SLOT
THE SWEET BLACK BEAR (SMALL STONE)
It's a bitch to explain the feeling in the early nineties; the world seemed to be going OUR way. Music was changing.
Nirvana had hit big, and we considered them our peers, our friends, if only by the proverbial six degrees.
Sonic Youth, Soundgarden, Mudhoney, Kyuss in the US, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Tricky and the Verve in the UK.
chrissakes, you know the list and probably have one of your own. The band I was in was making humble inroads; it seemed to us like people finally got IT.
Here, Detroit and Ann Arbor were vibrant, creative cities full of bands of all types, not just so-called grunge bands.
And yet to me the single most criminally underrated and ignored band in the world was Slot.
Sue, Eddie and Billy just playing for their own pleasure, blissfully (for us in the know) unimpressed and unconcerned by the musical trends around them.
Slot released various CD-EPs, favoring that format over albums because it allowed them to write and record in small batches-it's cheaper, ya know.
It allowed fans to follow the band's evolution closely, and Slot recorded one last lot of songs before their dissolution in 1995.
Alas, it was never released to anyone but close friends. One might say "Life got in the way." The day Billy lost his struggle against cancer in 2004 we -the Small Stone camp- were in Austin looking forward to nights of heavy drinking and heavy Rock.
When the phone call came that all changed. Pain, anger and disbelief in time led to nostalgia; Billy's wake was more like a party: musician and non-musician friends alike from all over the country traveled to Detroit to respect him and support Sue, his wife, friend and musical co-conspirator.
In all the years, the Slot House had never been so full. of people, laughs and tears: Slots and Chiefs and Small-Stoners and Necros and Five H.
Johnsons and etc. dressed to the nines, toasting, cracking jokes and revisiting memories.
Eventually, at Small Stone, we "revisited" the Slot catalog; all good. To our amazement, that "unreleased" thing held up beautifully.
It was difficult to tell when it was recorded, as it had aged much more gracefully than records by some of their better-known contemporaries.
It sounds as fresh and unconventional now, in the Oughts, as it did when first committed to tape.
The songs you have before you are nothing less than Slot and Billy's last testament, and we have decided to release this record not only as a tribute to our old, dear, departed friend, but as fans - pure, gleeful fans of this little band called Slot, who feel that this record needs to be heard.