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The Cramps
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Conjuring a fiendish witches' brew of primal rockabilly, grease-stained '60s garage rock, vintage monster movies, perverse and glistening sex, and the detritus and effluvia of 50 years of American pop culture,
the Cramps
are a truly American creation much in the manner of the Cadillac, the White Castle hamburger, the Fender Stratocaster, and
Jayne Mansfield
. Often imitated, but never with the same psychic resonance as the original,
the Cramps
celebrate all that is dirty and gaudy with a perverse joy that draws in listeners with its fleshy decadence, not unlike an enchanted gingerbread house on the Las Vegas strip. The entire psychobilly scene would be unthinkable without them, and their prescient celebration of the echoey menace of first-generation rock & roll had a primal (if little acknowledged) influence on the rockabilly revival and the later roots rock movement.
The saga of
the Cramps
begins in 1972 in Sacramento, CA, when LSD enthusiast and
Alice Cooper
fan
Erick Purkhiser
picked up a hitchhiker, a woman with a highly evolved rock & roll fashion sense named
Kristy Wallace
. The two quickly took note of one another, but major sparks didn't began to fly until a few weeks later, when they discovered they were both enrolled in a course on "Art and Shamanism" at Sacramento City College. These two lovebirds were soon sharing both an apartment and their collective enthusiasm for the stranger and more obscure sounds of rock's first era, as well as the more flamboyant music of the day. Their passion for music led them to the conclusion that they should form a band, and
Kristy
picked up a guitar and adopted the stage name
Poison Ivy Rorschach
, while future vocalist
Erick
became
Lux Interior
, after short spells as
Raven Beauty
and
Vip Vop
.
Ivy
and
Lux
hit the road for Ohio, and after living frugally in Akron for a year and a half, they made their way to New York City in 1975 in search of stardom.
While working at a record store,
Interior
made the acquaintance of fellow employee
Greg Beckerleg
, who had recently arrived from Detroit and also wanted to form a band.
Beckerleg
transformed himself into primal noise guitarist
Bryan Gregory
, and even persuaded his sister to join the nascent combo as a drummer. However, Pam Beckerleg didn't work out on traps, and so
Miriam Linna
, an Ohio transplant who had gotten to know
Lux
and
Ivy
during their sojourn in the Buckeye State, finalized the first proper lineup of the band they called
the Cramps
. Between
Ivy
's twangy single-note leads,
Bryan
's shower-of-sparks reports of noise,
Lux
's demented banshee howling, and
Miriam
's primitive stomp,
the Cramps
didn't sound like anyone else on the budding New York punk scene, and the foursome soon began attracting both crowds and buzz with their shows at CBGB's and Max's Kansas City. After about a year of gigging in and around New York,
Linna
left the group (she would later co-found frantic cultural journal Kicks Magazine and exemplary reissue label Norton Records), and another former Ohioan,
Nick Stephanoff
(known to his fans as
Nick Knox
and previously a member of infamous Cleveland noise terrorists
the Electric Eels
) took over behind the drums, and this version of
the Cramps
released the group's first recordings, a pair of 7" singles recorded in Memphis with
Alex Chilton
as producer and issued by the band's own Vengeance Records label.
In 1979,
Miles Copeland
signed the band to his fledgling new wave label I.R.S. Records, and their first 12" release was an EP featuring the material from their self-released singles, entitled
Gravest Hits
. That same year, the band traveled to Europe for the first time, playing as opening act for
the Police
and stealing the show from the peroxide-addled pop stars many nights.
The Cramps
returned to Memphis with
Chilton
to record their first full-length album, 1980's masterful
Songs the Lord Taught Us
, but what should have been a triumphant U.S. tour following its release was scuttled when
Gregory
unceremoniously quit the band by leaving unannounced with a van full of their equipment; at the time, a story circulated that
Gregory
left
the Cramps
to pursue an interest in Satanism, though in later interviews
Lux
and
Ivy
said there was no truth to these rumors and his actions were more likely the result of his addiction to heroin.
Lux
,
Ivy
, and
Nick
opted to move the band to Hollywood, CA, and recruited
Gun Club
guitarist
Kid Congo Powers
to take over as second guitarist in time to record their second long-player,
Psychedelic Jungle
.
In 1981,
the Cramps
filed suit against I.R.S. Records over unpaid royalties; the court case prevented the band from recording new material for two years, and when they returned to America's record racks, it was with a live album, 1983's
Smell of Female
, recording during a pair of dates at New York City's Peppermint Lounge.
Kid Congo
amicably parted ways with the band shortly afterward, and the search for the right record company kept
the Cramps
out of the studio until the U.K.-based Big Beat label released the ultra-lascivious
A Date With Elvis
in 1986; while several guitarists had come and gone since
Kid Congo
, for these sessions
Poison Ivy
ended up overdubbing herself on bass. In 1987, the group finally found a simpatico bassist in the form of tough gal
Candy Del Mar
, whom
Lux
and
Ivy
met in the parking lot of a liquor store.
Del Mar
made her recorded debut on the live album Rockin n Reelin in Auckland New Zealand, and she was still on board when
the Cramps
finally signed a U.S. record deal with Enigma Records and recorded the fine and full-bodied
Stay Sick!
in 1990.
Only a year later,
the Cramps
were back with a new studio album,
Look Mom No Head!
, but in a surprising move
Nick Knox
had left the band, and was replaced by
Jim Sclavunos
; after
Jim
's short tenure with the group,
Nickey Beat
(aka
Nicky Alexander
, former timekeeper with
the Weirdos
) took over the drum throne before one
Harry Drumdini
signed on. Less startlingly,
Candy Del Mar
was also out of the lineup, replaced by
Slim Chance
, a one-time member of
the Mad Daddys
.
Harry
and
Slim
joined
Lux
and
Ivy
in 1994 for
the Cramps
' first major-label album,
Flamejob
, released by the Warner Bros.-distributed Medicine imprint. As usual, much touring followed, and the band even made an appearance on the popular youth-centric soap opera Beverly Hills 90210 in 1995.
The Cramps
' major-label period proved to be brief, with Cal-punk indie label Epitaph inking a deal with the group to release 1997's
Big Beat from Badsville
, which featured the same lineup as
Flamejob
.
In 2001,
Lux Interior
and
Poison Ivy Rorschach
celebrated the 25th anniversary of
the Cramps
by taking the matters of record-making into their own hands; they revived the long-dormant Vengeance label and reissued their entire post-I.R.S. album catalog (except for
Flamejob
) on expanded and remastered CDs and colored vinyl LPs. A new
Cramps
album followed in 2003,
Fiends of Dope Island
, which (of course) featured yet another personal change, with Chopper Franklin becoming the band's latest bassist. And with
the Cramps
continuing their unholy mission well into the 21st century, they offered their fans a look back with 2004's
How to Make a Monster
, a collection of rare live material and demos. They performed live for the final time in November 2006 at the House of Blues in Anaheim, California, before a relative period of inactivity for the band. Then, in February 2009, the sad news came that
Lux Interior
had passed away, aged 62, at the Glendale Memorial Hospital after suffering an aortic dissection. Tributes were plentiful for such a singular figure and 2011’s File Under Sacred Music: Early Singles 1978-1981 acted as a timely reminder of the passion, prescience and originality that was inherent in the music of
The Cramps
.
–
Mark Deming, Rovi
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More The Cramps
Discography
File Under Sacred Music: Early Singles 1978-1981
The Cramps' Jukebox
How to Make a Monster
Fiends of Dope Island
...Off the Bone/Songs the Lord Taught Us
2004
Songs the Lord Taught Us/Off the Bone/Psychedelic Jungle
2001
Off the Bone
2000
Psychedelic Jungle/Off the Bone/Songs the Lord Taught Us
1999
What's Inside a Girl
1998
Greatest Hits
1997
Big Beat from Badsville
1994
Flamejob
1993
Collection
1991
Look Mom No Head!
1991
Eyeball in My Martini
1990
Stay Sick!
1990
Creature from the Black Leather Lagoon
1990
All Women Are Bad
1989
Psychedelic Jungle/Gravest Hits
1988
What's Inside a Ghoul
1987
Rockin n Reelin in Auckland New Zealand
1986
Date with Elvis
1984
Bad Music for Bad People
1983
Smell of Female
1983
Off the Bone
►
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