Old Enough to Be Confused

This first ran on Splice Today.
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It’s taken me somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 years to appreciate fIREHOSE. A friend taped it for me back in the early 90s, maybe a year or three after its release in 1991. I didn’t hate it or anything, and I listened to it a fair amount because my friend said I should like it and I felt like I should keep trying. But it was only when I started to listen to it again last month after that two decade hiatus that I ended up falling in love — and buying all of fIREHOSE’s other albums.

It’s appropriate that I had to wait, and wait, and wait, to really appreciate the band. Most rock at least makes some pretense at aiming for the kids, but fIREHOSE really is music for aging decadents. Bassist Mike Watt and drummer George Hurley were already punk legends when the band coalesced — they’d been two thirds of the Minutemen, before guitarist D. Boon died. The new guitarist and vocalist, Ed Crawford, substituted for Boon’s youthful political charge a jaded, wigged out irony — everything the band does sounds like it’s in quotes. One of their songs, from 1993’s Mr. Machinery Operator is even called “More Famous Quotes.” Another, from 1987’s If’n, is called “For the Singer of REM” and is a gleefully goofy skewering of Michael Stipe, with Crawford burbling about how “the door’s a symbol for/these objects in your drawer,” while Watt and Crawford somehow imitate REM’s folk-rock shimmer exactly while still sounding like their own spiky, funky selves. It’s as if they’ve contemptuously swallowed their target whole.

As that parody suggests, there’s a little Weird Al in fIREHOSE’s makeup — but it’s Weird Al as he would have been if he was more musically talented and more ambitious than any of the bands he parodied. fIREHOSE is undoubtedly joking throughout Flyin’ the Flannel, but the jokes are so fractured and bizarre and cool-as-shit that they end up slipping over into the sublime. It’s the greatest chortling grandpa music ever.

Most of the songs on Flyin’ the Flannel are only one to two minutes long, and they all seem put together out of spare pieces, shards, and novelty items. “Can’t Believe” is a joyful power-pop ode to love into which someone has inadvertently dropped a barrel-full of amphetamines and the lunatic what swallowed them. Crawford wails his Michael Nesmith lines like Rob Halford with head trauma, while Watt and Hurley burp and stutter, turning the wannabe triumphant hook into a series of strutting pratfalls. On the band’s version of Daniel Johnston’s “Walking the Cow,” Mike Watt emotes like a slowed down Elvis, while the band turns the fey original into a faux-soulful stroll, with the meaty bass insisting that there really is a cow lowing over there. “Flyin’ the Flannel” is a cock rock roar about the need for tailors, interspersed with fruity folksy interludes, as Watt’s base meditatively scuffles about in the underbrush And then there’s “Towin’ the Line,” which is maybe the album’s closest song to actual funk. Though it’s still all slowed down and spaced apart, like George Clinton leisurely bouncing around the studio on a pogo stick.

Talking about individual tracks is a little deceptive though. The songs tend to blur into each other, not because they all sound the same, but, again, because they’re each so fragmented. The whole feels less like a whole than like an assemblage, stiched together out of Hurley’s weird shifting beats, Watt’s weird shifting bass runs, and Crawford’s weird shifting riffs and wails. You end up with this tattered, limping thing, which keeps trying to rock and then gets tired and goes off to snark or fart or sit down for a rest, or bellow at the kids on the lawn. Maybe I felt like it was bellowing at me once upon a time, I don’t know. But whatever my problem was, I’m glad I finally got old enough to like my music this distracted and crotchety and glorious.
 

5 thoughts on “Old Enough to Be Confused

  1. I’ve always been into Ragin’ Full On but I haven’t really dipped into the later fIREHOSE albums. I’m a big Minuteman fan and I like Watt’s solo work so I know I need to check this stuff out.

  2. Oh crap, I just listened to the whole thing for the first time in many years. It’s so good. fIREHOSE, for me, is the definition of punk, in its best meaning. Punk not meaning a particular sound or aesthetic or form, but the approach. In particular in not knowing, and then not caring, how a traditional song structure is supposed to work, or how your instrument is supposed to be played. That you don’t just have a drum fill as a break in a song! They play really earnest (never thought of them as ironic) interpretations of straight ahead rock, except that there are 6 moods of them per song, and the bass is playing the drum part and the drums are playing the lead guitar part. I love fIREHOSE!
    I remember listening to the album fromohio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8Yiz8haPzI (when I was just starting to play drums in high school) and just being in awe of how George Hurley uses the hi-hat on that album. It was and is singular. I almost think of them as outside artists. I remember (someone correct me) that when Watt and D. Boon started jamming, they didn’t know how to tune, and they really wanted to play music like Blue Oyster Cult, who they loved. The Minutemen was what came out of them very earnestly trying to play butt rock but being incapable of it. Also, that they didn’t understand that the bass was supposed to sync up with the drums, so Watt paid more attention to meshing with the guitar. OK, enough of me blathering on, I’m going down the rabbit hole now of all those wonderful albums (that on the album art [I had tapes] is inscribed “this and all future albums dedicated to D. Boon”, as well as a number telling the listener proudly how few hours it took to record!) They jam econo.
    Have fun, Anthony Stock, checking out all those albums! (spoiler alert, for me Mr. Machinery Operator is worth skipping. Too much J. Mascis) Thanks, Noah!

  3. Hey Brisa; thanks so much for sharing my obsessive fIREHOSE fandom! I do still love Mr. Machinery Operator, even if, as you say, J. Mascis is maybe no ideal in every way.

    They are an unusual punk band; sort of iconically punk in many ways, but also really different in their approach than most of what is thought of as punk (in part as you say because they’re really instrumental virtuosos, albeit odd ones.) It depresses me that they’re main legacy is inspiring the Red Hot Chili Peppers…but I don’t feel they can really be blamed for that…

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