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	<title>Murphy&#039;s Law&#187; California</title>
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		<title>Mr. Bungle&#8217;s California: Ten Years Later</title>
		<link>http://bullmurph.com/2009/06/24/mr-bungles-california-ten-years-later/</link>
		<comments>http://bullmurph.com/2009/06/24/mr-bungles-california-ten-years-later/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2009 15:30:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sean Murphy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantomas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mike Patton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mr. Bungle]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bullmurph.com/?p=1826</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[PopMatters keeps the party going, plowing through the calendar year of 1999, reminiscing about important albums that dropped that year. For my part, I&#8217;m tackling the yang to Fantomas&#8217; yin: Mr. Bungle&#8217;s California. These two albums bookend Mike Patton&#8217;s frenetic, fin-de-siecle  inspiration, and also signify two of the most significant and satisfying projects he has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1827" title="bungle" src="http://bullmurph.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/bungle.jpg" alt="bungle" width="300" height="300" /></em></p>
<p>PopMatters keeps the party going, plowing through the calendar year of 1999, reminiscing about important albums that dropped that year. For my part, I&#8217;m tackling the yang to <a href="http://bullmurph.com/2009/06/23/fantomas-10-years-later/">Fantomas&#8217;</a> yin: Mr. Bungle&#8217;s <em>California. </em>These two albums bookend Mike Patton&#8217;s frenetic, fin-de-siecle  inspiration, and also signify two of the most significant and satisfying projects he has been involved with. Not quite as difficult to describe as <em>Fantomas</em>, <em>California </em>is nevertheless quite challenging to properly assess or summarize because, by nature of the band&#8217;s material, Mr. Bungle is uncategorizable. In a good way.</p>
<p>Link (with sound samples) <a href="http://www.popmatters.com/pm/feature/june-august-1999-the-white-stripes-to-andrew-bird/P4/">here.</a></p>
<p><strong><span style="font-family: 'Arial Narrow','Arial MT Condensed Light',sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small; color: #dd942d;">13 July 1999</span></span></strong><br />
<strong><span style="font-size: large; color: #996600; font-family: 'Arial Narrow','Arial MT Condensed Light',sans-serif;">Mr. Bungle</span></strong><br />
<strong><span style="font-family: 'Arial Narrow','Arial MT Condensed Light',sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: medium; color: #666666;">California</span></span></strong></p>
<p>From the sounds of the seagulls and surf that open the album to the century-ending clang that closes it, Mr. Bungle’s <em>California</em> covers more ideas and images than most bands could cram into a career. Anyone who has fallen under Bungle’s uncanny spell can attest to the fact that when you hear one of their albums, it <em>stays</em> heard. This is music that takes you somewhere, including places you did not know existed. Mr. Bungle gets inside your mind and remains there.</p>
<p>Mr. Bungle only released three albums in the ‘90s (in part because the various members kept busy with other projects, like Faith No More, Fantômas, and Secret Chiefs 3, all of whom made incredible and important recordings during that decade), and each successive album represented a considerable leap forward. The band’s self-titled 1991 debut was an ambitious, genre-splicing experiment that combined carnivalesque whimsy with occasionally disturbing subject matter: it was about what happened <em>after</em> the circus left town, metaphorically speaking. <em>Mr. Bungle</em> endures as a psychedelic hall of mirrors that remains delightful and disorienting, no matter how many times you hear it. Their next release, 1995’s <em>Disco Volante</em>, upped the ante and managed somehow to be both weirder and (at times) more accessible than its predecessor. A song like “Desert Search for Techno Allah” (and before you even listen to it, think of the awesomely odd images that title conjures) defies description—it’s a techno mash-up with eye-popping musical proficiency. The band’s brand of weird science offers no quarter: this material affronts non-believers and turns adventurous listeners into fanatics.</p>
<p>Incredibly, after another four-year interval, <em>California</em> synthesized the band’s numerous compulsions (surf music, proto-funk, eastern rhythms, jazzy noodling, and ingenious yet oddball lyrics) into a cohesive whole. The confidence and focus displayed throughout their third album is on an entirely other level. On each of the ten tracks you might hear traces of Frank Zappa (both the comic and the composer), Captain Beefheart, Ennio Morricone, and the Ventures. The band cruises from one influence to the next with arresting ease, perfecting a sort of laid-back lunacy, a controlled hurricane of intensely opposite styles that inexplicably make complete sense.</p>
<p>Aside from being the Mr. Bungle masterpiece (<em>Disco Volante</em> boasts some of the band’s finest moments, but taken in its entirety it’s a tad too disjointed and self-indulgent; it’s a schizophrenic near-miss), <em>California</em> is the culmination of their cut-and-paste surrealism, marrying the stop-on-a-dime intensity with a kitchen sink sensibility that incorporates the entire universe into its vision. More so than any previous album, Mike Patton’s prodigious (and possibly unparalleled) vocal range is fully utilized, allowing him to explore everything from retro-crooning (&#8220;Vanity Fair&#8221;) to campy faux-lounge (&#8220;Pink Cigarette&#8221;) to <em>relatively</em> straightforward rock (&#8220;The Air-Conditioned Nightmare&#8221;) to the utterly unclassifiable (&#8220;Golem II: The Bionic Vapour Boy&#8221;). The band continuously weaves a west-coast vibe into the mix, winking and nodding with playful but heartfelt invocations of the Beach Boys, Hollywood, and (as always) surf music filtered through a distinctively postmodern heavy metal M.O.</p>
<p><em>California</em> is not even a collection of songs so much as miniature sonic movies. Take “Ars Moriendi”, for instance. The opening seconds somehow blend a thrash guitar/drum riff with an accordion waltz (imagine hardcore gypsy music), then Patton enters with his operatic flourishes, singing lyrics like “All my bones are laughing / As you’re dancing on my grave”. The song navigates the incongruous edge between head-bang abandon and Turkish wedding music that makes you want to slamdance while doing a polka. Or consider “Goodbye Sober Day”, which is like “I Am the Walrus” on Peyote—think the outro of Syd Barrett’s “Bike” thrown into a blender with multi-tracked falsetto wails cut by one of Sun Ra’s stranger big band workouts. And that’s just the first 30 seconds. The song goes on to incorporate Gregorian chants (convincingly) and a Balinese monkey chant (seriously). All while the band slowly disintegrates into oblivion like the bad guys’ faces melting at the end of <em>Raiders of the Lost Ark</em>.</p>
<p>There are also gems of calm and clarity, like “The Holy Filament”, which showcases Patton as choir boy, and “Sweet Charity”, which sounds like Phil Spector working with Brian Wilson. Then there is the track that epitomizes what worked best on the previous albums, “None of Them Knew They Were Robots”. Here is the Bungle aesthetic at full effect: Hawaiian music crashing into Carl Stalling cartoon territory—keyboards and horns and Trey Spruance’s quicksilver chord changes—with a brief but convincing Elvis impersonation serving as a sick cherry on top. Oh, and it somehow manages to <em>swing</em>. It’s a madcap laugh, to be certain, but it’s also absolute genius.</p>
<p>And so, it’s a shame that the boys couldn’t keep the party going after Y2K, but considering the subsequent gifts we have received from Secret Chiefs 3, Tomahawk, and Fantômas, it seems churlish to complain. Besides, if Bungle was going to go out on top, the third time was a charm—the project where all the disparate elements and obsessions came together. <em>California</em> is an album that sums up the 20th century while burning the bridge to the 21st, an eternal <em>fin-de-siècle</em> celebration.</p>
<p> <em><img src="http://www.popmatters.com/images/rating_circle_full.png" alt="" width="15" /> Sean Murphy</em></p>
<p>Air. Conditioned. Nightmare. Live.</p>
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<p>Ars Moriendi. Live.<br />
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