Generic

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (114 ratings)
Generic album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 40:38

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Jason Pettigrew

eMusic Contributor

Jason Pettigrew is the Editor-in-Chief of Alternative Press. His favorite noises in life are the first minute of "Cables (Live)" by Big Black, the Arp 2600 synt...more »

01.06.09
Flipper, Generic
1982 | Label: Public Flipper Limited LLC / IODA

Why is there a 27 year-old album listed alongside records by young turks? Because San Francisco's Flipper only copped one trait inherent in all California hardcore at the time: attitude. Generic Album captures the band at their most glorious fucked 'n 'fabulous peak. Rarely in tune, the quartet would play a medium-tempo riff ("Sex Bomb," “I Saw You Shine”) for what seemed like infinity in an effort to put the urge in "dirge." Guitarist Ted Falconi opted to create jagged bouquets of guitar abuse that rivaled sci-fi noiseniks Chrome than following Greg Ginn's lead. At their best, Flipper were positively acidic (in both corrosive substance and wheat-derived hallucinogen terms); at their worst, they reminded you of the feeling you get when you wake up drunk. Because they didn't get in line with hardcore's harder/faster/angrier ethos, not only could they hold their own opening shows for Black Flag or brooding industrialists Throbbing Gristle, they (in)directly influenced everyone from tangled post-punks, shoegazers, noisicians and the grunge aesthetic that put the phrase "Sub Pop" on the nation's radar a decade later.

Write a Review 7 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

f*ck yeah.

b.b.betty

bay area punk rock. 'nuf said. not enough? this band hates you, me and everyone else. feeds for great music.

user avatar

Classic Anti-Rock

ludlow555

It's loud. It's messy. Irreverent. Snotty. Yeah, it's pretty much perfect. Play this at Hot Topic. Watch the kids go into seizures. Yay, fun!

user avatar

I love this album to the point of madness

EMUSIC-00798931

I already reviewed this, but want to stuff the ballot box of this album with 5 stars ratings. Please please please please please please please download this very wonderful album. Washes the unpleasant taste of Animal Collective, Grizzly Bear, Dirty Projectors out of your mouth. ALBUM GENERIC ROCKS LIKE CRAZY.

user avatar

Crazy assed...

AcidRock23

Sex Bomb will always be the highlight for me but this is a great album, the epitome of lo-fi, it don't get more lo-fi than this...

user avatar

7.5 mins, One 4 bar riff

jhedrick0521

Flipper is genius in the amount of fun they can get out of one idea. For example, see "Sex Bomb." My band used to cover it as our closer. It took us about 45 seconds to learn and we never got tired of playing it.

user avatar

far from generic...

Dvoodoo

Their finest hour, and far from generic, their raw, noisy, painfully poetic and viciously vital early 80's releases have been out of print for years due to the surviving band member's own idiocy. Looks like they finally wrested legal control from Rick Rubin who bought their (stolen) master tapes in the early 1990's. I see the band's legendary dysfunctional drugged out incompetence continues to this day with the missized cover art... oh well ...It's Flipper! Start downloading this now...and move on to the other albums as time & energy permit.

user avatar

best version of sex bomb baby!

borntochill

this album is my favorite flipper lp. if you can only download 2 of their songs. get sex bomb baby (generic) and ha ha ha 7" version!!!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Moby Let’s Go

By Robert Phoenix, eMusic Contributor

While Virgo is often considered to be the one sign driven by an almost insane desire for perfection and purity, a fair number of the artists that fall under its arc - from August 23rd to September 22nd - can hardly be called Puritanical. A quick check finds Charlie Parker, the archetypal bebop mainliner, shooting junk while deconstructing the songbook of his day in blistering triple-times. Then there's Gene Simmons. While Simmons has eschewed alcohol… more »

They Say All Music Guide

If great rock & roll is supposed to be about breaking the rules, then Flipper’s still-astonishing debut, Album — Generic Flipper, confirms their status as one of the great rock bands of their day. Album captures a band who not only refused to obey the accepted guidelines of rock & roll, they didn’t even bother to pay much attention to their own rules. On the opening cut, “Ever,” the band displays a willful contempt for rhythm, playing in a sludgy mid-tempo that wavers back and forth — and then they add a snappy (if casually executed) clap track over the top, making the sloppy mess seem almost catchy. Flipper slogs along through a slow, noisy swamp through most of the album, only to snap-to with a dose of up-tempo hardcore near the end on “Living for the Depression,” and then close out with the brilliant “Sex Bomb,” the closest thing ’80s punk ever created to the beer-fueled genius of the Kingsmen’s “Louie Louie,” and a song with a great beat that you just can’t dance to. And while Flipper seemed sincere about their utter lack of faith in mankind, on “Life” they dared to express a tres-unhip benevolence, declaring “Life is the only thing worth living for.” (Not to mention the angry but deeply committed finale to “Living for the Depression,” in which Bruce Lose declares, “I’m not living my life to be/A real cheap f*cker like you, copout!”) About the only accepted rule of rock that seems to mean anything to Flipper is that music isn’t worth playing if it doesn’t have passion; every noisy moment of Album — Generic Flipper sounds like Flipper was willing to live and die for this music (and in a sense, that’s just what Will Shatter did). On Album — Generic Flipper, Flipper plays noise rock with none of the pretension that later bands brought to the form, proving that music doesn’t have to be fast to be punk (a lesson that gave the Melvins a reason to live), and creating a funny, harrowing, and surprisingly engaging masterwork that profoundly influenced dozens of later bands without sounding any less individual two decades later. – Mark Deming

more »