The
alt-rock revolution of the '90s opened the doors to the mainstream for a bunch of weirdos, chief among them
Primus, the Bay Area-based trio led by bassist/singer/prankster
Les Claypool. From the start, they were alternative primarily because they didn't quite fit any other category. Their roots were in the Bay Area
metal scene, which kind of fit since they were indeed heavy even if they weren't quite metallic, plus they shared an instrumental virtuosity not uncommon to
metal, even if in
Primus' case it often sounded like an extrapolation of
Frank Zappa -- and that was in large part due to
Claypool's satiric lyrics, equally as cynical and vulgar as
Zappa, but delivered without the same level of pretension (although he did often manage to nail part of
Frank's condescension). But above all,
Primus was jokey, their music exploding in garish colors as if it was a
Tex Avery cartoon, which the gleefully grotesque clay and cartoon album covers resembled. They jammed, but their exaggerated rhythms, dissonant chords, and intricate riffs made it all sound like a soundtrack to absurd antics. Their songs were peppered with characters like Tommy the Cat, John the Fisherman, Jerry the Race Car Driver, Mr. Krinkle, and a murderer called Mud, all personified by
Claypool in a voice that sounded like he held his nose while he sang. Not quite the raw ingredients for a huge band, but
Primus came along at the right time, with their breakthrough second album, 1991's
Sailing the Seas of Cheese, arriving not long after
Faith No More and
the Red Hot Chili Peppers made
funk-metal popular, and not long before
Nirvana made all underground
rock commercially viable.
Primus rode this wave all the way toward the top of the
Billboard charts, as their third record, 1993's
Pork Soda, debuted at number seven, leading toward a headlining slot on the third
Lollapalooza that year. They weren't as huge as
Nirvana or
Pearl Jam, but there's little question that
Primus was one of the big
alt-rock bands in America during the peak of
alt-rock, and they did it without a commercial crossover to their name.
But they did have a number of
MTV and modern
rock radio staples in the '90s, and they're all collected on 2006's
They Can't All Be Zingers, the band's first compilation. Removed from their brief, inexplicable peak, these songs still sound strange, but not necessarily in the way they were intended -- and if ever there was a band that tried to sound strange, it was
Primus. As this well-chosen comp illustrates through its selection of hits and album tracks, they were self-consciously funny-sounding without quite being funny, deliberately abrasive yet never quite rocking. They were certainly not
grunge, nor were they really rooted in
punk the way so many
alternative rock bands were: they were an arty
jam band, which is the reason why
Claypool wound up forming collectives with other arty jammers such as
Phish's
Trey Anastasio and
the Police's
Stewart Copeland when
Primus was on one of their many hiatuses. That artiness and virtuosity is abundant on
They Can't All Be Zingers, which is really all the casual
Primus fan or '90s nostalgist needs, since a little of this goes a long, long way for all but the faithful. In a way, the manic
"Jerry Was a Race Car Driver," "Tommy the Cat," with its
Tom Waits cameo, or the crude but funny
"Wynona's Big Brown Beaver" still retain their power: they still sound boldly colorful and willfully annoying, but even if you're ready to turn off any of the songs by the time they reach the second verse, it's still hard not to admire
Primus for their sheer musicianship as well as how they stuck to their defiantly weird guns. As this comp proves, they didn't change much from their debut through to their 2003 EP
Animals Should Not Try to Act Like People, and even if that's not strictly your cup of tea, it's hard not to admire that -- and hard not to be a bit nostalgic for a time when a band like this could sneak onto the charts and become platinum-selling artists with music as odd as this. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine