The Lemonheads

THE LEMONHEADS
 
 
The Lemonheads  are an American alternative rock band first formed in 1986 by Evan Dando, Ben Deily, and Jesse Peretz.  Dando has remained the band’s only constant member.  After their initial punk-influenced releases and tours as an independent/“college rock” band in the late 1980’s, the Lemonheads’ popularity with a mass audience grew in 1992 with the major label album It’s a Shame about Ray.  This was followed by a cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s “Mrs. Robinson”, which eventually became one of the band’s most successful singles.  The Lemonheads were active until 1997 before going on hiatus, but reformed with a new lineup in 2005.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

If anything, the practice of virtually any celebrity deciding to lay down some musical tracks has been accelerating in recent years; sometimes the results aren’t bad at all actually.  On their 2009 Varshons album – made up entirely of covers of mostly unfamiliar songs – the Lemonheads are accompanied by model Kate Moss on one track, Arling & Cameron’s “Dirty Robot”; while actress and model Liv Tyler (daughter of Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler and model/singer Bebe Buell) contributed vocals to their version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hey, That’s No Way to Say Goodbye”. 

 

I got Varshons myself, because it includes a cover of one of my TOP TEN favorite songs of all time (maybe my VERY FAVORITE even):  “Green Fuz”, a minimalist song by a Texas garage rock band called Randy Alvey & Green Fuz.  The Cramps previously included “Green Fuz” as the opening track on their album Psychedelic Jungle.  Any version of “Green Fuz” is welcome in my record collection; but (despite truly terrible sound quality) the original is simply untoppable, with 15-year-old Randy Alvey’s growling lyrics backed by a fine band that includes drums that are unlike any that I have ever heard before.  To this day, when the original “Green Fuz” comes up on an album I’m playing, it is as if the world stops spinning:  My mouth goes slack, my muscles freeze up, and my mind focuses entirely on this incredible recording. 

 

The Cramps were careful to match the timing of their recording of Green Fuz to that of the original song (2:06) – though they made only a half-hearted attempt at the drum solo toward the middle of the song – but the Lemonheads took a more leisurely approach to the song. 

 

(March 2013)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021