ANTON BARBEAU ~ DRUG FREE

Anton Barbeau represents the Sacramento chapter of that nameless coterie of enduringly reliable,
acid-tinged singer-songwriters that includes XTC’s Andy Partridge, Robyn Hitchcock, Julian Cope
and the Bevis Frond’s Nick Saloman. His new album bathes beautifully constructed, thoughtfully
arranged songs in a fading psychedelic sunshine, and it would be many casual consumers’
album of the year if only they got to hear it. 'Alphalpha Bhang' is a snake-charming slow
burn, while 'Boncentration Bamps' is lysergicly incoherent and inexplicably affecting.
Why buy George Martin’s rebooted Beatles? Classic guitar pop isn’t dead. (****)

Reviewed in The Sunday Times by Stewart Lee, UK


- Hello, ASA, how can I help?

- I'd like to report a blatant case of fraudulent advertising in indie rock.

- Oh dear, has some hapless bunch of asymmetrical hairdos been hailed as the second coming again?

- Not this week. I'm calling about is the latest album from Anton Barbeau, a US singer-songwriter dubbed
the "cult-hero's cult hero", whatever that means, most likely not blinding sales figures. It's called Drug Free...

- Let me guess: a straight-edged opus in praise of clean living, with vitamins, minerals and natural highs
practically oozing from the grooves?

- Not quite. See, that's the problem. Judging by the mind-warping contents of the disc, Barbeau's a hardened
dope fiend who eats, drinks and thinks dope, topping off the recreational regime by sleeping with his stash
under the pillow to ensure uninterrupted reception of dope dreams. The guy's pictured in the sleeve with fungi
for eyes, and when he kicks the high life amidst the title track's Plastic Ono Band stomp, it's only because
the feds force him to. A while later, he's sufficiently bonged-out to figure it's a neat idea to equip impeccable
tunes with wacky handles such as 'Bomcentration Bamps' and 'Alphalpha Bhang'. There's raga guitar and
trippy echo chamber explorations aplenty. Shit, the dude's so fucked up he thinks it's still the 60's!

- And you're worried that kids will grab the platter under false premises, and get wayward ideas from the
album's aural assimilation of brain-melting pharmaceuticals?

- On the contrary. I'm concerned that the clean & sober title will shoo discerning folks off, imply as it does
a dose of pure squareness, thus robbing Barbeau of the wider attention the almighty rushes triggered by
the album's disorientating peaks so richly deserve. Anyone can dabble in psychedelia, but to do it Anton's
way, with inventive aplomb that simultaneously celebrates and ridicules the hippiefied era's excesses,
complete with an indigenously offbeat approach to lyric writing, deserves a resounding round of applause.

- That good, eh? Sounds like a real find.

- Indeed. Anyone not digging the Love-esque high-pitched guitar shrills of 'Just Passing By', 'Oh The Malaise'
high-octane psych-folk or the sweet ballad of love between man and murdereress that is 'Leave It With Me, I'm
Always Gentle' must be closely related to "the man". It's not just about acid-fried Sixties fetishisms either - the
rifftastic ramalama of 'Magic Metal Apron' gallops towards T-Rex territory, whilst the nonsensical 'Disco Dress'
is an intoxicating oddity miles beyond categorisation. But nothing beats the faaaaar-out fuzz-fuelled quicksilver
guitar freak-out the fragile wonders of 'In A Boat On The Sea' erupt into. No wonder Barbeau's Sacramento,
California hometown recently staged an all-day "Anton-a-thon" in honour of the power-pop bard.

- But a more fitting title would be called for, right?

- Indeed.

- How about Dope Soaked?

- I'd go for Dud Free.

Reviewed in Kruger Magazine by Janne Oinonen, UK


Anton Barbeau is one of a legion of American pop anglophiles. The Kinks, The Beatles, XTC and
Robyn Hitchcock loom large among his influences. In Barbeau’s case, the favour been returned:
He’s recorded with The Bevis Frond and has two albums out on Dorset’s Pink Hedgehog label.
The first, Waterbugs & Beetles is a re-release of his sophomore CD from 1995. The second,
Drug Free, is his last but one, from 2006. The two albums share definite similarities: Barbeau
laid down most of both albums by himself. Nine other musicians came in to lend harmonies, the
odd spot of drumming and a few overdubs on Waterbugs & Beetles. On Drug Free, Barbeau
once again handles the lion’s share of the music-making – he’s credited with vocals, guitars, a
variety of keyboards, bass drums, harmonica, woodwinds and "bird-calls and nonsense" – and
pulls in another large collection of helping hands (18 in all, this time) to fill out the corners. Both
albums share Barbeau’s most distinctive feature (and drawback): His singing voice. It’s
energetic (some might say manic) and tuneful but has a nasal, tremulous side that may
rub some listeners the wrong way. That said, Waterbugs & Beetles is definitely the
product of reckless youth, Drug Free the product of a seasoned veteran.

Barbeau seems to feel the same way. Although it’s been lauded as his best work, he’s given
Waterbugs & Beetles a bit of a trim. The 19-song original is now 16 tracks over 46 minutes.
‘Groovy’, ‘Jelly’, ‘Untitled (But Sad)’ and ‘I Want You Not Around’ all get the chop as being under-
recorded or just plain bad; ‘Beautiful Bacon Dream’ also gets a dub version. (For those who worry
about such things, the original cover art, a grainy black-and-white photo of a shaggy Barbeau, has
been replaced with a photo of a kitten.) Trimmed or not, the album is an eclectic offering, with pop
tunes, punchier rockers and acoustic ballads keeping company with throwaway snippets. The
album leaps out of the starting gate with breakneck girl ode ‘Allyson 23’, and then slows things
down for some musical grumbling on ‘MTV Song’. It then segues into Hitchcock territory with ‘A
Proper Cup Of Tea’ (goes well with poison, apparently) and the insect-fixated title track, a gentle
acoustic number that breaks for a stately but overdriven electric guitar lead part.

‘Beautiful Bacon Dream’ is a clunky and chunky tune based around a climbing riff – it works
primarily by splitting ‘Waterbugs And Beetles’ from the other acoustic centrepiece of the album,
‘The Epic Ballad Of Sarah And Zoe’. ‘The Epic Ballad’ highlights Barbeau’s anglophiliac streak
with references to Heathrow Airport and Morris Minors. ‘Complicated Umbrella Piece’ is a snippet
of answering machine message, ‘The Tad Song’ is another oddity – starting as a somewhat
conventional ‘boy-loses-girl, tells girl she doesn’t know what she’s missing’ power-pop putdown,
it veers crazily into a frenetic blizzard of noise, crashes to a halt then comes back as a hard rock
tune. ‘Bible Beater’ is a ruder, poppier tune which contains the line "You shall get to heaven if
you rub a little harder." Another oddity ‘Slimy Cello Piece’ is just that (although it doesn’t sound
all that slimy, it does appear to feature a cello.) ‘Long John’ is a more experimental tune, with a
pair of children discussing a game of hide-and-seek over a crackly loop. ‘Vomit Song’ is a low-
fidelity goofball ramshackle strummer that borders on the novelty tune. ‘Come To Me (Made Of
Metal)’ brings things down to earth, a slow, melodic love song that brings in a crunchier electric
sound just past the halfway point. It’s followed by ‘Come (Again)’, a goofier take on the same
tune and by the album capper, the dub version of ‘Beautiful Bacon Dream’.

Ten years later, Barbeau has knocked out a slew of albums, co-operated with the aforementioned
Frond fellows (on King Of Missouri) and generally refined his craft. Older and wiser definitely suits
Barbeau: He’s become a much sharper producer. His singing is also less strenuous. The stacked
harmonies and piano that gild the title track of 'Drug Free' make for a superb opener (they sound so
nice that he tries it again on the brief ‘Lop It Off'). Added touches like the whistling on the suitably
subdued ‘Leave It With Me, I’m Always Gentle’. ‘Just Passing By’ is a full-bodied pop piece with
a disconcerting lyrical undertow. ‘Alphalpha Bhang’ once again lays on the multi-tracked vocals
for an epic, slightly druggy, tale of children discovering their parents up to no good (although
exactly what is a bit unclear). Barbeau gets strumming again for the deceptively bouncy ‘Disco
Dress’. ‘Boncentration Bhamps’ begins as a stripped-down acoustic number. Barbeau’s simple,
repeated lyrics “I don’t like the sound of the boncentration bamps ... come away, sailor” are
presumably an oblique take on current U.S. affairs with an extended psychedelic bridge.

‘Magic Metal Apron’ flies along on a dreamy chorus ... just don’t ask for the verses to make
any sense (they seem to focus mostly on food). ‘She Wears A Green Leaf’ makes about
as much sense, with the chorus describing the protagonist’s sartorial habits (leafy, as the
title suggests) and the verses being a barmy travelogue. ‘Oh The Malaise’ is an acoustic
lament of too easygoing days which drift off suddenly to make way for another repeated
acoustic number ‘Circus For The Stars’. ‘In A Boat On The Sea’ takes a leisurely tack, with
neat little licks interposed between Barbeau’s ruminatory lyrics. ‘Alphalpha Drone’ ends the
album with a blend of backward guitar, surges of Farfisa and studio chatter. Although it is
about the same length, give or take a minute, as Waterbugs, Drug Free comes as a far
firmer piece of work. The guitars are quieter, but the rhythms move the songs along in a
far more determined fashion, and listeners will likely feel themselves more inclined to bop
along. The only thing holding it back is a hideous cover portrait of the artist, which resembles
a candid snap deemed unfit for the family photo album. Both albums hold treats for pop fans:
Some will prefer Waterbugs scattershot songraft, quirky melodies and guitar crunch, while
others will find the more refined ‘Drug Free’ a more consistent pleasure. Both albums
makes a good entry into Barbeau’s catalogue.

Reviewed at Pennyblack Music by Andrew Carver, UK


Much of what is written about Sacramento singer-songwriter Anton Barbeau has been genealogy-
by-numbers, tracing his work back through a fairly obvious lineage to the heyday of UK psychedelic
pop. Let's try and not do to much of that that here, because his work deserves better, having the
strength and uniqueness to be evaluated in light not shadow. In the Village Of The Apple Sun
was one of the finest releases of 2006, and in many ways, Drug Free is a companion piece to
that brilliant, acid-drenched blotter of songs and sound-sketches. Drug Free, like its predecessor,
has a knack of firing hooks into your cerebellum in a way that makes them difficult to dislodge
– days, not minutes or hours being required. Above all, Barbeau knows that at the core of all
good psychedelic pop there must be genuinely memorable song-craft, otherwise the construct
either flies apart like the psyche of someone on the worst of trips, or is impenetrable like the
consciousness of one of Philip K. Dick's burnt-out co-travellers "who were punished entirely
too much for what they did". It's all in the balance.

The title track is an entirely fitting opener, playing ironically with the concept of the artist set
adrift creatively without psychotropic assistance. "I lost the will to write, to strum and to sing"
is the sentiment conveyed he complains to a fictional doctor while seeking some "prescription
bubblegum", but it is clearly not so, for the song is a fine slice of twisted pop, made more eldritch
by decontextualised vocal contributions from Sharron Kraus. Pete Townsend once wrote about
the songs stopping once the drugs stopped, and the same concerns seem to be addressed here.
'Leave It With Me, I'm Always Gentle' is classic hummable Barbeau, very much recalling Robyn
Hitchcock (maybe without the shellfish obsession). And it has whistling… always a good sign for
this genre. 'Just Passing By' is a genuinely deathless slice of power-pop, with an iconic chord-
progression, blistering leads, and a stunning tune along the lines of early work of The Teardrop
Explodes, Echo & The Bunnymen and The Chameleons (sensing a thread there). Definitely
one for future compilation albums.

After the Trojan horse represented by this initial brace of songs, the CD takes and more deranged
and tangled route. 'Alphalpha Bhang', 'Disco Dress' and 'Boncentration Bamp' play with influences
from UK toy-town psych-pop to Monty Python's Flying Circus, mostly successfully depending on your
tolerance for Gilliam-esque surreal daftness. Various Lucky Bishops sit in to provide a full-blown psych-
rock framework for the delirious 'Magic Metal Apron'. Barbeau's art can veer dangerously close to self-
parody at times, and sometimes it is going to cross the line, as 'She Wears A Green Leaf' does quite
spectacularly. Other tracks like 'Oh The Malaise' and 'Circus For The Stars' seem little more than
sketches for potential fully-realised compositions, but that is part of what you sign up for with this
kind of record. Conversely, 'In A Boat On The Sea' doesn't seem to have the variety of moves to
sustain its ten-minute-plus length, though it drifts by pleasantly enough. While perhaps not being
as consistent as In The Village Of The Apple Sun, there is more than enough diversion in
the material on Drug Free to please either the long-term Barbeau follower or the casual
fan of psych-pop wanting to check out his work. And it's good to know that there
are several other releases in the pipeline from this always intriguing artist.

Reviewed in Terrascope by Tony Dale, UK


Anton Barbeau from the States has been in a very productive mood since Drug Free! is one
of the two albums by him in a very short period of time. That’s a great thing, since I for one enjoy
his pretty much 60’s styled psychedelic rock/pop very much! Also this album was recorded with
the help of many friends, and besides Ant there are 18 musicians involved on this album. The
track 'Drug Free' starts with a short, harmonic vocal part by Sharron Kraus, and it’s a pretty slow,
The Beatles/Lennon styled psychedelic masterpiece with funny lyrics. The following track 'Leave
It with Me, I’m Always Gentle' that begins with acoustic guitar and vocals and grows gradually is
another 60’s styled number and includes for example some whistling and female backing vocals.

After a short accapello vocal section comes the melancholic 'Just Passing By' that is equipped
with groovy percussion and has, more or less, borrowed its chord progression from 'While My
Guitar Gently Weeps'. Another winner, for sure. The slow and dreamy 'Alphalpha Bhang' is an
excellent track with beautiful organ work and could have benefited a lot from a sitar. 'Disco
Dress' begins with acoustic guitar and vocals and is a rather groovy, nice and a bit wacky
number sounding a bit like the Swedish Dungen. This is cheerful and energetic stuff including
among other things a funny part and a funky ending! The rather slow 'Boncentration Bamps'
starts off in acoustic folk spirit and has a quite weird drum sound and some electric piano.

The rockier, exciting and interesting 'Magic Metal Apron' has loaned a bit from 'Little
Drummer Boy'. Then follows three short, acoustic folk pieces ('She Wears a Green Leaf',
'Oh, The Malaise' and 'Circus For The Stars'), after which it’s time for the longest track on
the album called 'In A Boat On The Sea'. This jamming, hypnotic and also heavy track begins
in a tranquil, pretty and minimal way until it gets stuck in a repetitive, hypnotic swirl that grows
and expands into very psychedelic proportions a bit in the kraut or space rock vein. This is
what I like! 'Alphalpha Drone' is just a short piece of guitar drone followed by a hidden track
hat has some female vocals, talk and laughter. This is another amazing album and warmly
recommended!

Reviewed at Psychotropic Zone by DJ Astro, FINLAND


Anton Barbeau released Drug Free alongside his ‘60s psychedelic pop-influenced In The Village
Of The Apple Sun
. Whereas the latter album entailed donning a rather specific musical costume
(which happens to suit him unbelievably well), Drug Free allows for a broader range of style and
expression, with more diverse – and perhaps more interesting – results. Though he retains the
‘60s aesthetic, his influences extend into various styles of the ‘70s; and his lyrics, despite their
enduring esotericism, seem to reveal a depth that the other album’s almost childlike whimsy
rarely permits.

The Lennonesque title track is a slightly paranoid, dream-like (hallucinatory?) account of
improbable events, with even Anton himself wondering, “How much of this is real?” His
vocals are arguably bolder than Lennon’s, boasting a comparative robustness, as well
as a talent for howling octave jumps. 'Leave It With Me, I’m Always Gentle' could be a
tender hippie love ballad, until the words reveal it to be a darkly amusing tale which really
gets off the ground when he recounts, “She placed a ring upon my finger/ and a shotgun
in my stomach/ and she turned to me and said/ ‘Kiss the bride.’” Both musically and lyrically,
the slow, trippy 'Boncentration Bamps', and especially 'Alphalpha Bhang', would have fit
perfectly on Village, but here provide useful pacing between more intense tracks. In an
almost gratuitous display of melodic prowess, he seamlessly weaves an acoustic 'Little
Drummer Boy' interlude into the gritty, glammy, electric 'Magic Metal Apron' - and some-
how makes it rock.

Perhaps easing his stylistic constraints on this album allowed Anton to shed at least one layer
of obscurity; I wouldn’t dare presume to know the real Anton Barbeau, but there are moments
on Drug Free when he seems to puncture the incoherence with fleeting displays of candor. He
interrupts the trivial mood of the stomping 'Disco Dress' to declare, “I’m worried ‘bout nothing
less/ than when I die what’ll happen to me,” only to instantly reestablish levity by asking, "Will I
be cold and hungry?/ Will a candy bar help me get through it?” In the melancholic 'Oh The
Malaise' , he admits, “I think I love you,” only to pull back with a noncommittal “Whose words
are these?” Meanwhile, 'Just Passing By' could very well be an earnest exploration of existential
angst, although, true to form, this remains unclear. The oblique nature in which he addresses
the issue, weaving a mysterious tale of distressed and confused characters, actually intensifies,
rather than dilutes, its impact; incorporating the command to “cherish each moment while
looking each other in the eye” within the dialogue raises the potentially platitudinous statement
above the level of cliché. And is it just me or does he mumble, “I cry a lot when I’m alone” on
the charming, folky 'She Wears A Green Leaf'?

'In A Boat On The Sea' initially sounds like a Luna song inspired by Eno’s dreamy 'On Some
Faraway Beach', until the rhythm section continues to chug along underneath increasingly
distorted guitars, unleashing an extended Krautrock-style jam. At 11:37, it’s the one moment
of true anti-pop indulgence, and it’s telling that Barbeau chose this moment to step out of the
spotlight. Whereas other so-called "quirky" songwriters might not be able to resist devoting
any spare moment of excess to a self-congratulatory display of personal eccentricity, Barbeau
– despite his talent for showmanship – has the humility to understand that the music is more
important than the man. He may be offbeat, but he never loses sight of a good tune.

Reviewed at The Red Alert by Alexandra Keyes, USA


Anton Barbeau confesses on its web page openly that he steals The Loud Family and other one
regularly from artists like The Beatles, Bob Dylan, XTC, Robyn Hitchcock, Julian Cope, Brian Eno,
David Bowie. That makes it pleasant in two kinds. First of all, because he admits something, what
many different also do, but does not admit. Secondly, the American steals at least of good volume.
On its new work Drug Free are that above all The Beatles in addition, Syd bar-saved and once hear
one a trace of the parliamentary group Crowded House/Split Enz ('Magic Metal Apron'), completely
with a excursion to the Weihnachtsklassiker 'Little Drummer Boy". Another time goes it to instrument
valley nearly as too with Sonic Youth and ago ("in A on the boat sea"). The album title is not however
only on one level correct, if it concerns Barbeau, at least looks he in such a way. The work a trace
Psychedelik is musical, speaks drug influence, to agree upon not paired with a Quaentchen irony
('She Wears A Green Leaf'). (8 out of 10)

Reviewed at Swiss Records by Robert Pally, SWITZERLAND


The award for last year's most ironicaly-titled album must go to Anton Barbeau's Drug Free
for both lyrically and sonically it is a psychedelic trip through 60s-flavoured pop. Barbeau is
blessed (or cursed perhaps) with a strained cackle of a vocal but his main gifts are his
songwriting skills. The songs range between easy on the ear tunes ('Leave It With Me I'm
Always Gentle') and slow-burning epics ('Alphalpha Bhang', 'Boncentration Bamps') to
rockier numbers ('Disco Dress', 'Magic Metal Apron'), with the best song probably
being 'In A Boat On The Sea'; a wistful little number with a simple but addictive
Eno- style melody. Some amusing lyrics certainly give the impression that his
live shows (featuring "auto-neurotic" humour no less) would be worth checking
out but with the weirdness factor being so high means that Barbeau that
is unlikely to gain any more popularity than, say, Robyn Hitchcock.

Reviewed at Leonard's Lair by Jonathan Leonard, UK


Harold Shipman dispatches epistles from the afterlife via Barbeau's Myspace. "Your
music causes my flaccid pecker to awaken and point skyward", inscribes the belly-up
Shipman, signing off "Your Loving Friend". We can thus deduce that Harold is a fan of
cosmic, evocative, grizzly power-pop; that he enjoys simplicity of form and lyricism in
songcraft; and that he oft retreats into a balmy familiarity whose choral repetition is
boderline jarring. We can further presuppose that Harold's ardour for elementary
structurs, ambling psychedelia and light-hearted harmonies might stretch to The
Beatles and Crowded House. But Shipman is not Anton's only obsessive: his
home town of Sacramento, USA, recently stage a 23-hour "Anton-a-thon", in
which scores of performers took to the stage and performed tributes to the
deific Barbeau.

Reviewed in Plan B by Nicola Meighan, UK


You probably think you know Anton Barbeau by his obvious reference points – John
Lennon/The Beatles, Syd Barrett, Bob Dylan, Robyn Hitchcock, Neil Young – but really,
Barbeau possesses his own unique voice. Drawing from a diverse base that includes
psychedelic rock (of course), whimsical oddities, fuzzed-out ragas, spacey folk ballads,
power pop ditties etc, Barbeau imbues his eclectic tastes with a distinctive way with
words. Never a dull moment.

Reviewed at Power Of Pop by Kevin Mathews, SINGAPORE


Sacramento's Barbeau's been slogging away for some years, this being his eigth album, but only
now is he beginning to get a glimmer of mainstream recognition. Very much in thrall to the 60s, it's
the more experimental end of The Beatles (Lennon especially on the title track), which provides the
prime blueprint, though his Brit derived influences also dip into Julian Cope, Ray Davies, Syd Barrett
and, the most recent trace in evidence, XTC. With tracks that run from 19 seconds on 'Lop It Off' to
over 11 minutes with 'In A Boat On The Sea' with a couple clocking in under two minutes, he mines
a fairly quirky psychedelic pop vein. He does dig out several nuggets too; the whistling, hand clap
loping 'Leave It With Me, I'm Always Gentle', an early Bowlie-like 'Just Passing By', 'Magic Metal
Apron' with its nick from 'Little Drummer Boy', and the folksy coloured 'She Wears A Green Leaf'
and 'Alphalpha Bhang' among the best things here. But, rather like titling one track ('Boncentration
Bamps') after a Monty Python sketch, it does tend to overplay the quirkiness, suggesting he needs
to do a little more refining before attracting the notice of The Flaming Lips fans he's got his eye on.

Reviewed at Brum Beat by Mike Davies, UK


There's something that I find strangely appealing about Anton Barbeau. Drug Free sounds like it was
recorded in the mid-seventies by a bunch of tripped-out, glammed-up, platform heeled hippies. Is this
the dawning of the Age of Aquarius? Is the Moon in Uranus? No this is Anton Barbeau and they is
faaaaaaar out! I'd actually listened to seven of the thirteen tracks before I opened the case and took
a look at the sleeve notes, only to find a pic of the band lolling about near some ancient standing
stones. Class! The vocals are tight and pleasantly strangled as if coming to your ear through a tin
can and a bit of string. It's quirky, infinitely musical, full of interest and hugely enjoyable. Fiddles,
Hammonds, 12 strings and minor keys make for some easy listening while you're sucking on
your bong! This might just be your scene man. Boomshanka!

Reviewed at TrakMARX by Debbie Hurry, UK


Part of a dual release by Anton Barbeau, "the cult hero's cult hero." With a whole raft of previous
releases this Sacramento-based psychedelic power-pop songsmith has gained international plaudits
for his leftfield pop odysseys. With a sound reminiscent of The Beatles at their most extreme or Teardrop
Explodes' Julian Cope, Drug Free is quirky yet inviting melting pot of 60's harmonies, bittersweet lyrics
and pop sensibility. The titles track opens the album with a Lennon-esque vocal style and lilting melody.
The remaining tracks swim easily by, from the frankly bizarre 'Lop It Off' to the modern-day Beatles meet
Nirvana sound of 'Just Passing By'. 'AlphAlpha Bhang' is a vaguely Eastern sounding acoustic groove
through pop's more diverse waters. 'Magic Metal Apron' goes electric again with a driving, trippy,
hedonistic roam through late 60's psychedelia. At times making forays into territory once held by
English psychedelic folk-rock the album closes with 'AlphaAlpha Drone', with a further exploration
of Eastern themes once so loved by 60's British rockstars. Unique, individual, never predictable
and always unexpected Drug Free is a treat.

Reviewed in Fuse, UK


I'm holding a press release that says "His sound is best described as Beatles-meets-Julian Cope-
meets-Joe Meek pop odyssey." That the guy has got a good enough grip to rip off John Lennon
is beyond dispute, but the real deal is that Anton Barbeau is edgier, splashing around the darker
puddles of the Finn brothers solo stuff and taking his influences off to more formally rocky places
and dragging Harry Chapin into the bad places. This is, these are good things, but why should
you listen to, let alone buy this album? Easy, it rips off the right people, it's intelligent, it's wayward
n willful and bombs your glam-connection with 'Magic Metal Apron', the one that kind of wraps it all up.

Reviewed in Unpeeled, UK


Considered something of a cult hero on the underground US rock scene, Sacramento singer/songwriter
Anton Barbeau returns here with his latest record, Drug Free. Released alongside another new album, In
The Village Of The Apple Sun
, it seems that 2006 is shaping up to be a busy year for Barbeau. Drug Free
is a record that finds Anton Barbeau taking his Beatles meets Julian Cope meets Joe Meek psychedelic
pop for a spin, delivering thirteen mesmerising songs for your listening pleasure. Title track and opening
song here, 'Drug Free' sounds like an out take from Bowie's Ziggy Stardust period; Barbeau affecting a
similar drawl and weaving a glam rock marvel into the process. The tender 'Leave It With Me, I'm Always
Gentle' is a more Beatles-esque slice of power pop whilst on 'Just Passing By', Barbeau unleashes some
dissonant guitar squalls and raises some hell. Continuing with a definite anglophile feel, 'AlphAlpha Bhang'
has echoes of Tyrannosaurus Rex; a song dripping with hippy vibes and incense soaked attitude.

'Disco Dress' is a jaunty garage rocker with punchy power chords and sky high melodies, though that hippy
vibe does surface again with a progtastic recorder solo midway through proceedings. Proving once again
that this is a songwriter with a definite ear for timeless melodies, 'Boncentration Bamps' and 'Magic Metal
Apron' are upbeat pop tunes that will have you grinning from ear to ear, although as a lyricist Barbeau is
perhaps a little too prone to quirkiness that can begin to grate. An epic and sprawling slice of psychedelic
pop, 'In A Boat Song On The Sea' heads off in similar directions to The Flaming Lips or Mercury Rev,
deviating from its simple pop roots to climax in a sprawl of psychedelic noise and Can like rhythmic
shuffles. A gloriously left of centre pop record, Drug Free sees Anton Barbeau bringing together the
twin worlds of power pop and psychedelia on an album that charms, beguiles and bristles with
imagination from start to finish.

Reviewed at UK Music Search, UK


Sacramento USA, is where you'll find artist come musician Anton Barbeau brewing another slightly
psychedelic cocktail of folk and trippy soundtracks. 'Lop It Off' is one track that uses, harmonies,
acoustic guitars and piano and Barbeau's voice. All of this is half influenced by The Beatles (see
'Circus For The Stars') then contemporarily flavoured with a deep tone, at the same time, possibly
accidentally creating the atmosphere of The Flaming Lips. Proof enough that Drug Free possesses
a fine, new idea for modern indie/pop. 'Magic Metal Apron' sounds like all of this cross bred with a
Suede track, whilst 'In A Boat Song On The Sea' sounds like a folk outing glued onto a New Order
guitar/bass track, which seals the fact that this strangely compelling album actually picks out all the
right flavours from a wide ranging palate of sounds.

Reviewed at Manchester Music by Simon Brown, UK


One of those excellent examples where a true indie musician created an own new sound... based on
decades of music... far from beaten path sound... unique and always *tasty* and high class... so why
does the *offcial* music world ignore him?... well... simply... too inteligent for today's *Blunt-ism* poisoned
masses... that is why I like EVERY album by Anton Barbeau... this *is just* another VERY GOOD one!!

Reviewed by DJ Lord Litter, GERMANY


I'll start this review with a link: Anton live. On it you'll see Anton and his band singing the title track
live in San Francisco, an interesting alternate take on the album version on which I thought for a
minute I was listening to a John Lennon song. A strong start then! Backed by a myriad of musicians,
Ant keeps up the standard achieved on previous releases (including one King Of Missouri where he
collaborated with The Bevis Frond). 'Leave It With Me' takes things along nicely with a nice bit of country
rock. 'Just Passing By' has Steve Randall on "jangle/phase" guitars and Ant on lead and some uncredited
hand drums. This is one that will stick in your head. 'Alpha Alpha Bhang' has more of the psychedelic Beatlish
touches with guitars variously effected. Throughout Ant has many stories to tell and many idiosyncratic touches
and musical snippets that make me think Frank Zappa and The Mothers Of Invention may have hit his radar at
one stage. This is confirmed on the satirical 'Disco Dress' - the old Farfisa adds to the "cheesiness" and he
even has his own Suzy Creemcheese in there. Alan Strawbridge provides the guitars and rhythm section on
the heavy 'Magic Metal Apron' with its references to mango chutney and poppadums and a quotation from
'The Little Drummer Boy' – curious! The crowning glory of the album though is the 11:37 of 'In A Boat On The
Sea' its preposterous beauty transcending all that has come before. The laid back twin guitars of Dave
Middleton and Steve Randall work a treat and the rhythm section of Larry Tagg and Brad Cross make a
telling contribution to a visceral atmospheric vibe that goes, like some Grateful Dead jam, nowhere in
particular, part of its attraction I suppose. That's not to take away from the rest of the album wherein lie
some real musical gems! Another interesting and contagious release from Pink Hedgehog!

Reviewed in Zeitgeist by Phil Jackson, UK


The same could be said for Drug Free, which was recorded with much the same cast as Village (including
Kraus and Strawbridge), and has much the same feel. (Hell, 'In A Boat On The Sea' is even more blatantly
psychedelic than the Villagers). Perhaps slightly less trippy than Village for the most part, Drug Free emphasizes
the songs’ hooks and melodies over atmosphere. Thus seemingly joking cuts like 'Magic Metal Apron' and
'Boncentration Bamps' (title and chorus borrowed from a Monty Python sketch) are married to great melodies
that will keep you singing to yourself for hours trying to figure out what he means. (A common occurrence in
Barbeau’s universe, actually.) Like other celebrated eccentro-pop tunesmiths, however, Barbeau is hiding
emotional kicks behind the wordplay - listen carefully to 'Oh The Malaise', 'She Wears A Green Leaf' and
the title song and you’ll find more than just eyebrow-cocking cleverness. Indeed, 'Just Passing By' and the
absolutely lovely 'Leave It With Me, I’m Always Gentle' are the most straightforward songs he’s yet done.
(Maybe). Everything here is awash in catchy melodies, with will be enough for any pop-smart consumer’s
eardrums. Drug Free is slightly less quirky than In The Village Of The Apple Sun, but no less excellent.

Reviewed at High Bias by Michael Toland, USA


"A cult hero's cult hero" is apparently one way to describe our Anton here, whatever that means. Using
The Beatles as a comparison to his sound, therefore, is something of a confusing one in this light. But
several seconds into the opening title track, it makes some sense. It's possibly the most Lennon sounding
song I've heard since 'Free As A Bird' - and it works too, chugging away in a pleasant enough manner. It
seems Anton is one of those singer-songwriter types who have been doing the rounds for sometime but
never quite crop up on your radar. He's already well past the five album mark, remarkably. He's also already
garnered some praise on both sides of the Atlantic - his hometown recently celebrated his talents by throwing
numerous prizes his way while mainstream press notices have began to trickle in. Drug Free is clearly an
album by a man with ideas galore and the patience to then go and sketch them out. However, the overwhelming
60s-ness does get a bit grating after a while. Apparently, Andy Partridge of XTC is a fan and the two songwriters
do share a love of the more weird side of that decade. But while Partridge was able to combine that with a knack
of killer hooks and sublime melodies, Barbeau at times seems over-reaching. Additionally, 19 second tracks
like 'Lop It Off' seem deliberately quirky and equally irritating as do as a series of shorter numbers which, quite
frankly, go nowhere fast. Barbeau is at his best on songs like 'Just Passing By' when his writing qualities are
allowed the space to shine and more basic and effective ideas (such as the cheapo sounding guitar solo)
bring substance to the table. There's plenty to investigate on Drug Free and Barbeau will doubtless be back
to make another album. Perhaps the next will find him even more friends. Rating: 7/10.

Reviewed at No Ripcord by D.C. Harrison, UK


"Sacramento - where Britpop never died"

This album couldn’t be any more Beatley if it was small, black and concealed a pair of somewhat fragile
wings under a shiny carapace. To be more specific – because The Beatles had one or two changes of
musical direction, y’know – it’s late Beatles and early solo Beatles, much like last year’s hugely enjoyable
Dr Dog album. If you have any Beatlegeek friends, why not compete to decide which specific songs the
tracks here resemble? Within the opening seconds of the title track, you’ll be arguing between ‘Dear
Prudence’, ‘Instant Karma!’ and ‘Oh! Darling’. This makes Drug Free, Barbeau’s eighth album, sound
like an exercise in copycatism, which isn’t fair at all. His frazzled power-pop also takes in Julian Cope,
XTC, Syd Barratt and The Kinks: like any self-respecting Californian psych-merchant (see also Ariel
Pink, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, The Warlocks) Barbeau clearly knows his British guitar-pop.
Christ, there’s even a song titled after a line from a Monty Python sketch (‘Boncentration Bamps’).
It successfully pulls clear of its influences and establishes its own identity, as you’d expect from
such an experienced artist: unfortunately this identity becomes wearing over the course of an
entire album, with a touch too much wackiness and not quite enough wit.

Reviewed at New-Noise.Net by Eddie Robson, USA


In one year extremely prolific for Anton, in launching terms—three, counting this—the bard of Sacrament
in offers them with plus a full workmanship of brilhantismo, creativity, mood and letters more than what
inhaled. Drug Free! (great heading) the record of the year is strong candidate. One more time, Anton
touched almost all the instruments and counted on aid of some friends. The result is simply surprising,
estarrecedor and shining: Drug Free! it is since already my favourite record in all its immense discografia.
The record opens in the band-heading, an excellent band where it drains its immense sense of mood. The
second band 'Leave It With Me, I'm Always Gentle' is certainly one of the best moments of 2006, with its
letter beirando the nonsense and its cativante melody. After one short vignette —one of its marks—Anton
in offers them with another wonderful band —'Just Passing By'—where has resquícios of 'My My Hey Hey'
of Neil Young in the two first seconds of guitar, by the way, touched for it, Anton. The slaughter follows with
'Alphalphabhang' and the unusual 'Dress Record', taken off of records of years 70. Obviously, a record
that speaks of drugs would need to have a band to the style Grateful Dead, what the Boat happens with
long (more than the 11 minutes) 'In On The Sea', that Jerry Garci'a would applaud of foot. The record
closes with another classic signature of Barbeau, a vignette without name. The record was launched
by the Pink Hedgehog and is one of the launchings most succulent of this year. If it will be able, it
acquires it, without scares!

Reviewed at Mofo by Rubens Leme Da Costa, BRAZIL


Talk of cool and discerning labels leads us invariably on to Pink Hedgehog, set up by Weymouth's far-sighted
and philanthropic Simon Felton, and now boasting an artistic roster which has to be the envy of labels with far
more money and far less sense. The latest batch of Pink Hedgehog releases kicks off with Drug Free by
Sacramento-based wild card Anton Barbeau, who is gradually and deservedly becoming recognised as a
songwriter of singular genius. Drug Free is arguably Anton's most accessible work to date. The terrific title
track would sit very comfortably indeed on the first Plastic Ono Band album, and 'Alphalpha Bhang' shares
its playful but darkly literate worldview with Syd Barrett's early compositions. Anton's lyrics are alternately
hilarious and strikingly perceptive, and his songs have a way of burrowing under your skin to the point where
they become one with your own corpuscles, and you never want them to leave. Comprehensively recommended.

Reviewed in The Dorset Echo by Marco Rossi, UK

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