Where's My Towel/Industry Standard

Industry Standard (usually extended to Where's My Towel/Industry Standard) is the debut studio LP by the American punk rock band Big Boys. It was released in 1981 on vinyl through Wasted Talent Records, operated by members of the Judy's. In 2004, the record was reissued on vinyl by Red C Records. It has never been officially released on cassette or CD, although it appears in its entirety on The Skinny Elvis, a retrospective multi-format compilation released by Touch and Go in 1993. The album's title and many of its themes were inspired by a growing dissatisfaction with elements of the Austin, Texas punk rock scene from which the Big Boys had spawned.

Where's My Towel/Industry Standard
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 15, 1981
Recorded1981 (1981) at Rampart Recording Studios in Houston, Texas
GenrePunk rock, post-punk
Length26:34
LanguageEnglish
LabelWasted Talent (JWT-3405)
Red C
ProducerBig Boys, David Bean
Big Boys chronology
Live at Raul's Club
(1980)
Where's My Towel/Industry Standard
(1981)
Lullabies Help The Brain Grow
(1983)

Background

In 1980, the infamous Austin club Raul's was sold to Steve Hayden, who implemented several policies that conflicted with the band's ideology ,[1] including the banning of cover songs to avoid paying publishing fees. Hayden funded the release of Live at Raul's Club, a split LP with fellow Austin punk rock band the Dicks, hoping the Big Boys' side would receive radio airplay based on its comparatively mild lyrical content. According to guitarist Tim Kerr, Hayden repeatedly justified his management decisions by claiming conformation to an industry standard.[2] The song Complete Control explored the band's relationship with Hayden. Spit was written about another local club, whose owner refused to let them play an agreed upon second set, claiming their stage presence distracted customers from purchasing alcohol. Following the recording of Industry Standard with producer David Bean of The Judy's, the second title Where's My Towel was added to the sleeve after a friend of the band described Kerr's cover artwork with the phrase.[3]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Security"0:53
2."T.V."2:26
3."I Don't Wanna Dance" (lead vocals: Tim Kerr)2:04
4."Identity Crisis"1:48
5."Thin Line" (second guitar: Chris Gates)3:31
6."Advice" (guitar: Chris Gates, bass: Tim Kerr)1:07
7."Complete Control"3:10
8."Work Without Pay" (guitar: Chris Gates, bass: Tim Kerr)2:34
9."Spit"3:11
10."Act/Reaction"2:36
11."Self Contortion"2:05
12."Wise Up" (guitar: Chris Gates, bass: Tim Kerr)1:15
Total length:26:34

Personnel

Production

  • David Bean - producer, engineer
  • Big Boys - producers
  • Bill Daniels; Beth Kerr - photography
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gollark: UPDATE: it works now since apparently I can still `readAll` and `write` strings in `wb`/`rb` mode for some reason.
gollark: I'm having some bizarre issues writing some binary data to files. I'll try and put together a bit of code to demonstrate this with, but basically it seems like `\13` bytes (carriage return) are being replaced with `\10` bytes (line feed). My code is using `"w"` and `"r"` modes instead of binary mode because according to the wiki binary mode doesn't let me use `readAll` and write a whole string; do I need binary mode and is there a way around reading/writing individual bytes for this?
gollark: Wait, an automatic nether portal? Won't that run out of flint and steel or something eventually?
gollark: But I'd be interested to know what application you're working on which uses distance data.

References

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