Artist

Renaldo & The Loaf

Genre: Rock ,Experimental ,Mixed Media
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Formed in England, the experimental outfit Renaldo & the Loaf earned parallels to the Residents, in part due to multiple releases on that ensemble's Ralph Records imprint. The project originated with architect Brian Poole, who performed under the moniker Renaldo Malpractice, alongside pathologist David Janssen, known in the group as Ted the Loaf. Their idiosyncratic perspective, combined with resourceful deployment of tape loops alongside acoustic tools including mandolin, bouzouki, and clarinet, set the pair apart even amid other ventures in experimental music.

Poole and Janssen first connected during school in the late '60s, united by enthusiasm for Tyrannosaurus Rex, the Incredible String Band, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, and folk traditions, which soon prompted them to create music jointly. A few performances followed in the early '70s before studies prompted a temporary pause; upon resuming, their work reflected influences from Robert Fripp and Brian Eno through the addition of tape delay and prepared guitars. As their improvisations acquired greater organization, they documented material under the name Plimsollline. A 1978 agreement yielded the album Tap Dancing in Slush and the EP Behind Closed Curtains, yet the arrangement collapsed, leaving both items unreleased until 2014.

The duo pressed onward, refined their studio setup, and tightened song lengths after consulting Rough Trade's Geoff Travis. Sufficient material accumulated by 1979 for the self-released cassette Struvé & Sneff, marking their first outing as Renaldo & the Loaf. Ralph Records took notice later that year after Poole left a copy of the cassette during a San Francisco visit. Further tracks followed at the label's request, resulting in the Ralph debut Songs for Swinging Larvae in 1981. Director Graeme Whitler produced a short film of the same title that year, built around a medley drawn from the album and destined to achieve cult status. Continued sonic exploration brought keyboards into the 1983 album Arabic Yodelling. The same year delivered Title in Limbo, a collaborative effort with the Residents captured during the duo's first official encounter with the group in 1981. Rough Trade issued the limited rarities set Olleh Olleh Rotcod in 1985, while the single "Hambu Hodo" appeared a year later as an initial preview of the next project. Proceeds from Title in Limbo funded advanced equipment, enabling the more polished sound of 1987's The Elbow Is Taboo. The album's creation proved exhausting, however, and after contributing the sea shanty "Haul on the Bowline" to a Ralph compilation, the pair disbanded in 1988.

Poole later issued work through Fiction Friends and the Shouting Hat, while Janssen released solo efforts as Mr. Sneff and the Darkening Scale and partnered with Sylvie Walder in Tapeworm Vessel. The 2006 establishment of the Renaldo & the Loaf website prompted their return, yielding songs for the 2007 film Kirk Mannican's Liberty Mug. Klanggalerie reissued the full catalog in 2014, appending bonus tracks along with the previously unavailable Tap Dancing in Slush and Behind Closed Curtains. Two years afterward the label presented Gurdy Hurding, the duo's first album in nearly three decades and one shaped by early music influences. Renaldo & the Loaf delivered its initial live performance in 38 years during Klanggalerie's 25th anniversary events in 2018.