Posts Tagged ‘Three Stooges’

Unsolicited Career Advice for… Michael Stipe

Who knows how Uncle Donnie gets to know someone like Michael Stipe well enough to receive the gift of dishware from him?  Granted, these are strange times in which we live, so finding something like this in the memo stack was not entirely a surprise, though Mike Mills and Peter Buck might not be too happy with U.D.’s nicknames for them. —RS

TO: Michael Stipe
FROM: Don Skwatzenschitz
RE: Career Advice

Mike, thanks so much for the Basquiat dinner plates. Nothing like getting to the bottom of one of Mitzi’s casseroles and seeing a neo-Expressionist skull staring back at me.  We’d have you over for dinner, but I know you’re a vegetarian, and she puts beef broth in everything (makes for an interesting apple pie, let me tell you).

Mike, I know you and the boys got a bit of a bump in popularity last year, with the Accelerate album and the return to rocking out and such and so forth. You’re at your best when you and the nerdy one let the schlubby one turn up his amps and blow a hole through whatever wall happens to be nearby. Don’t get me wrong—I actually liked Around the Sun (leaving New York is never easy, but there’s so much more of the country to see) and Up. To my ears, Reveal is the only truly crap record you guys have made. Man, did that stink. I mean, no redeeming qualities whatsoever, aside from maybe—maybe—“Imitation of Life,” but that got old pretty quickly. You guys dropped a turd on that one. Most bands don’t recover from something that rank.

Which is why you should look out for yourself more, for your own career, your own life apart from the nerdy one and the schlubby one. I’ve got some ideas you might want to consider:

  • Go nuts. You’re a dignified, middle aged man with intellectual, political, and artistic pursuits beyond the music you are best known for. You appreciate privacy and go to some lengths to protect it. You support worthy people and worthier causes. Mike, it’s a wonder anyone knows who the hell you are. You need to pull a Britney. Or an Amy Winehouse. Go out for a night on the town without any underwear … or pants. Or put on the underwear, smoke five or six pounds of crack, and go wandering down the street on a crying jag. Better yet, get fat, take steroids, get plastic surgery to the point where you’re barely recognizable, take in a bunch of stray dogs, and do a lot of interviews about how you’ve hit rock bottom and are now bouncing back. It worked for Mickey Rourke—he even got an Oscar nomination. Speaking of which …
  • Become an actor. They’re actually making a remake of The Three Stooges, with Jim-friggin’-Carey as Curly. Michael, you were born for that role. It’s totally playing against type (unless Curly was really a shy, mumbling alternative type and we just didn’t know it), which is why you’ll blow everyone away with your “Nyuk-nyuk-nyuk-nyuks” and your “Whoop-whoop-whoops” and you “Oh, wiseguys.” Forget that whole movie producer thing, Mike. You were born to be in front of the camera. Acting like Curly Stooge.
  • Two words: Food Network. You and Mario Batali were so awesome together on that Sundance show. The two of you need to do a cooking show together—Mike and Mario’s Vegetarian Kitchen or some such thing. It’ll knock that conniving bitch Paula Deen right off the network.
  • Fake your death. There’d be a state funeral in Georgia. Flags at half-staff at the next Lollapalooza show. Courtney Love might write a song for you (or get Billy Corgan to do it and say she wrote it). Rolling Stone would put you on the cover and give every album five stars in the next Record Guide (including Reveal, which really was a turd, Mike). Warners might actually earn back some of your advance from the last REM contract. And you—you get to disappear, find a little place on the beach somewhere and live out your days listening to Patti Smith bootlegs and reading Rene Ricard collections to your heart’s content. Sound good? I knew it would.

All the best,
Don

Way Out Wednesday: The Three Stooges, “Madcap Musical Nonsense at Your House”

stoogesmadcap2-frontToday’s Way Out Wednesday nugget of joy is brought to you by the Three Stooges. The Stooges made a number of popular short subjects in the 1940s. Later, when television was new, stations needed lots of material to show. This brought out a Stooges resurgence, especially among kids. This album featuring Larry, Moe, and late addition Curly Joe, was put out in 1959 to answer that need. As opposed to the album The Nonsense Songbook (since released as simply The Three Stooges or Sing-a-Long with the Three Stooges) where they sang popular songs, this album features the Stooges doing skits and singing new words to old songs.

The first song on the album is called “We’re Coming to Your House”, wherein the boys want you to be excited about their arrival, despite the fact that they’re going to “break up the joint”:

Three Stooges – We’re Coming to Your House

In “Let’s Cut a Record,” Larry, Moe and Curly Joe are invited into a recording studio to do a record. Moe tells Curly Joe that after they record their song he’ll be on a piece of plastic. Curly Joe is very excited about this prospect. Things turn surreal when somehow or other Curly Joe gets stuck on the piece of plastic and Moe and Larry try to catch him each time he goes around. We’re told that if we turn the record over we can get him off of it. I never did figure out how that was supposed to work!

Three Stooges – Let’s Cut a Record

The next skit, entitled “Three Chipped Monks,” features the Stooges wanting to get into a theatre to see the Chipmunks. Someone mistaken believes that the Stooges ARE the Chipmunks (Sorry, I can’t explain that one), and they perform for the audience. The audience enjoys their performance even though their voices are an octave lower and they don’t sing nearly as well:

Three Stooges – Three Chipped Monks

We finally end with the heartfelt “Goodbye, Auld Lang Syne!” stating that the Three Stooges will always be my friends. Hey, not that long ago you wanted to tear the place up and now you want to be my friends? Who do you think you are, the Cat in the Hat?

Three Stooges – Goodbye, Auld Lang Syne!

If you’d also like to hear the Stooges foiling a toy store robbery, appearing on Click Dart’s Bandstand, and going to a baseball game so they slug the umpire, you can give it a listen right here!

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