Rocket From the Tombs - The Day the Earth Met the Rocket From the Tombs (2002)


Zanim jednak doszło do jakiegokolwiek debiutu płytowego ze strony Pere Ubu, istniała grupa Rocket From The Tombs, w której muzycy (David Thomas - voc., Peter Laughner - g., Gene O'Connor - g., David Bell - b., Johnny Madansky - dr.) dzielnie ćwiczyli i zapoznawali się z rockowym rzemiosłem. A w zasadzie, jak ustrzec się od nieszczęsnych schematów, w które klasyczny rock zaczął popadać. Rockets nie pozostawili po sobie zbyt wiele - ot, ostała się tylko taśma z nagraniami dla lokalnej rozgłośni radiowej. Zgiełkliwe gitary były na tyle zgiełkliwe, że muzycy postanowili przedstawić płytę pierwszemu menadżerowi MC5. Nic jednak z tego nie wyszło - gest ten nie zaowocował żadnym kontraktem. I wszystko wskazywało na to, że grupa skończy podobnie do innych nielicznych weteranów sceny Cleveland, takich jak Mirrors czy Dead Boys - zostanie w zapadłej dziurze gdzieś na północnym wschodzie Stanów, nie wychyliwszy z niej głowy nawet na sekundę. Ale udało jej się dotrzeć do szerszej publiczności, otwierając występy takich bandów, jak Iron Butterfly, Television czy Captaina Beefhearta. Na przestrzeni kolejnych 3 lat następowały zmiany składów, aż wreszcie grupa rozpadła się z powodu różnicy zdań na temat jej przyszłości. Odśrodkowe siły rozrywały ją między glam-rockiem, rockiem kabaretowym, nową falą, punkiem. (Kamil Antosiewicz)

Archiwalne, kompletne nagrania z 1975 roku zespołu, który potem przekształcił się w Pere Ubu i The Dead Boys. Płyta zawiera 9 utworów studyjnych (nigdy nie publikowanych) oraz 10 numerów koncertowych. Brudne, punkowe wręcz wcielenie Davida Thomasa, zawiera min. covery The Stooges, niezwykła wersję "Satisfaction" oraz pierwotne wersje "30 Seconds Over Tokyo", "Final Solution" i "Life Stinks". Kawał historii teraz odgrzebany i zremasterowany przez samego Thomasa.


Not to be confused with San Diego-based alt rockers Rocket from the Crypt, Rocket from the Tombs was a mid-'70s Cleveland un-punk outfit best-known as the band that split into two better-known Cleveland punk bands, Pere Ubu and the Dead Boys. Rocket was formed by a reporter for the weekly Cleveland entertainment newspaper The Scene who went by the name of Crocus Behemoth. A portly man with a mound of wild hair, Behemoth had the perfect name, and a reputation as a wild, completely unpredictable stage performer, which in the early days of the group, consisted of wrapping his considerable girth in aluminum foil, wearing Kiss-style makeup, and spray-painting his hair. After numerous musicians came and went, Behemoth met Peter Laughner, a guitarist/songwriter who played at many of the same clubs as RFTT, as a member of Cinderella Backstreet, a now-infamous Cleveland band of which Pretender Chrissie Hynde was briefly a member. Laughner became a fan of Rocket and occasionally joined the band for a song or two. Before long, Laughner and Behemoth became partners, and with the addition of guitarist Gene O'Connor, bassist Craig Bell, and drummer Johnny "Madman" Madansky, Rocket from the Tombs became a fairly stable unit.

Playing high-energy rock influenced by the Stooges and Lou Reed (Laughner's hero), RFTT made a name for itself in the Cleveland club scene, as well as opening for touring thud-rock has-beens like Iron Butterfly. The songs were sharp and acerbic, a worm's-eye view of an entropic Cleveland, an urban area that was then a dying industrial city. Songs like "Life Stinks" and "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" (both later recorded by Pere Ubu) were indicative of the boredom, anomie, and restlessness felt by the city's pre-punk punks. A mercurial band given to constant internal conflict, Rocket from the Tombs was a group always at odds with itself. One example was the Crocus Behemoth issue; outside of Laughner, no one else in the band could stand his singing (or non-singing, as the case may be). Compounding this were Laughner and Behemoth's arty proclivities, which clashed with the hard rock/heavy metal direction preferred by the rest of the band. In 1975, a scrawny, Iggy-worshipping kid from Youngstown, Ohio named Stiv Bators came to Cleveland and was tried out as lead singer, but he didn't last. Laughner, meanwhile, had met and become friendly with influential rock scribe and fellow gonzo Lester Bangs after sending Bangs a Rocket demo tape that he reviewed favorably for Creem. Soon Laughner was writing for Creem and traveling to New York for a first-hand look at the punk scene at CBGB's. Blown away by Patti Smith and especially Television, Laughner returned to Cleveland only to find that the issue of musical direction was tearing RFTT apart. Within weeks, the band was no more.

Laughner and Behemoth (who at this point was going by his birth name, David Thomas) began Pere Ubu, while Gene O'Connor (then called Cheetah Chrome) and Johnny Madansky (then Johnny Blitz) had wisely remembered to keep Bators' phone number; they called him up and formed the wonderfully scuzzy Dead Boys. Laughner's time as a member of Pere Ubu was short, and by 1976, he was fronting a series of new bands, among them Friction, the Finns, and Peter & the Wolves. Despite this flurry of creativity, which included a good chunk of writing for Creem, Laughner was fueling a substance abuse problem that had reached critical mass, and by 1977, he was dead of liver failure at the age of 25. Both Pere Ubu and the Dead Boys went on to have respectable careers (Ubu more so than the Boys), but the sad legacy of Rocket from the Tombs is that of Peter Laughner, an extremely talented man who didn't live long enough to see his talent rewarded. Over 25 years after their initial demise, the surviving members -- bolstered by Television's Richard Lloyd, Laughner's replacement -- defied the odds by regrouping for an exhilarating June 2003 tour, documented on Rocket Redux. In 2010, this same lineup reconvened in Cleveland for recording sessions. The results were released a year later as Barfly. (John Dougan)

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