Archive for Texas

Re-Engaging in 3 Days!

Thirsty Records is back in 3 days
New content will drop on 7.5.2022
A tribute, new music, videos and more!

EGO ALIEN LIVE AT CONNIE’S RIC RAC IN PHILLY FRIDAY 3/17/17

Come out to see EGO ALIEN LIVE at Drunken Irish Night In The Italian Market at CONNIE’S RIC RAC in Philadelphia on Friday, March 17, 2017.

Follow EGO ALIEN on FacebookTwitterYouTube, and SoundCloud

The new LP, “PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN” IS AVAILABLE NOW AT:

CD BABY

iTunes

 

 

 

EGO ALIEN’S NEW ALBUM, “PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN” IS NOW AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information, contact: Ted Bunch … tedbunch[at]thirstyrecords[dot]com

THIRSTY RECORDS ANNOUNCES THE RELEASE OF EGO ALIEN’S NEW ALBUM, “PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN”

FEBRUARY 7, 2017 (BROOKLYN, NY) – Thirsty Records is proud to announce the release of the fresh new album, “PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN” from EGO ALIEN.

EGO ALIEN released their debut EP “CRAWL ON THE EDGE” in January of 2014 (available here) and eponymous EGO ALIEN” EP in March of 2015 (available here)

The new album, “PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN”, can be purchased here.

Coming off of a wildly successful CD release show on 1/28/17, the band is looking forward to a successful 2017 playing shows on the East Coast.

As main man for EGO ALIEN TED BUNCH is a vicious supporter of the Philadelphia/South Jersey original music scene, and can be found at various area clubs on either side of the Delaware River, on any given night. Ted can also be heard supporting the local scene on his weekly radio broadcast, THIRSTY RECORDS ON GASHOUSE RADIO.

Chris Kusmanick plays monster grooves on a fret less five string bass and The Drummer’s high energy and hard driving edge completes the heavy melodic power trio.

Follow EGO ALIEN on Facebook, TwitterYouTube, and SoundCloud.

 

“PROGRESS IS A GNARLY CLOWN” IS AVAILABLE NOW AT:

CD BABY

iTunes

###

 

EGO ALIEN ALBUM RELEASE SHOW

On Saturday January 28, come out to THE ROOM AT HARPERS PUB in CLEMENTON NJ to celebrate the 2017 EGO ALIEN release on THIRSTY RECORDS with a night of original rock music including JOHN FAYE, 4:44 and PRAVDA.

You will hear cuts from the new EGO ALIEN album, new music from 4:44’s latest release, and new Pravda material. The new Ego Alien CD and t-shirts will be available at the show.

John Faye will act as host performing multiple times throughout the night. Word on the street is that there may be a surprise visit from his alter ego, JIMMY MILLER.

Click on this EVENT LINK and accept the invite. Come out and bring a friend, we’d love to see you!

HARPER’S PUB has an excellent menu and there is no cover charge to this show.

See you at The Room at Harper’s Pub, 1 Gibbsboro Rd, Clementon, NJ 08021

LISTEN TO “PUSSY IS AS PUSSY DOES” BY WITHERIN’ JOHNSON

Listen to “Pussy Is As Pussy Does” from the “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON” LP by WITHERIN’ JOHNSON.

PARTY APES – TEXAS STYLE

This series of shots comes from Austin, TX. Brian DiFrank, proprietor of Whetstone Audiothe best little hi-fi shop in Texas, caught this saucy simian polishing off a potent liquid lunch. You can see a clear progression here:  1) emptying the bottle, 2) contemplating having emptied the bottle, and 3) dealing with the consequences of having emptied the bottle.

CAUTION:  PARTY APES are not tame.

Do not enable them with money, food, drinks, or smokes.

They do not know how or when to quit

WITHERIN’ JOHNSON’S NATHAN “BEDROOM” FORREST INTERVIEWED IN SEPTEMBER ISSUE OF THROBOSAURUS BASS ZINE

NATHAN “BEDROOM” FORREST

Exclusive Interview by C. Space from THROBOSAURUS BASS ZINE (September 2013)

We caught up with Nathan “Bedroom” Forrest, the bass player for Witherin’ Johnson, at an all-u-can-eat chicken fried steak happy hour in Austin where he gave us the skinny on his fat and dirty bass style.

/// \\\

THROB:  Tell me about your musical upbringing.

NF: I was surrounded by music from a young age. My father preached at the Trample Road Church of Christ in Houston. I started picking a little guitar in the house praise band at age 6. By the time I was 12, I had started a silly church dance band. We were set on naming it Billy Bible & The King James Trio, but that name was already taken by another Houston area band, so we settled on The New International Players.

THROB:  Who were your influences on bass?

NF: Stateside it was all about high cholesterol grooves being laid down by players like Larry Graham, Duck Dunn, James Jamerson, & Bootsy Collins. From England, I focused on the punch and crunch of John Entwistle, Geezer Butler, and John Paul Jones. Later on, I was totally into Lemmy.

THROB:  How did you go from playing guitar in a praise band to playing bass in Witherin’ Johnson?

NF: Helluva question. I first met J. Fred Resin and Lowball Jack when I caught them cutting out of Sunday services at Trample Road to smoke and listen to “Highway To Hell” in the parking lot. It wasn’t too long until I was out there with them every Sunday. They kept talking about some cosmic bluesman named Clarence “Witherin’” Johnson who they were trying to convince to give them lessons, but he didn’t think they were serious. Jack finally snuck me in to a chicken shack called Ludie Mae’s to see this guy play. Everything about Witherin’s band was heavy and deep, like thunder. The shack was totally shaking and moaning. It was the absolute widest, wildest musical sound I’d ever heard, and it changed me. It changed the way I walked, the way I talked, and also the instrument I played. It was like a switch getting turned on. All I wanted to do was play the biggest sound possible – BASS. Simultaneously, it hit me that I was finished with groove-less, whitebread praise bands.

THROB:  What was your next move?

NF: We got our drinkin’ buddy, Rusty Girders, to play drums, and finally talked the old man into giving us music lessons as a group. We had no idea that he was showing us more than just chords, melody, timing, or tone. We would run down some dinky little teenage tune, and he would say something edgy like, “Play what’s not there.” We would try to freeform jam and his comment would be, “Can’t play free unless there’s something to be free from.” He was like a Buddha with gold teeth, and he expected you to flow with no ego. He was always telling me to phrase on the off-beat of the off beat and to play the notes between the notes.

THROB:  How did you apply this knowledge to your career?

NF: My first popular local band was called Slacks (like Pants but that name was already taken). Because of our name, “Slacks”, we were lumped in with the Church of the SubGenius. Their honesty about their “fake religion” seemed pretty refreshing after the Church of Christ’s fakeness about their, um, honesty. We all paid a $35 fee, and the SubGenii started booking us to play their “devivals” which consisted largely of sci-fi sermons, angry anti-commercial rants, and also music. These “devivals” were huge events for Texas freaks and notable for being “clothing optional”. It wasn’t long before sex, drugs, and absurdism took over the group, and we broke up over the same muy caliente senorita we were all sharing.

After that I drifted around the country as a bassist-for-hire until I landed a gig in Los Angeles with Latent Thetans who were the Church of Scientology house band. The Scientologists were a lot like the SubGenii except with no sense of humor. It was a great place to rock the low end… until it wasn’t.

When they decided that I needed to go, they sold all my instruments and my rock ‘n’ roll shoes, and left me penniless in a dumpster behind Jerry’s Famous Deli in Marina Del Rey. I wandered in a haze for days mulling over the implications of being left in the trash. When I finally came to my senses I was sitting in the back row of an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting somewhere in Orange County.

I eventually ditched all cults and recovered from being in recovery.

Next thing I know I’m back in the great state of Texas making a record with my childhood friends in a band that’s now called Witherin’ Johnson. A band that’s a 100% tribute to the man who showed us what was what. Nothing else really matters.

THROB:  What were your weapons of choice when you recorded “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON”?

NF: Half of the record is a scratch ‘n’ dent Epiphone Jack Casady with a gold top and a killer low impedance pickup. The other half is a pawnshop G&L SB-1 (P-Bass) from the 1980’s. I also used the Catalinbread SFT bass overdrive like it was going out of style.

THROB:  What’s happening besides the new Witherin’ Johnson record?  What else is on the horizon for Nathan “Bedroom” Forrest?

NF: I just started cutting some tracks for a group called “party apes”.

I’m also looking for a luthier crazy enough to build my dream bass. It’s a 6 string bass where both the D and G strings are doubled with octaves. It’s like an 8 string bass minus a couple of the octave strings.

THROB:  What would you be if you weren’t a bass player?

NF: A porn star!  Seriously!

/// \\\

WITHERIN’ JOHNSON DEBUT ALBUM, “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON”, IS NOW AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information, contact: Jack Sprat … jacksprat[at]thirstyrecords[dot]com

THIRSTY RECORDS ANNOUNCES THE RELEASE OF WITHERIN’ JOHNSON’S “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON

AUGUST 6, 2013 (BROOKLYN, NY) – Thirsty Records is proud to announce the release of the debut album from WITHERIN’ JOHNSON, “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON”.

ABOUT THE MAN

Clarence Monroe Johnson (June 19, 1910 – December 31, 1999), known as “Witherin’ Johnson”, was a cosmic American blues singer, songwriter, guitarist, and occasional pianist from Port Arthur, Texas.  Authorities claim he simply vanished on the eve of the new millennium.

The Gulf Coast’s poet-in-residence for nearly 50 years, Johnson is notable for his refusal to ever record in the modern album format.  He made his mark with a slew of hit-and-run singles on assorted minor independent labels. This dogged commitment to the margins allowed him to produce works of uncompromising intensity by ignoring all influences from the outside world.  To date no collection of his music has been made commercially available.

It’s difficult to gauge the cultural impact of singles like “Can’t Live With ‘Em, Can’t Live Near ‘Em”, “All Downhill From Here”, “Silky Way Blues”, and “Lord, She’s Got To Go”, but there’s no question of the deep impression these works made on the band who now carry on in his name.

ABOUT THE BAND

WITHERIN’ JOHNSON is an American alternative rock band from Texas who takes its name from the obscure bluesman.  The band was formed during an existential liquor store run by J. Fred Resin (Vocals, Guitar) and Lowball Jack (Guitar).  Their first song was written there on the spot in the discount aisle.  They recruited childhood friends Nathan “Bedroom” Forrest (Bass), and Rusty Girders (Drums) to lay down the foundations for their debut on Thirsty Records, “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON”.

The record kicks off with a tribute to their mentor by calling out a modern update of his “Pale Imitation” blues. Having set a heavy mood they cut right into a screed of blistering jams about the loss of blood, money, jobs, friends, women, and self-control.  AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON” is a lean, mean, rock ‘n’ roll testament to partings-of-the-ways of all descriptions.

The old man gave them hard lessons – a downwardly mobile way of seeing things as much as the liberal bending of strings.  He gave them everything they needed to know in the form of his oft-repeated philosophical challenges to the almost-but-not-quite-ness of everything:

“Be Alive.  Speak Spanish.  No Checks.”

“Be wrong enough to get it right.”

“The end ain’t comin’ quick enough.  Let me touch a dollar.”

 

AVAILABLE NOW AT:

CD Baby

iTunes

###

WITHERIN’ JOHNSON DEBUT, “AND THE HORSE YOU RODE IN ON”, TO BE RELEASED ON AUGUST 6