Ed Hall (band) - Albums

Albums

After releasing six songs on the Mind Drum Records compilation Charlie Manson Street, debut album Albert was released on the Boner label in 1988. Standout track "Candy House" was a taste of things to come on 1990's similarly bizarre and humorous "Love Poke Here". The band was subsequently featured in Richard Linklater's 1991 indie film masterpiece Slacker, and signed a contract with Butthole Surfer King Coffey's Trance Syndicate label and toured North America as the Butthole Surfers' support act.

With each song named after an individual that may or may not have ever existed, 1992's Trance Syndicate debut "Gloryhole" marked a leap forward in the band's sound, whilst retaining much in the tradition of its two predecessors: open, loose backbeats overlaid with pop song structures, and plenty of Butthole Surfers-esque acid-damage. Production benefited greatly from the move to Butch Vig's Smart Studios, and highlights included "Buster Enamel" and the jakob-like instrumental "Bernie Sticky," along with a cello-driven cover of Kiss's "Beth" (also released as a 7-inch single on Trance Syndicate)

1993's Motherscratcher has been described as the most focused, least whimsical Ed Hall album issued during the trio's career. The opening "White House Girls," with its exaggerated backbeat and laughing chorus, is a near-perfect example of the prickly riffs and trebly, note-driven leads of Gary Chester's guitar-playing, and the solid foundation provided by the developing partnership between bass player Larry Strub and new drummer Lyman Hardy, who replaced Kevin Whitley prior to the Gloryhole tour. Texturally, Ed Hall, with this album, was beginning to resemble a more cryptic and nuanced, less abrasive version of Flipper, one of the trio's most salient influences, and with whom they toured in 1994. Instrumental "Satori in Manhattan, Kansas" has been described as "strikingly beautiful" and "eclipsed by very little in rock music."

Ed Hall's final album, 1995's La La Land was an extension of the ground covered on Motherscratcher - raunchy overdriven guitar scrapings underpinned by snaking bass lines and long-armed drumming, topped with vocals that testify and holler.

Ed Hall split in 1996. Rumors of an eventual appearance of their unreleased sixth album have not been fulfilled. Bassist Strub moved to Thailand and taught English for some years. Gary Chester spent time in Moist Fist and Gold (which was just Pong), and Lyman Hardy played in a number of bands, including the Goin Along Feelin Just Fines. All three now play in retro-futuristic cosmic dance-rock combo Pong. A reunion show in Austin, Texas in 2003 featured Chester, Strubb, Hardy, and Whitley, with Whitley and Hardy sharing drum duties. Another reunion show (with Crust (band) and Pain Teens) is scheduled for Saturday November 24th, 2012 at Emo's East in Austin.

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