Declaring itself "werewolf music" and urging the listener to "play on Halloween night!"
Quintron's The Frog Tape is more atmospheric than downright frightening, but it definitely evokes eerie goings-on in the dead of night. Originally sold only on
Mr. Quintron and Miss Pussycat's Halloween tour, the album, as its name implies, mixes recordings of chirping and croaking frogs (courtesy of "The Boys Club Swamp Frogs") with
Mr. Quintron's Phantom of the Opera-esque organ playing and gleeful cackles, along with the occasional yell or scream from Miss Pussycat. The result is one of
Quintron's most abstract albums since Internal Feedback. Tracks like "The Throat" are genuinely unsettling because it's difficult to tell, at first, if the track's cavernous croaking is coming from a human, a frog, or a machine. Mixed in with the more abstract pieces -- which range from the simple but effective intro, "Horror," to the hypnotic pull of the aptly named, 14-minute final track, "Frogs" -- are tracks that bear a closer resemblance to
Quintron's later, more song-oriented work, including the drum buddy-driven "Scary Office" and creepy covers of
Johnny Mathis' "No Love" and "Bride of Frankenstein" (aka a zombiefied version of "The Wedding March"). Meanwhile,
Quintron's version of "Stray Cat Strut" makes the song sound as if it was always meant to be played by a Hammond Model D electric organ and accompanied by a chorus of frogs. A spooky good time, The Frog Tape reflects the sci-fi mischief underpinning all of
Quintron's work, and is also a hip soundtrack to Halloween parties or any other time requiring spooky, but not clichéd, mood music. ~ Heather Phares