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Posts Tagged ‘The Mermen’

Day 35. Cowabunga!

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

The ‘Cowbunga Surf Box Set’ looks like a surfboard. There are even textured speckles on the front that mimic a surfboard’s texture. Rhino, in general, does a great job with box sets. This one was pretty much well done overall. And my guess is that it exists because of the ‘Pulp Fiction’ and Quentin Tarentino’s nod to surf and hot-rod music.

When most people think of ‘surf’ music they usually come up with ‘The Beach Boys’, and this of course would only be the early Beach Boys (and certainly not much beyond ‘Pet Sounds’). OR – Dick Dale (the king of the surf guitar!) comes to mind. For the most part I do like the early Beach Boys stuff, and it is represented in the box, but I LOVE the mostly instrumental and heavily reverbed music of ‘The Lively Ones’, ‘The Sentinals’ and ‘The Astronauts’. I’d take ‘Pipeline’ over ‘Surfin’ USA’ any day. Most of the set focusses on the 60s, but the last disc covers 20 years of surf as it changed through the 70s to the 90s. ‘The Mermen’ get a nice nod with a live rarity.

When I worked at Blue Note Music selling guitars, we had this great used and pieced together Fender Strat and a Music Man Twin Reverb knockoff that had a great California surf sound. It would have cost me probably $300 for the pair, but I was barely scraping by with tuition and rent. The both of them sat there for months and I would play them pretty much whenever I wanted, but I was so heart broken the day I came into work to see them missing. I never did find such an ideal surf guitar / amp combo again… something about the pickups in the guitar and the spring reverb just matched on those two pieces… oh well… Still, when I picture myself finally getting another band together, it is always a surf group playing dense, modal melodies over pounding drums.

Day 17. The Mermen.

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Tonight has four discs from the San Francisco trio The Mermen (‘Krill Slipping’, ‘Food For Other Fish’, ‘Glorious Lethal Euphoria’ and ‘Songs Of The Cows’). The Mermen are often cited as one of the prime examples of the surf music revival of the ’90s, but they are really more like a combination of surf, psychedelic and the noisier side of Sonic Youth. They can go from ambient and melodic to walls of sound crashing around you (just like being in the water at the beach!). And usually, that can be like that all in one song.

I was introduced to The Mermen by my friend Charles. Charles and I worked at the Tower in Berkeley together close to 15 years ago now. Since then, we still get mix discs to each other pretty much every year. I have probably been introduced to more music from Charles then just about anyone else (except my Dad). In fact, I can probably look at the iTunes library on my laptop right now and find close to a 1/3 of what is newer pop and rock on it is there because of Charles. I don’t bother listening to much radio anymore (though I am lucky to be within the 3-4 mile radius that picks up KUPS!), but every year when I get new discs from Charles I find new music to explore. Charles and I have often complimented each others tastes while at the same time really liking about the same music. He buys pop records like a fanatic, while I hunt for jazz and blues. But when we share it with each other, the is little disagreement about what is good.

What is unique about The Mermen (from the Charles filter perspective) is that they are completely instrumental and not your traditional pop group. What got Charles into them though was meeting the bassist Alan, then going to one of the shows they put on at Ocean Beach in San Francisco. What was especially impressive about the group was how good they sounded live and how much their albums sounded like their performances. One of the startling things about their CDs is the lack of overdubs. They create a very full sound from one guitar, one bass and a drummer (that sounds like he has ten arms sometimes). The bass playing is full and melodic, and the guitar work often resonates through a dense reverb to create a large washes of color. I have been a fan of 60s surf music for about as long as I can remember, and the Mermen certainly caught my interest because they weren’t simply a rehash of that style, but a real update and outgrowth of it.

And while the Coltrane discs I mentioned last night conjure up a very specific memory of a very specific moment, when I listen to the Mermen I am almost always reminded of the smell of fog as it rolled into Berkeley and me standing outside the record store drinking a hot cup of Wall Berlin coffee at 11pm.  And the more I think about it… both of these just make me realize that this is music that came to me when I was younger. I’m glad I was so open-minded to new music at 20… that’s how a 20 year old should be. And I know that all of this is really just nostalgia. I love my life now, but being 20 was fun. And I still have the soundtrack.

Suggested listening: The Mermen: Food For Other Fish if you can find it… if you can’t, let me know.