officer
Random Coolzip, a man on the edge, a man who buys drive-through cocktails
while on duty as he tries to forget. Meanwhile, the soap opera that is
his life plays out on every channel as surrounding events, from terrorists
at the Academy Awards to the integration of lotus-like aliens in Major
League Baseball, conspire to drive him ever crazier. It is from this
record that we learn there's a whole dead cat in every bar of Dead Cat
Soap, and it is this album that contains the classic line, shouted by an
excited and confused terrorist, "EAT FASCIST DEATH, FLAMING MEDIA PIGS!"
Forget the critics who said it wasn't great Theatre; The Next World is
absolutely essential. - (DJ Johnson)
A double album anthology that samples something great from every album up
through 1974's Everything You Know Is Wrong. The title comes from
Catherwood's classic exit into the time machine in Nick Danger, which is
here in its entirety. But wait, Forward into the Past is also one side of a
rare 7 inch EP (backed with Station Break, also here) released between 2
Places and Dwarf that was never on any album until this one. There's two
chapters of Giant Rat, the song Back to the Shadows Again, Mark Time from
Dear Friends and lots more. Another great intro point for the novice
Firehead. (Collector's item in vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)
Just before Jimmy Carter took office, TFT welded some bits together as a
report by Edward M. Torres to the new president, sort of an audio State of
the Union in early 1977. It's a tour of home town America, Duck Town to be
exact, populated by denizens like those lovable old hermaphrodites, Mutt and
Smutt. There's also the Ben Bland All Night Matinee which is brought to you
by Tudor Nightmare Village. Ben features the movie Bacon Rind on the Whistle
Front, a Multiple Identity benefit and an interview with Mr. Torres. Part of
Who put the Mickey in the Ground Zero is lifted directly from Dear Friends
and likewise the title cut is a remake of a lovely little piece on the
Indians, originally performed on Live at the Ash Grove. Also known as the
Butterfly Album, this may be the rarest of all TFT's commercial releases.
(Collector's item in vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)
Fighting Clowns reunited the Firesign foursome just in time to greet the
Reagan era. If ever they were needed, they were needed then. The
format was a departure from previous albums, presenting the quartet in a
musical review. The satire was a little broader, more politically
pointed and somewhat less texturally dense than the classic albums, but
the Bozos were back in the nick of time. With a generous helping of help
from Jeff Baxter, who performed lead guitar chores and then some, the
album pointed out that the incidental music which all of the albums
featured at some point was more important than was always apparent, and
that there were genuine musical satire chops at play here. And play it
was, with the group working together and sounding happier about it than
they had in some time. It kicked off a continued reunion that produced
the next round of Firesign recordings, a sort of second golden age, and
holds a unique and important place in the Firesign discography. -
(Shaun Dale)
Our most awfule plot once endeavoured in 1972 on Not Insane to us was
brought in fulle measure in 1982. Edmund Edmund, scion of Phlegmland, is
haunted by goats or ghosts upon the battlements, anon he woos a winsome
wench in the cemetery. Then hither come the Moguls to wage a Universal
battle of Paramount importance o'er the ghastly rights to these ghostly
rites. In these spiral'd grooves the 4 or 5 fooles hath been joined by an
ensemble of actores for a romp of moderne puns done in grande Bardish
style. Cry Speed, and take it one more time! The Lost Comedie's meaning
doth matter little, faith, it means Anythinge You Want To. But be warn'd!
Know ye well your English, ye Heads of Firesyne, or this comedie may yet be
lost e'en when found! (Collector's item in vinyl only) -
(Rusty Pipes)
"I'm not mean to Bambi, she likes it that way!" A lovely doctor soap opera
recorded live in 1981 is the centerpiece of this 1982 release and fills out
some of the material about Peggy found on Don't Crush That Dwarf. The second
side is political bits recorded in 1980 for National Public Radio's Morning
Edition, plus a couple of the legendary Jack Poet VW commercials. Real
Commercials a la Firesign. (Collector's item in vinyl only) -
(Rusty Pipes)
Another collection of great moments of Firesign past. See the review for
Forward Into The Past and then collect 'em both. It's a simple equation.
The four or five guys are together again, performing two discs-worth of their
classic bits. As usual, they can't convey the atmosphere of their albums, but
they knew that going in. Instead, they present the audience with a chance to
pick up new insights into favorite bits. Anyone who missed the Nixon
aspect of President Springhead in I Think We're All Bozos On This Bus will
have a second shot at it as Worker returns to the scene of the crime. The
guys take the opportunity to sprinkle 1990s pop culture into their stories,
dropping names from Heidi Fleiss to Dan Rostankowski. Live, the multi-layers
of Firesign's world are reduced to four living, breathing tracks, but they
sure make the best of it. For a true fan, this is a wonderful walk on the
funway. - (DJ Johnson)
The curios and artifacts enshrined on this 1996 release include their very
first recording from 1967, International Youth on Parade. Another Pre-
Electrician delight, the Goon-Show-like "By the Light of the Silvery" is a
two part piece that later evolved into "The Giant Rat of Sumatra." Also
there's the very funny "Exorcism in Your Daily Life." Mainly it's early
work but the title piece is the cybernetic pilot for their 1985 album, Eat
or Be Eaten. A worthy addition to your collection. (Cassette only.) -
(Rusty Pipes)
It's the eve of the Millennium and things are unraveling fast. Radio Now,
which changes format every few minutes to stay up with the focus groups, is
bringing us special coverage of all the events leading up to the big
Princess Goddess Doll Drop. Meanwhile cars and coffee makers are coming
apart with Y2K problems. Guys with eyeball hats are either cleaning up Fun
Fun Town's morality or spreading Ebola virus, it's hard to tell. Time for a
station break, Ralph Spoilsport sells us used body parts and monolithic
corporation US Plus tries to make us feel good about their owning the very
idea of America. Back to the talk shows where fringe groups are getting
brain cramps. Please stop pulling my string! Cut to breaking news. But
there's a news drought. Everybody's waiting to see what happens as the
Millennium inches ever closer... like... a... slow... motion... disaster...
movie... called... Glacier. Goodbye to 19 Anything! - (Rusty Pipes)
Phil Proctor and Peter Bergman took a break from the Firesign foursome
to plug in the Charge-a-Card and order some pay per view public access.
One of the better Firesign side projects, TV Or Not TV didn't offer the
textural complexity of the best FST albums, but it hung together
conceptually and what it lacked in mind boggling neural twists it made
up for with a wide range of characters performing some genuinely funny
material. They control the horizontal, they control the vertical, they
control your rib cage as it tries to control your laughter... - (Shaun Dale)
Need a good 5 cent joke or a Hundred Dollar Shine? Proctor and Bergman's 1975
album is all live material, half drawn from the TV or Not TV album. It also
contains the only bit in the Firesign catalogue on Gerald Ford plus the
absurdist Man Who Eats Watches (Collector's item in vinyl only) -
(Rusty Pipes)
At Hot Rock Radio, if the records weren't free they'd be all news. At least
that's their theme song at this absurd station that pre-dates Radio Now by
exactly two decades. The radio station format gave Proctor & Bergman a chance
to stretch out with 22 short, mostly unconnected bits, and it was good stuff.
Through the magic of commercial interruptions we meet Dr. X ("...Practicing
medicine... until I get it right"), get a crash course in C.B. radio procedure,
luck into a sweet deal on illegal weaponry, and learn to sing our TRUE national
(natural) anthem. If you're looking for a cohesive story, look elsewhere.
If you need a good shot of P&R's cultural grinicism, then by all means give
yourself a break and search the used record store bins for this one. -
(DJ Johnson)
Mix together cars, Nick Danger, Watergate and the Second Coming of Christ
together in East LA and you get Roller Maidens from Outer Space. Oh yes,
don't forget TV, Country Western music and a good dash of hedonism. Phil
Austin's solo album from 1974 is another channel slalom centering on the
adventures of Dick Private, star of the show "Carhook." Our private dick is
hired by Regular Boinklyn and Tricky Retardo to find out why their wives
Ethyl and Juicy joined the secret society of the Roller Maidens. Meanwhile
Tricky's brother Jesus Retardo comes back into town sparking the song, C'mon
Jesus, one of four very good C&W tunes on the album. Later Jesus goes up
against the Roller Maidens' boss Nick Exxon, Regular and Tricky go
transvestite, and everyone gets all balled together in the end. Ossman,
Proctor and Bergman co-star along with the band, Red Greenback and the Blue
Boys and yes, Austin can sing quite well. Did we mention it may be the most
surreal amalgam in the whole catalogue? If you're a novice, try some of the
others before you tackle this one, but it's rewarding. (Collector's item in
vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)
David Ossman's "solo" album actually included performances by 3/4ths of the
Firesign Theatre, but it was his baby. While all serious Fireheads know
this album inside and out, the fringe fans are totally ignorant of its very
existence. The story involves Mark Time, a volunteer astronaut who was
hurled into space toward Planet X and frozen for the bulk of the decades-long
journey each way. On his return to Earth he is not met by the throngs of
flag-wavers he expected, but by a Government Tweeny, a manufactured lifeform
and the only semi-breathing soul left at the shut-down space station. The
timing of this album's release (1973) coincides with the public's back-turning
act that left America's space program high and dry. Mark returns to find
a strange new world where there is precious little room for space heroes.
As the zep flies lazily over Panoramaland 2000, our hero sets out to find
some answers, dammit. - (DJ Johnson)
Nick Danger is still having trouble spelling "Danger" in 1980 but it finds him
again anyway. All the usual suspects are here, Nancy, Lieutenant Bradshaw,
Rocky Rococo, Blootwurst and more. There's only one thing missing, David
Ossman. The writing is great but unfortunately Nick loses his script halfway
through the adventure and is forced to improvise as he discovers a plot by Van
Pedarazzi to control the world market in... well, that's part of the mystery,
so you figure it out along with who has three faces. Coming close on the heels
of Nick's Missing Shoe adventure, TFT could have easily fallen into a
Dangerous rut but Three Faces is damn near as good as the original. -
(Rusty Pipes)
Firesign foreshadowed the computer revolution on many occasions. The real
deal was almost in full swing when the guys made this little gem. Our hero
is simply named Player. He purchases a video game that he knows is taboo,
having been recalled for dangerous bugs. The game pulls him into its
bizarre world, but unlike the many movies that have followed similar lines,
this seems totally natural to Player, so much so that it's a seamless
transition into a computer world where the bugs'll kill ya. Peter Bergman's
ultimate computer geek rings true, and he always seems to be a step ahead
of the vast cast of meanies that are out to terminate his interface. Released
after a three year Firesign drought, this was a pleasant indicator that the
guys could update their landscapes to include the details of the computer
fixated world of the 80s. Then again, that was a world they had predicted
all along. - (DJ Johnson)
Help, it's the Police! A 7" single released only to radio stations in November
of 1969. Hilarious fun, it is two sides of extremely short bits segued
together. Among these almost one-liners: Police State , The Straight People,
Captain Equinox and a public service message for NASA commanding all Aliens to
register, with or without forms. Also found on the Forward into the past
double album. (Collector's item in vinyl only) -
(Rusty Pipes)
In Nick Dangers's first post-war adventure he wakes up one day to find
everyone's left shoe is missing. Then he stumbles (after all he only has one
shoe on) across a plot to make a penny off every loafer in town! This 12"
Rhino EP marks the 1979 rebirth of TFT after several years hiatus. Missing
Shoe is five short but spirited chapters, each spiced with quick lead ins and
commercial spoofs. Sound effects are limited to a Wurlitzer and acoustic noise
makers giving it an authentic old radio sound too. Great fun! (Collector's
item in vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)
Amy Carter for President! A 7" picture disk that held the Ronald Reagan song
on one side and the Jimmy Carter song on the other side. The Jimmy Carter Song
was not released on the 1980 Fighting Clowns LP, but it is on the CD.
(Collector's item in vinyl only) - (Rusty Pipes)