8-Track of the Moment: George Harrison - Electronic Sound

8-track of the Moment - February, 2002

David Peel and the Lower East Side
Have a Marijuana

Date: 1968
Elektra Records

Program 1
Here Comes a Cop
The Alphabet Song
Show Me the Way to get Stoned
Program 3
I Like Marijuana
I've Got Some Grass
Happy Mother's Day
Program 2
Mother where is my Father?
Up Against the Wall
We Love You
Program 4
Up Against the Wall
I do my Bawling in the Bathroom

Thanks to Lynne Alman for this tape!!


The following write-up was plagiarized from various points on the Internet:

David Peel is one of the great lost geniuses of rock music. His first two albums rank among rock's masterpieces even if they have been heard by very few people. He played folk music with the emphasis of punk-rock and the arrangements of a street musician. He continued the wildly unorthodox saga of the Fugs and predated all the nuts who will play "lo-fi pop" in the 1990s. Except that he played it with divine recklessness. No major encyclopedia or history of rock music mentions him.

At first, second and third listen, "Have a Marijuana," the debut record by New York street musician and John Lennon protégé David Peel seems pretty ridiculous. Recorded live on the streets of New York, the production is patchy, yielding more of a "recorded live in someone's bathroom" vibe than anything else. Then there's the lyrics, all of which are juvenile, dated and delivered in an erratic Tiny Tim-meets-Cheech & Chong style. But somewhere around the fourth or fifth listen Peel and his merry band of misfits begin to grow on you. By the six or seventh spin songs like "I Do My Bawling in the Bathroom" and "I Like Marijuana," with their dumber than dumb choruses and out of tune folk-rock progressions, actually become charming. 

Perhaps it's because Peel, a marginal figure born to be a cultural relic, is a much more interesting, exciting and entertaining '60s icon than all the overblown, bloated characters like David Crosby and Grace Slick. Unlike them, Peel never came in from off the streets. In fact, he can still be found singing these songs in New York's Tompkins Square Park to this day. And while that's mildly pathetic, it's also heartening. When he sings about smoking some grass and getting harassed by lame cops (the topic of just about every track) you tend to believe him. 

Check out his current antics here: http://www.davidpeelnyc.com/ 


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