Very full collections of odds and odder odds from Mouth Congress, the duo of Scott Thompson and Paul Bellini of The Kids In The Hall. This music is incredible and will remind you that life can be freaky, unhinged and fun. It just has that spirit of being excited about being beautiful by not being afraid of anything, embracing every weird and hilarious idea and turning them into weird and hilarious songs. Is it comedy? It's no more so than, say, Ween or Tragic Mulatto or early Butthole Surfers. The bio says it is for fans of John Waters, Divine, Yoko Ono, Ween, early Butthole Surfers, etc, if that gives you a hint. The booklet is incredible as well, full of amazing photos of young and proudly out and proudly freaky Paul and Scott, plus essays from the two, lyrics (which are amazing) and more. Enjoy!
more about it Mouth Congress began as a dare. Paul Bellini and Scott Thompson’s friend Brian Hiltz always had a rock
band and dreamed of being Pete Townsend. Having no musical talent, all
Paul could do was dream. One day in 1984, Brian rented a beatbox from a
local music store. Paul was fascinated by this thing, which played
whacky mambo and samba beats. And then Brian dared Paul to start his own
band, so he rented that beatbox and set it up in the basement on top of
an old freezer in the house where they lived. At the time, Paul’s sister Christine, who also lived in the house, was
dating Rob Rowatt. He brought over his electric guitar and they jammed
in the basement. Then Christine’s high school friend Gord Disley came
over with his guitar. Later that same week, Scott Thompson came by for a
visit, and together they had a massive jam session that yielded about
thirty short, ridiculous songs, mostly about genitalia and identity. Pleased with the results, they set out to find a name. At the time,
Christine was studying Hinduism and had a copy of the Sir Richard Burton
translation of the Kama Sutra. Their eyes fell upon ‘mouth congress,’
his term for oral sex. Still in their mid 20s and coming to terms with their homosexuality, Scott and Paul decided that this was the ideal name for their rock band. For a while, they recorded everything on a standard cassette tape
recorder with a condenser mic. The results were generally unlistenable,
so they upgraded to a Tascam 4-track recorder. Most of the songs on
Waiting For Henry were recorded in this fashion, over a period of nine
years and in at least nine different Toronto-area houses or apartments. The band’s approach to lyrics was unusual. Because Scott was a sketch
comedian, he was always inventing new characters. They decided
rock’n’roll was the ideal form in which to explore homosexual
experiences. They did all the recording and mixing with whatever
musicians were around at the time. Paul enjoyed filtering Scott’s vocals
through guitar pedals like a phase shifter or a wah wah pedal. Scott
loved edgy topical material, like sexuality, race, and gender issues,
though sometimes the songs were just pure nonsense. Without trying, they
were surprisingly cutting edge. It wasn’t long before Scott, a
performer by nature, decided that Mouth Congress should appear live at
The Rivoli - the Toronto club where the Kids in the Hall performed most
often. They sang songs about cigarettes and the Holy Ghost to a
flummoxed audience. Over the next three years, Mouth Congress did dozens of live shows with
various combinations of Rob, Gord, or Brian, and often including Steve
Keeping on drums and Tom King on keyboards and vocals. They also had
several bass players – Blaine Vanstone, Steve Gelling, and Tim O’Neil,
who, in true Spinal Tap fashion, have all since passed away. They are
remembered fondly, and Paul and Scott continue to keep a close eye on
the current bass players. The live shows gained a reputation for being theatrical, to say the
least, as they combined props, sets, multiple costume changes, unusual
song choices, lots of guest stars, and Scott’s stand-up comedy. Unlike
other bands, Mouth Congress didn’t just have a set list – they wrote
whole scripts. In 1988, they decided to record a 7-song demo tape. The
tracks were recorded quickly, as the Kids in the Hall were about to go
to New York City to spend a year developing their material for Broadway
Video. Then, caught up in the excitement of The Kids in the Hall being
signed to television, they neglected to distribute the demo tape. Making
the TV show was so time-consuming that Mouth Congress activities slowed
to a crawl. In 2011, Paul dug out an old VHS tape of one of the live shows. It was
footage of Scott singing (or rather, screaming) a noisy punk song called
“Showland.” In it, he strips down to his underwear, peeling off layer
after layer of clothing until almost naked on stage. The sight of one of
the Kids in the Hall covered in sweat, writhing on stage like Iggy Pop,
was something he felt comedy fans might actually enjoy seeing.
Naturally, Scott agreed and they decided to make a ‘documentary’ about
the band. At the same time, Gord Disley suggested they upload some
classic Mouth Congress songs to Bandcamp, so they dumped everything -
over 600 recordings - onto the site. Some of them were just jams, crude
beyond description. Others were professionally produced, and many were
live tracks. Mouth Congress never made much of a distinction between the
stuff that sounded like real music and the stuff that was just creative
‘junk’. They loved all their creations equally. One day in 2019, Mike Sniper of Captured Tracks stumbled upon the
Bandcamp page, got in touch with Paul and Scott, and suggested
assembling a compilation of the best recordings to be officially
released for the very first time. So Paul and Scott chose 30 songs to
share with the world and that’s how we got the first Mouth Congress
compilation, Waiting for Henry. Who is Henry? We don’t really know, but we certainly hope he shows up soon.
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