Tupelo Chain Sex was a 1980s era punk/jazz/rockabilly musical group founded by Dave Dahlson aka "Limey Dave", J.J. Poskin (aka JJ Holiday), Sim Cass, and Joey Altruda who also founded the group Jump With Joey. In the early 1980s, they were headline performers at Club Lingerie in Los Angeles, and also performed at the Sunday Club at Cathay de Grande (restaurant), The Music Machine, Al's Bar, The Anti-Club, and the O.N. Klub, among others, and toured extensively[1] with groups like The Circle Jerks.[2]
In 1982, Willy "Wooly" McNeil joined what was then called "a raucous psychobilly outfit".[3] Lead singer "Limey" Dave (Dave Dahlson), the front man for the group, sported a blue Mohawk, tattoos of Roman soldiers, women's sunglasses, jeans with the ass cheeks cut out, and was purportedly a narcoleptic.[4]
Critics have had difficulty classifying the music of Tupelo Chain Sex as exemplified by The Miami News noting that "Their music has been called jazz, bop, be-bop, R&B, swing, reggae, country, rock, blues, punk, funk, Latin, mambo, thrash, calypso, salsa, soul, shuffle, skiffle, ska, skank, surf, boogie, jive, dub ... and psycho-billy."[6]
When the group hit the Los Angeles music scene, the Los Angeles Times called it "bizarre" and "an avant-garde rockabilly combo featuring washboard, harmonica and a singer named Limey Dave who sports a Mohawk, shouts dislocated epics like Elvis Presley Meets E.T., and alters his vocals through an echo device".[7] In a subsequent review of a live performance, The Times declared that one of the group's major musical influences appeared to be dada.[8]
The Washington Post called their music a "startling musical synthesis ... delivered with the visceral force of a punk group, as well as with the tricky tempos and superb solos of a jazz combo".[9]
A SPIN Magazine reviewer called the group's approach to music a relationship between "Charlie Parker and, say, The Dead Kennedys" and Spot the Difference "the most eclectic album I've heard all year".[2]
Discography
What Is It (Selma, 1982, LP)
Ja-Jazz (Selma, 1983, LP)
Spot the Difference (Selma, 1984, LP)
Dr. Nightcall b/w Two Cadillacs Crash! (Selma, 1984, 7" ps)
Record Breaker (DeLuxe, 1985, bootleg 10" on coloured vinyl)
4! (Cargo, 1989, LP & CD)
References
^Mullen, Brendan (2006). Whores: An Oral Biography of Perry Farrell and Jane's Addiction. Da Capo Press. p. 5. ISBN978-0-306-81478-5.
^ abFarren, Mick (July 1985). "Tupelo Chain Sex: Spot the Difference". SPIN. New York, NY: 33. ISSN0886-3032.
^Grigg, Jane (Winter 1992). "Generations United". Straight No Chaser Magazine: The Magazine of World Jazz Jive. Archived from the original on 2007-05-22. Retrieved 28 October 2010.