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The Residents



 
 
The Residents are an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 avant-garde music
Avant-garde music

Avant-garde music is a term used to characterize music which is thought to be ahead of its time, i.e. containing innovative elements or fusing different genres....
 and visual arts
Visual arts

The visual arts are Art#Art forms that focus on the creation of works which are primarily visual in nature, such as drawing, painting, photography, printmaking, and filmmaking....
 group who have created over sixty albums, created numerous musical short films, designed three CD-ROM
CD-ROM

CD-ROM is a pre-pressed Compact Disc that contains Computer data storage accessible to, but not writable by, a computer. While the Compact Disc format was originally designed for music storage and playback, the 1985 Yellow Book standard developed by Sony and Philips adapted the format to hold any form of Binary file....
 projects and ten DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
s, and undertaken seven major world tours. Throughout their career, spanning nearly four decades, they have successfully maintained complete anonymity.

History
Origins
The Residents supposedly hail from Shreveport, Louisiana
Shreveport, Louisiana

Shreveport is the third-largest city and the principal city of the third largest metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Louisiana, as well as being the 99th-largest city in the United States....
, where they met in high school in the 1960s.






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Encyclopedia


The Residents are an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 avant-garde music
Avant-garde music

Avant-garde music is a term used to characterize music which is thought to be ahead of its time, i.e. containing innovative elements or fusing different genres....
 and visual arts
Visual arts

The visual arts are Art#Art forms that focus on the creation of works which are primarily visual in nature, such as drawing, painting, photography, printmaking, and filmmaking....
 group who have created over sixty albums, created numerous musical short films, designed three CD-ROM
CD-ROM

CD-ROM is a pre-pressed Compact Disc that contains Computer data storage accessible to, but not writable by, a computer. While the Compact Disc format was originally designed for music storage and playback, the 1985 Yellow Book standard developed by Sony and Philips adapted the format to hold any form of Binary file....
 projects and ten DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
s, and undertaken seven major world tours. Throughout their career, spanning nearly four decades, they have successfully maintained complete anonymity.

History


Origins


The Residents supposedly hail from Shreveport, Louisiana
Shreveport, Louisiana

Shreveport is the third-largest city and the principal city of the third largest metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Louisiana, as well as being the 99th-largest city in the United States....
, where they met in high school in the 1960s. In 1966, members headed west to San Francisco, California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
. After their truck broke down in San Mateo
San Mateo, California

San Mateo is a city in San Mateo County, California, California, United States, in the San Francisco Bay Area. It is one of the larger suburbs on the San Francisco Peninsula, located between Burlingame, California to the north, Foster City, California to the east, and Belmont, California to the south....
, they decided to remain there. Like all information pertaining to the early days of the band, this is provided by The Cryptic Corporation and may or may not be invented.

While attempting to make a living, they began to experiment with tape machines, photography, and anything remotely to do with "art" that they could get their hands on. Word of their experimentation spread and in 1969, a British guitarist and multi-instrumentalist named Phil Lithman
Snakefinger

Philip Charles Lithman , who performed under the stage name Snakefinger, was an English people musician, singer and songwriter. A multi-instrumentalist, he was best known for his guitar and violin work and his collaborations with The Residents....
 and the mysterious N. Senada
N. Senada

N. Senada was a Bavarian composer and music theory who formulated the "Theory of Obscurity" and the "Theory of Phonetic Organization". There is a debate as to whether or not he existed, or was simply an invention of The Residents....
 (whom Lithman had picked up in Bavaria
Bavaria

Bavaria , with an area of and almost 12.5 million inhabitants, is a region located in the southeast of Germany and is the largest States of Germany of Germany by area....
 where the aged avant-gardist was recording birds singing) paid them a visit, and decided to remain.

The two Europeans would become great influences on the band. Lithman's guitar playing technique earned him the nickname Snakefinger
Snakefinger

Philip Charles Lithman , who performed under the stage name Snakefinger, was an English people musician, singer and songwriter. A multi-instrumentalist, he was best known for his guitar and violin work and his collaborations with The Residents....
, a nickname he got after his frantic playing on the violin during the performance with The Residents at The Boarding House in San Francisco 1971, where his fingers' speed made them look like snakes in the eyes of the less-musically proficient but imaginative Residents.

The group purchased crude recording equipment and instruments and began to make tapes, refusing to let an almost complete lack of musical proficiency stand in the way.

1969-1972: Residents Unincorporated

In 1969 the group began to make the first of their unreleased tapes. Rumors have surfaced of two of perhaps hundreds of unreleased reel-to-reel items titled Rusty Coathangers for the Doctor and The Ballad of Stuffed Trigger. The titles may be in question (as is the idea that these were album-length recordings), but the first title has been confirmed by a former head of the now defunct Smelly Tongues fan club. Further evidence of pre-1970 recordings surfaced with the release of the song "I Hear You Got Religion", supposedly recorded in 1969, and released originally as a downloadable track from Ralph America in 1999. Cryptic says there are lots of tapes dating back decades, but they were all recorded before the group had officially become "The Residents" so the band does not consider them to be part of their discography.

While the album The Ballad of Stuffed Trigger has never been released in any form, Uncle Willie, former Residents fan club president, wrote in his book Uncle Willie's Highly Opinionated Guide to The Residents that, while searching through the band's archives, he came across "a suite named 'The Ballad Of Stuffed Trigger'," but not a complete album.

In 1971 the group sent a reel-to-reel tape to Hal Halverstadt at Warner Brothers, since he had worked with Captain Beefheart
Captain Beefheart

Don Van Vliet is an United States musician and visual artist, best known by the pseudonym Captain Beefheart. His musical work was mainly conducted with a rotating assembly of musicians called The Magic Band, which was active from the mid-1960s to the early 1980s....
 (one of the group's musical heroes). Halverstadt was not overly impressed with "The Warner Bros. Album" (he describes it as "okay at best" in "Uncle Willie's Cryptic Guide to the Residents"), but awarded the tape an "A for Ariginality". Because the band had not included any name in the return address, the rejection slip was simply addressed to "The Residents". The members of the group then decided that this would be the name they would use, first becoming Residents Unincorporated, then shortening it to the current name.

The first performance of the band using the name "The Residents" was at the Boarding House in San Francisco in 1971. That same year another tape was completed called Baby Sex. The original cover art for the tape box was a silk-screened copy of an old photo depicting a woman fellating a small child. (Considered artistically rude at that time, it would be viewed as child pornography today).

In 1972 they moved to San Francisco and formed Ralph Records
Ralph Records

Ralph Records was The Residents' original record label, the name coming from the somewhat colorful phrase "calling Ralph on the porcelain telephone."...
. By this time, The Cryptic Corporation was operating as a partnership and incorporated to take over the running of Ralph Records.

1972-1980: Album Era

Before the Santa Dog
Santa Dog

Santa Dog was the first official release from The Residents and Ralph Records. It was a double single released in December, 1972.The single was packaged to look like a Christmas card from an insurance agency and was mailed to various recipients, including Frank Zappa and Richard Nixon....
 single and while recording Meet the Residents
Meet the Residents

Meet the Residents is the first full-length release from avant garde group The Residents. It was released in 1973 on Ralph Records. The cover was a parody of Meet the Beatles! ; Later re-releases of the record changed the cover, though still kept a Beatles parody on the back, listing The Residents as "John Crawfish, George Crawfish, P...
, The Residents undertook one of their first major projects: the ambitious Vileness Fats
Vileness Fats

Vileness Fats is an unfinished film project of avant-garde band The Residents, filmed primarily from 1972 to 1976. The Residents shot over fourteen hours of footage for the project, but were not even two-thirds of the way through their incomplete script before they cancelled the production....
 film project. Intended to be the first-ever long form music video, The Residents saw this project as the opportunity to create the ultimate cult film
Cult film

A 'cult film' is a film that has acquired a highly devoted but relatively small group of fan . Often, cult movies have failed to achieve fame outside of the small fanbases; however, there have been exceptions that have managed to gain fame amongst mainstream audiences, including Carnival of Souls , Easy Rider , 2001: A Space Odyssey...
. After four years of filming (from 1972 to 1976) the project was reluctantly canceled due to time, space and monetary constraints. Fourteen hours of footage were shot for the project yet only about three-quarters of an hour of that footage has ever been released.

'Santa Dog' is considered by The Residents themselves and their fans to be the "official" start of the band's recorded output. This is so because it was the first to be released to the public. Shortly after this release, the band left San Mateo and relocated to San Francisco. They sent copies of 'Santa Dog' to west coast radio stations with no response until Bill Reinhardt, Program Director of KBOO
KBOO

KBOO is a non-profit, listener-funded FM Community radio broadcasting from Portland, Oregon. The station's mission is to serve groups in its listening area who are underrepresented on other local radio stations and to provide access to the airwaves for people who have unconventional or controversial tastes and points of view....
-FM in Portland received a copy. 'Santa' had the strange kind of sonic weirdness he was looking for and it was played heavily on his popular (Radio Lab) show. Bill met The Residents at their Sycamore St. studio in the summer of '73 with the news of his broadcasts. They were overjoyed that they had finally gotten media acceptance and he was celebrated with the news that KBOO was the first station to play a Residents record on the air. Inviting him in and treating him like family, Bill was given exclusive access to all their eclectic recordings. Copies from the original masters of 'Stuffed Trigger', 'Baby Sex' and the 'Warner Bros. Album' were now in his possession. He promoted these along with 'Meet The Residents' regularly on his radio program. There was considerable resistance to the commercial viability of Residents material. To aid in their promotion, Bill was given 50 of the first 1000 copies of 'MTR'. Some were sent to friends, listeners and critics and two dozen were left for sale on consignment at Music Millennium Records where they sat unsold for months. It should be mentioned that KBOO DJ, Barry Schwam (Schwump, who also recorded with the Rez) promoted them on his program as well. Eventually KBOO air-play attracted many loyal fans and Portland, Oregon became the epicenter of a worldwide cult phenomenon.

The Residents, at this time, were at a rough point in their career. There was internal turmoil, which supposedly resulted in a large, "embarrassing" food fight. They decided to resolve this tension in 1974 by allegedly recording what would later become Not Available
Not Available

The Residents' album Not Available was originally recorded as a follow-up to 1974's Meet the Residents. However, following the Theory of Obscurity, it was immediately locked away in a bank vault with no plans to issue it until the members of the band had completely forgotten about its existence....
—representative of N. Senada's Theory of Obscurity taken to its logical conclusion. The album was recorded and then placed in storage to be issued only when everyone had forgotten about it. However, contractual obligations related to the much-delayed release of Eskimo
Eskimo (album)

Eskimo is an album by The Residents that was originally supposed to follow 1976's Fingerprince. However, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979....
 forced its release in 1978 after the band had almost forgotten about it. The Residents were not bothered by this deviation from their plan since the 1978 decision to release the album would not affect the philosophical conditions under which it was originally recorded.

The Third Reich 'n' Roll came next, a pastiche on 60's rock 'n' roll with an overarching Nazi theme represented visually on the album cover, which featured Dick Clark in an SS uniform holding a carrot, with a number of Hitlers dancing on clouds behind him. On each side of the record was a single composition, approximately 17 ½ minutes long, using recordings of classic rock & roll songs that were spliced, overdubbed and edited with new vocals, instrumentation and tape noises. The original songs were finally removed leaving entirely new and bizarre performances. The music video for this album was shot on the sets that were built for Vileness Fats
Vileness Fats

Vileness Fats is an unfinished film project of avant-garde band The Residents, filmed primarily from 1972 to 1976. The Residents shot over fourteen hours of footage for the project, but were not even two-thirds of the way through their incomplete script before they cancelled the production....
.

Following The Third Reich 'n' Roll came Fingerprince
Fingerprince

Fingerprince is an album by The Residents. The album was recorded between 1974-76 and released in 1976. It was intended to be a three-sided record named Tourniquet Of Roses....
, a particularly ambitious project not unlike the earlier Not Available recordings. The band's original intention with Fingerprince
Fingerprince

Fingerprince is an album by The Residents. The album was recorded between 1974-76 and released in 1976. It was intended to be a three-sided record named Tourniquet Of Roses....
 was to release it as the very first "three-sided" album - they had found a way to simulate a third side by arranging the grooves on one side of the vinyl album to play a completely different program of tracks depending on which series of grooves the needle was dropped on. However, this idea was dropped when the band discovered that the Monty Python
Monty Python

Monty Python is a group of six comedians who created Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC on October 5, 1969....
 comedy troupe had executed the very same idea three years earlier with their Matching Tie and Handkerchief album. The "third side" was later released as an EP entitled Babyfingers
Babyfingers

Babyfingers was a release by the avant garde/experimental rock music band The Residents, containing music recorded for their 1976 release, "Fingerprince"....
, and the Babyfingers tracks have since been re-integrated into the Fingerprince album on the CD reissues.

The Residents followed Fingerprince with their Duck Stab/Buster & Glen
Duck Stab/Buster & Glen

Duck Stab redirects here. For the 1978 EP, see Duck Stab!Duck Stab/Buster & Glen is an album released in 1978 by The Residents. It is often called Duck Stab, after Duck Stab!, a seven-song Extended play released earlier in 1978 featuring shorter songs similar to the first side of Fingerprince....
 album - their most easily comprehensible album up to that point. This album got the band some attention from the press (namely New Musical Express, Sounds and Melody Maker
Melody Maker

Melody Maker, published in the United Kingdom, was, according to its publisher IPC Media, the world's oldest weekly music newspaper. It was 1926 in music as a magazine targeted at musicians; in 2000 in British music it was merged into "long-standing rival" New Musical Express....
), and dropped most of their reliance upon the Theory of Obscurity.

Eskimo
Eskimo (album)

Eskimo is an album by The Residents that was originally supposed to follow 1976's Fingerprince. However, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979....
 (1979) contained music consisting of non-musical sounds, percussion, and wordless voices. Rather than being songs in the orthodox sense, the compositions sounded like "live-action stories" without dialogs. The Residents remixed the "songs" in disco
Disco

Disco is a genre of dance music that originated in and was initially popular among African American, gay and Hispanic and Latino Americans communities in the United States in the late 1960s....
 style, the results of which appeared on the EP Diskomo
Diskomo

"Diskomo" was a 12-inch single of elements from the 1979 album Eskimo by the Residents put to a disco beat. The b-side was a special suite of nursery rhymes put together as "Goosebump"....
. Eskimo was reissued in surround sound
Surround sound

Surround sound, using multichannel audio, encompasses a range of techniques for enriching the Sound recording and reproduction quality, of an audio source, with additional audio channels reproduced via additional, discrete speakers....
 on DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
 in 2003.

The Commercial Album
The Commercial Album

The Commercial Album is an album released by The Residents in 1980. It is commonly considered a follow-up of Duck Stab/Buster & Glen. The album pares down the concept and structure of the average commercial pop song and reduces it to a one-minute redux....
 (1980) consisted of 40 songs that, like Eskimo, rejected traditional song structure. Each consisted of a verse and a chorus and lasted one minute. The songs pastiched the advertising jingle although the songs were not endorsements of known products or services. The liner notes
Liner notes

Liner notes are the writings found in booklets which come inserted into the compact disc jewel case or the equivalent packaging for vinyl records and cassettes....
 state that songs should be repeated three times in a row to form a pop song. With a leap of promotional imagination, The Residents purchased 40 one-minute advertising slots on San Francisco's most popular Top-40 radio station KFRC forcing the station to play each track of their album over three days. This prompted an editorial in Billboard magazine questioning whether the act was art or advertising.

When MTV
MTV

MTV is an United States cable television network based in Media of New York City. Launched on August 1, 1981, the original purpose of the channel was to play music videos guided by on-air hosts known as VJ ....
 was in its infancy, The Residents' videos were in heavy rotation since they were among the few music videos available to broadcasters. The Residents' earliest videos are in the New York Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
's permanent collection and were eventually released together in 2001 on the Icky Flix
Icky Flix

Icky Flix is the title of a combined DVD and CD set released by the band The Residents as part of their 30th anniversary celebration in 2001....
 DVD, which includes an optional audio track of remixes.

The Mole Show: The start of the Live Era


In 1981, a trilogy of albums was to be released, starting with Mark of the Mole
Mark of the Mole

Mark of the Mole is an album by The Residents, released in 1981. It was meant to be the first album in a trilogy detailing the conflicts between the Moles and the Chubs ....
, was released. A tour ensued, and was narrated nightly by Penn Jillette
Penn Jillette

Penn Fraser Jillette is an United States comedian, illusionist, juggling and writer known for his work with fellow illusionist Teller in the team Penn & Teller....
. Many think, after observation of official clues in liner notes such as those found in Demons Dance Alone, that the Mole Show caused several members of the Residents to leave, leaving Mr. Red Eye to studio duties. The Mole Trilogy is made up of parts I, II and IV.

This tour is also noted for being the first time The Residents appeared on stage wearing their trademark eyeball masks and tuxedos. The performance featured The Residents in front of painted back drops used to help illustrate the story. Penn Jillette would come out between songs telling long intentionally pointless stories. The show was designed to appear as if it was falling apart as it progressed: Penn would pretend to grow angrier with the crowd and the lighting effects and musical performance would become increasingly chaotic, all building up to the point where Penn was dragged off stage and returned, handcuffed to a wheelchair, to deliver his last monologue. During one noteworthy performance, Penn was assaulted by an audience member while handcuffed to the wheelchair.

The 13th Anniversary show

After being approached by their Japanese distributor to do a 2 week run of shows in Japan, The Residents created the 13th Anniversary tour. While the musical performance was more mainstream, the stage show was another over the top spectacle, featuring inflatable giraffes, dancers in eye ball masks illuminating the darkened stage with work lights, and a lead vocalist dressed in a garish yellow suit wearing a Nixon mask. After the two week run in Japan The Residents took the show through the US.

Backstage at the Hollywood Palace show in December 26 1985 one member's eyeball mask (Mr. Red Eye) was stolen, so it was replaced with a giant skull mask. The eye was returned by a devoted fan who discovered where the thief lived and stole it back, although Homer Flynn has stated that the person who returned the mask was most probably the thief himself. It was put into retirement because it was now "unclean" and in a bad condition, and had become a superfluous shell. From this point forward the lead Resident was known as Mr. Skull.

Cube E

"Cube E" was a three-act performance covering the history of American Music. It was a step up from previous shows, featuring more elaborate dance numbers and sets. It was also the first show composed exclusively of music written for the show. The show was almost entirely backlit with black lights highlighting fluorescent pieces of costumes and set.

Part one covering cowboy music was first performed on German television as "Buckaroo Blues". It featured the singer and two dancers wearing giant cowboys hats around a glowing campfire. Part two was called "Black Barry" and focused on slave music and the blues. The act ended when a giant cube head rose from the back of the stage. Part three, "The Baby King," featured Elvis songs with an elderly Elvis impersonator performing songs for his grandchildren. The show ended with an inflated Elvis dying as a result of the British Invasion
British Invasion

File:The Beatles in America.JPGThe British Invasion was the term applied by the news media?and subsequently by consumers?to the influx of rock and roll, beat music and pop music performers from the United Kingdom who became popular in the United States, Canada and Australia....
.

Wormwood

Based around bible stories, Wormwood featured the Residents departing from preprogrammed music and once again using a live band. The band wore ecclesiastical robes and performed in a brightly lit fluorescent cave. It featured the male and female lead singers switching leads depending on what characters were needed. Act one consisted of one-off stories about individual Bible characters. Act 2 focused on suites of songs about Bible figures such as Abraham
Abraham

Abraham is a man featured in the Book of Genesis and an important figure in several monotheistic religions. Judaism, Christianity and Islam traditions regard him as the founding Patriarchs of the Israelites, Ishmaelites and Edomite peoples....
, Moses
Moses

Moses is a Hebrew Bible Hebrews religious leader, lawgiver, prophet, to whom the Mosaic authorship of the Torah is traditionally attributed. Also called Moshe Rabbeinu in Hebrew , he is the most important prophet in Judaism, and also an important prophet of Christianity, Islam, the Bah?'? Faith, Rastafari movement, Chrislam and many ot...
, and King David. During a performance in Athens, Greece, one of The Residents had to leave the stage after being struck by a rock hurled from the audience.

In the late 80s they created the epic recording "God in Three Persons
God in Three Persons

God in Three Persons is a rock opera album by The Residents, released in 1988. It was about a man 'Mr. X' and two conjoined twins. The songs are all sung in a rhythmic spoken word fashion, similar to talking blues....
", a story about the exploitation of two Siamese twins with healing powers by a male dominant force and "The King & Eye
The King & Eye

The King & Eye is an album by the United States avant-garde band The Residents, released in 1989. It consists of a series of Elvis Presley songs strung together with a narration exploring what motivated him throughout his career....
", a surreal biography of Elvis Presley
Elvis Presley

Elvis Aaron Presley was an United Statesn singer, actor, and musician. A cultural icon, he is commonly known simply as "Elvis", and is also sometimes referred to as "List of honorific titles in popular music" or "The King"....
 and the birth of rock and roll.

1991-1997: Multimedia Era


One of the noted Residents projects of the 90s is "Freak Show." This marked the beginning of The Residents' obsession with emerging computer technology in the 1990s. Much of the music was made with various MIDI devices. "Freak Show" also served as the name for a CD-ROM
CD-ROM

CD-ROM is a pre-pressed Compact Disc that contains Computer data storage accessible to, but not writable by, a computer. While the Compact Disc format was originally designed for music storage and playback, the 1985 Yellow Book standard developed by Sony and Philips adapted the format to hold any form of Binary file....
 that was released by the Voyager Company on March 1, 1995, shortly after Laurie Anderson
Laurie Anderson

Laurie Anderson is an American experimental performance artist and musician who plays violin and keyboards and sings in a variety of experimental music and art rock styles....
's first multimedia CD-ROM experiment, Puppet Motel. "Freak Show" was also a stage performance by a theater company at the Archa Theater in Prague that premiered on November 1, 1995, and a comic book. Several of the songs were also performed live during the 1997 25th anniversary concerts at the Fillmore in San Francisco. After the CD-ROM's success, the album was re-released as The Freak Show Soundtrack with a different cover. A limited edition, The Freak Show Special Edition, was released in 2002 to mark their 30th anniversary.

1998-2005: Band Era


More recently The Residents recorded the dramatic album "Demons Dance Alone
Demons Dance Alone

Demons Dance Alone is a 2002 concept album by The Residents about the emotional effects of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The album is split into three main parts, "Loss", "Denial", and "The Three Metaphors", bookended by "Tongue" and "Demons Dance Alone", and broken up by various untitled transitional instrumentals....
" (also a tour and DVD in 2002) and "Animal Lover
Animal Lover

Animal Lover is an album, released in 2005 by The Residents.It portrays human life through the eyes of different animals. In the CD booklet, the lyrics to a song are preceded by a story from an animal's point of view....
" in 2005.

Singer Molly Harvey began as a Ralph employee but by the mid-90's contributed to virtually all of The Residents' many projects. The Residents' increased reliance on Harvey--essentially handing her half of the vocal duties since at least Demons Dance Alone --seems to incidentally parallel their artistic revitalization. Nolan Cook, Carla Fabrizio, Toby Dammit, Eric Drew Feldman
Eric Drew Feldman

Eric Drew Feldman is an United States keyboard instrument and bass guitar player. Feldman has worked with Captain Beefheart, Snakefinger, The Residents, Pere Ubu , Pixies, Deus_%28band%29, Katell Keineg, Frank Black, The Polyphonic Spree, Tripping Daisy, Reid Paley, Charlotte Hatherley, Custard , and PJ Harvey....
, and many other artists continuously worked with the band over the last five years, recording and performing live. The new artists helped to counter what Allmusic derided as a "sonic palette [confined to] factory presets from their new Macintosh audio" of the CD-ROM era.

In February 2005, The Residents toured Australia as part of the "What is Music?" festival, performing a two hour retrospective set entitled the 33rd Anniversary Tour: The Way We Were. These shows saw a fairly minimal band; three eyeball-headed Residents (one on guitar and two laptop/sample operators), a "stage hand" performer, and a male and female vocalist in costumes reminiscent of the Wormwood tour. Video projections and unusual flexible screens were added to the stage set, creating an unsettling ambiance. The performances on the Way We Were tour were recorded and were released on CD and DVD in 2005.

2006-2007: Storyteller Era


Summer of 2006 brought the internet download project, River of Crime (Episodes 1-5)
River of Crime (Episodes 1-5)

The River of Crime is a release by The Residents, originally released online as a five-episode podcast through both iTunes and Cordless Recordings' website....
. River of Crime was their first project with Warner Music Group's Cordless label. Following the success of River of Crime, The Residents launched their weekly Timmy
Timmy (The Residents)

Timmy is a fictional character by avant-garde group The Residents, first appearing in the 1995 CD-ROM project Bad Day on the Midway. The character was brought back on July 26, 2006 in a series of weekly short videos featuring Timmy telling anecdotes about his life and other strange stories....
 video project on YouTube
YouTube

YouTube is a Video hosting service website where users can upload, view and share video clips. Three former PayPal employees created YouTube in February 2005....
. In 2007 they did the music for the documentary Strange Culture
Strange Culture

Strange Culture is a 2007 documentary film directed by Lynn Hershman Leeson. It stars Tilda Swinton and Thomas Jay Ryan.It premiered January 19, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival....
 and also released a double instrumental album, Night of the Hunters. On the Fourth of July, 2007, the planned October release of their latest project with Mute Records
Mute Records

Mute Records was an independent record label based in the UK. In 2002 the label was sold to EMI....
, The Voice of Midnight
The Voice of Midnight

The Voice of Midnight is an album by The Residents, released in 2007. It was adapted from a short story, Der Sandmann, by Prussian writer E....
 (a music theater adaptation of E.T.A. Hoffmann
E.T.A. Hoffmann

Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffmann , better known by his pen name E.T.A. Hoffmann , was a Germany Romanticism author of fantasy and Horror fiction, a jurist, composer, music critic, drawing and caricature....
's short story Der Sandmann
Der Sandmann

The Sandman is a short story written in German language by E.T.A. Hoffmann. It was the first in a book of stories titled Die Nachtst?cke ....
), was announced on their website.

2008-present

On the 21st of May they announced on their website that their first North America tour since Demons Dance Alone
Demons Dance Alone

Demons Dance Alone is a 2002 concept album by The Residents about the emotional effects of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The album is split into three main parts, "Loss", "Denial", and "The Three Metaphors", bookended by "Tongue" and "Demons Dance Alone", and broken up by various untitled transitional instrumentals....
 for a project entitled The Bunny Boy
The Bunny Boy

The Bunny Boy is an album released September 1, 2008, by avant-garde group The Residents. According to the group's blog, the album is similar to their previous albums Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, The Commercial Album, and Demons Dance Alone and contains "19 fast paced songs" about "[o]bsession, insanity and the coming Apocalypse"...
 is set to begin on October 9 in New York - later an earlier date was added for Santa Cruz. Soon, it was announced that the tour will also include Europe, starting November 13. On June 3, the Residents.com website boasted the planned release of The Bunny Boy which was released on September 1. The website had posted information in which Foxboro claimed this would be a Farewell Tour; it was later revealed that this was nothing more than a mistake by Foxboro.

Identity

Much of the speculation about the members' true identities swirls around their management team, known as "The Cryptic Corporation." Cryptic was formed as a corporation in California by Jay Clem (Born 1947), Homer Flynn
Homer Flynn

Homer Flynn is a spokesman for the avant garde music and visual arts group The Residents, and their management group the Cryptic Corporation. Cryptic was formed by Flynn along with Hardy Fox, John Kennedy, and Jay Clem in the early 1970s....
 (born April 1945), Hardy W. Fox (born 1945), and John Kennedy in 1976, all of whom denied having been band members. (Clem and Kennedy left the Corporation in 1982.) The Residents themselves don't grant interviews, though Flynn and Fox have conducted interviews with the media. Nolan Cook, who has been working with the band recently, denied in an interview that Fox and Flynn are the Residents, saying that he has come across such rumors, and they are completely false.

Writer Simon Crab blogged that he had interviewed Fox in the mid-nineties, and that Fox openly admitted that he and Flynn were the two members of the group.

William Poundstone
William Poundstone

William Poundstone is an American author, columnist, and skeptic. He has written a number of books including the Big Secrets series and a biography of Carl Sagan....
, author of the Big Secrets
Big Secrets

Big Secrets are a series of books written by William Poundstone.In each book, Poundstone seeks to explore a number of mysteries, and reveal "the uncensored truth about all sorts of stuff you are never supposed to know" ....
 books, compared voiceprints of a Flynn lecture with those of spoken word segments from the Residents discography in his book Biggest Secrets. After noting similar patterns in both, he concluded "the similarities in the spectograms second the convincing subjective impression that the voices are identical." He posited that "the creative core of the Residents is the duo of Flynn and Fox." A subset of that belief is that Flynn is the lyricist (a conclusion buttressed by the fact that his voice bears an uncanny resemblance to one which appears on many of the Residents' albums) and that Fox writes the music. In addition BMI's online database of the performance rights organization (of which the Residents and their publishing company, Pale Pachyderm Publishing (Warner-Chappell), have been members for their entire careers), lists Flynn and Fox as the composers of all original Residents songs. This includes those songs written pre-1974 (the "Residents Unincorporated" years), the year Cryptic formed . However, many have pointed out that a songwriter can copyright a song under any name he/she chooses; the person named in the copyright assignment receives all royalties and legal requests and other information for the song, which, if Flynn and Fox are merely trusted managers who both handle the Residents' business and protect their identities, makes them the logical choice to be assigned the copyrights.

Cryptic openly admits the group's artwork is done by Flynn (among others), under various names that, put together, become Pornographics, but the pseudonym is rarely spelled the same way twice (examples: Porno Graphics, Pore No Graphix, Pore-Know Graphics); and that Fox is the "sound engineer" — meaning that he is the main producer, engineer, master, and editor of all their recordings. (Since 1976, the Residents' recordings have all listed their producer as "The Cryptic Corporation," presumably meaning Fox in particular.) Many other rumors have come and gone over the years, one being that 60s psychedelic band Cromagnon shared members with the band. On the 2008 Bunny Boy tour, the Singing Resident, believed to be Homer Flynn, appears on stage without a mask.

Noted Fans

The alternative
Alternative

Alternatives are objects or actions, where the choice of one excludes choosing the other. Alternative may also refer to:...
 band Primus
Primus

Primus may refer to:...
 has covered several Residents songs, including Hello skinny and Constantinople.

Discography


Albums

  • Meet the Residents
    Meet the Residents

    Meet the Residents is the first full-length release from avant garde group The Residents. It was released in 1973 on Ralph Records. The cover was a parody of Meet the Beatles! ; Later re-releases of the record changed the cover, though still kept a Beatles parody on the back, listing The Residents as "John Crawfish, George Crawfish, P...
     - 1974
  • The Third Reich 'n Roll - 1976
  • Fingerprince
    Fingerprince

    Fingerprince is an album by The Residents. The album was recorded between 1974-76 and released in 1976. It was intended to be a three-sided record named Tourniquet Of Roses....
     - 1976
  • Duck Stab/Buster & Glen
    Duck Stab/Buster & Glen

    Duck Stab redirects here. For the 1978 EP, see Duck Stab!Duck Stab/Buster & Glen is an album released in 1978 by The Residents. It is often called Duck Stab, after Duck Stab!, a seven-song Extended play released earlier in 1978 featuring shorter songs similar to the first side of Fingerprince....
     - 1978
  • Not Available
    Not Available

    The Residents' album Not Available was originally recorded as a follow-up to 1974's Meet the Residents. However, following the Theory of Obscurity, it was immediately locked away in a bank vault with no plans to issue it until the members of the band had completely forgotten about its existence....
     - 1978
  • Eskimo
    Eskimo (album)

    Eskimo is an album by The Residents that was originally supposed to follow 1976's Fingerprince. However, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979....
     - 1979
  • The Commercial Album
    The Commercial Album

    The Commercial Album is an album released by The Residents in 1980. It is commonly considered a follow-up of Duck Stab/Buster & Glen. The album pares down the concept and structure of the average commercial pop song and reduces it to a one-minute redux....
     - 1980
  • Mark of the Mole
    Mark of the Mole

    Mark of the Mole is an album by The Residents, released in 1981. It was meant to be the first album in a trilogy detailing the conflicts between the Moles and the Chubs ....
     - 1981
  • The Tunes of Two Cities
    The Tunes of Two Cities

    The Tunes of Two Cities is an album by The Residents, released in 1982. It is part two of the Mole Trilogy. Rather than forwarding the story of the battle between the Mole People and the Chubs, the record's concept is to display the differences between the two cultures through their music....
     - 1982
  • Intermission: Extraneous Music from the Residents' Mole Show
    Intermission: Extraneous Music from the Residents' Mole Show

    Intermission: Extraneous Music from the Residents' Mole Show is an Extended play by The Residents, released in 1983. It featured music from the opening, closing and intermission portions of the Mole Show....
     - 1983
  • Title in Limbo
    Title in Limbo

    Title in Limbo is an album by The Residents in collaboration with Renaldo and the Loaf, released in 1983 on Ralph Records. Guest performers include Snakefinger , and vocalist Nessie Lessons....
     - with Renaldo and the Loaf
    Renaldo and the Loaf

    Renaldo and the Loaf was an England musical duo active in the late 1970s and most of the 1980s, consisting of a pathology and an architecture ....
     1983
  • George & James
    George & James

    George and James is an album by The Residents, released in 1984. It was subtitled American Composer Series - Volume 1. The American Composer Series was originally supposed to be an ongoing project lasting from 1984 until 2000 that profiled a number of different artists....
     - 1984
  • Whatever Happened to Vileness Fats?
    Whatever Happened to Vileness Fats?

    The Residents had begun a movie in 1972 called Vileness Fats. The concept of the movie was to shoot it on a new media form and tell most of the story through music....
     - 1984
  • The Big Bubble: Part Four of the Mole Trilogy
    The Big Bubble: Part Four of the Mole Trilogy

    The Big Bubble is an album by The Residents. It was released in 1985, and fleshed out the backstory of the band's "Mole Trilogy", which had been introduced in Mark of the Mole and The Tunes of Two Cities ....
     - 1985
  • Census Taker
    Census Taker

    The Census Taker is the soundtrack to the 1984 movie of the same name , released in 1985. The only truly notable thing about the movie is this soundtrack, composed entirely by The Residents, which includes some new tracks as well as some older songs reworked....
     - 1985
  • Stars & Hank Forever: The American Composers Series
    Stars & Hank Forever: The American Composers Series

    Stars and Hank Forever was the second release in the American Composers Series by the avant garde band The Residents. The album was released in 1986....
     - 1986
  • God in Three Persons
    God in Three Persons

    God in Three Persons is a rock opera album by The Residents, released in 1988. It was about a man 'Mr. X' and two conjoined twins. The songs are all sung in a rhythmic spoken word fashion, similar to talking blues....
     - 1988
  • The King & Eye
    The King & Eye

    The King & Eye is an album by the United States avant-garde band The Residents, released in 1989. It consists of a series of Elvis Presley songs strung together with a narration exploring what motivated him throughout his career....
     - 1989
  • Freak Show
    Freak Show/Freak Show Soundtrack

    Freak Show marked the beginning of The Residents' obsession with emerging computer technology in the 1990s. Much of the music was made with various MIDI devices....
     - 1991
  • Our Finest Flowers
    Our Finest Flowers

    Our Finest Flowers is an album by The Residents, released in 1992. For their 20th anniversary, instead of releasing a greatest hits album, they instead decided to release an album of new songs made out of their greatest hits....
     - 1992
  • Gingerbread Man
    Gingerbread man

    A gingerbread man is a cookie made of gingerbread, usually in the shape of a stylized human, as per the name .Most gingerbread men share the same roughly humanoid shape, with stubby feet and no fingers....
     - 1994
  • Hunters
    Hunters (album)

    Hunters was an album by The Residents, released in 1995. It was a soundtrack commissioned for the Discovery Channel series Hunters: The World of Predators and Prey....
     - 1995
  • Have a Bad Day
    Have a Bad Day

    Have a Bad Day is an album by The Residents, released in 1996. This CD features some of the soundtrack music from the CD-ROM Bad Day on the Midway, also by The Residents....
     - 1996
  • Wormwood: Curious Stories from the Bible
    Wormwood: Curious Stories from the Bible

    Wormwood: Curious Stories from the Bible is a concept album released in 1998 by avant-garde musicians The Residents. The album's purpose is to retell some of the more "curious" stories in the Bible, not to condemn or condone, but to give people a greater understanding, although the liner notes do sometimes give a sarcastic and almost mock...
     - 1998
  • Roadworms: The Berlin Sessions
    Roadworms: The Berlin Sessions

    Roadworms: The Berlin Sessions is an album by The Residents, released in 2000. During the tour supporting the Wormwood album, many of the songs changed quite a bit....
     - 2000
  • Icky Flix
    Icky Flix

    Icky Flix is the title of a combined DVD and CD set released by the band The Residents as part of their 30th anniversary celebration in 2001....
     - 2001
  • Demons Dance Alone
    Demons Dance Alone

    Demons Dance Alone is a 2002 concept album by The Residents about the emotional effects of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The album is split into three main parts, "Loss", "Denial", and "The Three Metaphors", bookended by "Tongue" and "Demons Dance Alone", and broken up by various untitled transitional instrumentals....
     - 2002
  • WB: RMX
    WB: RMX

    WB:RMX is an album by The Residents, released in 2003.The Residents originally got their name when a demo tape recorded in 1971 was rejected and returned, since no name of the band was provided, to "Residents." The album itself had only officially seen the light of day when played on a Portland, Oregon radio show in the 1970s....
     - 2003
  • 12 Days of Brumalia
    12 Days of Brumalia

    The 12 Days of Brumalia was an internet event presented by The Residents and Residents.com that resulted in an album of the same name. For 12 days, starting on December 25th, a new song was posted on Residents.com web site along with an illustration and a quote....
     - 2004
  • I Murdered Mommy
    I Murdered Mommy

    I Murdered Mommy is a 2001 album by avant rock band The Residents. The album was to be the soundtrack to a proposed but abandoned CD-ROM multimedia project of the same title....
     - 2004
  • Animal Lover
    Animal Lover

    Animal Lover is an album, released in 2005 by The Residents.It portrays human life through the eyes of different animals. In the CD booklet, the lyrics to a song are preceded by a story from an animal's point of view....
     - 2005
  • Tweedles
    Tweedles

    Tweedles is a concept album by The Residents released on October 31, 2006.The CD is accompanied by a two-part book: the first half consists of the album's spoken lines, and the second half contains the lyrics to the songs....
     - 2006
  • Night of the Hunters - 2007
  • The Voice of Midnight
    The Voice of Midnight

    The Voice of Midnight is an album by The Residents, released in 2007. It was adapted from a short story, Der Sandmann, by Prussian writer E....
     - October 2007
  • The Bunny Boy
    The Bunny Boy

    The Bunny Boy is an album released September 1, 2008, by avant-garde group The Residents. According to the group's blog, the album is similar to their previous albums Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, The Commercial Album, and Demons Dance Alone and contains "19 fast paced songs" about "[o]bsession, insanity and the coming Apocalypse"...
     - 2008


Singles and EPs

  • Santa Dog
    Santa Dog

    Santa Dog was the first official release from The Residents and Ralph Records. It was a double single released in December, 1972.The single was packaged to look like a Christmas card from an insurance agency and was mailed to various recipients, including Frank Zappa and Richard Nixon....
     - 1972
  • Satisfaction
    Satisfaction (Residents cover)

    "Satisfaction" b/w "Loser = Weed" was released as a 7-inch single by The Residents in 1976. The song is a complete reworking of " Satisfaction", originally released by The Rolling Stones....
     - 1976
  • The Beatles Play the Residents and the Residents Play the Beatles
    The Beatles play The Residents and The Residents play The Beatles

    The Beatles Play the Residents and the Residents Play the Beatles is a 1977 single by the Residents. The A-side, "Beyond the Valley of a Day in the Life", is a collage of The Beatles recordings, with a looped clip of a Beatles Christmas record in which Paul McCartney says "Please everybody, if we haven't done what we could have done we've t...
     - 1977
  • Santa Dog '78
    Santa Dog '78

    "Santa Dog '78" was a reworking of the song "Fire" from the original "Santa Dog" double single by the Residents. It was released in December 1978, packaged in a special picture sleeve and sold through mail-order only....
     - 1978
  • Babyfingers
    Babyfingers

    Babyfingers was a release by the avant garde/experimental rock music band The Residents, containing music recorded for their 1976 release, "Fingerprince"....
     - 1979
  • Diskomo
    Diskomo

    "Diskomo" was a 12-inch single of elements from the 1979 album Eskimo by the Residents put to a disco beat. The b-side was a special suite of nursery rhymes put together as "Goosebump"....
     - 1980
  • The Commercial Single
    The Commercial Single

    "The Commercial Single" was released to promote The Commercial Album by the Residents. It was released in the United Kingdom and France and, despite being called a single, included eight songs: six songs from the album and two bonus tracks, all clocking in at one minute....
     - 1980
  • It's a Man's Man's Man's World
    It's a Man's Man's Man's World

    "It's a Man's Man's Man's World" is a song by James Brown and Betty Jean Newsome. Brown recorded it on February 16, 1966 in music in a New York City studio and released it as a single later that year....
     - 1984
  • Kaw-Liga - 1986
  • Earth vs. the Flying Saucers - 1986
  • It's a Man's Man's Man's World
    It's a Man's Man's Man's World

    "It's a Man's Man's Man's World" is a song by James Brown and Betty Jean Newsome. Brown recorded it on February 16, 1966 in music in a New York City studio and released it as a single later that year....
     (Australia) - 1986
  • Hit the Road Jack
    Hit the Road Jack (Residents cover)

    "Hit the Road Jack" was a single featuring a cover version of Hit the Road Jack by Ray Charles as performed by the Residents.200 copies of the single were released as a picture disc, while the rest were on black vinyl....
     - 1987
  • For Elsie
    For Elsie

    "For Elsie" was a reworking of Ludwig van Beethoven's Fur Elise by The Residents. It had a very limited release on colored vinyl, while a compact disc version was handed out at a one-off show....
     - 1987
  • Snakey Wake
    Snakey Wake

    The Snakey Wake was a fan-club only release of music played by The Residents at the wake of their longtime friend, Snakefinger....
     - 1987
  • Buckaroo Blues
    Buckaroo Blues

    Buckaroo Blues is an early recordings of songs by The Residents that would later be included in their Cube-E tour. The songs are interpretations of Western folk music songs and cowboy poems....
     - 1988
  • Santa Dog 88
    Santa Dog 88

    Santa Dog 88 was the first release by The Residents fan club called Uncle Willie's Eyeball Buddies, or UWEB for short. It included four versions of the song "Fire" , originally released on the 1972 double single "Santa Dog"....
     - 1988
  • Double Shot
    Double Shot

    This single by The Residents is titled "Double Shot" . Although the back track listing has the words "God in Three Persons" between them, it tells us that 'The Thing About Them' is adapted from it and 'Double Shot' served as inspiration for it....
     - 1988
  • Holy Kiss of Flesh
    Holy Kiss of Flesh

    "Holy Kiss of Flesh" was a CD-3 single released by the Residents in the U.S. on Ryko in 1988 in the United States and re-released by EuroRalph in Europe in 1993....
     - 1988
  • From the Plains to Mexico - 1989
  • Don't Be Cruel - 1989
  • Blowoff - 1992
  • Santa Dog '92 - 1992
  • Prelude to "The Teds"
    Prelude to "The Teds"

    Prelude to "The Teds is an EP by Avant-Garde group The Residents for the Hello Recording Club....
     - 1993
  • Pollex Christi
    Pollex Christi

    Pollex Christi was the first of Ralph America's limited edition CDs by the Residents. The piece was purportedly composed by the friend and collaborator from their early years, N....
     - 1997
  • I Hate Heaven
    I Hate Heaven

    "I Hate Heaven" was a promotional CD single by the Residents released on EuroRalph in 1998, featuring three songs taken from their Wormwood: Curious Stories from the Bible album of the same year....
     - 1998
  • In Between Screams - 1999
  • High Horses - 2001
  • The Sandman Waits - 2007


Compilations

  • The Residents Radio Special
    The Residents Radio Special

    The Residents Radio Special is an album released by The Residents, released in 1979. This cassette was a promotional item issued to radio stations shortly before the release of Eskimo....
     - 1979
  • Please Do Not Steal It! - 1979
  • Nibbles - 1979
  • Residue of the Residents
    Residue of the Residents

    Residue of the Residents is a compilation of The Residents' outtakes, ranging from about 1971-1983. The compilation was released in 1984. "Walter Westinghouse" is an edited version of the song from the Babyfingers E.P....
    - 1984
  • Ralph Before '84: Volume 1, the Residents - 1984
  • Assorted Secrets
    Assorted Secrets

    Assorted Secrets was originally released as a compact audio cassette-only extra by The Residents that featured some live-in-the-studio recordings as well as a live rehearsal of the Mole Show....
    - 1984
  • Memorial Hits - 1985
  • The Pal TV LP - 1985
  • Heaven? - 1986
  • Hell! - 1986
  • God in Three Persons
    God in Three Persons

    God in Three Persons is a rock opera album by The Residents, released in 1988. It was about a man 'Mr. X' and two conjoined twins. The songs are all sung in a rhythmic spoken word fashion, similar to talking blues....
     Soundtrack - 1988
  • Stranger Than Supper - 1990
  • Liver Music
    Liver Music

    Liver Music is a collection of songs by the Residents put together by their now-defunct fan club UWEB. The tracks are from an assortment of live songs from 1972-1990....
    - 1990
  • Daydream B-Liver
    Daydream B-Liver

    Daydream B-Liver is a sequel to UWEB's Liver Music, this one a collection of rarities by the Residents....
    - 1991
  • Poor Kaw-Liga's Pain - 1994
  • Louisiana's Lick - 1995
  • Our Tired, Our Poor, Our Huddled Masses - 1997
  • Residue Deux - 1998
  • 25 Years of Eyeball Excellence - 1998
  • Land of Mystery - 1999
  • Refused
    Refused (Album)

    Refused, also known as Santa Dog '99, was released by the Residents towards the end of 1999 to celebrate the end of the millennium . The Residents had previously reworked the song "Fire" a number of times since the release of the original single in 1972, ostensibly to give an idea of where they were musically at the time....
    - 1999
  • Dot Com
    Dot Com (Album)

    Dot.Com is an album released by Avant rock musicians, The Residents, in 2000. It was released in a limited edition of 1200 copies.In 2000, Ralph America collected all of the MP3s they had released on the Buy Or Die website on a CD entitled dot.com....
    - 2000
  • Diskomo 2000
    Eskimo (album)

    Eskimo is an album by The Residents that was originally supposed to follow 1976's Fingerprince. However, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979....
    - 2000
  • Roosevelt 2.0 - 2000
  • Petting Zoo - 2002
  • Eat Exuding Oinks - 2002
  • Best Left Unspoken...Vol. 1 - 2006
  • Best Left Unspoken...Vol. 2 - 2006
  • Best Left Unspoken...Vol. 3 - 2007
  • Smell My Picture - 2008


Live Albums

  • The Mole Show Live at the Roxy
    The Mole Show Live at the Roxy

    The Mole Show Live at the Roxy is a live recording by The Residents. The show was originally bootlegged, and the cryptic corporation bought the master tapes, releasing it officially on Ralph Records in 1983....
    - 1983
  • The 13th Anniversary Show Live in the U.S.A.
    The 13th Anniversary Show Live in the U.S.A.

    The 13th Anniversary Show Live in the U.S.A. is a live album by The Residents. It was originally released in 1986 as a double compact audio cassette and re-released on compact disc in 1992 by the Residents fan club UWEB....
    - 1986
  • The Thirteenth Anniversary Show
    The Thirteenth Anniversary Show

    The Thirteenth Anniversary tour was a triumph both financially and critically for the The Residents. It was also the last time Snakefinger would work with them, as he died of a heart attack in 1987....
    - 1987
  • The Mole Show Live in Holland
    The Mole Show Live in Holland

    The Mole Show Live in Holland is a live album by the band The Residents, released in 1987. This is the most easily accessible version of the Mole Show and it was presented live, complete with narration by Penn Jillette....
    - 1987
  • Cube E: Live in Holland
    Cube E: Live in Holland

    Cube E: Live in Holland is an album by The Residents released on November 8 1994 by Restless Records as an audio CD.Although not videotaped in its entirety, the project called The History of American Music in 3 E-Z Pieces was recorded almost in entirety and released as Cube-E: Live in Holland....
    - 1990
  • Live at the Fillmore
    Live at the Fillmore (The Residents)

    Live at the Fillmore is a limited release double compact audio disc recording of a live show by the Residents. To celebrate their 25th anniversary, the Residents performed a series of concerts during the last week of October 1997....
    - 1998
  • Wormwood Live
    Wormwood Live

    Wormwood Live is a live album by the Residents. Recorded in Germany, it features the full live performance of songs from their album, Wormwood: Curious Stories from the Bible....
    - 1999
  • Kettles of Fish on the Outskirts of Town - 2002
  • The Way We Were
    The Way We Were (album)

    The Way We Were is the title of an album recorded by singer Barbra Streisand. It was released in 1974 and peaked at number 1 in the Billboard albums chart for two weeks....
    (live CD/DVD) - 2005
  • Cube E Box Set - 2006


Multimedia Projects

  • Vileness Fats
    Vileness Fats

    Vileness Fats is an unfinished film project of avant-garde band The Residents, filmed primarily from 1972 to 1976. The Residents shot over fourteen hours of footage for the project, but were not even two-thirds of the way through their incomplete script before they cancelled the production....
    (unfinished film project) - 1972 - 1976
  • Freak Show
    Freak Show/Freak Show Soundtrack

    Freak Show marked the beginning of The Residents' obsession with emerging computer technology in the 1990s. Much of the music was made with various MIDI devices....
    (CD ROM) - 1991
  • Gingerbread Man
    Gingerbread man

    A gingerbread man is a cookie made of gingerbread, usually in the shape of a stylized human, as per the name .Most gingerbread men share the same roughly humanoid shape, with stubby feet and no fingers....
    (CD ROM) - 1994
  • Bad Day on the Midway
    Bad Day on the Midway

    Bad Day on the Midway is a CD-ROM game designed and scored by The Residents and a number of other graphic artists, notably Jim Ludtke. The game allowed the player to switch from character to character in order to solve a number of puzzles: what put the park's owner in a coma? Who is killing off the carnies? Is it possible to keep the I...
    (CD ROM) - 1995
  • Icky Flix
    Icky Flix

    Icky Flix is the title of a combined DVD and CD set released by the band The Residents as part of their 30th anniversary celebration in 2001....
    (DVD
    DVD

    DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
    ) - 2001
  • Eskimo (DVD) - 2002
  • Disfigured Night DVD (DVD) - 2002
  • Demons Dance Alone (DVD) - 2003
  • The Commercial Album DVD - 2004
  • Wormwood DVD - 2005
  • The Way We Were CD/DVD - 2005
  • The River of Crime - June 2006
  • Timmy
    Timmy (The Residents)

    Timmy is a fictional character by avant-garde group The Residents, first appearing in the 1995 CD-ROM project Bad Day on the Midway. The character was brought back on July 26, 2006 in a series of weekly short videos featuring Timmy telling anecdotes about his life and other strange stories....
    - August 2006
  • The Bunny Boy
    The Bunny Boy

    The Bunny Boy is an album released September 1, 2008, by avant-garde group The Residents. According to the group's blog, the album is similar to their previous albums Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, The Commercial Album, and Demons Dance Alone and contains "19 fast paced songs" about "[o]bsession, insanity and the coming Apocalypse"...
    - August 2008


External links



Further reading

Meet the Residents - America's most eccentric band!
by Ian Shirley, SAF Publishing, Wembley, UK, 1998 ISBN 0 946719 12 8