Fingerprince
Fingerprince is the third studio album by the American experimental rock band The Residents, released in 1977 on their own Ralph Records label.[1][2] Originally conceived as a groundbreaking three-sided record titled Tourniquet of Roses, the project faced practical challenges that led to its division into the Fingerprince LP and a limited-edition EP called Babyfingers in 1979.[1] The album's structure divides into a side of brief, quirky vignettes exploring themes of human interaction and absurdity, followed by the ambitious 18-minute suite "Six Things to a Cycle", which narrates a cycle of human self-destruction through repetitive, minimalist motifs.[1] Influences from Indonesian gamelan music, composers like Philip Glass and Steve Reich, and the microtonal innovations of Harry Partch are evident, particularly in the suite.[1] Six Things to a Cycle originated as a ballet score commissioned for choreographer Maurice Béjart, intended for performance on a barge in a Venice canal, though it ultimately served as the album's conceptual anchor.[1] Subsequent reissues, including a 1990s two-CD set combining material from both Fingerprince and Babyfingers, have preserved its status as a seminal work in the band's avant-garde discography, noted for its innovative sound design and refusal of conventional song structures.[1][2]Background and concept
Development
Fingerprince was conceived by The Residents during the years 1974 to 1976, a period marked by concurrent work on their unfinished experimental film Vileness Fats—which they self-financed with limited resources, including $1,200 from selling a band member's sports car—and the recording of the album Not Available.[1][3] This multitasking reflected the group's early resource-strapped environment at their independent label Ralph Records, founded in 1972, where projects often overlapped due to part-time efforts around day jobs.[3] Originally titled Tourniquet of Roses, the album was envisioned as an extension of their experimental audio explorations, but complex ideas like its planned three-sided format were ultimately abandoned owing to the practical and financial constraints of producing such an unconventional release through Ralph Records.[1] These limitations forced a streamlining of ambitions, aligning with the broader challenges faced in completing Vileness Fats, where budget shortages and technical obsolescence halted progress after four years of intermittent shooting.[3] The project played a pivotal transitional role in The Residents' evolution, bridging their initial phase of unrestrained avant-garde experimentation—seen in earlier works like the tape collages of Santa Dog (1972)—toward a more structured minimalism influenced by composers such as Philip Glass and Steve Reich.[1] This shift emphasized disciplined composition techniques, including repetitive percussion patterns and invented languages, setting the stage for future releases while adapting to the realities of independent production.[1]Original three-sided idea
Fingerprince was originally envisioned by the Residents as the world's first three-sided LP, titled Tourniquet of Roses, as the material was too long to fit on two sides.[1] This concept aimed to push the boundaries of album structure by extending the recorded content across three sides.[1] The ambitious three-sided design was ultimately abandoned due to significant practicality issues in manufacturing, including challenges in producing non-standard vinyl configurations, as well as high costs that were prohibitive for the small independent label Ralph Records.[1][4] Instead, the project was streamlined into a conventional two-sided album, with approximately two-thirds of the material comprising the final Fingerprince release.[1] The excised content from the proposed third side was later issued separately as the Babyfingers EP in 1979, restoring the full scope of the original recordings for fans.[1]Recording and production
Sessions and contributors
The recording of Fingerprince occurred in sporadic sessions from 1974 to 1976 at the Residents' El Ralpho Studios in San Francisco, California. These sessions built upon the group's original three-sided album concept, adapting material over time into the final LP format.[5][6] A key collaborator was guitarist and vocalist Philip "Snakefinger" Lithman, whose contributions included guitar on "You Yesyesyes" (LP) and "Tourniquet of Roses" (Babyfingers EP), as well as vocals on "Home Age Conversation"; this marked his first major involvement with the Residents.[5] Additional inputs came from vocalist Pamela Zeibak, who provided singing on "Six Things to a Cycle." The album also incorporated elements from the 1976 Leapmus suite, which served as the foundational basis for Side B's structure and content.[5][7] Several tracks integrated demo material from the Residents' 1974 recording sessions.[5]Technical aspects
The Residents employed a low-budget recording approach for Fingerprince, utilizing their rudimentary setup at El Ralpho studio in San Francisco, California, operated under the Ralph Records label, to capture a raw, distorted sonic aesthetic reflective of their experimental ethos.[6] This home-based environment, with limited resources, prioritized improvisation and analog manipulation over polished production, aligning with the band's early financial constraints.[1] Side A features short songs constructed through tape loops, analog synthesizers, and minimal instrumentation, including guitars, horns, keyboards, and percussion, creating fragmented, surreal soundscapes.[8] Key collaborator Snakefinger contributed guitar to select tracks like "You Yesyesyes," enhancing the sparse arrangements.[9] The album's Side B centers on the 15-minute suite "Six Things to a Cycle," which employs violin performed by Adrian Deckbar alongside percussion and vocals to evoke minimalist, cyclical rhythms inspired by gamelan traditions.[10] In post-production, the group edited extensive session material to conform to a standard two-sided LP format after abandoning the original three-sided concept, which proved unfeasible for manufacturing and distribution.[1] This process involved splicing and overdubbing to streamline the composition while preserving its avant-garde intensity.[6]Musical style and themes
Overall structure
Fingerprince is formatted as a standard two-sided vinyl LP, with Side A dedicated to eight short, minimalist songs that collectively run for approximately 19:43, providing a series of concise, rhythmic vignettes driven by skeletal arrangements of percussion, horns, and electronics.[2] In contrast, Side B presents a single extended composition titled "Six Things to a Cycle," a 15:09 ballet suite that unfolds as a continuous, multi-part narrative piece exploring themes of humanity being consumed by its self-created environment through repetitive motifs and layered instrumentation.[1] This division creates a deliberate balance within the album's total runtime of about 34:52, blending accessible, song-based structures on the first side with more abstract, immersive abstraction on the second, marking a shift from the band's earlier, uniformly experimental works such as the sprawling, conceptual soundscapes of their shelved second album Not Available.[1] The overall structure reflects an experimental intent to juxtapose brevity and repetition in the Side A tracks—characterized by abrupt starts, minimal melodic development, and quirky percussive elements—with the expansive, cyclical form of the Side B suite, which functions as a unified ballet score rather than discrete songs.[1] This approach draws on minimalist influences akin to those of Philip Glass and Steve Reich, incorporating repetitive patterns and gamelan-like percussion, yet integrates rock-derived energy through distorted guitars and driving rhythms, distinguishing it from pure classical minimalism.[1] By alternating between these formats, the album achieves a dynamic tension that highlights The Residents' evolving interest in formal contrast to enhance thematic depth without relying on traditional verse-chorus progressions.Lyrics and influences
The lyrics of Fingerprince explore themes of alienation and primitivism, often through abstract and surreal narratives that challenge conventional human progress.[1] A prime example is "Six Things to a Cycle," an evolutionary ballet depicting a primitive humanoid consumed by its self-created environment, only to be replaced by another primitive entity, symbolizing cyclical renewal and isolation.[1] This track employs invented languages and repetitive motifs to evoke a sense of primal disconnection.[1] The overall lyrical style is abstract, repetitive, and surreal, prioritizing sonic texture over linear storytelling. Songs like "You Yesyesyes" exemplify this through minimalistic, echoing affirmations that build a hypnotic, disorienting rhythm, reflecting the album's experimental ethos.[11] Such approaches draw from influences including Harry Partch's microtonal innovations and invented instruments, Indonesian gamelan percussion, and the minimalist repetitions of composers like Philip Glass and Steve Reich, blending them into a uniquely avant-garde framework.[1]Release history
Initial release
_Fingerprince was released on February 15, 1977, by Ralph Records under catalog number RR 1276, marking the third studio album from the anonymous experimental collective The Residents.[12][13] The initial pressing, completed in December 1976, was limited to 1,000 copies on vinyl, emphasizing the label's independent, small-scale production approach.[8] The packaging featured a distinctive sepia-toned grayscale cover art designed by Pore No Graphics, incorporating the iconic Ralph Records eyeball logo without any band photographs to preserve the group's deliberate anonymity.[8] Housed in a thick cardboard sleeve, some copies included an application form for the Ralph Records "Weirdo" mailing list, underscoring the direct-to-fan distribution model.[8] Marketing efforts positioned Fingerprince as experimental rock, leveraging underground networks through Ralph's mailing list and limited mail-order sales, which aligned with the DIY ethos prevalent in the burgeoning punk scene of 1977.[14] This release marked the first Residents album to draw mainstream press attention, notably with a positive review by Jon Savage in Sounds magazine on December 31, 1977, which praised its accessibility compared to prior works.[15] Despite the buzz, distribution remained minimal, confined primarily to independent outlets and fan channels amid the punk explosion.[16] Originally conceived as the world's first three-sided album titled Tourniquet of Roses, the project was scaled back to a standard two-sided format due to production constraints.[1]Reissues and editions
The Babyfingers EP, containing tracks originally intended for the third side of Fingerprince, was released in September 1979 by Ralph Records as a limited 7-inch vinyl edition of approximately 35-40 copies without initial artwork, with about 10 later hand-decorated in various colors and packaged in modified Santa Dog '78 sleeves.[17] In 1981, the WEIRD Fan Club produced 1,500 additional copies with black and pink cardboard covers, followed by a 1985 reissue of 250 copies on pink vinyl in clear plastic sleeves.[17] These editions preserved the EP's experimental mini-opera elements, including "Walter Westinghouse," which had been excluded from the original LP due to space constraints.[2] The first CD reissue appeared in 1987 via East Side Digital (rESiDe 4), compiling the full Fingerprince album with the Babyfingers tracks integrated, resulting in a 53-minute runtime across 18 tracks and marking the debut of the complete version on compact disc.[18] This was followed in 1995 by Euro Ralph's edition (CD 011), which restored the original LP track order on a standard 5-inch CD while appending the full Babyfingers EP as a bonus 3-inch mini-CD in a separate sleeve, housed in a fold-out Digipak; both discs were remastered by Master & Servant in Hamburg.[19] A 1997 remastered version on East Side Digital further refined audio quality, addressing inconsistencies in prior pressings.[2] In 2018, the pREServed Edition was issued as a 2CD set by New Ralph Too in collaboration with Cherry Red and MVD Audio, featuring 28 tracks totaling 113 minutes, including the remastered original album on Disc 1 and a Disc 2 of ephemera with eight previously unreleased 1976-1977 recordings such as the 14-minute "Leapmus" rehearsal, live-in-studio takes, and excerpts from the 1986 Tromsø concert.[20] Remastered from original tapes by Scott Colburn, this edition restored the album to its conceptual running order and included rare imagery, an essay by archivist Jim Knipfel, and historical notes detailing the project's evolution from the abandoned three-sided Tourniquet of Roses concept, while incorporating outtakes to provide context on the era's experimental sessions.[20] A highly limited Tourniquet of Roses box set, realizing the long-canceled 1977 collectors' edition, was self-released in 2020 in an edition of 15 numbered copies, containing a golden lathe-cut LP of Fingerprince, a 12-inch lathe-cut of Babyfingers, and additional inserts evoking the original three-sided vision.[21] This was expanded in 2021 to a deluxe edition of 25 numbered box sets with similar lathe-cut components. The most recent reissues occurred in 2023: New Ralph Too, via Cherry Red and MVD Audio, released a remastered 2LP vinyl edition (NRTLP004D) paired with a bonus 7-inch of select outtakes, complete with new sleevenotes continuing the pREServed archival approach.[2] Simultaneously, Psychofon Records issued a limited collector's edition of 200 numbered LPs on pink/clear/purple striped vinyl as part of their Classic Series, featuring a glossy fold-out cover and bonus inserts to highlight the album's gimmick packaging history.[22]Track listing
Original LP tracks
The original 1977 vinyl edition of Fingerprince by The Residents presents a two-sided LP structure, with Side A comprising eight concise tracks totaling approximately 19 minutes and Side B dedicated to a single extended composition. The sequencing emphasizes fragmented, experimental vignettes on the first side, contrasting the ambitious, cyclical narrative of the second. Runtimes and track order follow the pressing by Ralph Records.[2]| Side | Track | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | You Yesyesyes | 3:00 |
| A | 2 | Home Age Conversation | 2:03 |
| A | 3 | Godsong | 3:41 |
| A | 4 | March de la Winni | 0:58 |
| A | 5 | Bossy | 1:00 |
| A | 6 | Boo Who? | 2:48 |
| A | 7 | Tourniquet of Roses | 3:15 |
| A | 8 | You Yesyesyes Again | 2:38 |
| B | 1 | Six Things to a Cycle | 17:44 |