Trouble Coming Every Day

TROUBLE COMING EVERY DAY (Mick Farren)
 
 
“Trouble Every Day”  (labeled in early prints as “Trouble Comin’ Every Day”) is a song by The Mothers of Invention, released on their 1966 debut album Freak Out!.  The UK underground artist Mick Farren covered the song on his album Vampires Stole My Lunch Money (1978).  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

After taking several years off from making music, Mick Farren resurfaced in 1978 with a brilliant solo album, Vampires Stole My Lunch Money.  The album opens with what might be the best cover of a Frank Zappa song by anybody:  “Trouble Coming Every Day”, a seething litany of what’s wrong with the world that could surely have come straight from Farren’s pen. 

 

Vampires Stole My Lunch Money is a more personal record than his other albums.  There are no less than three songs about drinking – “I Want a Drink”, “Half-Priced Drinks”, and “Drunk in the Morning” – plus a monologue about personal demons called “(I Know from) Self-Destruction”.  Whether this is just a persona or the actual state of Mick Farren’s life at that point – I doubt anyone could tell the difference, the music is that heartfelt.  Musicians on hand include Larry Wallis of the Pink Fairies and Wilko Johnson of Dr. Feelgood; supporting vocals are provided by Sonja Kristina of Curved Air and Chrissie Hynde, the lead singer of Pretenders (a year and half before their first album, Pretenders came out).  

 
(March 2014/1)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021