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18-20 Sycamore Street, San Francisco, California is a three-storey building which was rented by Residents, Uninc. in late 1972, following their move to San Francisco from their small apartment in San Mateo. The building's address was variously printed as either 18 Sycamore Street or 20 Sycamore Street during the group's time there.

A former print-works with a completely open ground floor, the building was large enough to act as a kind of artists' colony,[1] being used simultaneously as a recording studio, art and design studio, film soundstage, record label headquarters, and living space for several people. 20 Sycamore Street was the first of the group's studios to be nicknamed El Ralpho, in honor of their then-newly founded record label Ralph Records.

The Residents and Ralph Records remained in the Sycamore Street studio until July 1976, when they moved into an even larger office and studio space at 444 Grove Street. Upon moving to Grove Street, The Residents also moved into separate homes, and never lived together again.[1]

History[]

Sycamorestreet-tvroom

The TV room in the upstairs area of Sycamore Street, decorated by The Residents; as seen in William Reinhardt's 1976 Super-8 home movie "The Residents Exposed!"

Prior to Residents, Uninc. moving into the premises, 18-20 Sycamore Street had been used as a printworks, and most recently at that time, as the headquarters for the long-running dog magazine Western Kennel World,[2] which had only recently ended publication.[3][4]

When Residents, Uninc. moved into the building in the second half of 1972, it was full of photographs of dogs; the magazine's headquarters had housed a dog photography studio, which the group discovered had been also used to produce pornography on the side. A Polaroid photo found in the building depicting a dog in a Santa Claus costume inspired the opening track and cover art design of the group's first official release, the double 7" EP Santa Dog, which was issued in December as the inaugural release from the group's new independent record label, Ralph Records.

Sycamorestreet-jayclemwithyoyo

Jay Clem posing with a yo-yo in Porno Graphics' art studio in the Sycamore Street greenhouse, from William Reinhardt's 1976 home movie "The Residents Exposed!"

The upstairs space was used as a communal living area, with a TV room (housing The Residents' sizable record collection) and enough bedrooms to house not only The Residents, but also a number of their friends, including Jay Clem, John Kennedy and the group's graphic designer Homer Flynn, who had a small silkscreen printing space in the building's greenhouse (which also boasted an atrium and skylight), alongside ferns and other plants maintained by the members of the household.[5] Much like their previous space in San Mateo, the group vigorously decorated the premises, with paintings, found art materials, and various ephemera collected by its members all displayed throughout the building.

The basement housed The Residents' recording studio, where the group's engineer Hardy Fox produced their earliest official recordings. By the end of the group's time in the building, the studio featured at least three open reel tape machines, a mixing board, and various musical instruments, as well as a number of large paintings (including a prominent graphic of a crucified figure in a bra) and one of the large prop skulls later seen in promotional videos and live appearances.[5]

Sycamorest-atrium-and-skylight

The greenhouse/atrium and skylight, photo by William Reinhardt

The building also featured an entirely open space on the ground floor, which The Residents promptly converted into as a soundstage for their first attempted film production, Vileness Fats. The space, however, was not high enough to house a full-size film production; the group incorporated this into the script by making most of the characters one-armed midgets and building the sets at a shorter scale; the actors crouched inside the costumes during shooting. The film was in production for almost the entirety of The Residents' time at Sycamore Street, being abandoned in an incomplete state shortly before they left the building.

By 1976, Kennedy had become independently wealthy, enabling him to purchase a larger building at 444 Grove Street. The group moved into the new building in July, disassembling Residents, Uninc. upon their exit, with Kennedy founding the new management group The Cryptic Corporation alongside Flynn, Fox and Clem. Upon vacating the building, a decision was made that the members of the group would live separately; it is said that The Residents have never lived together again.[1]

After The Residents vacated the Sycamore Street warehouse, it became the San Francisco home of their friend and collaborator, English guitarist Philip "Snakefinger" Lithman. Snakefinger used The Residents' former studio as his main living space.[6] The space is now an orthopedic rehabilitation clinic.

List of projects recorded at this studio[]

Residentsrecordingstudio

The Residents' basement recording studio

See also[]

Sycamorestreet-google-2018

18-20 Sycamore Street, pictured in October 2018 by Google Maps

External links and references[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Fifty Years Of Weird & Wacky Wonderfulness", Musique Machine, March 23rd 2022
  2. Carol Roever Simonds, "The 50's, 60's and Beyond", Dog News, December 3rd 2010 (archived via Google Cache
  3. "Portfolio Info Continued", Evidence of Residents Volume 1
  4. "Santa Dog - Res History Ep. 1" by Mr. Riggsy's ResTube on YouTube, April 27th 2021
  5. 5.0 5.1 "The Residents Exposed!" home movie by William Reinhardt (posted by "rossarooney"), YouTube, July 21st 2008
  6. Ian Shirley, Never Known Questions: Five Decades of The Residents, 2016
Wbrmx-sml-transparent The Delta Nudes / Residents, Uninc.
(1967 - 1974)
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