Etron Fou Leloublan's third studio album came out four years after its second, but the group had released the live
En Public aux États-Unis d'Amérique in the interim. The trio lineup from that live album (drummer
Guigou Chenevier, bassist
Ferdinand Richard, and saxophonist
Bernard Mathieu) is here expanded to a quartet with the arrival of
Jo Thirion on Farfisa organ, piano, and trumpet. The music has also changed considerably. Gone are the long, multi-part epics and the free-form improvisations; now the songs are tighter and shorter (between two and seven minutes). The album is overall more accessible, but only because the previous two were so off the wall. But while previous studio efforts were indescribable manifestations from unique creators,
Les Poumons Gonflés falls more easily into the early-'80s current of avant-garde rock. Parallels can be traced back to
Samla Mammas Manna, the Art Bears,
the Muffins, Quebec's
Wondeur Brass and
André Duchesne, and most of all
Fred Frith, who produced the album and performed on two songs (
Etron Fou had played backup band duties for half of the ex-
Henry Cow member's solo LP Speechless a few months earlier). Despite the presence of a fourth member in
Thirion, the songs sound colder and fleshed out, but they gain in focus without losing their wacky lyrics (still no English translations in the CD reissue; too bad). Highlights include the story of "Christine," who left her newborn child on the train (if you think that sounds dramatic you should guess again), the angular "Nicole," and
Chenevier's instrumental piece "Upsalla," a tribute to
Samla Mammas Manna (based in Upsalla, Sweden). Especially for non-French speaking listeners who can't grasp the Dadaist stories central to the LPs Batelages and Les Trois Fous Perdégagnent,
Les Poumons Gonflés is the best point of entry in
Etron Fou's discography. ~ François Couture