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Robyn Hitchcock and The Venus 3 - Ole Tarantula

November 22, 2006

Robyn Hitchcock and The Venus 3 - Ole TarantulaRobyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 - Olé Tarantula (Yep Roc)

It all started with the Soft Boys. Somebody made me a copy of their odds ‘n sods collection Invisible Hits, an assortment of leftovers so good that other bands would be proud to call them the main course. My Maxell cassette of that album got so many spins that I nearly wept when it eventually got destroyed in the car stereo of a friend. This was before Robyn got a major label deal with A&M Records, you understand, so Invisible Hits was totally out of print and the friend that made the copy, well, like your pot dealer in college, he was long gone.

Add to this, a chick that I really thought I had a connection with, a music hipster no less, mentioned that she really liked that album after I played it. So like a schmuck, I found a tremendously priced import copy of the album and, are you sitting down, gave it to her as a Christmas gift, an action that haunts me to this day, especially considering the emotional guillotine that is falling in love with someone more than they actually love you.

I stitched my head back on when I found another copy for myself and christened myself a Robyn Hitchcock disciple. He sang songs to me that sounded great stoned and they sounded just as good sober, although the words became a tad more warped.

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And since that time, Robyn Hitchcock has not released a dud yet. Some better than others, yes, but none would fall into the category of unlistenable, horrible, or Down In The Groove. I use the Dylan reference there because, in my mind, Hitchcock shares equal billing with Bobby, and as far as consistency is concerned Robyn’s got a better batting average.

And whereas Dylan released a book called Tarantula, Hitchcock’s released a new album called Olé Tarantula that maybe isn’t as good as Modern Times but I’ll probably end up spinning it more. Sorry, Bob.

Stylistically, Hitchcock has about three or four different formulas: folkie, jangle-psychedelia, jangle-pop, and a culmination of the three. Olé Tarantula finds Robyn back in the jangle-pop vein, just like the initial A&M days when major labels actually pondered the idea of his commercial potential without questioning what the hell a balloon man was.

Now that he’s on a more appropriate indie, he can meander between his styles freely and we’re left with yet another awesomely un-groundbreaking effort that leaves me a happy fanboy and you with an album that you’ll probably forget about buying.

So is this the part where I tell you R.E.M.’s Peter Buck is on it, as is The Young Fresh Fellows’ Scott McCaughey, and that he’s written a song with XTC’s Andy Partridge? Do I tell you he’s written a lovely song about the late New York Doll, Arthur Kane? How about the fact that it contains the absolutely best song about spider eggs hatching in your windowsill ever written? Like any of this is enough for you to download it immediately or run down to the record store and buy it.

I secretly hope that you will.

Olé Tarantula stands up next to Robyn’s best work and is as good of place as any for you to start and become a fanboy yourself. Just don’t do something stupid and give your copy to someone you think you’re in love with. Trust me: you’ll regret it.

Comments

Hey, thanks for the review. I've been looking forward to some new Hitchcock.

As far as Fanboy-dom goes: I've got "Element of Light" on vinyl. That's all I'm going to say.

, Nov 22, 2006 3:06PM

gotta get this one.

, Nov 22, 2006 7:09PM

I have to admit, I like his surreal jangle-pop a metric ton. Robyn is one of those weirdly angled musical back-scratchers thats the only way to hit a certain, peculiar itch.

, Nov 27, 2006 8:10PM

Hitchcock is my hero and I have every Soft Boys album and most of his solo stuff. I just saw him live a week ago -- it was incredible. He closed the night with "Give it to the Soft Boys" I nearly wept tears of joy.

, Nov 29, 2006 4:01PM

I think there is a much larger story here. Something about going someplace else and then finding where you were there, but its not you anymore.

, Dec 15, 2006 10:04PM

UPDATE: Yesterday, I received the copy of Invisible Hits from the ex-girlfriend that received it nearly twenty years ago. Apparently, she read this review and returned it to me. It is in mint condition, just like when I bought it.

, Jan 5, 2007 12:33PM

A happy ending, if I do say so myself. There are cool exes in the world after all; if she's reading this, you've done a wonderfully heroic thing, ma'am!!

, Jan 7, 2007 9:40PM

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Put a shirt on, hippy.
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