lunes, 21 de marzo de 2022

Southern Culture On The Skids

 
North Carolina's Southern Culture on the Skids offer an affectionate parody of downscale trailer-park culture, matching their skewed outlook with a wild, careening brand of rock & roll. SCOTS' music is a quintessentially Southern-fried amalgam of rockabilly, boogie, country, blues, swamp pop, and vintage R&B, plus a liberal dose of California surf guitar, a hint of punk attitude, and the occasional mariachi horns. Following an early incarnation as a relatively straightforward roots rock outfit, they morphed into a raucous, tongue-in-cheek party band obsessed with sex and fried chicken in the early '90s. 1991's 'Too Much Pork for Just One Fork' made the group cult favorites, 1996's 'Dirt Track Date' was a well-crafted and high-spirited major-label debut, 2010's 'The Kudzu Ranch' saw them launching their own label, and 2021's 'At Home with Southern Culture on the Skids' was recorded in the comfy confines of their guitarist's living room. 

Southern Culture on the Skids was founded by guitarist/singer Rick Miller in the college town of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in 1985. Growing up, Miller had split time between Henderson, North Carolina, where his father ran a mobile-home factory, and Southern California, where his mother lived, and where he first discovered surf and rockabilly. After earning a degree in art from the University of North Carolina, Miller started the first incarnation of Southern Culture on the Skids with original lead vocalist Stan Lewis, bassist Leslie Land, and drummer Chip Shelby. Lewis brought a distinct Cramps influence to the band, although their style was still much more subdued than it would later become. This quartet lineup released an EP called 'Voodoo Beach Party' on the local indie label Lloyd Street, followed later in 1985 by an eponymous full-length debut. 

As the band drifted more and more into country territory, co-founder Lewis split; two more members were added on accordion and pedal steel, but the band's new direction alienated much of its local following, and the first version of Southern Culture split not long after. In 1987, Miller regrouped with a new, smaller lineup featuring bassist and sometime vocalist Mary Huff and drummer Dave Hartman, both of whom had grown up together in Roanoke, Virginia. (Lewis, Land, and Shelby would later reunite as Stan Lewis & the Rockin' Revellers, and performed on a mostly local basis.) The new Southern Culture spent a few years honing their sound and releasing the very occasional single. Finally, in 1991, they returned to the LP format with 'Too Much Pork for Just One Fork', which was issued on the ill-fated Moist label. 'Too Much Pork' established the group's lyrical obsessions, and featured the first recording of their fried-chicken anthem "Eight Piece Box," a concert favorite.


 
Southern Culture's next album, the rawer-sounding 1992's 'For Lovers Only', began to win them a wider following thanks to better distribution from the band's new label, Safe House. Among other fan favorites, it featured Huff's first major vocal showcase, a cover of the Jo Anna Neel country obscurity "Daddy Was a Preacher But Mama Was a Go-Go Girl." The half-live, half-studio EP 'Peckin' Party' followed on Feedbag in 1993, as did the 10" 'Girlfight EP' on Sympathy for the Record Industry. The more laid-back, country-flavored full-length 'Ditch Diggin' appeared on Safe House in 1994, featuring covers of the Louvin Brothers and Link Wray. In 1995, Geffen subsidiary DGC signed Southern Culture to a major-label contract, which was consummated the following year with 'Dirt Track Date'. Although 'Dirt Track Date' included re-recordings of several of the band's most popular past songs, it received generally enthusiastic reviews and sold over a quarter of a million copies. 

After releasing the Lucha Libre-themed EP 'Santo Swings!' for Estrus Records (which included Spanish-language covers of "Scratch My Back" and "Double Shot of My Baby's Love"), SCOTS cut their second album for DGC, 1997's 'Plastic Seat Sweat', which featured the band's new keyboard player, Chris "Cousin Crispy" Bess. While 'Plastic Seat Sweat' was a solid effort, its commercial reception disappointed both the band and their label, and it was to be the group's final major-label release. After a few years of steady touring, 2000's 'Liquored Up and Lacquered Down' was released by TVT Records; the deal proved to be a one-off, and it would be four years before the band found a new recording home, with the North Carolina-based indie Yep Roc Records. SCOTS' Yep Roc debut, 2004's 'Mojo Box', was completed after the departure of Chris Bess, with the band back to the trio of Miller, Huff, and Hartman. 'Mojo Box' was produced by Rick Miller in his new studio, Kudzu Ranch, where he also produced albums by The Fleshtones, Dexter Romweber, and The Woggles

Southern Culture on the Skids released two more albums for Yep Roc, 2006's live set 'Doublewide and Live' and the 2007 covers collection 'Countrypolitan Favorites', but split with the company to go fully independent and start their own label, Kudzu Records. SCOTS launched their new venture with the 2010 album 'The Kudzu Ranch', named for Miller's studio, and followed with reissues of the 'Too Much Pork' album and the 1998 EP 'Zombified'. In 2013, SCOTS released 'Dig This', a set offering new recordings of the songs from 'Ditch Diggin', minus the Link Wray and Louvin Brothers covers from the original release. The band also briefly reunited with Yep Roc for the multi-artist concept LP 'Mondo Zombie Boogaloo', which also featured new material from The Fleshtones and Los Straitjackets; the three bands set out on a joint tour in the fall of 2013 to promote the set. In 2016, SCOTS delivered a creative change of pace with 'The Electric Pinecones', an album steeped in '60s pop and psychedelic influences as well as their trademark Dixie-fried rock. 

With SCOTS's DGC recordings out of print, the band bowed to demand for material from that era with the 2018 release 'Bootlegger's Choice'. The album featured brand-new recordings of 16 songs that appeared on 'Dirt Track Date' and 'Plastic Seat Sweat', cut with the same producer, Mark Williams, as well as a remastered version of the 1991 recording of "Camel Walk." In 2020, SCOTS issued 'Kudzu Records Presents', a 12-song collection dominated by covers that initially came out as a boxed set of 7" singles before they were compiled on a single disc for CD release. The group's usually busy touring schedule was put on hold by the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 and 2021, so with time on their hands, they began recording fresh material on a makeshift recording rig in Rick Miller's living room. The sessions at Miller's place became the basis of 'At Home with Southern Culture on the Skids', released in September 2021. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC
 

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