ESP Ohio

Friday, June 21, 2013

Some Of The Magic Syrup Was Presereved (2002)

Some Of The Magic Syrup Was Preserved
(2002, Fading Captain Series)


The first of 3 LPs released under the name Acid Ranch. This double LP is a real bag of rocks to carry up a real steep hill my friends. Disregard everything you like about Guided by Voices and embrace everything you like about the cosmos of Robert Pollard. Strap on your no-fi headphones, drop some bad acid, and prep your ears with some Jandek beforehand. Like all Acid Ranch records, it's a test of faith for the super fans. Interesting at times, this sits as more of a collector's piece than anything else. A double LP debut, limited to 500 copies, complete with collage booklet. Get out your wallets and place a bid on this when you can, but perhaps be warned.


SIDE A:
The Theory Of Broken Circles- 3  Well, here we are then. Subtle guitar riff and bass back-up play along, on and on. Pollard recites, sometimes howls, some surreal beat poetry in dead-pan and full on goofball vocals. Somewhere between "Hot Freaks," King Crimson, and weather-worn film strips. 5 minutes though. Beware. Can you hang?

Underdogs- 2 Drum pounding, some duck farting noises. Pollard's lyrics are cool, but ultimately meanders into nothingness.

Doctor Moon- 3 Pollard sings like he's got a case of the hiccups over steady, matter-of-fact strumming. None to out-of-left field, sans the semi-yodeling.

Pictures From The Brianbox- 2 Trebly and clean electric guitar cut. Comes complete with rocking bass line. Pollard howls wildly. Scotch-taped rock number that's tough to stomach. 

Song Of Love- 1  40 second acapella track.  Who cares?

Redboots And The Helmet- Super lo-fi recording. Electric guitar, muffled Pollard vocals. Contains the lyrics "19 Something and 5," later used in the track "Dayton Ohio-19 Something and 5" off the 7''of same name.  Unlike that song, this one's not so hot. 

Hey Baby- 3  Cheap pump organ and Pollard vocals take the lead. Kind of a '50s rock n roll tune, if it was fucking haunted. Short and weird. 

Love Boat- 2  Bass holds song together with guitar strums popping in. Short and pretty worthless.



SIDE B:
Morning Has Broken- 4  Sad, moody, surreal song from the brothers' Pollard. Bob takes acoustics. Jim adds springy UFO feedback and amp drops.

Daily Planet- 3 Pretty much more of "Morning Has Broken," with Jim's weird amp noise, and Bob on acoustic, singing a never-ending story about Superman. Some humor here. Wonderfully surreal ending in the same vein as a David Lynch soundtrack.

Look To The Left- 4 Frantic electric guitar strums with silly vocal delivery. Somewhat catchy, if not annoyingly so. Pretty lo on that lo-fi scale too. Charmingly obnoxious and hooky.

You Will Be There- 2 Essentially tremolo amp noise that bleeds into some home-made Dayton Krautrock. Pollard comes in with some surrealist, cold vocal stylings. Way too long though. Almost decent but just out of reach.

Mongoose Orgasm- 1 It's song's like this where I'm convinced '80s Pollard could, and does, Quantum Leap to present day Pollard. In this leap, present day Pollard tells past Pollard that you can, literally, record anything, and one day release it. '80s Pollard then leaps back to record "Mongoose Orgasm." Instrumental with garage sale drum tones, stick clicks, and squeaking dog toy!

Exploratory Rat Fink Committee- 3 Jim Pollard (I presume), plays some flange, electric guitar, and Bob Pollard sings like he's bellowing in a rubber room,while still pulling off his vintage high-kicks. Completely asinine, cranium diarrhea, that all slops up into a fairly enjoyable stew.

Dungeon Of Drunks- 2 Acoustic guitar tune. Has somewhat of a grunge-feel. Acid Ranch even pulls off a rickety melody on this but to little success.

The Megaphonic Thrift (An Odd Assembly)- 3 Droning, melancholy, and completely lo-fi organ plays the lead while Pollard croons and preaches over it. Falsetto stuff too at 1:20 in! How 'bout that? Not absurd to think some of this could have made it on to an early GBV EP, sans the ODD role call at the end.

Lonely Street- 4 Barely audible electric guitar. Pollard sings as if having smoked one too many cigarettes and hit record in the middle of the night. Short and kind of sweet for Acid Ranch.


SIDE C:
Mr. Gene O- 1 Dumbest riff. Terrible vocals. No matter how you slice it. 2 minutes too long.

10-5-55-30- 2  Pollard sings numbers (yes, numbers) at random over decent chord progression as Mitch (I presume) adds lead guitar line. Too stupid.

I Hate Your Perfume- 2 Sad sac, brittle demo that never made the cut. It's some sort of a song, but so what? No it exists in this world. Man.

Steak And Eggs- 1 Jim Pollard does the noise guitar stuff as Bob sings an apparent dialogue between some characters (according to the detailed lyrics sheet). Bullshit for 3 minutes.

Dying- 4 Great mood piece for your college student film. Reminds me of when the improved Nightwalker material is really on point. This is terrible, but shut off all the lights and listen.

Edison's Memos [Original Title]- 2 Same song title also appears on Robert Pollard's semi-solo, rock fronted band The Choreographed Man Of  War LP in 2001. Unlike that song, which is GREAT, this is not the same song. Electric guitar picking becomes more urgent. Pollard yells. First minute's useless, but Pollard's mid-song vocal outburst is almost worth it. Almost.

What Kind Of Love Affair?- 2 None with this song, that's for sure. Yuck yuck yuck.  Goofy, drunken folky tune in a backwoods kind of way.

Fly- 1 Two chord rock riffs with amp noise, and vocals that sound like Pollard's singing gibberish into a scarf.

Electric Indians- 1 Sparse, reverberating guitar with Pollard spoken beat poetry over it. Surrealist writing is appreciated for Pollard's part, but music wise... what?

Newton's Hopeless Marriage- 1 Electric guitar riff as Pollard speaks verses and attempts some sort of chorus. Three very full minutes of ping-ponging guitar anti-matter.

That Girl Moore- 1 Those vocals! What in the world? Hillbilly drunken comedy thing.  Not worth a damn, but good for a laugh.



SIDE D:
Some Of The Magic Syrup Was Preserved- 4 If there were a pre-Circus Devils demo, this would be the track that spawned the fire. Eerie and bizarre. Again, like a good Nightwalker track, this is moody improv gone right.

You The Doctor- 2 Punk-spy themed number, with Pollard shouting vocals. 55 seconds but only 30 seconds of actual song.

Let's Go To China (Where The East Is Good To Me)- 4 Pollard solo on this with acoustic guitar. Has a Mountain Goats feel (pre-Mountian Goats, of course). A bit long, but the least sporadic track on here.

Scary Out There- 1 Moody, wish-wash guitars. Pollard's almost onto a short snippet tune but is WAY off-key. Short, but scrap.

Cath- 2 Horse as all hell, Bob Pollard does a Ted Leo tune (pre-Ted Leo, of course, and of course they apparently hate each other.  Refer to the James Greer book Learning To Hunt).  Forget this though.

Frogmen- 3 Yeah, you know. Frogmen. Simple, and whisteable tune from the dusty corner of the basement. Tremolo guitar as Pollard sings a decent tune over it. One of the better tracks from disc 2 of this wax pack.

Beatles And Stones- 4  Nearly 7 minutes long! Acoustic strumming and Pollard surreal beat-poetry. Recorded in the '80s, but reminiscent of the classic GBV direction but without the full execution. A glimpse of things to come. Super long, but put it on and kick back to the lo-fi pre-GBV rattle.

Salvation Army Bacon And Eggs- 1 Electric guitar jangle. Out of tune vocals. Pollard does some storytelling. Weird but you know... I don't know?  Then he barks like a dog. But you know...?  I still don't know.




3 comments:

  1. Maybe I should listen to this one again. I do own it. Only song I can recall is "Beatles and Stones." Which I remember being kind of okay.

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  2. I think Beatles and Stones is the birth of Polladrd's genius. It's very moving.

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  3. if i ever sell my copy of this album, and i then see it on some magazine's list of most underrated double albums of all time, i'll take that as proof that we're living in a simulation.

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