In 1986, Pat Barousse, a talented multi-instrumentalist, joined the group, and the tapes kept coming. "We started to get lame after a while," said Coleman. "Pat joined because we were doing far out stuff, but Chris and I wanted to do more sappy pop songs. Pat quit, and we went away to college."
The two returned to Tallahassee and formed a new version of the Spoons in 1987, a more traditional rock band. The line-up had Chris playing guitar and singing, Mike on drums and vocals, with John Barlow, guitar and vocals, and John Hintz, on bass, rounding out the quartet. Barlow also brought some great song-writing to this group's only release, Chedr, before leaving the Spoons.
Josh Clemons was brought in to fill second guitar position, and the classic Singing Spoons line-up congealed. Live, they were as interested in their on-stage drinking as they were playing, and they ravaged their instruments and throats until the audience thought they would collapse. The Spoons were LOUD, incredibly loud, and the noise from their guitars created bizarre psycho-acoustics that sounded more like 10 than 2 guys pummeling their axes. Mike sang most the leads in a mournful high falsetto while beating the drums as if to exorcise demons from the skins. Their songs were emotional, intense, strange, funny and sometimes touching, spewed out of a Husker Du/Crazy Horse inspired ruckus.
After the release of the classic Resin Cabin LP and the "Buzz" single, the group played their only tour, of the East coast, before disbanding in 1992. They had recorded over two hours of music to use for their next album, American Buckle, but it was never released. A song from these sessions appeared on The Nervous System compilation.
In 1993, Chris and Mike formed Ultraboy.
Spoons Releases: