Tuesday, March 14, 2017

CD Odyssey Disc 982: Red Hot Chili Peppers

I ran for the bus today because I didn’t want to walk home after a long day. It doesn’t count as exercise, but I’ll take it.

Disc 982 is…Freaky Styley
Artist: Red Hot Chili Peppers

Year of Release: 1985

What’s up with the Cover? A collage of the band doing various silly things in various silly outfits. These guys look like they’d be a lot of fun to run into at a party, as long as it wasn’t anywhere that you were responsible for the glassware or the carpets.

How I Came To Know It: My friend and old roommate Greg introduced me to both the band and every album I own by them, including this one. Thanks, Greg!

How It Stacks Up:  I have three Red Hot Chili Peppers albums and I like them all. I rank “Freaky Styley” second, just behind “Blood Sugar Sex Magik” (reviewed back at Disc 690).

Ratings: 3 stars but almost 4

Listening to the power pop stylings of the Red Hot Chili Peppers in recent years it is hard to remember just how incredible and innovative they were at the beginning of their careers, but if you need a refresher look no farther than “Freaky Styley”.

Back in 1985 the Chilis were drugged out beach bums oozing with potential. They were a mix of surfer punk, funk, and psychadelia. With the dynamic balls-forward vocals of Anthony Kiedis and the incredible bass licks of Flea they seemed destined for greatness. Add in Parliament’s George Clinton as producer and it felt like anything could happen.

The only thing holding this record back is its total refusal to have an artistic direction, but that’s also what makes it so enjoyable. The Chilis range through musical styles, throwing in bizarre rhyming spoken word tracks like “Thirty Dirty Birds” as readily as they land backbone sliding funk riffs. I love the mix, but it is hard to concentrate on what’s coming next.

This whole recording from the name, to the cover art through to the music feels overblown and excessive. Ordinarily I would call it ambitious, but you get the feeling these guys are just freaking out and having a good time. That they were defining their own musical niche in the process feels more born out of fearlessness than forethought.

Kiedis has a wonderful tone to his voice, although for the most part this won’t be fully showcased until later records (even 1987’s “Uplift Mofo Party Plan” has more sustained singing). On “Freaky Styley” he is all about delivering his crazed and frantic lyrics into the pocket of the beat with the precision of a rap star. He’s like James Brown if James Brown were a surfer acid freak.

Guitarist Hillel Slovak (who would die tragically of a heroin overdose three years later) brings the punk edge to the band, with raw, saw-toothed playing that cuts its way through the groove when the song needs grit, and drops a funky riff down on “Yertle the Turtle” that will make you dance like a madman. It made me dance in the elevator on the way home, in fact. I’m just thankful no one was in there with me, because there was no resisting that funk – audience or not. Also, bonus points for making the best song about a Dr. Seuss story ever.

The rhythm section of Flea and Cliff Martinez hold the whole thing together. Flea is the star of the band at this stage of their career (maybe at every stage). The title track is just a slow fade in/fade out groove driven almost entirely by Flea’s bass playing and I can’t get enough of it.

The band features some fine guest musicians in the horn section, including none other than the great Maceo Parker on saxophone. On “The Brothers Cup” the mix of the Chilis doing their rap-rock stylings mixed with the funky flourishes of the horn solo make that song timeless and irresistible.

Regrettable, the record suffers from poor production (sorry George). It could just be the transfer of everything onto CD that is the culprit here (my copy is old and in those early days they didn’t know how to fix the mix for compact disc). In any event, it sounds tinny and distant in places, which is the worst thing for music as visceral as this.

Also, the way the music jumps around from style to style – sometimes between songs, and sometimes within them – makes it hard to settle your ears down and listen. The music is frantic and distracted. It is brilliantly so, but it isn’t for everyone, and you have to be in the mood to have your senses assaulted.

Overall, “Freaky Styley” is a solid record that is hard to define but easy to love.


Best tracks: Hollywood, Freaky Styley, The Brothers Cup, Catholic School Girls Rule, Sex Rap, Yertle the Turtle

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