The Health & Happiness Show were late for the gig and charging down the highway on the road to Nashville on July 28, l994. They were out supporting their debut album Tonic and they were on a roll: Rolling Stone magazine had just done a big spread on the band and the Rolling Stones were blasting on the boom box, taped to the dashboard, life was good... then some 86-year-old guy decided to pull a U-turn on the super highway right into the van's lane. James Mastro, the driving force behind the Health and Happiness Show was also driving behind the wheel. "I swerved to avoid him and two other cars, the van rolled over twice in the middle of the highway. Miraculously, no one was seriously hurt, even the equipment was okay with the exception of a knob that broke off my Fender Princeton amp." Their newly purchased van, however, was totaled.
With the tour canceled they were on the way home in a rental van when drummer Vinny DeNunzio saw a sign advertising a trailer park with the slogan Instant Living . After their spin with Madame Death, and feeling somewhat born again, the saying stuck in their heads. They came home, chilled and thought about not playing for a while. But inactivity bred restlessness which led the band back to the studio. The end results are a leaner and louder H&H Show with the guitar work of James Mastro, Erik Della Penna and Richard Lloyd front and center. Gene Holder, normally a producer, for the likes of the dB's , Freedy Johnston and Yo La Tengo, offered his services as engineer. In two weeks time, Instant Living was ready to mix.
With Holder along, bass player Tony Shanahan and James Mastro headed down to old pal Mitch Easter's Brickhenge studio in North Carolina to mix the bulk of the album. After the intense fury of the recording sessions, the slowed down Southern pace was a welcome change. Aside from supplying barbeque, hush puppies, and a large music video archive (lots of Bowie and Patti Smith), Mitch also contributed the mix for "You Is Fine."
Birth, death and the stuff in-between is what Instant Living is all about. "On Your Way" is based on an old Apache birth song and was written by James right before the birth of his daughter. "Watch the Weather" was inspired by centenarian sisters Sadie and Bessie Delaney's observations of the past century. There's also the ecstatic opening track "To Be Free," which James describes as "the thoughts that roll through your head as you're rolling your van at 65 miles per hour."
So now you have it: Instant Living, every moment revealing something new. To be continued...
HEALTH & HAPPINESS SHOW on tour is:
James Mastro, Richard Lloyd, Vinny Denunzio, and Dave
de Castro on bass.