Puppet Wipes / Cuyakoga Creeping Bent / Poor Alpkoga (live) / The Tin Huey Story
Format: 7" EP
Year: 1977
Label: Clone Records
Price: $4.50
Purchased at: Square Records, Akron Ohio
God bless Akron, you've given us so much.
Admittedly what first brought me to Tin Huey were The Waitresses. Tin Huey's Chris Butler was the driving force behind the band- penning most of their hits including 'I Know What Boys Like', 'No Guilt', 'Christmas Wrapping', and the 'Square Pegs' theme. He is also a Guinness Record holder for 'Longest Pop Song in Recording History.' His song 'The Devil Glitch' clocks-in at a staggering sixty-nine minutes. Chris was also in the crowd that was fired on by the Ohio National Guard at Kent State University on May 4th, 1970. In 2005 he (accidentally) purchased the childhood home of Jeffrey Dahmer...
Anyway, this single appears to be vintage pre-Chris Butler.
I'm not going to go into Tin Huey's long history, as it's rather convoluted and esoteric to say the least. Suffice it to say they're still at it. A few random Tin Huey facts:
- They're one of the bands featured in the 2003 PBS documentary 'It's Everything, and Then It's Gone.' The special covers the history of post-punk and art rock Akron groups including Devo, Waitresses, Rubber City Rebels, Bizzaros, and The Numbers Band.
- Tin Huey played at The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.
I don't really have the words to describe their sound on this EP. Based on my limited vocabulary they remind me a lot of early Devo, especially 'The Tin Huey Story.' Rough, irreverent, and so free-form that they flirt with anarchy.
Regarding the disc itself- I went right to the source and purchased this one in Akron, Ohio. The shop I bought it from had several Tin Huey 7" singles. All were in mint condition. I asked the store owner if they were reissues... and he honestly didn't seem to know. The single is so deadstock-mint that I really can't tell myself, but I will say that there are no reissue markings on it, the paper used for the sleeve is crude and cheap, and I think if it was reissued they wouldn't be using the Clone label so prominently on the sleeve and label?
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