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Blood Sucking Maniacs - Blood Sucking Maniacs

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Blood Sucking Maniacs - Blood Sucking Maniacs

As a child—this would have been sometime in the mid-1970s—Terry and Jo Harvey Allen’s son Bale assembled in the front yard of their Fresno home a curiousdevice, an elaborate congeries of crucifixes and mirrors suspended in deadfall.It was, the fledgling artist patiently explained to his bemused parents, avampire trap.Half a century later, Blood Sucking Maniacs, the record by the eponymous Allen family band, resembles, in its own manner—that is, unwieldyand convoluted, ardent and hammy, slightly deranged—a vampire trap in both construction and intent.A bricolage of potent symbols and spare parts, wary ofthe eternal, at once affectionate and defensive, vulnerable and dangerous, fiercely protective of past and future wounds.In other words, a family—or amechanism for one specific family to write (and interpret) itself.These maniacs, ten kin, span five generations and 121 years.In order of descending seniority:Pauline Allen, Terry’s hellraising, barrelhouse piano-playing mother, who died in 1984 but joins the party through a transmission from beyond the grave; JoHarvey and Terry, the matriarch and patriarch, who, separately and together, inhabit myriad artistic endeavors; Bukka, their firstborn, an accomplishedsongwriter and studio and touring musician; Bale, their younger son, an equally accomplished visual artist, gallerist, and drummer; their three grandsons,Sled (a drummer, entrepreneur, and fisherman; see the “some like to fish” lyric in theme song “Blood Sucking Maniacs”) and Calder (another songwriter,musician, and fisherman), Bale’s two boys, and Bukka’s son Kru (a piano-playing football star); their granddaughter-in-law Sophie (music industry executiveand mother), and finally, Sled and Sophie’s baby boy, Lucky Marlo, Terry and Jo Harvey’s first great-grandchild, whose fetal heartbeat opens and closes therecord with the actual (ultra)sound of coursing Allen blood.Terry has designated four additional official Maniacs, surrogate family members adopted into theAllen family fold: Richard Bowden and Lloyd Maines (credited as the “Blood Brothers”), the benevolent bedrock of the Panhandle Mystery Band since the firstday of recording Lubbock (on everything) in the summer of 1978, and real-life brothers Charlie Sexton and Will Sexton (the “Bastard Children”), who, betweenthem, have collaborated with the Allens and just about anybody else you can imagine.Though their bloodlines are, genetically speaking, different, thesemaniacs have drunk deeply of Allen blood, and their sympathetic playing elevates these recordings.The songs collected herein are miscellaneous andmultiplex, comprising heartrending ballads and arch in-jokes on a spectrum from sublime to unabashedly sentimental, mordant to doting.Thesecontradictory qualities, too, are redolent of family.The unifying principle here is not so much blood harmony as blood entropy.It’s all one thing,” Terry hasoften said, when confronted by confused critics, of his multidisciplinary practice, which embraces music, art, writing, and theater.The same formula appliesto the Allens’ conception of art and family—it’s all one thing, or it can be.Notwithstanding the popular misconceptions about the romantic life of the hermiticartist and his hermetic art, family need not be an inconvenience or impediment to sidestep on the path to artistic fulfillment or career success (whateverthose two absurd, abstract metrics might mean).Art and family need not present separate or parallel conditions and experiences but can, as in “Bloodlines,”the reprised title track of Terry’s 1983 album, flow together in confluence.
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As a child—this would have been sometime in the mid-1970s—Terry and Jo Harvey Allen’s son Bale assembled in the front yard of their Fresno home a curiousdevice, an elaborate congeries of crucifixes and mirrors suspended in deadfall.It was, the fledgling artist patiently explained to his bemused parents, avampire trap.Half a century later, Blood Sucking Maniacs, the record by the eponymous Allen family band, resembles, in its own manner—that is, unwieldyand convoluted, ardent and hammy, slightly deranged—a vampire trap in both construction and intent.A bricolage of potent symbols and spare parts, wary ofthe eternal, at once affectionate and defensive, vulnerable and dangerous, fiercely protective of past and future wounds.In other words, a family—or amechanism for one specific family to write (and interpret) itself.These maniacs, ten kin, span five generations and 121 years.In order of descending seniority:Pauline Allen, Terry’s hellraising, barrelhouse piano-playing mother, who died in 1984 but joins the party through a transmission from beyond the grave; JoHarvey and Terry, the matriarch and patriarch, who, separately and together, inhabit myriad artistic endeavors; Bukka, their firstborn, an accomplishedsongwriter and studio and touring musician; Bale, their younger son, an equally accomplished visual artist, gallerist, and drummer; their three grandsons,Sled (a drummer, entrepreneur, and fisherman; see the “some like to fish” lyric in theme song “Blood Sucking Maniacs”) and Calder (another songwriter,musician, and fisherman), Bale’s two boys, and Bukka’s son Kru (a piano-playing football star); their granddaughter-in-law Sophie (music industry executiveand mother), and finally, Sled and Sophie’s baby boy, Lucky Marlo, Terry and Jo Harvey’s first great-grandchild, whose fetal heartbeat opens and closes therecord with the actual (ultra)sound of coursing Allen blood.Terry has designated four additional official Maniacs, surrogate family members adopted into theAllen family fold: Richard Bowden and Lloyd Maines (credited as the “Blood Brothers”), the benevolent bedrock of the Panhandle Mystery Band since the firstday of recording Lubbock (on everything) in the summer of 1978, and real-life brothers Charlie Sexton and Will Sexton (the “Bastard Children”), who, betweenthem, have collaborated with the Allens and just about anybody else you can imagine.Though their bloodlines are, genetically speaking, different, thesemaniacs have drunk deeply of Allen blood, and their sympathetic playing elevates these recordings.The songs collected herein are miscellaneous andmultiplex, comprising heartrending ballads and arch in-jokes on a spectrum from sublime to unabashedly sentimental, mordant to doting.Thesecontradictory qualities, too, are redolent of family.The unifying principle here is not so much blood harmony as blood entropy.It’s all one thing,” Terry hasoften said, when confronted by confused critics, of his multidisciplinary practice, which embraces music, art, writing, and theater.The same formula appliesto the Allens’ conception of art and family—it’s all one thing, or it can be.Notwithstanding the popular misconceptions about the romantic life of the hermiticartist and his hermetic art, family need not be an inconvenience or impediment to sidestep on the path to artistic fulfillment or career success (whateverthose two absurd, abstract metrics might mean).Art and family need not present separate or parallel conditions and experiences but can, as in “Bloodlines,”the reprised title track of Terry’s 1983 album, flow together in confluence.