Waiting for the Electrician or Someone Like Him

Waiting for the Electrician or Someone Like Him
Studio album by The Firesign Theater
Released January 1968
Genre Comedy
Length 42:00
Label Columbia
Producer Gary Usher, The Firesign Theatre
The Firesign Theater chronology
Waiting for the Electrician or Someone Like Him
(1968)
How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You're Not Anywhere at All
(1969)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
The New Rolling Stone Record Guide
The Goldmine Comedy Record Price Guide

Waiting for the Electrician or Someone Like Him is the first comedy album recorded by The Firesign Theatre. It was originally released in January 1968 by Columbia Records.

Plot

The first side of the original LP presented a trilogy of three related plays, presented as continuously connected tracks progressing in time. The second side presented a longer, separate play.

"Temporarily Humboldt County"

The first section runs 9 min 14 sec, and satirizes the displacement of the American Indians, first by Spanish conquistadors, then by American frontiersmen, and finally by the US government forcing them onto a reservation, which it uses as a "cobalt testing range". The title comes from friends of the Firesign Theatre telling them that the local Indians in Humboldt County, California added "temporarily" to the name as a way of saying no one could really own the land. The section ends with a bomb explosion, followed by the sound of wind blowing.

"W. C. Fields Forever"

This 7 min 39 sec track is continuous with the first; the Indians wander silently through the desert and come upon the "Lazy Ol' Magic Circle Dudes Ranch and Collective Love Farm", a hippie commune. The commune's spiritual leader, the perpetually drunk/stoned "Tiny Doctor Tim", is a parody of Timothy Leary. (W. C. Fields actually appeared on the first track, dedicating the cobalt testing range.) The title parodies the Beatles song "Strawberry Fields Forever".

"Le Trente-Huit Cunegonde"

This 7 min 19 sec track continuously segues into a future world in which the 1960s hippie counterculture has now replaced the mainstream cultural establishment. Police patrol searching for "non-groovy" people whom they arrest to be "returned for re-grooving". Mothers breast-feed their sons into adolescence, and a teenager named Malcolm X John Lennon gets in trouble with his school principal for studying instead of hanging out and "relating" with his peers by smoking marijuana. A US senator who sounds like Ted Kennedy chairs a committee which also returns people for re-grooving, and the "Secretary of Peace" directs bomber aircraft to drop copies of Naked Lunch on Nigeria.

Side two: "Waiting for The Electrician or Someone Like Him"

This single, 17 min 48 sec track begins as a Turkish language instruction record, and immediately follows its listener on a Kafkaesque trip overseas. An unnamed innocent played by Phil Austin is manipulated by mysterious strangers and authority figures into situations beyond his control. (In the written script, the character is called simply "P." for Phil, a reference to Kafka's use of "K." in The Castle.)

A highlight of side two is the "Beat the Reaper" sketch, a mock game show in which the contestant is injected with a disease and must guess what it is in order to win the antidote (if the contestant fails to self-diagnose, he is sent home with the disease). This segment is also featured on both the Shoes for Industry: The Best of the Firesign Theatre and Forward Into The Past compilation albums.

Issues and reissues

Waiting for the Electrician or Someone Like Him was originally released on Mono LP, Stereo LP, and 8-Track.

It has been re-released on CD at least three times

Some of the 2001 Sony CDs omit the first 16 seconds of the beginning of track 4 due to a mastering error. The defective Sony re-release and some non-defective copies also end with an un-marked bonus track "The Mantras and The Chakras". This track, lasting 4:08, is not included on any other Firesign release. For more information about the defective CDs see: http://www.firesigntheatre.com/media/html/wfte_bad.html

Cover

On the cover of the LP the name of the group is rendered "Firesign Theater." On their next album, How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You're Not Anywhere at All, the name is spelled "Firesign Theatre." The latter spelling has been used consistently since that time.

Citations

References

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