Showing posts with label The Little Engine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Little Engine. Show all posts

Saturday, December 17, 2022

The Little Engine

    In the same manner that the Raw Mommies were only tangentially Snufmeg, Johnny B Dub's outside "project" (with Flip, who made an appearance with the Cheese Mites on "I Can Read About Any Book That Someone Gives Me") The Little Engine earned a place in the Snufmeg pantheon with this eponymously titled album from the late 1990's.

   Following the rise and fall of the Raw Mommies, Johnny B Dub continued with a more conventional musical approach, leading the Little Engine's songwriting credits with Snufmeg classics like "Far Away", "Pros Jam with Pros", "Smile, Baby, Smile", "Andalusian Holiday" and "Clarinet". Flip's contributions ("The Elixir" and "You've Given Up on Love") comfortably rounded out the collection. Guitar and voice were provided by the songwriters accordingly, confidently backed up on drums by the mysterious Z!

   Alas, the Little Engine enjoyed a brief career (under two years) with few performances captured. Sadder, still, whereas the Raw Mommies enjoyed a 2013 reunion, certain legal impediments have precluded Flip from enjoying a similar experience.


Saturday, May 2, 2020

Themes, Motifs and Snufmeg

   Culled from a thirty-seven year span of the Snufmeg Library, the album "Themes, Motifs and Snufmeg" explores the flowering of cogent and structured expression which lurked beneath the chaotic and harsh innovations from which Snufmeg, in general, and the Cheese Mites, in particular, sprang. Absent here are the loops and feedback. Echoes remain, but, then old habits die hard. The overall thread throughout is the presentation of versions of standards and others over the span of time.
   Opening the collection is "Echo Song." This version captures the 'Mites at the crucial time where customary song forms were phasing out the riotous tone poems. The thematic phrasing of this song was dominant in the early "freak-out" performances, archived in as yet undisclosed versions. For tracks 11 and 14, these renditions, from as late as 2005 (although other sources date it in 2015), showcase the depth and deftness exclusively of Williwill's guidance, as he recreates "Echo Song" with brilliance and beauty only hinted at in the original. Track 6 is listed as "Untitled," which was the working title until "Echo Song" simply sufficed. This version is orchestrated by Johnny B. Dub. What we encounter is a comparison of the unique voices or sensibilities when juxtaposing the version by Johnny versus those by Williwill. They serve to establish how the two approaches work together, as well as the identifiable idiosyncrasies, in creating the broad methods and conceptualizations of the music of the Cheese Mites and much of the Snufmeg catalog.
   The mono and stereo versions of "The Monkey's Gonna Get You," seek to pay respect in an homage to the "swinging Sixties." With an open, spacious production, the classic sound of early 60's hits is recreated, yet with Cheese Mites absurdity in a lyrical tale of alarm fitting for "Planet of the Apes."
   Occupying tracks 3, 7, 10 & 12, "Out in the Sun" was one of the first major structured works by the Cheese Mites, and penned by Williwill. Track 3 is ambitious in its production esthetic, incorporating echoed guitars and French Horns. Conversely, track 7, is a simpler, two guitar version, with an almost rockabilly modality to it. While track 10 most likely predates the "official" recording (track 3), it nonetheless stands as a valid version, revealing a looser feel, probably due to the development of the song's themes. Williwill commands the production on track 12, featuring a tighter rhythm section, snappier up-tempo beat, and cleaner production than the lads had to endure in the old days.
   Like "Out in the Sun," Williwill led the charge in professionally crafted pop masterpieces, and "Speak" was no exception. It contributed considerably in changing the course in Snufmeg, and for the Cheese Mites. Two versions are included here; track 4 from 1982, and a Johnny B. Dub produced remake (track 8) from around 2005. Though the latter version is cleaner, it does not possess the mood of the former.
   Finally, we have two versions (tracks 5 & 9) of "Pros Jam with Pros." Intended as a mock of "musicians wanted" ads, the song experienced iterations outside of the Cheese Mites, notably by Bulb, and The Little Engine (both to be examined in upcoming posts).


Wednesday, April 22, 2020

I Can Read About Any Book That Someone Gives Me

   The eight song collection, probably from 1984, entitled "I Can Read About Any Book That Someone Gives Me", finds the Cheese Mites in two configurations. The first of these, Johnny B Dub & DJ Williwill, provides the four songs "The Rock Slide Rap," "Row Your Book," "Mega Funk," and "Jungle Fiasco." Building upon the frantic primitivism of "Experiment in Stupidity," the Cheese Mites recede from overt song craft, and regroup around improvisational oriented compositions. "The Rock Slide Rap" pays lyrical homage to the song "Rock Slide," originally recored by Sin, but also recorded by other forms of the 'Mites. The relentless tape looped drum beat both hypnotizes and drills into the psyche, providing an unsettling and pulsating figure over which echoes, vocals and a proto-funk bass line collude in twelve minutes of irritation, a trademark of much of the 'Mites recorded output. "Row Your Book" continues twelve more minutes of the motifs established by "The Rock Slide Rap." At this stage in their career, they were hellbent on daring the listener to stay.
   The mercy of songs half the length in time as the previous two is little detected in "Mega Funk" and "Jungle Fiasco." A study of the production technique indicates the possibility of these two songs stemming from a separate session from the former two. Feedback washes, echoes, loops and unforgiving repetition, however, the hallmark of early Cheese Mites recordings, is not discarded with these recordings.
   The second configuration in this collection is manifest in the four songs closing the tracklist. Joined by Flip (later to be in the Snufmeg related project, The Little Engine), the Cheese Mites sound more like a live band, than other, more recordings of a layered quality. For "Amen," "Are We Their Yet?" and "Ja Only Knows," Flip guests as drummer, competently providing a rhythmic foundation which Williwill tonally completes on bass. Unchecked by concern for melody or structure, Johnny's feedback and echo laden guitar provide harsh counter-balance. For "Funk You" Johnny and Flip switch roles, the result of which is the most traditional and tuneful piece in the entire collection.