The Dancing Cigarettes were a popular post-punk and art band based in Bloomington, Indiana and active from 1979 through 1983. They were part of a cadre of Bloomington-based bands that made an impact on the underground music scene. Other bands included The Gizmos, Zero Boys, Dow Jones and the Industrials, and MX-80 Sound. These bands established Indiana as an innovative breeding ground for punk, post-punk and new wave music in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Early on, the group changed line-ups frequently, but it typically consisted of Michael Gitlin, Emily Bonus, Tim Noe, Jaclyn Oddi, John Terrill, and G. Don Trubey. More avant-pop than post-punk, their music was as eclectic as their members' musical talents would lead one to believe, ranging from squonky Beefheart rock to bouncy Devo-esque new wave, as evidenced by the brilliant "Pop Doormat," which opens with a deceptively anthemic synth line, then uses an ebullient bass and keyboard melody to underscore a disconsolate lyrical theme that wraps with the repeated question "What am I waiting for?" The band played regularly at numerous venues in Bloomington, including the Bluebird, Bullwinkle's, and Second Story. The Cigs also toured extensively, appearing at clubs throughout the US, including CBGB in New York, the Music Box in Kansas City, Mister Goodbar in Buffalo, Tewligans in Louisville, Space Place in Chicago, and many others. Notable gigs included sharing the stage with DNA, Babylon Dance Band, The Fleshtones, Men & Volts, and author William Burroughs, plus an inspired performance at the 1982 World SubGenius Convention in Chicago. The Cigarettes' musical style is most frequently characterized by the repeated use of hard dissonances in combination with angular rhythmic patterns. At times, dissonances are densely packed, as in the thick web of atonal clusters supporting the lyrics of "Broken Windows." A more spacious use of dissonance is found in "Simple Machines," clarified by an intriguing orchestration of the band's various instrumental sounds. "Puppies in a Sack" and "Piano Lesson/Smith Street" share a similar "additive process" technique in the gradual building of their dissonant and polytonal textures. Combined with this predominantly modular organization of material is a powerful sense of linear motion frequently provided by the band's lyrics. Often the emotive verbal scenarios create tenuous implications of direction which counteract the clouds of tonal density. In "Puppies in a Sack," the relentless repetition of "It was fun for a while" evokes a resignation to nostalgia, which is arrested by the plaintive admission, "But that was a while ago!" The group recorded frequently but released very little material during its lifespan. Two CDs and an LP of their material have been released in the years since the band broke up.
Discography
1981 - Red Snerts: The Sound of Gulcher compilation LP Broken Windows 1981 - The Dancing Cigarettes7" EP Puppies In A Sack, Mr. Morse, Pop Doormat, Best Friend 1981 - Segments compilation cassette tape Burn in Heaven 1982 - T.M.I. 015: A Compilation LP Jungle Book 1985 - Son of Segments compilation cassette tape Dance Dogs Dance 1996 - The School of Secret Music CD Studio:Bells are Ringing, Burn in Heaven, Jungle Book, Golden Moment, Razor Hand, Heat Pump, Dance Dogs Dance, Bury Your Picture. Live Radio Recordings from KOPN Columbia, MO: Poignant, Piano Lesson/Smith Street, Burnt Toast, Nervous and Wrong, Bad Bad Boy, Up Thru the Spiral, Spanish Modern/Insect Boxing, Feel this Pain, Pop Doormat, "D" in Anger 2002 - The Gulcher Recordings: 1980-1981 CD Studio: Puppies in a Sack, Mr. Morse, Pop Doormat, Best Friend, Broken Windows, Simple Machines, Poignant. Live at the Bluebird, June 1981: Whattayawannadonext?, Mr. Morse, Puppies in a Sack, Talking and Talking, Feel This Pain, Finger Pictures/Razor Hand, Eggs Any Style/Diet of Worms, Banana Industrial Complex, Monsters Eat My Hell, Jackie O/Too Mental For Me, Drawn By You, Burn in Heaven 2016 - Dance Dogs Dance LP Side 1: Dance Dogs Dance, I Don't Like Linoleum, Burn in Heaven, Pop Doormat, Bad Bad Boy, Finger Pictures, Razor Hand. Side 2: Bells are Ringing, Golden Moment, Poignant, Drawn by You, Little Green Thing