In the hilarious liner note/photo package with the disc is an indignant letter from a punk fan in about 1982 or so complaining bitterly about
the Beastie Boys as being little more than "a pathetic, feeble imitation of
Minor Threat." The thing is, that's fairly accurate. Collecting some of the long out-of-print/hard-to-find early releases by the band -- the
Polly Wog Stew EP and the
Cookie Puss single, mainly --
Some Old Bullshit is mostly that, if an entertaining enough variety. The eight
Polly Wog Stew tracks are brattish hardcore and not much more, mainly interesting to hear
Mike D's lead snotty whine and sometimes amusing lyrics (
"Egg Raid on Mojo" is about carrying out such an assault on the doorman of a Manhattan club).
"Jimi" is the best of the bunch because it isn't anything like hardcore, but more an attempt at noisy psychedelia that sounds like a sweeter, younger version of
the Butthole Surfers. There's one other reason to at least give the album an initial ear: the drummer at this point was
Kate Schellenbach, eventual founding member of
Luscious Jackson a decade later. The
Cookie Puss tracks signal the initial transmogrification of
the Beasties into the hip-hop monsters of the later '80s, if a bit hamhandedly. There's old-school synth beats and bass, some minimal scratching, and vocals that in retrospect sound like
Ween, but not much else -- the mock reggae anthem
"Beastie Revolution" is pretty funny, though. As an amusing bonus, two radio tracks from the hardcore days are included: rough takes on
"Egg Raid on Mojo" and
"Transit Cop." ~ Ned Raggett