Life-changing records show up when you least expect it, from unlikely sources. That's a theme that only partially threads this story. In addition…headphones are necessary.
The Dirtbombs were on tour in May of 2002 and it was trying. The van was too small, the advance promotion was nonexistent and our lone excitement (a day off scheduled in Groningen) instead turned into a day in Slagelse, Denmark with a broken down van where one band member literally shit his pants.
In the middle of all of this, we played a show at the Loppen club in Christiania. I was surprised by the fact that Christiania claimed itself independent from the rest of Denmark, that drugs were openly sold on Pusher Street, and that I'd never heard the word "pastoralism" until Mick Collins and I took a vaguely romantic walk around the nearby lake.
Before the show, the Dirtbombs found ourselves in conversation with a bunch of kids. They were clearly excited by the fact that we were from Detroit. "Have you ever been to Fred Smith's grave?" they asked. None of us had. "If we lived in Detroit, we would go there every day."
I forget any further conversation, but at the end of it they gave me a copy of a self-released single of their band, Dollhouse, called "Shangri-La Tiger." The cover was a confusing collage, it was on red vinyl and hand-numbered. (#51 of 500)
I was intrigued and mentally noted that I needed to give this record due attention upon arriving home.
As we emptied out the van to check in to our flights at Heathrow a few weeks later I mistakenly left my LP case…where the single was living snugly. It would be another two months before a lazy tour manager finally shipped it back to me. I'd almost forgotten about it.
Embarassingly, I'd never really listened to music on headphones before. No one really told me I should until Malissa and even after she did, it took awhile before I found a suitably cool pair from the 70s that made me look like I should be directing airplane traffic.
It was late at night when I put the record on. No one else was home. The opening groove is hypnotic, a drumbeat that envelops on top of itself. As the rest of the instrumentation kicks in the MC5 influence is clear, but avoids becoming a pastiche. It motors, it motors, it motors. Good little number. Enjoyable. As one of the first things I'd listened to on headphones, this beast definitely lent itself to that form of delivery.
Towards the end there's a little breakdown, things get quiet, chill and then without warning, the record FUCKING EXPLODES! A bomb detonates in the distance, space junk crashes in my front yard, glass windows liquify, my blood begins to run backwards screaming and my teeth grow baby teeth of their own.
It is, nearly twelve years later, still one of my most favorite moments I've lived while listening to a record. Later consultation with the band revealed they literally "turned on every pedal in the studio at the same time" to accomplish that affect. Bravo.
The best part about all of this is simple…records given to bands while on tour are 99.999% of the time absolute garbage. Not only did Dollhouse manage to transcend this fact of life, they managed to absolutely obliterate 99% of the records I've ever explicitly bought on my own.
#51 lived a long time on my jukebox. It currently has a little bit of heat warp from the great house fire of '08, but as I've just listened to it five straight times (each with increasing volume) it has lost none of the sheer bombast that made me first fall in love with it so long ago.
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Bought one of these today to see what the fuss was about…it’s nice
Thanks for pointing this band out! They were from a little town in Sweden called Enköping, where I’m from too! Feeling pretty proud of my hometown when I see bands from there being mention in The Vault! Let me repeat that, they are from Sweden, not Denmark! They broke up in 2010 sometime. I have met the singer a few times and he’s a cool guy. Really miss Dollhouse, best thing from Enköping ever…
wonderful little label here in the UK doing reissues of impossible to find psyche classics, for instance the awesome 60’s Brit horror flick Psychomania had a fantastic title track(the witch) by an obscure outfit called Frog.
The label is called SPOKE records by the way. They are in it for the love of the genre and that is reflected by the very reasonable prices.
I don’t work for them by the way. haha
I have this record! Picked it up a year or so ago at a local record store for $2. It still had a little insert the band had made with their contact information.
Dollhouse are totally unknown even in their native Denmark. I bet there’s still some surplus stock available!
Pissed off that the Dirtbombs played a show so close to where I lived and that I never knew about… Loppen almost did the same number with the Kills. Only found out about them playing there because of a little flyer I saw on a wall… and this was when they were getting quite big.
if you guys want more google tremble under boom lights.
I would love to read your book.
put it out 4 us to hear thats what the vault IS !!!!
Forgot to mention. Why don’t you or some or your friends put this out on vinyl so we can all drag out our head gear and try for the same experience ….
Great story ! I love records attached to memories. That’s what I love about the Live Records you do at TMR. So far each and every concert has been memorable and getting to buy a record of that moment is insane. Thanks for that !