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Firehose - Live Totem Pole

Live Totem Pole
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5 out of 5.0 stars 3 Ratings (1 Review)

Album Details: Live Totem Pole

Release Date:01/01/1992
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User Reviews: Live Totem Pole

  • Overall:

    If you can find it buy it!

    By Steve  Nov 30, 1999

    This CD Is VERY VERY good

Pro Reviews: Live Totem Pole

  • All Music Guide

    Firehose's seven-track mini-album from 1992, Live Totem Pole EP, proved to be a strong testament to the trio's high-energy live show. Recorded live at ~the Palomino in North Hollywood, CA, on August 16, 1991, Mike Watt and company sound possessed as they thrash their way through five covers and two overlooked originals from yesteryear. Although the Firehose precursor band, the Minutemen, had covered Blue Öyster Cult's "The Red and the Black" previously, the album-opening version included here simply shreds all previous versions (including BOC's original). Other covers include Public Enemy's "Sophisticated Bitch," the Butthole Surfers' "Revolution (Part Two)," Superchunk's "Slack Motherfucker," and Wire's "Mannequin." A pair of short Watt-penned compositions, "What Gets Heard" and "Makin' the Freeway" (the latter contains a humorous stage warning from Watt to a fan who's "throwing sht"), fit in well with the other selections. Shortly after its release, Live Totem Pole was discontinued, ...and it has become a collectors' item amongst Firehose/Watt fans. - Greg Prato, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

fIREHOSE

In 1985, after D Boon's tragic death at age 28 signalled the end of the Minutemen, bassist Mike Watt and drummer George Hurley threw in their lot with then-22-year-old former Ohio State University student, guitar player, and Minutemen fanatic Ed Crawford to form fIREHOSE. Taking their group name from a line in Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues," fIREHOSE continue... Read more