Initially conceived as entertainment for a downtown New York art community (which, at the time, was knee-deep in no wave),
the Lounge Lizards spent more than a decade with various lineups playing so-called fake jazz with pop and avant-garde rock tendencies. The band's initial incarnation was led by saxophonist
John Lurie, with brother
Evan on piano,
Arto Lindsay on guitar, Steve Piccolo on bass, and ex-
Feelie Anton Fier on drums; this lineup appeared only on the band's acclaimed, all-instrumental, self-titled 1981 debut.
Lindsay and
Fier left shortly thereafter, each embarking on a lengthy series of projects, and the
Luries recorded Live From the Drunken Boat in 1983 with a different and less compelling lineup. In 1985, during a hiatus in which
Evan Lurie recorded his first solo piano album, the collection Live 79/81 was released; the group also recorded with producer
Teo Macero and
the London Philharmonic. The Lounge Lizards regrouped in 1986 with both
Lurie brothers, saxophonist
Roy Nathanson, trombonist
Curtis Fowlkes, guitarist
Marc Ribot, bassist
Erik Sanko, and drummer
Dougie Bowne. This lineup recorded
Big Heart Live in Tokyo (1986) and the studio LP
No Pain for Cakes (1987), the latter of which featured the group's first vocal number. The following year's
Voice of Chunk was initially sold only through the mail.
John Lurie has also done scoring work for several
Jim Jarmusch films, including Stranger Than Paradise (1986),
Down By Law (1988), and Mystery Train (1989). ~ Steve Huey