Johnny Thompson Quintet?

Sancho Panza

Ikon Class
Joined
Apr 27, 2011
Heard it yesterday, but I noticed that it is two versions, one with the spelling "Color Me Columbus" and the other "Color Me Columbuth". "Color Me Columbus" is the a-side and "Color Me Columbuth" the b-side. It's the same music, but the lyrics differs some and the delivery, the b-side, sounds more "english", maybe I'm totally wrong now.

Just want to get some clairty of why there are two versions of the song.

"Color Me Columbus"



"Color Me Columbuth"

 
I never heard this. Are they crazy? Did they escape from somewhere? Will the singer strangle me? What is this?!
"Talk Talk", "Spazz" and "Be Forwarned" all put into one?
Acid Punk reaching even higher levels of noise and mayhem?
I fuckin don't BELIEVE this is 1966!
No matter what: it is friggin' AWESOMENESS!!

Mark, is there a button saying: I extremely like this?
 
I never heard this. Are they crazy? Did they escape from somewhere? Will the singer strangle me? What is this?!
"Talk Talk", "Spazz" and "Be Forwarned" all put in one?
Acid Punk reaching even higher levels of noise and mayhem?
I fuckin don't BELIEVE this is 1966!
No matter what: it is friggin' AWESOMESS!!

Mark, is there a button saying: I extremely like this?

I acutally don't know anything about them, but I am, like you, pretty sure that they must've escaped from somewhere, haha, specially the singer if you listen to "Color Me Columbuth".

http://s.dsimg.com/image/A-1192535-1264956721.jpeg

I really like the hat.
 
I think it was Erik Lindgren's liners in Deadly Dose Of Wyld Psych that compared the vocalist to Daffy Duck...I can't think of a better way to describe this vocalist!

Egg
 
I first heard this insane cut from an old vinyl only comp called 'World Of Acid'....

A copy of the 45 in picture sleeve was sold on ebay a couple of weeks ago for $180. Way higher than my max bid!
 
Picture sleeve from another 45 by the band:

45johnnythompson.JPG
 
How many copies do you estimate exists? Anyone?

I'll take a shot at it

If a cut so demented (and cool), with a great PS as an added attraction, only commands $180, I would guesstimate this to be scarce rather than rare. Meaning 100++copies. Perhaps a quantity find in the ice-age (80s. Hoho), but since dried up a bit?
 
I only hear an annoying novelty record... never understood the greatness... If I want demented I pull out JD Blackfoot - Epitaph For A Head. But music is totally subjective of course - just kinda baffled me how this of all 45s get such a long thread ;)
 
Definitely a novelty record. Interesting but not the kind of thing I would ever need to own. Like the man said though, taste is subjective. One thing that is very striking about it is the music underneath. Very tight sounding. Although it's mainly just a descending riff, the changes are awkward and they still manage to keep it together. I'm assuming the music was cut without a vocal which was added later but who knows. Too bad they didn't just make one side of it an inst. version.
 
Maybe you right, maybe there is a instrumental version. Would be nice to hear. Like the flute in the song. Comes really unexpected.
 
I realise this post is ancient history, but it is one of the few mentions of this incredible 45 on the net and I couldn't let the comment of 'definitely a novelty record' stand unchallenged. For me this is one of the most futuristic and truly demented psych records from a time when 'psychedelia' was a glint in the musical eye. Anyone without a pic sleeve copy will not have had the opportunity of seeing a section of the mindblowing lyrics, second only to The Elevators and The Deep in terms of acid immersion. These boys were on a mission into uncharted territory - hence the title referencing Columbus - a voyage to a new world. Musically this is amazing - hard fuzzed guitars, jazzy changes, flute and twisted vocals. It is beyond almost anything recorded in 1966. When I first heard it I assumed it was from 69/70 as it was so heavy and tight. I love this 45 and I think it deserves respect on every level, not simply dismissed as a novelty. I guess that tag is largely based on the vocals on the B side version, which for some reason are sung entirely with a lisp. Why? Maybe the lead singer was sick and tired of singing a song he hated over and over until they got the music tight, he sabotaged it. Maybe the band were trying to avoid accusations of pretention or drug promotion by attempting something that would potentially appeal to the novelty/teen market. But that is the B side.
 
I agree. "Novelty record" doesn't capture it. The b-side is kind of comical, still pretty mad. But the a-side is just really far out in the best sense.
It's interesting that Mans and Greg who called this a novelty record are both musicians. What probably puts them off is that you can hear that the Johnny Thompson Quintet are probably not rock'n'roll musicians but come from a jazz background, thus being an early example of fusion. (Fusion is one of the musical styles I really hate as well.) This is definitely not a garage band, they are highly trained musicians, although they have a garage-y sound. So the assumption is probably: these are studio cats exploiting the fuzz garage sound of 1966, intentionally overdoing it and turning it into a farce. It's possible to hear it that way. But I can't hear it like that. It's just too up front, too bold and adventurous. This is not exploitation, but exploration. (Not all jazz musicians are farts.)
 
Interesting guy, looks like he tried his hand at everything in the '50s and '60s. The trouble is, such versatility rarely creates great records.

Color Me Columbus is inspired by 7 and 7 Is. Would have been great with another vocalist.
 
I wonder what their other 45 sounds like. The sleeve looks pretty cool.

JohnnyThompsonQuintetGuitarsvillePSPromiseHerAnything.jpg