MEDITATIONS ON MUSIC & MEDIA

Tag: John Frusciante

RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS’ MOTHER’S MILK – PART II

Red Hot Chili Peppers Mother's Milk cassette

Greetings and welcome to part two of my meditations on Red Hot Chili Peppers’ seminal fourth long-player, Mother’s Milk.

All apologies for the long delay. My intent for these album pieces is to be short and sweet (ish), but it’s just not possible here. Look, I wore out my original Mother’s Milk cassette… But, immersing myself in this music again for the first time in decades, I’m more astounded than ever by the impact it had on my sensibilities as I grew my collection. It’s depths of influence are too great to not do a full-on review.

So… Where was I? Ahhhh, yes… A freshly minted high school senior impulse shopping at a local cd shop; early fall, 1989. Having discovered Red Hot Chili Peppers were, indeed, a real band, I compulsively purchased Mother’s Milk on cassette and went eagerly on my way.

INDEED IT DID SEEM THAT THEY HAD STRANGE WAYS

It’d be fair to expect after all this build up that Mother’s Milk must’ve been instantly epiphanal. And in a way it was… I knew there was something there right away, obviously. But RHCP’s amphetaminic fusions of funk, metal, rap, soul, punk, psychedelia, and jazz were a lot to unpack.

First impressions mixed shock, puzzlement, embarrassment, amusement, and exhilaration! Contemporary acts like Living Colour, and Guns N’ Roses, who also drew on influences that far preceded new wave, were good primers, yes. But Red Hot Chili Peppers were their own thing: weirder; primal; …fully engorged…

Hacking through the heavy brush of ancient memories, I can almost see myself now, rush-walking home and up those steep, brown carpeted steps to my bedroom; peeling away the cellophane, pulling the tape from the case, inserting it into my boombox, pressing “play,” hearing a tone burst…and then CHAOS!!!


Side note -Inconsequential Lessons in Music History
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Before moving to WB in 1990, Red Hot Chili Peppers’ music was issued by EMI – who, along with sister label Captiol, unusually featured XDR “tone bursts” at the beginning and end of every cassette. So, the first sounds one heard after pressing “play” were a series of ascending digital notes (“boo-doo-doe-da-dee-deet”). Then, after a 3 second pause, the album properly began. Yes, the false start was disruptive, but the detail distinguished the cassette experience from vinyl and cd.
Anyway…

Hey Yeah!

Funk-rap-metal jam “Good Time Boys” cold-opens Mother’s Milk with a bizarre blast of avant bass/guitar noise and a hearty group shout out (“HEY YEAH”); from there, sharply settling into a swinging, if bludgeoning groove ala “Black Dog.” In the breaks, complimenting Flea’s ornate, vintage funk-inspired bass lines, Frusciante’s nimble-yet-chunky riffs simultaneously echo Jimi and Jimmy. Out front, Kiedis’ shouted rhymes balance brags with call-outs to respected ’80s L.A. underground peers.

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Two-thirds the way through, in a space typically reserved for guitar solos, the group scratches the record, inserting a rough-cut audio collage* of song fragments borrowed from those aforementioned peers. Sound gimmicky? …Whatever. The stunts work as hooks that beg the question “what will these guys pull out of their socks next.

*Fishbone’s “Bonin’ In the Boneyard,”; Thelonious Monster’s “Try“; “White Girl” by X.

SAILING WITH STEVIE

Next, Flea’s frenetic, isolated bass ignites a very metal update to Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground.”

Now, full disclosure, I’d not heard Wonder’s original until after hearing the Chilis’ version. That said, although I liked ‘roided-up cover song novelties as a teen, my long-standing opinion of such fare has been that they generally don’t age well. But here, despite effectively trading Wonder’s lopey rhythms for bluster, the band’s ebullience and reverence for the source prevail. Feeding his mountainous mix, producer Michael Beinhorn conjures layers of funk, metal and neo-psychedelic guitar from Frusciante to mesmerizing effect. And, seriously, between Smith’s raucous beats and those cheerful group-sung choruses, I want to jump up and sing along to this banger right now just thinking about it!! The unexpected hardcore punk coda at the end is an especially fun touch.

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Aided by a colorfully animated promo video that featured often on MTV’s 120 Minutes in the fall of ’89, “Higher Ground” gave Red Hot Chili Peppers their first mainstream hit; boosting their profile enough to net gigs in major advertising campaigns, late night tv, feature film soundtracks, a better record deal, and, ultimately, superstardom.

Once Aboard and Feeling Smooth

Having (for now) satisfied the gods of obligatory covers, the Chilis follow with a pair of tracks greatly informed by the Minister of the New New Super Heavy Funk himself, James Brown

Anchored by skittering rhythms, swinging horn flourishes, and a forceful emphasis on “The One,” the hectic “Subway to Venus” nudges the group into jazzy r&b territory; all sections playing contrasting patterns and textures that resolve together at the end of every measure. Craziness! All the while, Anthony, ever the winking bragadoccio, invites listeners on a cosmic ride, dealing playfully abstract meta rhymes that both recall and directly reference his musical forebears.

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I had JB pegged as the main influence, but compare this live version of “Subway to Venus” from David Sanborn‘s Night Music against Sly & the Family Stone’s performance of “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Again)” on the Midnight Special.

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From there, shifting focus from the cosmos to a Forum packed with an altogether different set of stars, RHCP salute their beloved L.A. Lakers on “Magic Johnson.”

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Alternating tribal drumline sections with JBs-styled breakdowns, the group chants individual tributes to the roster that dominated the ’80s NBA. In hindsight, would kids today connect with a homer song about long-retired roundballers? I don’t know, but this is a fun jam.

The Freakiest Show I Know

Then, just when you think they might let up a bit five tracks in, Red Hot Chili Peppers erupt into epic aural mayhem on “Nobody Weird Like Me!” Broken into distinct parts, this thrashing punk-funk-metal monster’s first two-thirds play like a breakneck composite of everything we’ve heard so far; bursting with frenzied-yet-elastic bass leads, chunky metal riffs, relentless power drumming, and mischievously absurd lyrics. Some new wrinkles appear – synth washes courtesy of producer Beinhorn, for example, but you get the idea.

At the 2:40 mark, an abrupt apocalyptic instrumental break changes the vibe entirely, segueing the song’s final section into “Kashmir“-styled, quazi-Zep territory; exotic eastern sonic affectations, majestically measured grooves, and all!

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Today, I’m so thoroughly versed in Led Zeppelin that I hear their imprint on 90% of all rock produced since the late ’80s. But it was the influence of those groups that followed them, like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Whitesnake, the Cult, Bonham, etc. – the stuff playing on rock radio in my teen years, that sparked that interest.

PAIN’S PART OF LIFE

Changing pace at album midpoint, the Chilis split the sides with two of their most mature and conventionally crafted original songs to date…

The end of side one finds the band in uncharacteristically deep waters on “Knock Me Down.” Confronting addiction* after founding guitarist Hillel Slovak’s sudden passing a year before, Anthony pleads “don’t be afraid to tell your friends that you hurt inside”; underlining the importance support plays in the struggle for sobriety.

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And the song advances the group’s songwriting, as well. Oh, it’s still possessed of driving energy, but instead of proving again how awesome they are technically, John, Chad, and Flea lock into a hummable, tempered, shuffling funky groove reminiscent of T-Rex. Kiedis, with Frusciante on backing vocals, actually sings rather than shouts; a harmony approach will serve them very well on future recordings.

* A theme the band will revisit often in ensuing years.

End Side 1

To be continued…

MOTHER’S MILK – PART I

IMPACTFUL ALBUMS DAY 3

Mother's Milk

History remembers 1991 as the year alternative rock “broke” pop music. Fair enough. But if my memory serves – and in trivial matters it usually does – “Smells Like Teen Spirit” was more of a final straw than battering ram. Thanks to MTV, a multitude of off-center acts broke through in the 1980s. Yes, once the first wave of music video superstars crested in the mid-’80s, pop radio devolved again into a wasteland of edgeless trifle. But cool stuff did still bubble through. In fact, by decade’s end, even some of the weirdest and wildest underground acts around had managed to forge their way into the mainstream consciousness; bringing me to the next impactful album in my queue – Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ breakthrough 1989 LP, Mother’s Milk.

Released roughly 1/4 the way through their journey (so far), Mother’s Milk may just be the most important record in Red Hot Chili Peppers’ catalog. Granted, their next LP – 1991’s Blood Sugar Sex Magik – rightfully made them superstars. It was a funk-metal masterpiece; one of my favorite records of all time; undeniably brilliant. But hear me out. Mother’s Milk is a gloriously invigorated heavymightynaughtyspazzy collection of funkaedelicjazzyrapmetalsoulpunk certainly unlike anything I’d ever heard before. It stands on its own merits as a key precursor of the ’90s alt rock explosion. Most vital, however…born from the most trying of circumstances, the album rescued a teetering RHCP from almost certain oblivion…

IT WAS THE BEST OF TIMES; IT WAS THE WORST OF TIMES

Like flawed protagonists from epic literary tradition, Red Hot Chili Peppers’ long ascent from cult fixtures of the ’80s SoCal skate punk club circuit to darlings of the ’90s alt rock scene to, finally, rock institution is not for the feint of heart; a tale full of hopeful beginnings, soul-breaking tragedies, and redemptive victories. Stick with me while I illustrate the hellish crucible the band survived to make Mother’s Milk.

In 1987, the Uplift Mofo Party Plan LP triumphantly united all four founding members for the first time on record. Their name was rising; more infamous than famous at this point, perhaps, due to their stage antics, but rising. Nine months later, in the summer of ’88, RHCP was gutted by the sudden death-by-heroin-overdose of guitarist Hillel Slovak and subsequent exit of bereaved drummer Jack Irons. The future looked bleak. But the grief stricken remnant Chili’s – rapper/vocalist/post-modern poet Anthony Kiedis (himself, caught in the throes of heroin addiction) and hyperkinetic master of the poppin’slappin’funkyass bass, Flea (Michael Balzary) – braved on.

With little time and many obligations to meet, numerous would-be replacements received trials by fire on the tour. Many names passed through – D.H. Peligro (Dead Kennedys) and DeWayne McKnight (Parliament), most notably. Ultimately, the spots went to 18-year old L.A. native guitar demigod John Frusciante and prodigious punisher of the skins Chad Smith – thus establishing the most highly esteemed, if inconstant, of all Red Hot Chili Peppers lineups to date.

SET IT STRAIGHT

Truthfully, before Mother’s Milk, I didn’t even know Red Hot Chili Peppers were a real band! Too untamed and difficult to categorize, their record label didn’t know how to sell them. Mainstream radio wouldn’t touch them. No one I knew listened to them. So, my only prior reference point was their brief, anarchic cameo in the 1986 Kirk Douglas/Burt Lancaster caper comedy Tough Guys. But, boy, did those ninety-plus seconds leave an impression. Half-naked, slathered in paint, adorned in DIY faux-glam costuming, and bouncing like pogos, the Chilis just seemed too cartoonishly unhinged and fun to be true! I was intrigued, of course. But, assuming RHCP to be a joke band/plot convenience, I didn’t investigate further. My bad.

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NEVERMIND DURAN DURAN

Flash forward: high school senior year; 1989. Change was in the air. Wacked-out on a late-puberty deluge of testosterone, I edged closer to “normal” social functioning than ever before. Oh, I was still an angsty mess. But, thanks to budding friendships, improved grades, and a newfound competitive drive, things were…better. Further, detoxing cold from a serious comic book habit and seeking new hobbies (crutches) to indulge, I turned more intentionally to collecting music. 

Of course, I’d already filled a few vinyl-clad cassette cases by this point. U2, INXS, and Rush were probably my favorites. I’d stockpiled some new wave (Cars; Duran Duran; Huey Lewis) and tapes by ’70s AOR survivors (Asia; Yes; ELP). But this is where things really started to get interesting. Thanks to the discovery of harder-edged rock bands (GNR; Living Colour), classic rock radio, and the conspicuous presence of underground lifers (Cult; R.E.M.; New Order) on mainstream radio, my collection expanded rapidly. And then

In the fall of ’89, a provocative album sleeve caught my eye at a local cd shop; a high-contrast black and white image composite depicting four young, ragged shirtless fellows nestled into the arms of a beautifully bare Mother Nature. I’d always thought this shop was uncommonly sterile and unhip for an indie – like a Bose store, but they heralded the arrival of this curiosity with a modest display. Scanning the sleeve further, my eyes registered colorful text and graphics in the upper corners. The left-side read “Mother’s Milk“; the right – recognizable as a logo – bore chunky, all-caps, sans-serif text in a circle around a like-styled asterisk shape. “Wait… What…,” I paused… “RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS…? Really???” Requiring no further convincing, I paid for the tape, thanked the clerk, and enthusiastically went on my way.

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TO BE CONTINUED…

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