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Rhythm and Paranoia: The Best of Bush ...

1.2M streams

1,194,372

Snakes Crawl EP

1.2M streams

1,182,447

Boom in the Night

1.1M streams

1,077,608

Happy

95.8K streams

95,830

They Live in My Head

84K streams

84,010

Take the Fall

65.6K streams

65,607

There Is A Hum

42.6K streams

42,573

Cutting Floor

Bird on a Wire

They Live in My Head

Biography

The Bush Tetras were prescient outliers on the New York underground music scene of the late '70s and early '80s. While their music was taut and aggressive like punk, Pat Place's guitar added an inspired dissonance that reflected her connections to the city's no wave scene (she worked with two of James Chance's better-known projects, the Contortions and James White & the Blacks). Their crucial early '80s recordings (collected on 1995's Boom in the Night) also showed the influence of dub in their rubbery basslines and sense of space, and the group's chaotic but muscular attack anticipated the mid-'80s noise rock movement as well as post-punk. 2021's Rhythm and Paranoia: The Best of Bush Tetras was a career-spanning anthology that's the best introduction to their music, and after the death of longtime drummer Dee Pop, Sonic Youth's Steve Shelley joined the band and produced 2023's They Live in My Head. The Bush Tetras were founded in 1979 by guitarist Pat Place, vocalist Cynthia Sley, bassist Laura Kennedy, and drummer Dee Pop (aka Dimitri Papadopoulos). The band's name was a compromise between Place's idea for the group's handle, the Neon Tetras, and Sley's suggestion, the Bush Babies. After making a name for themselves on the N.Y.C. club circuit, they released their debut single, "Too Many Creeps," on the independent 99 Records imprint in 1980. The tune's angular but funky sound helped it get play at cutting-edge dance clubs, and the song eventually rose to number 57 on the club play charts. The song's success attracted the attention of the U.K. label Fetish Records, which released their next single, "Things That Go Boom in the Night," in 1981. That same year, the Bush Tetras issued a four-song EP, Rituals, that was produced by Topper Headon of the Clash; Fetish released it in the U.K., while Stiff America brought it out stateside. Stiff brought the Bush Tetras to London to play as part of a showcase of New York bands that was recorded for a live album; the LP, 1981's Start Swimming, featured two cuts from the band, "Punch Drunk" and a sinister cover of John Lennon's "Cold Turkey." The group toured the United States, and ROIR Records dropped a cassette-only live album by the band, Wild Things, in 1983. Later that year, Laura Kennedy and Dee Pop both left the band, and while they briefly soldiered on with Bob Albertson on bass and Don Christenson on drums, by the end of the year the Bush Tetras had broken up. After the band's split, Pat Place worked with spoken word performer Maggie Estep and created visual art. Cynthia Sley collaborated with former Richard Hell guitarist Ivan Julian in the Lovelies. Dee Pop backed a wide variety of artists, including Richard Lloyd, Jayne Country, Darlene Love, Gary Lucas, and the Gun Club; he also founded the groups Floor Kiss and Immaculate Hearts. In 1989, ROIR released a collection of Bush Tetras studio recordings, Better Late Than Never: 1980-1983, which helped spark new interest in the band. In 1995, after the success of Nirvana briefly rewrote the rules of commercial expectations for underground bands, the Bush Tetras reunited with their full original lineup. The reunion coincided with the release of a collection of the group's studio material, Boom in the Night, while yet another appeared in 1996, Tetrafied, which was compiled by Henry Rollins. The Bush Tetras next cut their first proper album, Beauty Lies, which was produced by Nona Hendryx and released by Tim/Kerr Records in 1997. The LP failed to make an impression in the marketplace. The group cut a second album for Tim/Kerr, produced by Don Fleming, but when Polygram, Tim/Kerr's parent company, was sold, the album ended up on the shelf, and in frustration, the Bush Tetras quietly dissolved in 1998. Place took up photography and Sley became a teacher. In 2005, the Bush Tetras once again returned to duty, with Place, Sley, and Pop joined by bassist Julia Murphy; Laura Kennedy was struggling with health problems, and died in 2011. The group focused on live work and toured periodically; a collection of fresh and hard-to-find material, Very Very Happy, was issued by ROIR in 2007, while the same label would give a belated release to the shelved second Tim/Kerr album in 2012, under the title Happy. In 2013, Cindy Rickmond took over on bass from Julia Murphy, while Murphy returned to the lineup in 2015. Val Opielski became the Bush Tetras' bassist in time for the recording of the 2018 EP Take the Fall. Drummer Dee Pop died in his sleep on October 9, 2021, the night before the Bush Tetras were to play a show celebrating the upcoming November release of a career-spanning box set, Rhythm and Paranoia: The Best of Bush Tetras. During the COVID-19 lockdown of 2020, the members of the Bush Tetras had been writing songs, sharing their ideas via Zoom calls, and after Pop's passing, they wanted to complete the music they began making with their late friend. As it happened, Steve Shelley, the former Sonic Youth drummer whose band was keenly influenced by the Bush Tetras' early work, agreed to join the band, and after playing a handful of live shows, they went into the studio, with Shelley producing the sessions. They Live in My Head, only the third full-length album recorded by the Bush Tetras in their long history, was issued by Wharf Cat Records in July 2023. Shortly before it came out, the group revealed Rocky O’Riordan -- aka Cait O’Riordan, who had played with the Pogues, the Radiators from Space, and the Hothouse Flowers -- had signed on as their bassist. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi