The first
Primus album was actually a fairly canny way for the band to get itself recorded -- like a number of other acts from the late '80s and after, the trio decided to simply record a couple of live shows for its debut. This has the advantage of not only demonstrating
Primus' undeniable live flair for art/prog rock/funk of its own devising, but capturing an already rabid fan base getting off on it big-time. That said, a good chunk of the album ended up in studio form on
Frizzle Fry the following year, so aside from hyperfans
Suck on This is going to be a bit of a secondary listen, though many of those same fans would claim it as the superior release. Certainly the band is flat-out throughout, its tempo-shifting riffing and
Funkadelic-meets-
Rush rhythm explosions benefiting from a fairly crisp recording. The downside is that
Les Claypool's voice is sometimes searching for breath or a touch buried in the mix, though -- songs like the merry grind of "John the Fisherman" and "Harold of the Rocks" suffer a little for it. Still, anyone who likes the
Zappa/
Beefheart goofy voice approach
Claypool is fond of will be perfectly happy with his nutty lip-flapping on songs like "Groundhog's Day" and "Pudding Time." The highlight is probably "Tommy the Cat," an early favorite that didn't surface in the studio until
Sailing the Seas of Cheese. Here, sans
Tom Waits cameo, it's a rollicking explosion of beatnik rant and spastic lust, while the band makes one hell of a righteous noise unto the heavens. Various stage-patter snippets and other odd moments -- at one point
Claypool cheerily asks the crowd to proclaim
Larry Lalonde a bastard, while elsewhere the band's slogan "We're Primus and we suck" takes a bow -- fill out the disc. ~ Ned Raggett