Butthold Surfers unearth ‘Live at the Leather Fly’

The set will be released on May 9th

Arguably one of the most notoriously named bands in rock history, Butthole Surfers made a career out of upending the establishment and irritating the easily annoyed. Their albums were abrasive yet tuneful, much like their live performances. Rising to the challenge of bottling these audible antics, Sunset Blvd. is prepping the release of Butthole Surfer’s third live album, Live From the Leather Fly on May 9th. Unearthed in the archives of Butthole history, the 21-track performance’s origins are shrouded in mystery. The “where” or “when” it was recorded is debatable, but the band have created a mythos surrounding it.

“Back in the ‘80s, Gibby [Haynes, vocalist/guitarist] used to fantasize about a nightclub called The Leather Fly. He wanted it to have a stuffed leather fly hanging in front of it,” reminisces frontman Paul Leary about the illusory venue that this show was recorded.

The first single released from the set is the appropriately titled “The Annoying Song.” The song is a gritty and rhythmic banger, fueled by Gibby’s droll and distorted vocals, fed through a toy megaphone.

“We were invited to participate in the first Lollapalooza Festival in 1991,” Leary remembers. “At some point of the tour Gibby got a hold of a toy battery-powered small megaphone that pitched his voice up,” he laughs. “He was annoying everyone within earshot backstage, speaking through it in a rhythmic manner. I found it hysterical enough to write music to it. That became ‘The Annoying Song’.”

Unpredictable, brash and, in typical Butthole Surfers’ fashion, so in-your-face that it penetrates your skull, their live performances pummel with the tight rhythm section of Jeff Pinkus’ pounding bass and King Coffey’s hale and hearty drums, Paul’s searing guitar work, and Gibby’s frenetic and eccentric vocal stylings. Deeply gonzo and often psychedelic, their hallucinogenic-soaked punk rock is sludgy yet melodic, like a fudgesicle made of sewer mud and Belgian chocolate. It’s this gritty scuzz-rock that defined them and propelled their legacy far beyond the underground, even dabbling with Top 40.

Kicking off with “Graveyard” (from 1987’s Locust Abortion Technician) and its spooky guitar effects that launches into a sludgefest with Paul’s piercing guitars, slicing holes through the song’s heavy corduroy textures, Live At The Leather Fly never lets up. From the Texas-punk stylings of “Gary Floyd” (taken from 1984’s Psychic… Powerless… Another Man’s Sac and written for the lead singer of The Dicks) to the discordant cacophony of “Bong Song” (from 1989’s Widowmaker EP), to the fan favorite “P.S.Y.” (from 1991’s Piouhgd), the 21 tracks of Live At The Leather Fly is a perfect encapsulation of what made Butthole Surfers important in the first place: Grade A Texas-Sourced punk.

Emerging from the 1980s hardcore scene, Butthole Surfers was formed by Gibby and Paul while in college in San Antonio, Texas. Bonding over a shared distaste for mainstream music, Butthole Surfers traipsed through the music industry, always in the fringes. Championed by Dead Kennedys, Nirvana, and Orbital and compatriots of Scratch Acid, Flipper and Big Black, they remained a fixture in the music scene’s counterculture. In a moment of mainstream acceptance (they scored a No. 1 modern rock Hit with “Pepper”), the band always embraced the obtuse and the obstinate. Though the band has never quite broken up, their legacy still inspires other acts, including Gwar, Flaming Lips, Jane’s Addiction, White Zombie, Monster Magnet, Primus and dozens more.

  1. Graveyard
  2. Dust Devil
  3. Gary Floyd
  4. 1401
  5. Alcohol
  6. Hey
  7. Negro Observer
  8. Human Cannonball
  9. You Don’t Know Me
  10. Some Dispute Over T-Shirt Sales
  11. Bong Song
  12. Blindman
  13. Nee Nee
  14. Too Parter
  15. Dancing Fool
  16. PSY
  17. Booze, Tobacco, Dope, Pussy, Cars
  18. Ghandi
  19. Edgar
  20. Fast Song
  21. The Annoying Song

Buddy Iahn
Buddy Iahn