Home    Pop    Gremlins Have Pictures

Roky Erickson

Gremlins Have Pictures
CD $14
LP + 7” Black $22
Digital Download $10.99
  • CD & LP housed in deluxe gatefold “tip-on” jackets with book-deep liner notes by Joe Nick Patoski
  • LP includes 8-pg booklet, download card for full album, and bonus 7" (with tracks 13-16 from the CD)
  • CD includes 32-pg booklet
  • Rare / unseen archive photos and ephemera

Description

Collected here, the odds and ends of Erickson’s post-incarceration work tell a story of a man finding his musical feet, ranging from Dylan-like folk strumming to the big, Neil Young-like rock of the unparalleled ‘Anthem (I Promise)’. Gremlins Have Pictures is an anthology of Erickson’s solo work following his extended incarceration at the Rusk State Hospital for the criminally insane, beginning with his first live performance (opening for a screening of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre in Austin) all the way to Don’t Slander Me (LITA 098).

By 1986, Roky Erickson’s career had endured twists, turns and a late-period purple patch marked by incredible music and self-destructive behavior. The Evil One (LITA 097) broke him out of the indie underground and Don’t Slander Me showed off his rock ‘n’ roll sensibilities. But Erickson was difficult to manage – and patience was running out. "I‘d given up after the second album,” Erickson’s then-manager, Craig Luckin, has said. “I had enough.”

Yet a third album – arguably his best – was to be found, if not created. Gremlins Have Pictures is an anthology of Erickson’s solo work following his extended incarceration at the Rusk State Hospital for the criminally insane, beginning with his first live performance (opening for a screening of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre in Austin) all the way to Don’t Slander Me (LITA 098).

The...

READ MORE

Artist Bio

His band was riding high in their native Texas and beyond and the howling single ‘You’re Gonna Miss Me’ was his calling card, but Erickson’s ‘60s ended in the stuff of nightmares. Under sharp scrutiny by the authorities due to the band’s well-expounded fondness for psychedelic drugs, Erickson was found with a single joint on his person. Pleading not guilty by reason of insanity to avoid prison, he was sent to the Rusk State Hospital for the criminally insane, where he was ‘treated’ with electroconvulsive therapy and Thorazine treatment. Erickson pulled through his three and a half years at Rusk, and even put together a band while incarcerated. That band, The Missing Links, contained Roky plus two murderers and a rapist.

Released from the institution in 1974, Roky found his legend had grown while he’d been away – not least because...

READ MORE

Preview Tracklist

  • 1 Night of the Vampire
    5:35
    Buy
  • 2 The Interpreter
    2:43
    Buy
  • 3 Song to Abe Lincoln
    2:27
    Buy
  • 4 John Lawman
    2:47
    Buy
  • 5 Anthem (I Promise)
    4:23
    Buy
  • 6 Warning (Social & Political Injustices)
    2:11
    Buy
  • 7 Sweet Honey Pie
    2:46
    Buy
  • 8 Cold Night for Alligators
    3:33
    Buy
  • 9 I Am
    2:29
    Buy
  • 10 Heroin
    4:26
    Buy
  • 11 I Have Always Been Here Before
    3:09
    Buy
  • 12 Before in the Beginning
    6:38
    Buy
  • 13 Bermuda
    3:15
    Buy
  • 14 Burn the Flames
    1:33
    Buy
  • 15 I'm a Demon
    1:14
    Buy
  • 16 The Beast
    4:05
    Buy