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www.zerecords.com CAN YOU IMAGINE ALL THAT MILK? CAN WE W H O M A N T H E SHIP O F S TAT E DENY IT IS SOME WHAT OUT OF CONTROL Ronald Reagan • State of the Union Message on Economic Recovery • February, 18. 1981 The year was 1980, and Detroit was getting ready to play host to thousands of Republican conventioneers who were holding their quadrennial shindig in the Motor City. In a breathtaking moment of silliness, someone decided to install brand-new awnings on the windows of the recently abandoned Statler Hotel, so as not to offend any of the visiting GOP functionaries with the depressing urban financial realities of the day. Meanwhile, the members of Detroit band Was (Not Was) were engaging in a bold musical experiment, splicing the genes of jazz, rock, R&B, and funk. With their futuristic grooves and intelligent (if twisted) lyrics, Was (Not Was) didn’t hide the local decay behind fake awnings. It gathered its ethnically diverse ranks, dressed the decay up in some fine threads and took it out dancing. The band’s ringleaders were Don Was (Donald Fagenson) and David Was (David Weiss). These brothers (of the soul variety) were in a good position to point out the absurdities of American life in the early ‘80s. Hailing from the scrubbed inner-ring Detroit suburb of Oak Park, the pair met in eighth grade, appropriately enough when they were both waiting in the principal’s office for discipline. The young friends cut their teeth listening to the homegrown sounds of Motown singles and the MC5. Add plenty of LSD and a healthy dose of the Firesign Theater to their natural mischievousness, mix well, and you’ve got a good idea of the part of the woodwork these freaks creaked out of. Don spent some time as a journeyman jazz player around Detroit, while David moved to Los Angeles and worked as a jazz critic for the Herald Examiner. But the pair kept in touch and eventually formed the band in a bid to go down in glory. Along the way, they assembled a crack team of musicians, including glorious frontman Sweet Pea Atkinson, a former Detroit auto worker whose rich vocal qualities recall Otis Redding or Sam Cooke. Also bringing soul to the ensemble was former O’Jays singer Sir Harry Bowens. The rock edge came from ex-MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer, while the jazz tinge came from trumpeter Marcus Belgrave who performed for decades with the bands of Charles Mingus and Ray Charles. Parliament/Funkadelic’s flamboyant percussionist Larry Fratangelo brought the funk, and the group was rounded out by saxman David McMurray, guitarist Randy Jacobs, and pianist Luis Resto. It would be hard to understand the self-titled debut album by Was (Not Was) apart from its political context-especially with Brother Wayne in tow. (As John Sinclair noted when talking about music and politics in the liner notes of the MC5’s Kick Out the Jams, « There is no separation »). But the band steered clear of didactic rambling, instead choosing to work in character studies. There’s motorcycle Michael who hasn’t been the same since Vietnam. There’s the chick from Ecuador who wants to talk about the moon. There’s the father who hallucinates that the sky is ablaze with ladies’ legs. All of them are interesting characters, if slightly askew. It may have been 13 years after the rebellion that saw the Motor City burn when this record came out, but Ronald Reagan was soon to win the nomination and declare it « morning in America. » But if it was morning in America, it sure seemed pitch black in the Motor City. In fact, even Reagan acknowledged that not all was right. “Can we who man the ship of state deny it is somewhat out of control?” he asked in his State of the Union address on economic recovery in 1981. A sample of that assessment features prominently in the Was (Not Was) cut « Tell Me That I’m Dreaming, » Another line from that same song seems to sum up the ‘80s gimmie gimmie gimmie culture. The song asks: « One man liked milk, now he owns a million cows. Can you imagine all that milk? » Sure. But where do I get me a glass? Now that we’ve got the context out of the way, we can talk about the music. This debut Was (Not Was) album is a glorious postmodern statement. The nuclear glow over suburbia on the front cover is an invitation to the party. All of the earmarks of later Was (Not Was) were there: the cast-of-thousands backing band, the razor blade smile lyrics, the burbling funk. It was that kind of metallic cool that only really plays in Detroit and Europe. This set begins with « Out Come the Freaks, » an essential cut that comes off as a dance manifesto. Next up is « Where Did Your Heart Go, » a dark, sinister, steamymanhole, sunglasses-at-night soundtrack to the rain-soaked streets of a blaxploitation thriller. On the aforementioned « Tell Me That I’m Dreaming, » Don Was crafts a bassline every bit as catchy and primal as « Flashlight » or « Good Times/Rapper’s Delight » behind surreal lyrics. « Oh, Mr. Friction » closes out the first side of the vinyl. The flip begins with « Carry Me Back to Old Morocco, » a soaring cut filled with mystery. « It’s an Attack, » is a hard funk ode to paranoia, while « The Sky’s Ablaze » is a noir radio thriller. Closing out the album is « Go…Now » is a powerful, fist-of-god stomp that showed a sense of hope alongside the postmodern angst. Kramer plays a blistering solo that dissolves into a wash of hard funk horns. Goosebump time!Rounding out this release are some remixes and other hard-to-find tracks including three remixes of « Tell Me that I’m Dreaming » and two remixes of « Out Come the Freaks. » Among the notable songs are « Wheel Me Out » and « Hello operator...I mean dad...I mean police... I can’t even remember who I am, » which comprised the first Was (Not Was) single on ZE Records. The band submitted a demo tape with a letter from the jazz critic of the LA Herald Examiner (who, you’ll remember happened to be David Weiss). Also included is « Dance or Die » from Sweet Pea Atkinson’s solo album « Don’t Walk Away, » (which, inshallah, will be re-released in its entirety someday). A few years after this record was first unleashed, the inventors of Detroit Techno began mining for butt-shakin’ gold. But many of those aesthetic innovations were already present in the oeuvre of Was (Not Was)-the cool, metallic sheen; the futuristic settings; the strange voices, the infectious hooks. Now, 23 years later, those tattered awnings still hang on the Statler, which is still empty and decaying. But this music is more durable. So enjoy, and if we’re lucky and dance all night, maybe when we leave the club it really will be morning in America. Brian J. Bowe, Editor in Chief CREEM Magazine : January, 2004. OUT COME THE FREAKS When the sun goes down they hit the streets In the bars to try and meet Some other stranger to ease the pain Of living alone ‘till it drives them insane The woodwork squeaks And out come the freaks Yeah, the woodwork squeaks And out come the freaks Like little Michael on his motorcycle With leather pants & a leather brain He ain’t never been the same since Vietnam Keeps his heart locked-up in a vest And his eyes inside his shoes Doesn’t ever want to lose them in a fight You never know what might go down tonight The woodwork squeaks And out come the freaks Open the door & there’s Suzanne She eats her breakfast from the pan She never even burns her tongue And someday she’d like to Get hung up on a millionaire She don’t even care If he ain’t got no hair She says “Long as he signs the check I figure what the heck I’ll get him a toupee What more can you say? The woodwork squeaks And out come the freaks Detroit Johnny don’t wear no tie Cause he says it hurts his neck He’s got a chick from Ecuador tonight She wants to talk about the moon, She says it used to be her frien But the doctors put an end to all of that A part of me is lost for good Do you really understand I do says Johnny As he grabs her hand WHERE DID YOUR HEART GO ? Where did your heart go? Did you put it on a train? Did you leave it in the rain Or down in Mexico? I spend my nights down on the wharf In unlit alleyways Next to the church downtown Where Sally prays Come down sometime We’ll eat a rusty can of corn And listen to the radio I love you, I love you It says Where did your heart go? Did you put it on a train? Did you leave it in the rain or down in Mexic? You cry but I don’t I’ve seen it all before There it goes again The slamming of the doors Sometimes the river calls me In the night it calls my name Says put your troubles down beside me Things have always been the same Rock and roll can’t teach me What the river said that night I jumped into its beauty And drifted out of sight TELL ME THAT I’M DREAMING I pulled into your town Saw two signs “West and West” Tell me that I’m dreaming Turned down a “No-way street” And saw another sign “Drive in reverse” Or something like it (We talked like men And ate fish at the end of the pier) I tried to walk, but how ? The rest of you were dancing With pointy shoes on Somebody pinch me Am I -- ? Was I ? Did I -- away the night ? New Shoes, laser breakfast, Fast target vehicles Leather house, Dreaming, somebody pinch me! Nightwatchman at a bank Made some pirates walk the plank Tell me that I’m dreaming One man liked milk, Now he owns a million cows Can you imagine all that milk? Tell me that I’m dreaming OH, MR. FRICTION! Drink from bottle when I home alone Spank the kids with a fork Run the appliances high-speed all day Switch stations every 5 seconds We are mostly mute with one another Sounds of unexpected voices shock us Talk is rarely squandered is it a favor or a threat? Long term plan or just a scam? What’d you say? Say it over! You know, your hands give you away Is it evil or selfish or for criminal gain? If it takes 20 seconds can you repeat it again? What’s it mean Straight out with it Or don’t say it at all I can take it, Call me Judas I’m a bastard, I’ll admit it I’m Mr. Friction (Girls: Oh, Mr. Friction!) I can force you to tell me Friction accepts no lies / I accept all lies I am the main lie You can’t lie to a lie Johnny Yuma was a copper Johnny Yuma... See what you done now??? Now I’m a gangster, Can’t speaka no ingles: Hopsa hopsa Lorry. Quanna quanna quanna may Iomtali. Iomtalo. Hey hey hey Drink from bottle when I home alone Spank the kids with a fork Run the appliances high-speed all day switch stations every five seconds Don’t bring me help I don’t like it when you stare What’s wrong? Water’s running everywhere Hot water even on my lawn Don’t ask what’s wrong This is intentional Blang, blang, blang, blang who called the cops? I said I’d be alright I-I-I gotta get th-the carrots out I said I’m coming with dynamite!!! CARRY ME BACK TO OLD MAROCCO Carry me back to Old Morocco Where the tea is strong and so are the people Rama Rama Rama - watch me now You made a song disappear I was hearing in my head Now the cactuses are talking And I sleep in the wind I was really getting there Then you came and all was bare You said you’d come back soon But it’s too late It’s too late Carry me back to Old Morocco Where the tea is strong and so are the people Rama Rama Rama - watch me now I was choking on the fish I ate for dinner It was good while it lasted I should’ve fasted, I almost had it yesterday Song tied up my ankles Couldn’t walk, couldn’t wiggle Then you came along United the song And let its long golden fingers Grasp the wind It was good while it lasted It was good while it lasted IT’S AN ATTACK! They’re coming out the hills They’re coming out the water They’re pouring off the prairie, It’s an attack! They’re screaming like banshees, They’re coming fully loaded They’re coming for your blood, boy, It’s an attack! Carry me back to Old Morocco Where the tea is strong and so are the people Rama Rama Rama - watch me now... Fire in the sky tonight, Rumbling from the moon tonight Restaurants no serve tonight, Nobody’s gonna sleep tonight I was really almost there Pulling handfuls of white hair From the surface of the moon They’re leaping out of airplanes, Moving fast like locomotives It’s a shock and a nightmare; it’s an attack! They’re teasing all the young girls, Digging holes in my driveway Peace and love that’s a joke! It’s an attack! Sharpen all your kitchen knives, Get out of the bath right now Turn on all your T.V. sets, Money cannot help you now It’s an attack THE SKY’S ABLAZE My father Used to take a drink or two When I was young It was then hallucinations Always dangled from his tongue The sky’s ablaze with ladies’ legs He used to say They’re kicking from the clouds Shoes fall through the morning haze And splat like eggs amongst the crowds Can you see them, son? my father asked Now they’re dancing plain as day His eyes were rolling fiercely, There was little I could say How can you go on? I’d like to ask How can you bear the night? Instead I hold my tongue, Because I know we’d only fight The sky’s ablaze with ladies legs, he’d say They’re kicking from the clouds, Shoes fall through the morning haze And splat like eggs amongst the crowds, Can you see it, boy? GO…NOW ! We are small But we’re all there is It’s you and I Why look to the sky We all know how There ain’t No Doubt The time is now That’s all we know about Put out your hand Get all you can Freedom! All across the land Put your feet on the floor Walk on out the door There’s air to breathe Who could ask for more? Go...now! Go...now! Go...now! Go...now! Life on earth is a carnival ride On a blue balloon Passin’ by the moon What time it is? Huh! It’s always time That’s all there is The rest is in your mind WHEEL ME OUT Wheel me out Wheel me out Wheel me out Wheel me out I’m rolling on these wheels I’m really in the mood today I’m the former scientist Now I’m a realist And I was discouraged by you You, who have never pushed the wheels You did it to me And I’m next Then I was discouraged by you Then I was discouraged by you You did it to him And I am next You... you... you dit it Then I was discouraged by you I am really in the mood today Then I was discouraged by you Discouraged by you You never pushed the wheels You did it to him And I’m next Now I’m next And I’m next Wheel me outWWW (RETURN TO THE VALLEY OF) OUT COME THE FREAKS Eddie Harold used a tape recorder When he had one of his girlfriends over He didn’t want to miss a single scream His friends all laughed when he played it later You had to wonder, did he really hate her? Girls always made him nervous, that’s to blame And makin’ love was just a crazy game The woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks, oh yeah The woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks, oh yeah In her apartment was a plastic altar She’d light a candle when her courage faltered Sometimes the world got a little hard to bear It wasn’t easy living in the city She wasn’t clever and she wasn’t pretty She chanted in the night but no one cared The woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks The woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks Freddie’s wife became a topless dancer Had bondage parties with a Turkish bouncer She’s been evicted, the police have got her car She tried to sell an antique shotgun She said she knows some crazy guy who wants one Her parents said “You’re not our daughter, you’re a whore” “It’s over and you don’t live here anymore” The woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks The woodwork squeaks and Strangers In The Night The woodwork squeaks and Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag We’re talkin’ ‘bout... The woodwork squeaks and The Shadow Of Your Smile Ooh, we’re talkin’ ‘bout... The woodwork squeaks and take the Last Train To Clarksville Mmm, ahh, the woodwork squeaks and out come the freaks, oh CHRISTMAS TIME IN MOTOR CITY Christmastime in the Motor City But things ain’t really pretty Leather, streets of paper, rusty pennies Smell of money in the air But you kip on a dollar anywhere! I’m out of work, it’s been awhile So don’t ask me to smile I ain’t no scrooge, I liked December But I can’t even remember Seeing Santa Claus this year Well I heard he got a job And he’s changing me to Bob Took a shave in the lobby of a Cadillac Hotel They gave him unemployment but no food stamps “We’ll give you jobs But there’s no free soup for the tramps” Christmastime in the Motor City But things ain’t really pretty Yeah, the streets are paved with rusty pennies Smell of moneys in the air (Air, air, air, air, air, air...) It was not a night to be with birds Christmas Eve without the tender words Without a place to call my home Sharing a square in the park with the pigeons Combing my hair and feeding them bread They bobbed their heads and walked right up Their cup is filled but mine got spilled along the way At 2:00 a.m., I’m off the streets, sitting in a donut shop A sad-eyed girl mops the floor next to my feet The light in here is far too bright, the radio is playing “Silent Night” I sit and watch the traffic pass, it sails away Look at this...It’s Christmas Day... Christmastime in the Motor City But things ain’t really pretty Yeah, the streets are pave with rusty pennies Smell of moneys in the air (Air, air, air, air, air, air...) WHEN THE DANCEFLOOR SQUEAKS, OUT COME THE GEEKS It’s not hard to understand why Michael Zilkha & Michel Esteban’s ZE Records and the whole punk-funk, disco-not-disco thang of the early 80s has been rediscovered by a new generation looking for their own answers to music’s eternal mind-body problem. ZE offered a seductive vision of the world where style collided with substance, where deconstruction made a reconcilliation with melody and hooks, where groove embraced distortion, where punk’s outcast geek was transformed by the fairy godmother of disco into a « Halston, Gucci... Fiorucci » clad suavecito with a social conscience and a brain. If this moment in dance music history can be seen as the revenge of the nerd, the class valedictorians were undoubtedly Was (Not Was). The group was formed in 1980 by two childhood friends (Donald Fagenson and David Weiss) from Detroit who had spent their adolescence locked in each other’s basements listening to The MC5, Frank Zappa, John Coltrane and Firesign Theatre. Such listening habits inevitably led to a surfeit of ideas which came tumbling out every which way on their records: reggae skank guitar, Robert Quine-style solos courtesy of The MC5’s Wayne Kramer, surreal, sarcastic lyrics via Dylan and Lenny Bruce, James Brown/Nile Rodgers chicken scratch, rudimentary synth riffs, basslines that alternated between Jah Wobble’s work with PiL and Terry Lewis’ Minneapolis sound, paranoia that seemed to come straight from a 1950s public service announcement. It was all wrapped up in the brittle production values that marked the 80s - the eggshell sound lending a piquancy to the rueful observations of the façades of the age of Reagan and Thatcher. However, while they probably combined dub, jazz, punk, funk and studio alchemy more elegantly than any other group of the time, Was (Not Was) could also be victims of their own intelligence and refusal to recognize boundaries. Left to their own devices, Was (Not Was) were like The Bonzo Dog Band, the Merry Pranksters and Gang of Four on a New Orleans funeral parade led by Parliafunkadelicment. On their extended remixes, though, their music became more streamlined and honed down to a razor smoothness. The remix process and the dancefloor forced Fagenson and Weiss to focus on one idea rather than the 30 they had running around their heads. Their wild eclecticism was restrained as was their tartness. Where most remixes are created simply to get more bodies on to the dancefloor, the mixes collected on « (The Woodwork) Squeaks » actually shed light on the messages of the songs rather than merely their grooves. Of course, the goal of the best dance music is to get you to think with your entire body and that’s exactly what Was (Not Was) succeeded in doing. After all, it’s not merely the détourned words of Ronald Reagan that let you know that « Tell Me That I’m Dreaming » is not your ordinary hands-in-the-air disco stomper; it’s the astringent guitar riff, the dub alienation, the comedic voices, the sibilant hi-hat that would soon become the hallmark of house music. The early 80s were a time when every musical genre seemed to converge, when a tangent that began in, say, punk would suddenly be picked up a month later by hip-hop, when the currents that would become house and techno were coursing through the wires of dance music. Don Was’ partner on the first two remixes here, the Traditional 12» mix of « Tell Me That I’m Dreaming » and the Predominantly Funk version of « Out Come the Freaks » was Ken Collier, a legendary Detroit DJ who was a crucial influence on the then-emerging techno scene. Collier’s credentials as a house and techno pioneer can be seen all over his mixes here, particularly in the bassline and sparse rhythms of the « Out Come the Freaks » remix. Collier died of diabetic complications in 1996, and these sterling, groundbreaking mixes stand as a fitting testament to his influence. Even without Collier, though, these remixes are often extraordinary.« Wheel Me Out », produced and mixed by Don Was and longtime partner in crime Jack Tann (who was in Was’ early punk bands The Traitors and President Eisenhower), represents everything great about the merging of post-punk and dance music in the early 80s. It was cathartic yet eerie and uncomfortable, cryptically political, full of nuance and intrigue. Another reason that Was (Not Was) and the whole punk-dance schtick resonates now is their sharp, acidic, left-wing cynicism. It’s a voice that almost the entirety of today’s popular music has silenced. This isn’t the bedazzled groove of Timbaland or The Neptunes embracing money, glitz and technology with equal verve. This is dance music as a way of shaking off the heebie jeebies, shedding off the skin of the daytime daze, jolting you out of your nightmares, only for you to realize that you weren’t imagining anything. Please, « Tell me that I’m dreaming ». Peter Shapiro, London december 2003. ORIGINAL ALBUM 01 • Wheel Me Out Long Version (Bonus Track) • 7:06 02 • Out Come The Freaks • 5:39 03 • Where Did Your Heart Go? • 4.57 04 • Tell Me That I’m Dreaming • 5:00 05 • Oh, Mr Friction • 3:33 06 • Carry Me Back To Old Morocco • 6:01 07 • It’s An Attack! • 3:10 08 • The Sky’s Ablaze • 2:15 09 • Go ... Now! • 5:30 BONUS TRACKS 10 • Hello Operator Short Version • 2:51 11 • Out Come The Freaks Again • 4:37 12 • Tell Me That I’m Dreaming 12 • 7:48 13 • Out Come The Freaks 12 • 7:10 14 • (Return To The Valley Of) Out Come The Freaks • 4:20 15 • Christmas Time In Motor City • 2:55 16 • Out Come The Freaks Dub Version • 6:30 CREDITS Produced in Detroit by Don Was, David Was & Jack Tann fot John Lewis productions • Recording & mixing engineer : Don Was • Dance mixes : Ken Collier Recorded at the Sound Suite January>March 1981 Executive producer Michael Zilkha Original Artwork Front Cover & Liner photography : Dirk Bakker • Airbrush : Terry Robeson Typeset/Keyline : Bill Thomas • Art direction : Maverse Payers Reissue Digipack & Booklet Art direction & Design by Michel Esteban Photos (not photos) Pages 4,8 & 9 by Robert Matheu • Pages 6 & 19 by Paul Natkin Special Thanks to Robert Matheu, Paul Natkin & Brian J.Bowe MUSICIANS David Was : Alto Sax, Piano, Vocals Don Was : Vocals, Bass, Moog Synthesizer, Vibes, Clavinet Marcus Belgrave : Trumpet, Flugelhorn Luis Resto : Oberheim Obx & Arp synthesizeres , Accoustic Piano David McMurray : Soprano, Alto & Tenor, Sax Larry Fratangelo : Percussion Wayne Kramer : Guitar Bruce Nazarian : Guitar Ricky Rouse : Guitar Kevin Tschirhart : Percussion, Electronic Handclaps Franklin K. Funklyn McCullers : Drums Jerry Jones : Drums Jervonny Collier : Bass Lamont Johnson : Bass Irwin Krinsky : Piano Carl ‘Butch’ Small : Percussion, Rap Vocals Armand Angeloni : Tenor Sax, Piccolo Flute Mack Pitt : Mandolin Mark Johnson : Moog Synthesizer Raymond Johnson : Rhodes Electric Piano Sweet Pea Atkinson : Lead Vocals on « Where Did Your Heart Go? », « It’s An Attack » Harry Bowens : Lead Vocals on « Out Come The Freaks », « Tell Me That I’m Dreaming » Marzanne McCants as the chick from Ecuador Liz Weiss as the former scientist, now on wheels Backing Vocals : Carol Hall, Carolyn Crawford, Kathy Kosins, Michelle Goulet, Sheila Horne Johnny Allen : Strings Arrangements on « Where Did Your Heart Go This Selection Selected and Produced by Michel Esteban Original Sound Recording Made by ZE Records © 1981 Remastered by RV at Translab Paris, December 2003 This Reissue p & © 2009 ZE Records Mundo Ltda Special Thanks to David & Don Was & Michael Zilkha