from the "Runnin' Ape-like from the Backwards Superman" liner notes, penned by the Captain:
A little history for ya. Summer 1987: Rubin Fiberglass crawls down to Isla Vista (a decaying beach town several miles outside Santa Barbara) from Santa Cruz and soon meets Grady Runyan. Both playing guitar and songwriting, the duo begat a fine meld of 60’s/70’s garage punk called the Umbilical Chords, guided as much by their originals as by the then-current wave of Aussie Stooge-necrophilia. In attendance at the Umbilical Chords shows is bassist/guitarist Scott Derr, late of the unheralded Squid Patrol.
Fall ’88: Monoshock forms soon after the Umbilical Chords implode. The new band’s m.o. was different though - based around simpler riffs and louder volume – not to mention the emerging trademark “wall of wah” guitar that Grady was coaxing from his Harmony Rocket (kinda like a massive, amplified “whoosh” of static getting sucked in and out of the room). Rubin Fiberglass switches over to drums with the big bottom supplied by Scott on bass. Suffice to say the air was turned to cottage cheese wherever these guys played, which was mostly carports, house parties and occasionally downtown Santa Barbara. It was Socal beach grunge, but lumberjacks don’t play volleyball – in other words, no one was paying attention – but thankfully the band recorded itself for posterity. The tape was later circulated as a demo (“Welcome To My Meat Market”), but met with the same familiar indifference.
Summer ’89 and Monoshock is history. Grady moves to the Bay Area to co-found the ear-splitting Liquorball (check out “Hauls Ass” and a couple of great singles), and later, as drummer, s Cardinal Sin, an SF group who would play their own twisted psych-pop along the Barrett-Spence-Erickson axis for an under-appreciated decade. Back in I.V., Scott and Rubin form the infamous Early Man Site with Tommy “Hon Lang” Kruger, while Scott and Tommy begin to issue records as Blackjack. By early ‘92, both Blackjack and EMS had likewise migrated northward. The band had incorporated fellow-I.V.-émigré “Shindig” along the way and was now beguiling SF audiences with its twin-guitar carpet-rock. Following the Cardinal Sin/EMS Northwest tour (on which Monoshock played an impromptu gig in a Seattle basement…no you weren’t there), Grady s EMS as THIRD guitarist. How heavy is too heavy? EMS begins to unravel under its own weight.
But the triangle remains unbroken: In March ’93, Monoshock MK2 arises from the EMS aftermath. Rubin, Grady and Scott rekindle the Asheton Bros. instrumental oomph, but with a greater fondness for “out” sounds and ideas. Within days, they are onstage playing a set of I.V.-era material from memory (there was no rehearsal), closing the show with a special guest Jeff/Cardinal Sin riding free-form tone generator over the proceedings. From here on, band activities were centered in Oakland (where all three were now living), and the woodshedding truly began: by the end of the year, Monoshock had an entirely new repertoire, as reflected in this collection and WTTF.
‘Twas around this time the band hooked up with the Insane Cat, two expatriate east-coasters moonlighting as a recording studio in an SF basement. The duo’s artastic notions (part of the Trashart continuum - check out their Zappa-esque Ikagen LP from ’84), not to mention recreational habits, synched up with the band’s own, and trips to the “studio” were too numerous to count during ’94-’95: all of the band’s singles, as well as WTTF, were recorded here during that time. The sympathetic atmosphere was crucial…..let’s just say the band could really let its hair down at the ‘Cat, and that the resulting hair loss bleeds through all these recordings, despite the aggressive non-fidelity.
The bands’ pursuit of maximal sound was, among other things, a magnet for the musically unemployable. Both the troll-like Feast - who crashed shows on self-abusive tambourine - and Hawkman Doug Pearson (keys and electronics) became regularly random collaborators. But the void was ultimately filled by the enigmatic sound-slayer known as the Aluminum Queen (whose 8-track tapes of startling noise warrant their own reissue); initially commuting over an hour to play assault-sax on the closing numbers in the set, he eventually relocated to Oakland to become a functioning fourth member, adding Ping-style electrics and tapes to the bands’ intense clatter.
And lest you get the impression that Monoshock were some sort of “studio” band, rest assured that these guys played out regularly during ’94-’95, both in town and out (Chico, Santa Rosa, I.V.) - the band was very visible, though attendance was never what you’d call SRO. They even embarked on two major tours that saw their sound uncorked all the way to Memphis and back. But the madness took its toll: by Fall ’95, when WTTF was ultimately completed, Monoshock was rapidly closing in on burn out. The band was nearly kaput by the time of album’s release, and nowhere to be seen by the time it finally found receptive ears.