In January 1984 the line-up of Jones, Perkins, Sujdovic, Brett Rixon on drums and Tony Thewlis on guitar (both from The Scientists) played gigs in Perth. In July that year the album was issued on Green Records and according to Australian rock music historian, Ian McFarlane, "it remains a classic of Australian garage/swamp rock. It was the best-selling Australian alternative album for 1984. It also went on to sell over 30000 copies in Europe". A cover of Leon Payne's "Psycho" was issued as a single in July, which was a hit on alternative radio and became the bestselling Australia alternative single for 1984.
The previous line-up fell apart in March when The Scientists left Australia to tour overseas; fill-ins included Stu Spasm of Lubricated Goat, Zulu Rattle and Salamander Jim on bass guitar; and Brad Shepherd of Hoodoo Gurus on guitar. By early 1985 the line-up of Baker, Perkins, Spasm (now on rhythm guitar) and Spencer, were joined by Graham Hood of The Johnnys on bass guitar. Although the album became an underground success, the band was largely a side project for its various members and Beasts of Bourbon disbanded by June that year. Perkins worked with Salamander Jim and various other projects, Jones had The Johnnys, and Salmon and Sujdovic had The Scientists. Baker tried a self-named group, The James Baker Experience, backed by Perkins and Spasm and joined by Roddy Radalj (The Scientists, Hoodoo Gurus) on guitar and vocals.
The ensemble released a one-off single in June 1985 and promptly separated. In March 1988 Beasts of Bourbon reconvened after both The Johnnys and The Scientists had disbanded. The line-up of Baker, Jones, Perkins, Salmon and Sujdovic recorded 'Sour Mash' with audio engineer and producer, Phil Punch (The Mexican Spitfires). The album appeared in December on Red Eye Records, with McFarlane declaring that it "virtually redefined the parameters of guitar-based rock'n'roll. The Cramps-influenced swamp-rock of old had been discarded for a more adventurous slab of gutbucket blues and avant-garde weirdness. Perkins' voice had matured into an authentic blues growl". Allmusic's Skip Jansen found "a raw blues-rock album with post-punk afflictions dream come true for fans of the Australian rock and garage punk with the blistering slide-guitar-driven sound, the band does a fine job of re-creating the sound of a twisted night out at the pub".
Their cover of "Hard Work Drivin' Man" (original by Ry Cooder and Jack Nitzsche) was issued as a single in November, which became a #1 independent hit single. In August 1989 they followed up with another independent #1 single, "Hate Inside", which was written by Jones and Perkins. By that time, Perkins was also performing irregularly as a member of The Cruel Sea. Beasts of Bourbon toured Europe and then released a third album, 'Black Milk', in July 1990. Jansen was disappointed "it pales by comparison to the two previous albums" although it was "a fine album of lurching blues-driven rock".
In Germany they issued a non-album single, "You Let Me Down / Blanc Garçon", the tracks appeared on the German version of the album, Jansen felt these "two cuts surpass anything on Black Milk". By February 1991, Baker and Sujdovic were replaced by Brian Henry Hooper on bass guitar and Tony Pola on drums – both from Salmon's new band, The Surrealists. Beasts of Bourbon undertook their Kick Arse Australian tour. The line-up of Hooper, Jones, Perkins, Pola and Salmon recorded the group's fourth album, 'The Low Road', with Tony Cohen producing. McFarlane saw it was "brimming with urgency, surrealism, atmosphere, myth, illusion and honesty, but above all, hard-nosed rock riffs".
While Jansen described their "straighter, less garage punk sound" although "it proved a little tough to get the live energy of a performance to tape". 'The Low Road' featured "Chase the Dragon" – which relates to heroin smuggling – a "blistering nefarious delight". Beasts of Bourbon performed at the inaugural Big Day Out Sydney concert in January 1992 and followed with another tour of Europe. In January 1993 a double album of live tracks and rarities, 'The Belly of the Beasts - Live '91 & '92' and 'Shit We Didn't Put Out the First Time', was issued to celebrate the group's tenth anniversary.
They attended the second Big Day Out, which had expanded into a series of concerts to four Australian capital cities, and then toured Europe again. Following the tour, Salmon – with Hooper and Pola – left the group to concentrate on The Surrealists while Perkins focused on The Cruel Sea, which was achieving success with their album 'The Honeymoon Is Over' (May 1993). Jones joined various projects and released his debut solo album, 'Rumour of Death' (November 1994). In September 1996, Beasts of Bourbon reformed with Hooper, Jones, Perkins and Pola joined by former Divinyls' member Charlie Owen – also in Tex, Don and Charlie with Perkins – on guitar. In January 1997 they released 'Gone' prior to another appearance on the Big Day Out series. The album reached the ARIA Albums Chart Top 50.
'Gone' received lukewarm reviews, but produced a single, "Saturated". The group's 1997 live performance at the Esplanade Hotel was recorded – five tracks appeared as a bonus disc on their 1999 compilation, 'Beyond Good and Evil'. However by the end of 1997 the group had dissolved again. In late 2003, they reformed and recorded a live album, 'Low Life', which was released on Spooky Records in August 2005. In 2006, they reformed to play in the Big Day Out around Australia and New Zealand. In late December 2006, Albert Productions signed an exclusive worldwide recording deal with the band, and they released a new album, 'Little Animals', on 21 April 2007. Perkins declared "Alberts label releases have been a huge influence on the Beasts of Bourbon, so to be signed to this legendary label is not only a great honour and the start of an exciting new chapter in the bands history, it feels like destiny". The album peaked in the Top 50.
The group played with Australian bands and artists at the Rockin' for Rights concert, which protested the Workchoices legislation. In April 2008 after a show in Berlin the group cancelled their remaining tour dates and ended the band. In 2012 the group announced plans to reunite the original line-up for a one-off gig at the 2013 Australian All Tomorrow's Parties music festival in mid-February.
In August 2013, Beasts of Bourbon played a series of shows in Sydney and Melbourne to celebrate their first 30 years. The three shows in each city featured alternate lineups for each night with James Baker and Tony Pola sharing drumming, Boris Sujdovic and Brian Hooper swapping as bass player and Kim Salmon and Charlie Owen rotating on guitar. As it has been for the history of the band, Jones and Perkins were the only persistent members. A triple live album '30 Years On Borrowed Time' was released to coincide with the live shows.
The group returned in 2019 with the name of The Beasts. The name change was made out of respect for Spencer P. Jones and Brian Hooper who both died in 2018. The band released a new album 'Still Here' which included contributions from Jones before his death. The band completed an Australian tour in November and December 2019 with Adalita in support. The line up for the tour was Tex Perkins, Charlie Owen, Tony Pola, Kim Salmon and Boris Sujdovic. In December 2020, The Beasts Of Bourbon were listed at #42 in Rolling Stone Australia's "50 Greatest Australian Artists of All Time" issue. Brian Hooper died in 2018. Spencer P. Jones died in 2018. Tony Pola died in 2021.
Members
Tex Perkins (vocals, guitar, drums, harmonica), Spencer P. Jones (guitar, vocals, banjo, mandolin), Kim Salmon (guitar, harmonica, tambourine, vocals), James Baker (drums, cymbals), Boris Sujdovic (bass, tambourine), Tony Thewlis (guitar), Brad Shepherd (guitar), Brett Rixon (drums), Stu Spasm (guitar), Graham Hood (bass), Brian Hooper (bass), Tony Pola (drums), Charlie Owen (guitar, harmonica)
SINGLES
''Psycho / Good Times / Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White'' 1984 Green [G.R.E.E.N.]
''Psycho / Good Times / Sometimes Goodguys'' 1985 Red Eye
''Hard Work Drivin' Man / Elvis Impersonator Blues / I Love You Because'' 1988 Red Eye
''Words From A Woman To Her Man / Hope You Find Your Way To Heaven'' 1990 Red Eye
Members
Tex Perkins (vocals, guitar, drums, harmonica), Spencer P. Jones (guitar, vocals, banjo, mandolin), Kim Salmon (guitar, harmonica, tambourine, vocals), James Baker (drums, cymbals), Boris Sujdovic (bass, tambourine), Tony Thewlis (guitar), Brad Shepherd (guitar), Brett Rixon (drums), Stu Spasm (guitar), Graham Hood (bass), Brian Hooper (bass), Tony Pola (drums), Charlie Owen (guitar, harmonica)
''Psycho / Good Times / Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White'' 1984 Green [G.R.E.E.N.]
''Psycho / Good Times / Sometimes Goodguys'' 1985 Red Eye
''Hard Work Drivin' Man / Elvis Impersonator Blues / I Love You Because'' 1988 Red Eye
''Words From A Woman To Her Man / Hope You Find Your Way To Heaven'' 1990 Red Eye
EPs
'The Hate Inside' 1988 Red Eye
'The Beasts Of Bourbon' 1990 Red Eye
ALBUMS
'The Axeman's Jazz' 1984 Green [G.R.E.E.N.]
'Sour Mash' 1988 Red Eye
'Black Milk' 1990 Red Eye
'The Low Road' (#85) 1991 Red Eye
'Gone' (#49) 1996 Red Eye
'Little Animals' (#44) 2007 Albert Productions
'Still Here' [as The Beasts] 2019 Bang! Records
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beasts_of_Bourbon
'Just Right' 1992 Red Eye
'Gone' 1996 Polydor
'Be Suburban' [as The Beasts] 2024 Sound Pressing
'The Axeman's Jazz' 1984 Green [G.R.E.E.N.]
'Sour Mash' 1988 Red Eye
'Black Milk' 1990 Red Eye
'The Low Road' (#85) 1991 Red Eye
'Gone' (#49) 1996 Red Eye
'Little Animals' (#44) 2007 Albert Productions
'Still Here' [as The Beasts] 2019 Bang! Records
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beasts_of_Bourbon
James Baker sadly has cancer. Cancer is like that unwanted guest at a party, that no-one wants around, is too stupid too get the hint & hangs around until the party is over. Then when you have gone to bed; because you are exhausted from kicking it out of the party, it raids your fridge and destroys your lounge room. Fuck you cancer & leave James Baker alone !
ReplyDeleteGet well James!
Delete'Let's Get Funky' from Black Milk is a banger - the music video is chaotic and weird, to say the least.
ReplyDelete