Hairway to Steven is the fourth full‐length studio album by American punk band Butthole Surfers, released in February 1988. All songs were written by the Butthole Surfers, co‐produced by the Surfers and Ric Wallace, and mixed by Wallace. The album was recorded at January Sound Studio in Dallas.
The last full‐length Surfers album of the 1980s marked a midway point in the band's career, straddling their psychedelic noise roots and the more accessible recordings that would follow. Like the Surfers' previous releases, Hairway to Steven uses nontraditional instrumentation, extensive tape editing, and sound modulation.
Review:
The final album for the Surfers' legendary run on Touch and Go got a
reception probably not even the band figured on – lead reviews in major music
magazines, increasingly higher profiles, and more. As it is, though, Hairway is
actually a touch lazy in comparison to the previous releases, sometimes sounding
almost all too normal. When it connects, though, Steven works wonders, whether
continuing in the punk/psychedelic fusion vein of the past or exploring a
gentler, tuneful side. The lengthy opener “Jimi” is the album's high note,
and as one might guess from the title it's something of a tribute to
Hendrix – at least, if “Third Stone From the Sun” sounded like it was
recorded in a sewer tunnel and was even more gone than it already was. Haynes'
alternately deep and hyper-high-pitched vocals work perfectly against
Leary's searing, crazed guitar noises, while the Pinkus/Coffey rhythm section
lays down a massive beat. Everything concludes with deceptive peacefulness:
acoustic guitar, tweeting birds, sounds of bowling, and the like. Other
highlights include “I Saw an X-Ray of a Girl Passing Gas,” a relatively
straightforward, mostly acoustic-plus-rhythm section number sung clearly (!) by
Haynes, and the mock live recording “John E. Smokes,” with Haynes often
sounding like a rural preacher gone mad. The humming guitar buzz of
“Backass” and the quick blast of “Fart Song” concludes Steven with vim.
As a final note, the song titles themselves can't be found anywhere on the
release – instead, and quite notoriously, a series of cartoon drawings stand
in for them. Some are fairly calm, but most show things like nude women
displaying their butts and rabbits taking dumps on deer. Juvenile? Of course,
but the Butthole Surfers never pretended to be nice and sweet.
Ned Raggett, AllMusic.com