Line Out Music & the City at Night

Monday, November 10, 2008

Worship These Monks

Posted by on Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 1:23 PM

I was one of two people in the Northwest Film Forum theater who caught Monks: The Trans-Atlantic Feedback at last night’s 9 o’clock showing. Oof. More people need to see this film (check the schedule for remaining show times here).

Mike Nipper describes the Monks very well in this obit for banjo player Dave Day. Their story is unique (American GIs form band in Germany after fulfilling their military duties; Germans go wild for them), their gimmick was one of a kind (um, they dressed like monks, complete with tonsures), and their music was a sui generis take on beat music that, strangely enough, like the Human Beinz’s “Nobody But Me,” foreshadowed techno with its “every instrument is a percussion instrument” attack and minimalist repetition. (Check out the video below of “Oh, How to Do Now” for proof.) One could also make a reasonable case for the Monks as precursors to punk, too.

The movie is as thorough a history of a mid-’60s beat group who released one LP 43 years ago as anyone could wish for. However, at 100 minutes, Monks could use some judicious editing; the band’s members are not inherently interesting enough to merit the in-depth interviews conducted, though hardcore fans will surely eat up every minute of it.

The movie would have benefited from showcasing more of the Monks’ music, which still sounds explosive and more vital than most of today’s rock. Hearing it, you can totally understand why this truculent, hypnotic, stripped-down (but still catchy) rock influenced the Fall and why Henry Rollins would want to reissue the Monks’ Black Monk Time album on his own label. One of their best-known tracks is titled “I Hate You” (which the Fall covered, fact fans)—an unprecedentedly blunt sentiment in a song during that time.

Seattle label Light in the Attic plans to reissue Monks material in 2009. As the kids sometimes say, hell to the yes.

“Oh, How to Do Now”

Monks: The Trans-Atlantic Feedback trailer

 

Comments (5) RSS

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1
Cripes, the Monks were excellent. Can't wait for the re-issues and finally hearing this stuff for real, from start-to-finish.
Posted by Fawkes on November 10, 2008 at 4:44 PM
2
That's terrible more people didn't turn out for the 9 PM showing. The documentary is great (though I do wish it had more Monks music too, Dave). Also appreciate this making up for anyone put off the film by the terrible Weekly review. It was such a thrill to have Dave Day rocking with all of us at TSK/Cops shows, etc., shortly before he passed away. His presence in the movie is, well, fucking holy.
Posted by Chris Estey on November 10, 2008 at 4:56 PM
3
Last night was full of conflicting interests for me, Dave. Otherwise would've been viewer #3. I plan to see this movie this week. "We Do Wie Du, We do Wie Du, We do."
Posted by Travis on November 10, 2008 at 9:05 PM
4
there were a bunch of people at the 5pm showing this weekend. loved the story, the documentary in and of itself was unimpressive but was totally worth it for the personalities and the live performances back in the 60s- wish there had been more footage!
Posted by shani on November 11, 2008 at 12:09 PM
5
My review copy was a screener of the (soon for sale, I'd reckon) DVD...what it was missing most was the UNCUT LIVE FOOTAGE as a BONUS...I've seen it all footage before, but the film was CLEAN and prrolly off some mastter tape, so not VHS quality. It woulda been the perfect (and MOST wanted) extra...oh well.
Posted by nipper on November 12, 2008 at 12:14 PM

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