The Brian Jonestown MassacreFire Doesn't Grow On Trees

Label:

A Records (4) – AUK049LP

Format:

Vinyl , LP, Album

Country:

UK

Released:

Genre:

Rock

Style:

Psychedelic Rock

Tracklist

A1 The Real
A2 Ineffable Mindfuck
A3 It's About Being Free Really
A4 What's In A Name?
A5 Silenced
B1 Before And Afterland
B2 You Think I'm Joking?
B3 #1 Lucky Kitty
B4 Wait A Minute (2:30 To Be Exact)
B5 Don't Let Me Get In Your Way

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright ©A Recordings LTD.
  • Phonographic Copyright ℗A Recordings LTD.

Credits

  • Artwork [Cover Art]Wolfgang Gotthardt Newcombe
  • Mixed ByAndrea Wright (2)
  • Performer [The Players Are]Uri Rennert
  • ProducerAnton Newcombe

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5056321621580
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, runout): AUK049 LKA-1
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, runout): AUK 049 LPB-1 STC

Other Versions (1)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
New Submission
Fire Doesn't Grow On Trees (CD, Album, Digisleeve) A Records (4) AUK049CD UK 2022

Recommendations

  • The Future Is Your Past
    2023 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • The Brian Jonestown Massacre
    2019 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Something Else
    2018 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Don't Get Lost
    2017 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Third World Pyramid
    2016 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Revelation
    2014 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Their Satanic Majesties' Second Request
    2017 Europe
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album, Reissue, Repress
    Shop
  • Phosphene Dream
    2010 US
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album
    Shop
  • Pol Pot's Pleasure Penthouse
    2017 UK, Europe & US
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album, Record Store Day, Limited Edition, Reissue
    Shop
  • Give It Back!
    2013 UK
    Vinyl —
    LP, Album, Remastered, Reissue
    Shop

Reviews

  • Rockdownnerd's avatar
    Rockdownnerd
    Edited one year ago
    July 18, 2022. Cleveland, Ohio. I am pretty sure that William Butler Yeats did not have Anton Newcombe in mind when the Steinach-enhanced Irish poet penned his great “Among School Children.” However, Newcombe’s rigid adherence to an unedited artistic ethos, begs the Irish nationalist’s famous lyrical question: “O body swayed to music, O brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance?” (Yeats, W. B, 1933).

    That is Anton Newcombe and his magnificent Brian Jonestown Massacre: Music and glance, dancer and dance. Anton is the BJM.

    In the late 1990’s, the California-based, Brian Jonestown Massacre ceaselessly toured from coast-to-coast and across the universe. A stream of indie records and adoring underground press bubbled into the consciousness of the music literati. My bartender pals at the world-famous Grog Shop implored me to check them out. After all, I wore my musical allegiances on my Keef-printed rocker tee and MBV-soaked college radio playlists. The BJM hit the Grog Shop so many times, I lost count of my attendance to their three hour, late-night, oil can fueled, psych benders. Thus began my multi-decade gravitation into the BJM music-verse.

    Thirty years have ed since the release of the Brian Jonestown Massacre’s brilliant 1992 debut, “She Made Me”. Today, the musical production of the BJM well exceeds the output of the great rock deities from psychedelia’s first wave. Then, Anton railed against the watered-down arena-rock tropes and the business machine that served its steaming pablum. Now, the BJM, once the petulant indie upstarts, are significant contributors to the tapestry of modern music.

    But don’t just take my word for it. In 2020, when I asked Jonestown’s percussionist and minister of the revolution, Joel Gion, about the volume of the BJM cannon, he responded: “It’s completely crazy to me in a way that BJM have been going successfully for now thirty years, but it’s truly a testament to Anton’s songwriting, longevity-wise, is starting to (gulp) become the Rolling Stones of indie psych rock or something. The big difference is, at this point in the Stones career, they were turding out Voodoo Lounge, where as Anton is right now today at a creative spike” (POW Magaine, 2020).

    June 24, 2022 and the Brian Jonestown Massacre have released its 19th full-length record, “Fire Doesn’t Grow on Trees”. So, how has Mr. Newcombe, dancer and dance, artist and art, endured?

    Side one of “Fire Doesn’t Grow on Trees” ignites with the drone-tinged, mod rocker, “The Real”. The album’s strident opener is a 5-minute psychedelic ballet where Ravel’s Bolero pirouettes to the chords of the Small Faces. Ever the gadfly, Newcombe taunts the listener: “You can’t ever get enough. You fill your mind with useless stuff. There’s no room for what you need. It’s killing you, now I believe.” “The Real” is equal parts retro-BJM and shiny-new Newcombe. Tense and driving, “The Real” melts into the flickering, post-COVID haze of musical uncertainty.

    While it is difficult to pick side one’s jump cut, “It’s about Being Free Really” may burn the brightest. Built on the Bo Didley R & B blueprint, “It’s about Being Free Really” propels the familiar jangling riffle into psychedelic perfection. With a subtle nod to Norman Greenbaum, “It’s about Being Free Really” buzzes with amp-warmed fuzz pedal fx. Newcombe’s vocals, quivering with imperfection, are neatly compressed, and a distant harmonica echoes into space. Fire’s “It’s about Being Free Really” is a real burner.

    Don’t snooze on the album’s closer! “Don’t let Me get in Your Way” opens with a caffeinated 12-Ric tone that harmonizes with the hum-able strum of the song’s hook and vocals. Thirty years in, “Don’t let Me get in Your Way” marks the growth of Anton’s studio knob-wizardry. The song layers vintage sounds on a shuffling groove and accenting fills. The track’s feel is more about tone than it’s charming sing-a-long message. Anton chaunts: ” To walk hand in hand/For the rest of your days. And show you the sides/That are sure to amaze. And help lift you up/When you’re feeling sad. And make you feel happy/When you’re feeling bad.” Final track, “Don’t let Me get in Your Way”, may be the record’s best.

    In 1933, W. B. Yeats was in his 60’s when he penned “Among School Children.” There, Yeats – the assumed narrator – sits among the schoolyard, sharing the out-of-reach celebration of young children at play. Today, its Newcombe, schoolyard turned rock club. The artist and art of Brian Jonestown Massacre is very much in-reach. “Fire Doesn’t Grow on trees” is artist and art, celebrating life’s music, both dancer and dance.

    http://www.powmagazine.org/powmagazine/the-brian-jonestown-massacres-fire-doesnt-grow-on-trees-the-pow-magazine-review/
    • missnoma's avatar
      missnoma
      Love this so much - classic BJM and yet fresh and new.
      • judedez21's avatar
        judedez21
        Excellent pressing. Clean and flat. Music is great too, classic sound, catchy choruses, and pure BJM.
        • Jakemills91's avatar
          Jakemills91
          A classic sounding album from BJM, beautiful press with clarity and no surface sound.
          • In_It_To_Spin_It's avatar
            BJM RIDE AGAIN!!!

            Absolutely Beautiful Sound.

            Love from a Fan For Life.

            Release

            See all versions
            Recently Edited

            For sale on Discogs

            Sell a copy

            103 copies from $15.99

            Statistics

            • Have:1565
            • Want:189
            • Avg Rating:4.41 / 5
            • Ratings:79
            • Last Sold:
            • Low:$13.95
            • Median:$20.61
            • High:$30.50

            Videos (10)

            Edit

            Lists

              Contributors