


This
story shows up in the Feb. 23rd 2005 issue of
Leo
Weekly and is about Gubbey Records recording artists Furlong!

Furlong takes the lead Louisville’s anti-punk punk rock scene
The gentlemen behind Gubbey Records are something of a maniacal
lot, that rare breed between ultra-creative geniuses and musical
miscreants dead set on destroying that which surrounds them with
weird, altruistic noise-pop. The guys who started a label to
kickstart their own self-recorded musical projects offer
Furlong: an excellent band, their band, a strange and new band
that will destroy Louisville in the best way, by exploding onto
the scene in a raging fireball of anti-punk punk rock and
changing people’s perspectives on distorted guitars and the
general lewdness of loudness. Seem like a fair amount of
contradictions? These guys make your head spin like that.
The Gubbey men have arranged an eclectic, enticing four-act
showcase at The Rudyard Kipling for this Saturday. The Audrey
Ryan Band, a sort of alt-jazz-folk-rock group on tour from
Cambridge, Mass., will open the festivities. Local beatnik
refugee Ron Whitehead and his highly-talented wife, Sarah
Elizabeth, will perform spoken word poetry and acoustic guitar
tunes. The pair have dedicated the set to Whitehead’s old
stomping pal, the great Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, who put a bullet
through his brain last Sunday (see more on HST on page 14).
Local bluegrassers Troublesome Creek follow.
Then comes Furlong, Louisville’s punk rock answer to Captain
Beefheart, a loud and beautiful mess of experimental sound
garbed in the same pop sensibilities that made grunge so
user-friendly. The band has recently upgraded to version 2.0,
bringing along bassist Chris Hoerter. There’s a new EP in the
works, Pony Up, a continuation of that which began on last
year’s magnificent sampler, The Indestructible Gubbey Records
Sampler CD Vol. II. Furlong’s “Ride My Train of Un-Agape Love”
stole that show, even from its alter-ego Funkus, whose “Sexual
Investigators” was a train wreck of Bootsy Collins-esque pure
funk from the ’70s that’s as hysterically funny as it is
funkaliciously adept.
Take from the new EP Truck Stop Whore, a bright and melodic
Velvet Underground-style dirge of pretty chords underneath a
story about a truck driver who “can’t wait to fuck my truck stop
whore.” The complementery high-pitched “oohs” and “ahhs”
reminiscent of early R&B perfect the tune’s mindbending
contradiction in terms. The lyrics are clever and pertinent,
despite the comical vulgarity.
“Blood Red Panties” is considerably heavier, opening with an
ominous bass line that explodes into a full band (piano
included) headbobbing jump. The opening line sets the tone:
“blood panties on the bedroom floor/don’t you know you should
lock the door/outside I wait all day for you.” After a pair of
verse-chorus-verse runs through, the song evolves on a piano
riff into a speedy psychotica of sound, then quickly fades to
silence.
Much like their equine-influenced name, Furlong’s music takes
the thoroughbred approach, spending most of the time in rigorous
and fruitful training, preparing for the fleeting bursts of
hysterical speed and power that only make sense on this band’s
record, in that kind of deep, pure context. Using that ambience
as an indicator, it’s hard to imagine this show as anything less
than a carnival, or at the very least, a horse race.
BY STEPHEN GEORGE
sgeorge@leoweekly.com
Furlong
Saturday, Feb. 26
Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak St.
636-1311
$5; 10 p.m. |
This is a small story on an event we produced in 05'

Gubbey Records presents …
Dave Rucinski, one of the honchos at Louisville's
Gubbey Records, has pulled together an entertaining
show tomorrow night at The Rudyard Kipling, 422 W.
Oak St. (10 p.m., $5).
There will be a sad note, as Ron Whitehead will
spend part of the evening commemorating the late
Hunter S. Thompson. Otherwise, he and Sarah
Elizabeth will combine post election poems with
interludes of mountain music.
The rest of the lineup features
the Audrey Ryan Band, an alternative jazz band from
Cambridge, Mass., that incorporates elements of
rock, folk and Latin music. Louisville's Troublesome
Creek will handle the bluegrass, and Rucinski's
band, Furlong, will wrap it up.
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The Following Article Was In The March 10-16 2004

Issue Of
Velocity Weekly, This Magizine Has Great Local Music Coverage!
Great Gubbey!
As mysterious and hotly debated as the whereabouts of "Leonard: Parts 1 through
5," so is the question of the final resting place of "The Indestructible Gubbey
Records Sampler CD, Volume I."
That question, however, has been rendered moot with the glorious release of "The
Indestructible Gubbey Records Sampler CD Vol. II: When Gubbey Attacks."
The Louisville label, home to such
subtle gems as Funkus and the S---house Poets, has released another sonic buffet
of its bands. In addition to the above, bands like Furlong, the Touched, Mr.
Samples and the Chocobots pop up on "When Gubbey Attacks!" a loud and quirky
odyssey of Louisville music.
Even Gubbey's founder, Dave Rucinski, shows up, doing a cameo under the moniker
Mr. Razzledazzle on the Funkus tune "Sexual Investigator."
He also takes a turn with S---house Poets on "My Love Travels at 25 MPH" and
with Mr. Samples' "I'm Gonna Grout Your Bifka," a random electronic indulgence.
It's not clear whether Rucinski is
running a label or just giving his friends an outlet for their musical fancies.
We're not sure it matters either.
Copyright 2004 The Courier-Journal.
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This Is a review of The
Indestructible Gubbey Records Sampler CD Vol II:
When Gubbey Attacks, that shows up in the April 2004
issue of Louisville Music News.
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Making it Matter
The Indestructible Gubbey Records
Sampler CD Vol. II (Gubbey Records)
Various Artists
By Kory Wilcoxson
Gubbey Records is determined to
make Louisville music matter again. Founded in 1993 by Dave Rucinski, the label
has witnessed the local music scene's wax and wane over the past decade. With
this second sampler, Rucinski is doing his part to showcase the diversity of
local offerings.
The sampler is noteworthy for the range of styles represented. Listeners
are treated to everything from the "locomotive sex rock" of Furlong (the
website's description is better than anything I could come up with) to the
P-funk vibe of Funkus' "Sexual Investigators" to The Chocobots' "Days Like
This," which calls to mind early Elvis Costello.
Another standout on the disc
include the almost indescribable "I'm Gonna Grout Your Bifka," a collection of
obscure and witty TV samples played out over what sounds like a perverted
version of Disneyworld's "Electric Light Parade" theme. The song is credited to
Mr. Samples, who is actually label founder Rucinski.
The sampler is worth picking up at
a local store to hear proof of a pulse in the local music scene. For more
information, visit the label's website at www.gubbeyrecords.com.
iPod Movies | Cheap Mp3 Music | Drug tests | Pass a Drug Test | Tooth whitening | Prescription drugs
Gubbey Records Press Page Radio Play for Gubbey Artists
Furlong The Band Indestructible Gubbey Records Sampler