Lenny Bruce
The Lenny Bruce Originals, Vol. 1
Play The Lenny Bruce Originals, Vol. 1
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AMG Review of The Lenny Bruce Originals, Vol. 1
Lindsay Planer
All Music GuideAfter being out of print, the Fantasy label compiled Lenny Bruce's late-'50s and 1960s platters onto compact discs for two volumes simply named The Lenny Bruce Originals (1991). The first installment gathers Interviews of Our Times (1958) and The Sick Humor of Lenny Bruce (1959), while the second serves up Togetherness (1960) and American (1961). The bulk of the material captures Bruce before an audience at the Peacock Lane club in Hollywood circa January of 1958 as well as Ann's 440 in San Francisco in April of the same year. As Bruce's legacy supports, he took on all topics and subjects with equal measures of wit and unapologetic candor. "Interview with Dr. Sholem Stein" as well as "Shorty Petterstein Interview" were from an odd EP that was not credited to Bruce, but rather was issued under the monikers of Henry Jacobs and Woodrow Leafer as Two Interviews (1955). "The Interview" was part of a weightier monologue detailing the career of a struggling jazz musician. The story is picked up as the addict horn player is in the process of being hired by a very famous bandleader (aka Lawrence Welk), whose name had to be excised due to potential lawsuits. Other standouts are the brilliantly conceived and executed parody named "The March of High Fidelity," in which hi-fi enthusiasts are depicted as fetishists who use junkie jargon and exhibit addictive behavior. "Father Flotsky's Triumph" -- displaying the artist's love and penchant for cinematic pseudo-drama -- is presented unedited at nearly eight minutes. Bruce delves into what he describes as "poetry in jazz" with the linguistic bit of psychedelic word association "Psychopathia Sexualis." "Non Skeddo Flies Again" recalls the tragedy of John "Jack" Gilbert Graham's successful bombing of United Airlines Flight 629 that killed 44 -- including his own mother. Bruce chides that it's hard to hate someone who bombs a flight that "only kills 40 people." His honest assessment of professionals doing what professionals do [read: get paid for their work] in "The Kid in the Well" suggests that many of Bruce's revelations have remained both poignant and ingenuous. The Hollywood-ification of "Adolf Hitler and the M.C.A." is admittedly in poor taste but impossible to ignore, while "Ike, Sherm, and Nick" offers a long-lost nugget of history concerning the inappropriate behavior of U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower's White House Chief of Staff Sherman Adams. Adams was asked to step down after it became public knowledge that he accepted a vicuĆa coat and other gratuities from a cotton broker who was concurrently being investigated by the Federal Trade Commission. "Religions, Inc." is perhaps the best-known entry in The Lenny Bruce Originals, Vol. 1, as it has appeared on several comedy compilations over the years. Bruce's keen BS detector and "follow the money" acumen hit upon major faith-based organizations decades prior to the PTL and subsequent fallout in the televangelism community. Finally, tacked on at the end of the disc is "Three Message Movies," with the humorist drawing on cinematic references to preach about three of his favorite topics: narcotics, truth, and tolerance.



