Harman Patil (Editor)

Suburban Lawns

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Years active
  
1978–1983

Record label
  
Genres
  
New wave, Post-punk

Active until
  
1983

Albums
  
Suburban Lawns, Baby (EP)

Suburban Lawns wwwfuturismoinccomwpcontentuploads201506Su

Labels
  
Suburban Industrial, I.R.S. Records

Past members
  
Su Tissue (Sue McLane)Frankie Ennui (Richard Whitney)John Gleur (John McBurney)Vex Billingsgate (William Ranson)Chuck Roast (Charles Rodriguez)

Similar
  
The Plugz, LiLiPUT, Girls at Our Best!, Essential Logic, Peter Ivers

Suburban Lawns were an American post-punk band formed in Long Beach, California, United States, in 1978 by CalArts students William "Vex Billingsgate" Ranson and Sue "Su Tissue" McLane. They later recruited Richard "Frankie Ennui" Whitney, Charles "Chuck Roast" Rodriguez, and John "John Gleur" McBurney.

Contents

Suburban Lawns Suburban Lawns 39Suburban Lawns39 2015 Review

The 1979 debut single "Gidget Goes to Hell" (released on their own Suburban Industrial label) gained the band notoriety when its Jonathan Demme-directed music video was shown on Saturday Night Live.

Suburban Lawns Looking Back on Suburban Lawns The Great Forgotten LA New Wave Band

Their sole album, Suburban Lawns, produced and engineered by EJ Emmons and Troy Mathisen, was released in 1981 on I.R.S. Records, featuring new wave radio favorite "Janitor."

Suburban Lawns Suburban Lawns Discography at Discogs

It has been said that the lyrics of "Janitor" were derived from a real-life conversation between Sue "Su Tissue" McLane and friend Brian Smith. According to Smith, the two were conversing in a loud room when they first met:

Suburban Lawns Suburban Lawns Janitor YouTube
She asked me what I did for a living. I said "I'm a janitor," and she thought I said "Oh my genitals." [Richard "Frankie Ennui" Whitney] overheard this and wrote the song.

According to Richard Whitney, this story is somewhat backwards; the music and all of the lyrics apart from “Oh, my genitals! I’m a janitor!” were already written when Sue McLane added them herself:

Su was definitely more of a poet than I have ever dreamed of being. The lyrics, except for Su’s contribution, are pretty straightforward science-nerd stuff about all things explosive. Su’s addition, whatever the source (and I have no reason to doubt what Brian Smith has apparently written about how Su came up with that addition), gave the song a poetical spin that added the dimension it needed to make it interesting. That’s exactly why, in my opinion, our best songs were those that were written collaboratively.

Gleur departed during the recording of the Richard Mazda-produced 5-song EP Baby, released in 1983, and the band folded shortly afterward. After the split, Whitney and Ranson formed a new, short-lived band called The Lawns, while McLane attended Berklee College of Music, where she studied piano.

In 1982 McLane recorded a solo album, Salon de Musique. She also played the role of Peggy Dillman in Demme's 1986 comedy movie Something Wild opposite Melanie Griffith, Jeff Daniels, and Ray Liotta.

Suburban lawns janitor


Discography

  • Suburban Lawns (1981)
  • Baby EP (1983)
  • Songs

    Gidget Goes to Hell1979
    Flying Saucer SafariSuburban Lawns · 1980
    JanitorSuburban Lawns · 1980

    References

    Suburban Lawns Wikipedia