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December
21 , 1994 |
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Th When Too Far Gone was released, Louisville’s legendary iron ship hybrid of punk and metal, Kinghorse, had been broken up for over three years. Since their breakup, they had been revered and essentially worshipped as an unmatched, historical pinnacle of Louisville’s punk movement. Any attempt to explain the fervor by which the band’s followers venerated the group will fail completely. During their four years together, Kinghorse had seamlessly dominated the local scene; attracting the largest crowds, earning the fattest guarantees, and setting the standards for the scale and level of resourcefulness by which all local bands would operate. And by breaking up in the fall of 1992, at the height of their popularity, they added the mystique of infallibility to their arsenal. Kinghorse was possibly part of a scene of their own, and locally, they seemed to do everything right. Right for themselves, at least. All four members brought scene seniority to the band from the very start, as former members of other legendary Louisville bands, Maurice, Malignant Growth, Solution Unknown, and Fading Out. Plus, with Mike Bucayu in the bass guitar position, they had the local big guns of Self Destruct Records on their side. The group boasted the always controversial Sean “Rat” Garrison singing, the no nonsense Mark Abromavage on guitar, and the unreal Kevin Brownstein on drums. In a December 1990 Courier-Journal review, Paul Curry wrote, “The world of Kinghorse is a dark, frightening place where understanding and compassion seem to be absent, where the individual has been oppressed beyond recognition and forgotten. Until now. Kinghorse represents the rebirth of the individual and the raging struggle necessary to maintain and nourish the soul; they are the musical embodiment of the holy war between illness and health.” However menacing the powers of Kinghorse became, they definitely grew to know their limits. Their music seemed to lose a tremendous amount of its energy when it became a recording, and the phenomenon of their intense popularity never seemed to translate (in any significant numbers) to non-Louisvillian audiences. Both of these downfalls of their otherwise rock solid assault manifested themselves with the release of the first two Kinghorse records. Their first seven inch was “Brother Doubt”/“Freeze” in 1989 on Self Destruct. Recorded at Sound On Sound by Howie Gano, September 3, 1988, the record was a wildfire when it arrived at ear X-tacy. The 500 copies were history in a couple months. The record was unique for several reasons, the first of which was that both songs were on Side One, and the flip side was an etching of the lyrics. The other interesting thing about it was that the subpar recording and even-worse mastering caused the sound quality on Kinghorse’s debut to portray their music in a much lower calibre than the razor sharp group could have performed it. Regardless of the lo-fi audio, the band was quickly shuffled off to do an album for Caroline Records in New York. Both the label and the band had no idea what they were getting into.
The
album was recorded in the Big Apple at Chung King House Of Metal. The
back cover of it describes better than anything what everyone’s
first impression of it was. Huge yellow letters, larger than the band
members names, proclaim, “Produced by Glenn Danzig.” Glenn
was an old friend of Kinghorse singer Sean Garrison, and Caroline apparently
seized the opportunity to capitalize on Danzig’s current celebrity
status. One listen to the album would discourage any producer from putting
their name on it, much less in letters so large. You can almost hear the
bass. The process of accurately transferring the band’s music from
a performance into a recording had once again failed. Nonetheless, the
record, encased in a piece of unfinished-looking “artwork”
by Pushead, and accompanied by Caroline’s marketing strategy, hit
stores in November 1990. They went on a full U.S. tour in support of the
record the following year.
In
the summer of 1994, Matt Loeser and I had what we thought was an impossible
idea. In the two years since the band had broken up, bootleg cassettes
had been circulating of Kinghorse’s last two demos. The first of
these was a six-song Sound On Sound session from October 3, 1991. The
band’s third and final record was pulled from this session. It was
another seven inch on Self Destruct, “Going Home”/“Lose
It.” These six songs were a demo for their second album on Caroline.
The other unreleased demo was a four-song cassette eight-track recording
made at their practice space by Scott Walker in June 1992, just before
they threw in the towel. Our best bet was Mike since he most likely had the master tapes. But even if he agreed to it and gave us the tapes, we still had three other members to locate and get permission from. That was the real problem. After a week or so of joking about the preposterous prospect of having a Kinghorse record on Slamdek, I finally just said “enough” and stopped by Mike’s apartment on Cherokee Road. It was a cool, rainy Friday night and I went by to drop off a check for Self Destruct merchandise I had sold through Slamdek mail orders. We talked about this and that and I got up the nerve to ask him about the unreleased tracks. To my surprise, he didn’t seem to care one way or another. He almost seemed pleased to give me the 10/3/91 DAT. I was sure as hell pleased to have it in my pocket and I just about wet my britches as soon as I walked out the door with it. I think I even did one of those “touchdown!” dances once I got outside. I could not believe it. I figured that Mike and Sean would be the biggest obstacles to overcome, and one was taken care of. I went back and met Matt and we both were ecstatic. A few nights later I was lucky enough to hear that the always elusive Rat was at Blockbuster Video on Bardstown Road. I got in my car and zipped the five blocks there as fast as I could. I caught him and quickly ran the idea by him as he was pacing up and down the aisles spying videos. The frantic, short-haired version of the Rat we once knew agreed that it was some of the band’s best stuff. And he told me he thought it would be good if people could hear it. It was good to see him again, much less to see him getting excited about his former band. I left that evil video store with an unbelievable feeling. Two down, two to go. Mike and Sean were the two members of the band I knew best, and I figured if they wanted it to happen then Kevin and Mark would probably be behind it, too. Sean got excited about it and went ahead and called both of them. They were interested. It was unreal. I knew that a Kinghorse CD of unreleased material on Slamdek was going to be huge, it was going to be unprecedented, and it was going to solidify the label’s role as “Louisville’s Record Company” once and for all. Kinghorse, especially for Slamdek, was the great beyond, the unthinkable, the icing on the cake we call Louisville. Everything was set. I began talking to Kevin in Dallas on the telephone. The plan evolved quickly from a six-song CD of the October ’91 recording into a disc that compiled all of Kinghorse’s unavailable material. This included work from three different recordings: the six-song Sound On Sound demo (10/91), the four-song Scott Walker cassette recording (6/92), and to my immense delight, six of the eight songs from the band’s first recording (9/88) [the two missing tracks comprised their first 7"]. Since Kevin was working in a mega-studio at the time, he was interested in getting a hold of the original reels and completely remixing as many of the tracks as possible. I thought that was fine, but I didn’t have any money to offer him for the studio time. He had recently laid a kitchen floor in his boss’ house who owed him a favor for doing so. Kevin concentrated on getting the tracks remixed, Sean worked on getting all the lyrics together, and I started working on the layout. Kevin’s task in this process was undoubtedly the most tedious, time consuming, and difficult. He spent several days working on the material, some of which was in pretty bad shape. Scott Walker’s cassette eight-track recording was transferred to a digital multitrack tape to make it easier to work with. Kevin’s friend Tim Kimsey, who worked on the second Pantera album, assisted him with the grueling task. But the multitrack master for the first Sound On Sound session was not saved, so those six songs were simply transferred from the 1/4" mixdown reel. Kevin also took care of clearing the new release through Caroline, with whom the defunct Kinghorse was still technically contracted. Kevin and I talked several times a week, both cramming to get the project done quickly for a Christmas season release, yet double-checking every last detail with every member of the band. It also had to be shipped off before I left for a five-week Metroschifter tour in early November. We located some really nice pictures which had been shot in 1992 for a story in Louisville Music News. A professional photographer took them, however, and charged us about a million dollars to use them. My intense excitement about the CD was the only thing that got my part done on time. Those guys drove me fucking crazy when we were putting the artwork together. Every little last small little thing itsy bitsy microscopic thing had to be an issue. The last few days of the project, I slept maybe two or three hours a night. There just wasn’t enough time. By the time it was all finished, I felt so compelled that I asked the band if I could include a few words about the CD itself in the liner notes. They agreed...
Everything was finally in order and delivered to Midwest Records in Dallas, who made the CD’s. John Timmons from ear X-tacy helped yet another Slamdek release materialize by pre-ordering several hundred discs. I left on the five-week U.S. tour with the Metroschifter, periodically keeping in contact by telephone with Kevin, John, and Clay Thompson at Midwest. Since I was out of town, when the discs arrived in mid-December, the entire order was delivered to ear X-tacy in Tyler Park Plaza. At 2,000 units, this was the largest initial order of any Slamdek release. In exchange for the pre-order, ear X-tacy had a four-week exclusive on the CD and they moved about 300 of them by Christmas. Pretty much everyone I knew got one for Christmas as well. It was cool. The credits page of the inside booklet included the Self Destruct and Slamdek logos side by side, and the note, “This compilation was made possible through the gracious cooperation of Caroline Records and Self Destruct Records.” Just before Too Far Gone hit the shelves, I talked with Kevin in Dallas from a pay phone on tour in Minneapolis. He told me that he and Sean had been talking about putting the band back together. “Oh my God,” was all I could say. Kevin was going to come to Louisville for a few weeks surrounding Christmas, during which they’d all get together. If things clicked like they used to and it seemed to be the thing to do, Kevin would move back and the ’horse would ride again. By the time Kevin arrived in Louisville, it was clear that bassist Mike Bucayu wanted nothing to do with a reformed Kinghorse. He had left his six-year post behind the counter at ear X-tacy to become the owner and full-time keeper of Blue Moon Records in Holiday Manor shopping center. Mike said he would do some reunion shows in support of the CD, but he had no interest in reforming the group on a permanent basis. The other three members made a crucial decision to put Kinghorse on stage for the first time with a different lineup. The teenaged Jerry Cunningham of Raze was selected to fill Mike’s shoes. Between Christmas and the reformed Kinghorse’s first show, Slamdek closed down. Nonetheless, April 22, 1995 at the Grand Theatre in New Albany, the Hate Machine was reborn. Before hundreds of teenaged lemmings, many of whom were familiar with Kinghorse only through the band’s tall legend, poorly produced album, and new CD on Slamdek, the reformed group took the stage. The sound check we witnessed that day was unreal. Not only was it Kinghorse in 1995 doing a sound check, but they sounded great, like they never stopped to take three years off. A blast from the past. When show time rolled around, Mark arrived intoxicated and in no condition to perform the set. The show went on anyway. And, in so many words, for the first time ever, they sucked. Here’s the play-by-play as reported in Hard Times by the Godfather, Darrell Ray Elmore...
After the show at the Grand, the band was very anxious to get the word out that that was obviously not the Kinghorse that had become so legendary. The quickest way to do that was to play again and prove the opposite. Later that summer, looking back on the experience of the band getting screwed by Caroline, breaking up, and then flopping at their comeback show, Sean told Highlands Lowlife fanzine, “We even have to totally establish our local supremacy again. There are a lot of people who were at that Grand show who will never come to another gig. Maybe they will in six months. I hate to say it, but it almost seemed that it was the will of something that was way bigger than us. Like a pre-disastered start to which nothing else can pale. Now I feel as if this band is almost pre-disastered. Everything bad that could have conceivably happened to this band has already happened. I can’t conceivably imagine anything else happening, unless one of us commits suicide, or is hit by a car. I can’t think of anything else that hasn’t gone wrong already!” The band lost everything, but somehow didn’t lose its desire. They fought back quickly with shows at the Cherokee (former Tewligans building) and the Butchertown Pub, regular (or irregular) appearances on the Sell Out Louisville Style radio program, their own forms of printed propaganda, and loads of out-of-town show dates. As I’m sitting here writing this book, it is still amazing to me that Kinghorse is a band. They have persevered and anything that has been thrown their way has not seemed to damage them in any way. Everything we always respected about them years ago, that caused us all to mimic their methods, still hold true about them today. I can’t think of any other Louisville band that has ever been truer-to-form than Kinghorse or more revered as a truly Louisvillian phenomenon. I also can’t name any band on Slamdek whose addition to the label surprised me more, or made me feel more like the label’s relevance to the city’s musical history was important. To everyone’s delight, Too Far Gone was met with a wave of excellent local reviews and took its rightful place as the most anticipated release Louisville had been waiting for... and didn’t even know it. |
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| LINER NOTES: Mark Abromavage,
guitar Track listing: *=prank call tracks Kinghorse Produced by Kevin Brownstein, CD Prep by Frank Salizar, Designed by Scott Ritcher, Background graphics by Mooch, Cover Photos by Nick Bonura. Thanks to: John Timmons and ear X-tacy, Scott Ritcher, Tim Kimsey, Clint Strickland, Chris MacDermott, Blue Moon Records, Brian Murphy, Gertrude Bucket, Scott Walker, Stefanie Donnelly, our friends, families, and fans. Tracks 1-6: Tracks 8-13: Tracks 15-18: All songs by Kinghorse, lyrics by Sean Garrison except “Lay Down And Die” lyrics by Brett Ralph, music by Mark Abromavage; and “What Am I Supposed to Do?” lyrics and music by Mark Abromavage. Tracks 7 and 19 field recordings and arrangement by Kevin Brownstein. Track 14 performed by Hank Sharmann and the TP Rollers. [aka Kevin] |
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