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=== CMJ New Music Report ===
=== CMJ New Music Report ===
July 3, 1995<ref>https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/1995/CMJ-New-Music-Report-1995-07-03.pdf</ref><blockquote>We casually dismissed initial pre-release announcements of ''Coconut Hotel'', the great "lost" Red Krayola album from 1967, thinking it was merely a joke from those nutty pranksters at Drag City, but lo and behold, here is an unheard curio from the Mayo Thompson archives. Bearing little relation to either the freak-out psychedelia of ''Parable of Arable Land'' (1967) or the wonderfully oddball songs of ''God Bless The Red Crayola And All Who Sail With Her'' (1968), ''Coconut Hotel'' is not a great revelation but a rather interesting oddity: Thompson and Krayola kohorts Rick Barthelme and Steve Cunningham play spare improvisations with a pile of different instruments — occasional plucks, miscellaneous horn bleats, piano tinkling, wandering drones, the sound of pouring water, etc. The highlight is several dozen "One Second Pieces" for trumpet/piano/percussion.</blockquote>
July 3, 1995<ref>https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/1995/CMJ-New-Music-Report-1995-07-03.pdf</ref><blockquote>We casually dismissed initial pre-release announcements of ''Coconut Hotel'', the great "lost" Red Krayola album from 1967, thinking it was merely a joke from those nutty pranksters at [[Drag City]], but lo and behold, here is an unheard curio from the [[Mayo Thompson]] archives. Bearing little relation to either the freak-out psychedelia of ''[[The Parable of Arable Land|Parable of Arable Land]]'' (1967) or the wonderfully oddball songs of ''[[God Bless the Red Krayola and All Who Sail With It|God Bless The Red Crayola And All Who Sail With Her]]'' (1968), ''Coconut Hotel'' is not a great revelation but a rather interesting oddity: Thompson and Krayola kohorts [[Frederick Barthelme|Rick Barthelme]] and [[Steve Cunningham]] play spare improvisations with a pile of different instruments — occasional plucks, miscellaneous horn bleats, piano tinkling, wandering drones, the sound of pouring water, etc. The highlight is several dozen "[[One-Second Piece|One Second Pieces]]" for trumpet/piano/percussion.</blockquote>


=== Testcard #1 ===
=== Testcard #1 ===
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===The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock===
===The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock===
1997<ref>https://archive.org/details/trouserpressguid00robb_1/page/597/mode/1up</ref><blockquote>Coconut Hotel, however, is pushing it. The all-improvised doodles on various real (guitar, horns, bass, piano, organ) and found instruments (mainly splashing water, handy clangables, shakeables and chalkboard-pleasant scrapeables) was recorded in 1967 by the original Red Crayola (Thompson, Steve Cunningham and Frederick Barthelme) and understandably rejected by International Artists as the followup to The Parable of Arable Land. The trio's photo on the back cover is no less unnerving or off-putting than the random contents, which could only serve as a fatal test for hypertension or the soundtrack to something far more squirm-inducing than ''Eraserhead''.</blockquote>
1997<ref>https://archive.org/details/trouserpressguid00robb_1/page/597/mode/1up</ref><blockquote>Coconut Hotel, however, is pushing it. The all-improvised doodles on various real (guitar, horns, bass, piano, organ) and found instruments (mainly splashing water, handy clangables, shakeables and chalkboard-pleasant scrapeables) was recorded in 1967 by the original Red Crayola (Thompson, Steve Cunningham and Frederick Barthelme) and understandably rejected by [[International Artists]] as the followup to [[The Parable of Arable Land]]. The trio's photo on the back cover is no less unnerving or off-putting than the random contents, which could only serve as a fatal test for hypertension or the soundtrack to something far more squirm-inducing than ''Eraserhead''.</blockquote>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 13:40, 26 March 2023

Track listing

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Boards"6:28
2."Water Pour"4:39
3."One-Second Pieces" (36)3:24
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."Organ Buildup"1:05
2."Vocal"6:28
3."Free Guitar"6:27
4."One-Minute Imposition"1:08
5."Piano"2:10
6."Guitar"1:28
Total length:33:21

Background

Valle Aridane Hotel, 2021[1]

Recorded 1967

Released 1995

Personnel

The Red Crayola

Technical

Cover art

The cover photo was taken by Mayo Thompson, likely in 1966, and shows the Coconut Hotel in the Canary Islands[2]. The building is now the Valle Aridane Hotel[3].

The band photo on the back cover is by Les Blank.

Issues

Release Format Label Cat. No. Notes
1995 LP Drag City DC62
1995 CD Drag City DC62CD
2014 LP Drag City DC62

Reviews

CMJ New Music Report

July 3, 1995[4]

We casually dismissed initial pre-release announcements of Coconut Hotel, the great "lost" Red Krayola album from 1967, thinking it was merely a joke from those nutty pranksters at Drag City, but lo and behold, here is an unheard curio from the Mayo Thompson archives. Bearing little relation to either the freak-out psychedelia of Parable of Arable Land (1967) or the wonderfully oddball songs of God Bless The Red Crayola And All Who Sail With Her (1968), Coconut Hotel is not a great revelation but a rather interesting oddity: Thompson and Krayola kohorts Rick Barthelme and Steve Cunningham play spare improvisations with a pile of different instruments — occasional plucks, miscellaneous horn bleats, piano tinkling, wandering drones, the sound of pouring water, etc. The highlight is several dozen "One Second Pieces" for trumpet/piano/percussion.

Testcard #1

September 1995[5]

The Trouser Press guide to '90s rock

1997[6]

Coconut Hotel, however, is pushing it. The all-improvised doodles on various real (guitar, horns, bass, piano, organ) and found instruments (mainly splashing water, handy clangables, shakeables and chalkboard-pleasant scrapeables) was recorded in 1967 by the original Red Crayola (Thompson, Steve Cunningham and Frederick Barthelme) and understandably rejected by International Artists as the followup to The Parable of Arable Land. The trio's photo on the back cover is no less unnerving or off-putting than the random contents, which could only serve as a fatal test for hypertension or the soundtrack to something far more squirm-inducing than Eraserhead.

References