Does anyone remember this album? [Archive] - Audio & Video Forums

PDA

View Full Version : Does anyone remember this album?



3db
02-06-2006, 05:32 AM
I stumbled across this again in my collection. This album is still as fresh sounding to me as it did when it first came out. I love this album.

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre700/e751/e7516314zay.jpg

Stone
02-06-2006, 06:49 AM
No, but I have this album:

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drd900/d987/d987136oue1.jpg


However, I think we are talking about two different bands.

BarryL
02-06-2006, 07:42 AM
I stumbled across this again in my collection. This album is still as fresh sounding to me as it did when it first came out. I love this album.

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre700/e751/e7516314zay.jpg

Weren't the two key guys here Hudson and Ford from The Strawbs? They had a couple of big hits off of this album, but I can't remember the names of them right now.

ForeverAutumn
02-06-2006, 08:26 AM
No, but I have this album:

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drd900/d987/d987136oue1.jpg


However, I think we are talking about two different bands.

Interesting history of this band on AMG....

One of the strangest stories in rock history, the Monks were formed in the early '60s by American G.I.s stationed in Germany. After their discharge, the group stayed on in Germany as the Torquays, a fairly standard beat band. After changing their name to the Monks in the mid-'60s, they also changed their music, attitude, and appearance radically. Gone were standard oldie covers, replaced by furious, minimalist original material that anticipated the blunt, harsh commentary of the punk era. Their insistent rhythms recalled martial beats and polkas as much as garage rock, and the weirdness quotient was heightened by electric banjo, berserk organ runs, and occasional bursts of feedback guitar. To prove that they meant business, the Monks shaved the top of their heads and performed their songs — crude diatribes about the Vietnam war, dehumanized society, and love/hate affairs with girls — in actual monks' clothing.

This was pretty strong stuff for 1966 Germany, and their shocking repertoire and attire were received with more confusion than hostility or warm praise. Well known in Germany as a live act, their sole album and several singles didn't take off in a big way and were never released in the U.S., it was rumored, because the lyrical content was deemed too shocking. They disbanded in confusion around 1967, but their album — one of the most oddball constructions in all of rock — gained a cult following among collectors, and has ironically made them much more popular and influential on an international level than they were during their lifetime. Bassist Eddie Shaw's 1994 autobiography, Black Monk Time, is a fascinating narrative of the Monks' stranger-than-fiction story.

ForeverAutumn
02-06-2006, 08:37 AM
Weren't the two key guys here Hudson and Ford from The Strawbs? They had a couple of big hits off of this album, but I can't remember the names of them right now.

According to AMG you are correct.

For the time and genre, I much preferred Squeeze's, Argybargy. Although I did own a copy of Bad Habits and enjoyed it for a while until I tired of it.

Ex Lion Tamer
02-06-2006, 09:05 AM
Weren't the two key guys here Hudson and Ford from The Strawbs? They had a couple of big hits off of this album, but I can't remember the names of them right now.

The one I remember fondly is "Drugs in my Pocket".

audiobill
02-07-2006, 02:56 PM
I stumbled across this again in my collection. This album is still as fresh sounding to me as it did when it first came out. I love this album.

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre700/e751/e7516314zay.jpg

Yes, indeed, I do remember it, fondly.

"Nice legs, shame 'bout the face."