Zip Code Rapists
(San Francisco, CA)
website: www.myspace.com/zipcoderapists
LISTEN
ON THE OFFENSIVE: Did onetime Bay Area-based musical subversives the Zip
Code Rapists truly make "the worst record of all time"?
By Will York
NOT SINCE THE Eagles' 1994 "Hell Freezes Over" reunion tour has there
been a rock reunion of such magnitude. OK, that's a slight exaggeration,
but for some of us, the Zip Code Rapists' improbable 10th anniversary
reunion in their old hometown is a momentous occasion.
On the rock history radar, ZCR are a blip, of course, but their live
shows are legendary, at least among locals who saw them and got the
joke. Even if you didn't get to see the duo during their brief life span
from 1992 to '95, their live recordings scattered across the albums
94124 and Sing and Play the Three Doctors and Other Sounds of Today
(1992 and 1995, respectively, on Amarillo) and documented more fully on
the recently released Here at Last: Zip Code Rapists Live (Freedom From)
tell the story well. This was a one-of-a-kind combo, with a natural
entertainer and comedian in vocalist Gregg Turkington and a remarkably
flexible and tolerant straight man in guitarist John Singer.
"We had the latitude to do anything," Singer explains over the phone
from Vermont, where he now lives. "A lot of it had to do with the push
and pull between the audience and the band. Some shows would turn into
confrontations, with stuff being thrown; other shows would turn into
sing-alongs." For one of their shows at the now-defunct Chameleon, they
brought along a Stephen Foster songbook and performed a set consisting
entirely of patriotic songs like "The Old Folks at Home," Turkington
remembers. The versatile talent is also the mastermind behind Amarillo
Records, Faxed Head, nationally known comedian Neil Hamburger and the
Great Phone Calls prank calls CD, reissued by Ipecac several years ago.
At another show, they served the audience ranch-style beans on plates
made out of trade magazines from their jobs at a local chemical company.
And at the record-release party for Sing and Play, they simply sat in
the audience and watched as impersonators from Caroliner and Mr. Bungle
took care of their set for them.
Sometimes they even played original songs, but more often than not, they
opted for covers. As amusing and odd as their song choices were Tony
Orlando's "Tie a Yellow Ribbon 'Round the Ole Oak Tree" and lots of
late-period Who stinkers they ultimately served as jumping-off points
for the band's extra-musical antics, not as destinations. On their live
recordings, Turkington seldom makes it past the first chorus without
breaking something or launching into a foul-mouthed tirade against some
unlucky audience member. He took other creative liberties as well:
There's video footage of him smashing Pablo Cruise records over his
head, wielding a blowtorch onstage, and breaking down in tears while
hugging a giant teddy bear during a cover of the Bee Gees' "I Started a
Joke."
The bears were a favorite stage prop, along with other inexplicable
items, such as golf trophies, nonworking telephones, and a giant
inflatable cigarette that they used for about a year. Hearing Turkington
casually list these items brings to mind the eternal question about just
about everything ZCR did: "Why?" And why, with no punch line in sight,
was it so funny?
"I've said this in an interview before," Singer confesses, "but the
closest I've come to wetting my pants as an adult was being onstage and
seeing some of the stuff that Gregg would do." Still, what made the
group tick is the dynamic between Turkington and his ambivalent foil,
Singer. "I think that's really the key to the group," Turkington agrees,
on the phone from LA. "Half the time he thinks it's really great, and
half the time he's really disgusted with the whole thing. To this day, I
really don't think he's made up his mind."
As a musical group, ZCR's reputation was poor unfairly so. "The worst
record of all time? It's definitely up there," Greg Prato wrote in his
www.allmusic.com review of Sing and Play. This was sometimes a sore
point with Singer, a skilled musician who's worked in many different
genres and lineups over the years, including Klaus Flouride's Jumbo
Shrimp, a black gospel group in Oakland, and his own solo
singer-songwriter projects. The duo's recordings were actually quite
diverse, encompassing everything from weepy C&W ballads to an acoustic
folk song about the presidents, with plenty of odd little interludes and
relatively little of the shrieking guitar-and-vocal-only mayhem for
which they're best known.
Alas, the reunion show doesn't mean the Zip Code Rapists are back
together as a functional band, but, self-professed show-biz hacks that
they are, they're not above another reunion. After all, aren't the
Eagles touring again this year? "The whole band was sort of predicated
on the idea of making fools of yourselves and seeing what happens,"
Singer says. "There's no reason we can't do that when we get old."
Press Photo Credit: