Thursday, 28 October 2010
34 Two By Two - Blue Zoo
Purchased : 4th August 1984
Tracks : Cry Boy Cry / John's Lost / Far Cry / Count On Me / Love Moves In Strange Ways / Forgive And Forget / I'm Your Man /Open Up / Can't Hold Me Down / Something Familiar
This was bought from WH Smith's in Rochdale on the way to a pre-season friendly.
This was a "percentage" purchase as I already had two of the singles and was a bit suspicious that the band were superficial bandwagon jumpers but I wanted the song "Forgive And Forget" (their last, albeit minor, hit) and hoped there might be a couple of other decent songs for my £2.99.
The band were formed in 1980 as Modern Jazz and released one single under that name before re-branding themselves. They had a number 13 hit single in autumn 1982 with "Cry Boy Cry" but suffered two flops before releasing this album which quickly sank without trace. One more unsuccessful single followed before they disbanded in 1985. Singer Andy "O" Overall was a former hairdresser but is now a mycologist. Guitarist Tim Parry became a successful record producer and A & R man.
The album kicks off with their only real hit "Cry Boy Cry" which at least in the chorus addresses the same theme of childhood trauma as Tears For Fears' contemporary material. The lyrics to the verses however are a prime example of the worst sort of nebulous modernism -"flick switch to off, close the vacuum" -to which the lesser lights of New Romanticism were very prone. Over a bed of synthetic percussion Parry lays down some funky licks while Mike Ansell impersonates Duran's John Taylor on bass and Matthew Flowers adds some colour on keyboards. The band's real trump card though was Overall whose elastic voice deserved better songs . His weakness is a tendency to over-enunciate which recalls Tim Booth and indeed, were the guitars mixed a bit higher, quite a lot of this album could be mistaken for James. The production is bright and shiny courtesy of future Talk Talk man Tim Friese-Greene; Mark Hollis actually cited this song as a reason for wanting to work with him.
"John's Lost" sets off with purpose and a punchy keyboard riff but soon gets derailed by the hamfisted cod-existentialism of the lyrics - "What I feel is just a package of disgrace, a useless bag of loneliness a mindless empty place". Overall delivers it with great conviction but when he sings "He told me I was playing someone I was not" it sounds all too honest. The "Hey Ya" chorus prefigures a big hit two decades later but sounds a bit weak.
"Far Cry" hits a rockier groove with Parry , clearly the best musician on show here, laying down some Keith Levine-esque guitar over Ansell's prodding bassline. Again the lyrics are the weak point an unconnected string of slogans that sound like they were added at the last minute. Bonus points to Parry for the Duane Eddy guitar in the middle eight.
"Count On Me " starts promisingly enough with a descending bass line and benefits from a more straightforward lyric with Overall promising commitment to his lover. On the down side it's a fairly nondescript piece of generic funk pop with a tuneless chorus.
Then comes a surprise with Friese-Greene's radical re-working of their 1981 single "Love Moves In Strange Ways". Originally a droney John Foxx -like ballad (which had interesting connotations if you lived near Manchester) Friese-Greene strips out most of the synths and Ansell, who is replaced on this track by Danny Thompson on double bass. Parry switches to acoustic guitar and drummer Mike Sparrow adds acoustic percussion. The latter sounds very similar to Talk Talk's Does Caroline Know from the following year which of course had the same producer. Tim Parry has a hand in writing every song but this is a solo composition and it's by far the best song on the LP. Overall's vocal is a little mannered but that's a minor quibble on a sad tale of relationship breakdown with a heart-stopping six-note keyboard line moving the story along. The last verse climaxes with the simple but stunning line "Why are you leaving me ?" a great but largely unknown moment in Pop.
Side Two opens with "Forgive And Forget" , another Parry composition. It begins with a descending piano motif introducing a prodding bassline and funk guitar before a bass drum thwack cues in Overall's wailed refrain, the best melody on the album. Parry's urgent guitar (very reminiscent of Haircut 100's Favourite Shirts ) drives the song along while Overall yelps about betrayal. After the second chorus the beat stops for a dramatic middle eight with big Lexicon Of Love piano chords before a frantic drum roll kicks off the song again. It deserved better than its number 60 placing.
Things unfortunately then take a turn for the worst with an awful , overproduced re-recording of their minor hit "I'm Your Man" originally produced by Paul Hardiman. Originally a noisy piece of funk-pop which went straight into the song this version has a weedy synth intro. It's also slower and mixes down the brash syn-drums which matched the sexual bravado of the lyric and Overall's delivery and were the best thing about the original.
"Open Up" isn't much better , a Fun Boy Three - like chant where Overall drily intones a string of psychiatric cliches over some Tin Drum oriental keyboard sounds. Even when guest vocalist Mariam Stockley joins in it fails to go anywhere and the false ending is therefore just annoying.
"Can't Slow Me Down" takes things up a notch, musically at least, with a moody keyboard line over more competent funk playing from Ansell and Parry. Unfortunately the lyric succumbs to the early 80s disease of trying to be a youth anthem (see also Toyah, Hazel O Connor, Adam Ant) - "They try and put you in your place, stand up meet them face to face" - and as usual sounds patronising and bogus.
"Something Familiar" the closer, actually does sound familiar now as the music bears a strong resemblance to John Farnham's later You're The Voice especially Sparrow's clattering drum patterns. Apart from that the track does betray some prog rock influences ; both the lyric about hearing voices and Overall going into a manic screech towards the end call to mind Solsbury Hill.
So I was just about satisfied with the LP and its best tracks still hold up today. Blue Zoo were a bit unlucky when you consider the contemporary success of the far inferior Kajagoogoo. If they'd been on EMI rather than Magnet and Overall had been sleeping with Paul Gambaccini they might have had a greater slice of the action but it wasn't to be.
Wednesday, 20 October 2010
33 Movement - New Order
Purchased : 4 August 1984
Tracks : Dreams Never End / Truth / Senses / Chosen Time / ICB / The Him / Doubts Even Here / Denial
This was purchased from Bostock's in Leeds on my way back from a meeting with two fellow members of the Leeds University Liberal Society to discuss some issues for the next term. Obviously it followed on from the purchases of Closer and Power Corruption And Lies the previous year.
I knew I'd be getting to this soon and wasn't looking forward to it. I've never actively disliked this LP but more than a quarter century on I still can't bring the music to mind when I see the titles (except for "Truth" - the one with the melodica) . It's the musical equivalent of a blurred photograph; no matter how hard you squint it will never come into focus.
Historically it's important as the first New Order LP , recorded in the wake of Ian Curtis's suicide, and their last collaboration with producer Martin Hannett. With characteristic stupidity Factory released it just before Christmas 1981 and just a fortnight after the Joy Division outtakes/live collection Still . It got to number 30 then turned tail and was instantly forgotten.
The opening track "Dreams Never End" is a close musical cousin to their first single Ceremony though without the benefit of an Ian Curtis lyric. It starts as so many of their later tracks would, with Peter Hook's ringing six-string bass riff (later to be very closely approximated by Simon Gallup on Inbetween Days ) soon joined by frantic hi-hat work from Steve Morris and complimentary minor chord work from Bernard Sumner before the drums kick in after 50 seconds. It's possibly the most compelling bit of music on the LP but unfortunately doesn't lead to a very interesting song. Hook intones tunelessly with heavy echo but is so mixed down it's hard to make out the lyric which seems to be an admission that they can't emulate Curtis's lyrical depth - "We'll change these feelings, we'll taste and see / But never guess how the him would scream". With no change in the music from one verse to the next it gets boring despite being just over three minutes long and ends suddenly without any resolution.
"Truth" is the most distinctive song on the LP purely because Sumner plays a melodica on it. He takes over the lead vocal on a song which sounds like an inferior re-tread both musically and lyrically of The Eternal from Closer. Morris doesn't actually drum on the track merely programmes some primitive beatbox while Hannett re-creates the hissing synth noises from the earlier track and Gillian Gilbert punctuates the verses with some abstract guitar squall. The real weakness is Sumner's timid vocal which never rises to the occasion.
"Senses" sees a little more input from Hannett who was distracted by both legal issues with Factory and increasing substance abuse during these sessions. The track is based around electronic percussion which skitters between the speakers while Gilbert hesitantly plays around with the low frequencies on her synth. Everything else is mixed down low especially Sumner's tuneless vocal and tinny one note guitar playing. It's an interesting example of the band reaching out for a new sound but like most of these tracks outstays its welcome.
"Chosen Time" benefits from Steve Morris returning to thrash the hell out of his kit while Hook lays down one of his fastest riffs. The problem is that the song is pitifully weak. Sumner, mixed down so low he sounds like he's trapped in a fridge, mumbles his way through another two verses of vague gloom before letting Hannett fill the rest of the track with more ambient synth noise.
Flipping over we have "ICB" , thought to stand for Ian Curtis Buried which is ironic since the music seems to be a composite of elements from various Joy Division tracks - the bassline from Dead Souls, the sweeping synths from Disorder , the metallic drum sound from She's Lost Control. Sumner's vocal is marginally better than on the previous three tracks (not that that's saying much) and there is at least a verse-chorus structure to hold your attention.
"The Him" also stays close to a Joy Division formula with Steve Morris laying down a drum track that's similar though less aggressive to the one on Colony and suddenly speeded up sections like in 24 Hours and Dead Souls. The droning synths do lend a bit of colour to Sumner's sombre vocals.
"Doubts Even Here" sees Peter Hook back on the mike and his Curtis impersonation is slightly better (up to Pickwick standard). Morris mixes acoustic and synthetic percussion and the glacial synths recall Atmosphere. Hook's bass mourns in the foreground and the lyrics address Curtis's death more directly than elsewhere - "You fade from sight there's nothing there". The lyrical climax of the song is quite wordy and half of it is spoken by Gilbert but instead of lifting , Hannett drops the vocals back in the mix and it's a struggle to hear any of it.
Finally we have "Denial" where Sumner's atonal guitar thrashing sounds very similar to New Stone Age on OMD's Architecture And Morality. Morris's drumming hints at the dancefloor but it's hard to understand what Hannett was trying to do here as the whole track sounds like the band are playing in the next room.Like the first track it just ends suddenly without climax.
And that's it. If New Order had carried on like this they'd have ended up like Gary Numan, in a cult cul-de-sac, sales diminishing with each release and of no interest to the wider world. This is just an album of settings for which the band couldn't deliver the songs yet. It is historically interesting as a late 1981 artefact , it's failure paving the way for the New Pop dawn of 1982. Curtis couldn't be replaced, least of all by hs surviving bandmates so the gloom had to lift. Perhaps that's the movement they had in mind.
Thursday, 14 October 2010
32 Pan - O - Rama - Flash and the Pan
Purchased : July 27 1984
Tracks : Down Among the Dead Men / Walking In The Rain / Captain Beware / Hole In The Middle / Hey St Peter / Atlantis Calling / Lights In The Night / Where Were You / California / Waiting For A Train
In the summer of 1984 W H Smiths had a cassette sale, mainly consisting of LPs from the previous year. The first I bought was The The's Soul Mining which I was so disappointed with that I sold it on within a year. This was the second, bought from the Lancaster store on my way back from a short break in Grasmere staying at Thorney How Youth Hostel on my own. I got some good walking in but the evenings were a desert of loneliness and boredom and it would be another three years before I went away again, this time to somewhere with a TV.
Anyhow on to Flash and the Pan. This album is a compilation of their first three LPs and briefly charted in the wake of the surprise Top 10 success of "Waiting For A Train" in June 1983. Their only other UK hit albeit a minor one was "And The Band Played On" which got a lot of plays from Simon Bates in the horrendously wet summer of 1978 but still couldn't crack the Top 40. Other than that they were known for being one of those English language acts like Fischer-Z and Chris De Burgh (pre-Lady In Red ) who were more popular in Europe than their natural markets.
Flash And The Pan were essentially a part-time studio project formed by two ex-members of 60s beat group The Easybeats, George Young and Harry Vanda. They were already successful producers (notably of AC/DC as George is the older brother of Malcolm and Angus) and writers (notably of John Paul Young's Love Is In The Air) before the first eponymous LP came out. Prior to 2008 I'd always assumed they were completely faceless but acquiring broadband and therefore youtube I discovered a series of jokey videos where the duo (with Vanda looking remarkably youthful) clown around for the camera.
Besides never playing live the project seemed to have two rules (at least up to this point; I haven't explored their three subsequent albums yet) . One, the lead instrument would always be a keyboard with minimal electric guitar on the records and two, at least the verses would always be drawled by Young in a cod-American accent and usually distorted by filtering, this despite Vanda being a competent singer. This renders their songs instantly recognisable and virtually uncoverable; it also made them an acquired taste, at least in the three main markets. This compilation is made up of five tracks from their debut Flash And The Pan (1978), three from Lights In The Night (1980) , and two from Headlines (1982).
The album begins with "Down Among The Dead Men" ("And The Band Played On" back under its original title) with its unforgettable earworm of a piano/organ riff that got the song to the cusp of the Top 40 despite a lyric about the sinking of the Titanic delivered in the style of Huggy Bear from Starsky and Hutch. There's no better track for illustrating the compelling tension between their dizzyingly melodic arrangements and the driest of vocals to deliver the lyric. The only sung line is the title just after a brass line that briefly shifts the mood in a very complex song structure. The last minute of the song is just stupendous with that riff played ever faster amid screeching strings and frantic drumming perhaps echoing the original musicians as they started to slide towards the Atlantic. Full marks to the commenters on youtube who spotted how much Jim Steinman's Holding Out For A Hero owes to this song.
"Walking In The Rain" follows , a sharp contrast in its apparent simplicity. Based on a constantly repeating six note bass line and sparse echoey fingerclicks for percussion with the synths washing in and out like passing cars this song is all insinuation (Grace Jones's hammy cover misses the point). At first Young's heavily-treated musings seem just the urban ennui of an ignored, middle-aged man but from the second verse there's purpose - "Feeling like a woman", "making when I can" and the third verse is downright sinister - "button up your lips!" . At the risk of upsetting Mr Tennant I'd say the road to West End Girls begins here.
"Captain Beware" is the most synth-heavy track the galloping acoustic-led rhythm emerging from a synth intro that sounds like a plane coming into land. The faster tempo means that Young has to proto-rap his warning of a dog about to turn on its master before the staccato bridge leads into a sung chorus with harmonies that recall The Sweet ;it may be no coincidence that there are klaxons on the track as well.
"Hole In The Middle" is probably the weakest song on the LP with its lazy stoner lyric but is interesting for the way it invents the classic Inxs sound with its strutting funk rock bassline , each run ending with a sharp synth chord in exactly the same way as Need You Tonight. The niggling synth on the verses also resembles Tim Farriss's choppy guitar style; someone was taking notes.
"Hey St Peter" was their debut single in 1977, a minor hit in the USA and a big one in Australia but not over here except when it was re-written by their Ensign labelmate Bob Geldof and reached number one as "Rat Trap" a year later. The original has Billy in New York chasing a comeback dream and one assumes living on borrowed time given his concern about the afterlife. The song is based around simple piano chords and acoustic strumming with the synths adding extra urgency and a background to the sung chorus. The middle eight is a classic with string synths swooping around a lengthy boogie woogie piano solo before everything slows down to Young and the piano (sounding very like The Buggles) for the punchline.
"Atlantis Calling" (not to be confused with a similarly-titled song by Eurobeat wallies Modern Talking which is unspeakable) begins with a harp chord like a lullaby then goes straight into a very bizarre song, nay anthropological lecture, about the influence of the Atlantis myth around the world, the list of examples putting me in mind of Alan Whicker. From their second LP Lights In The Night , it showcases the increasing influence of disco on their music with their drummer Johnny Dick sounding very like Chic's Tony Thompson . The propulsive piano playing which moves the track along anticipates house. A full decade before The Orb and their ilk these guys were setting quotes from Plato to a dance beat.
Then follows the title track from the same LP. A song of late night despair - "if the bottle doesn't get me, the thinking will" - set to funereal synthesisers and quietly swishing hi-hat work , one goes immediately to check the release date - May 1980. It's not therefore inspired by events in Macclesfield but an eerily contemporary echo from the other side of the world. On this one Young's morose mumble is absolutely right for the subject matter. The chorus has him speculating on extra-terrestrial life and it's easy to think this influenced Abba's The Visitors the following year with Frida alone in her home in a similar cocoon of synths.
"Where Were You" comes from their 82 LP Headlines and betrays the influence of Kid Creole and (gulp) Modern Romance in its Latin flavourings though it also throws in the only electric guitar solo on the LP. It's also very similar to their biggest hit as writers , John Paul Young's Love Is In The Air. And yet despite the upbeat trappings it's the most sinister song on the LP. Young is a guest at a party but the host is a former criminal associate who has thus far evaded the fall-out but now the chickens have come home to roost and Young is his gleeful nemesis -"we're all gonna help you on your way down !" Young can't get away with just talking on this one so adopts the half-yelling style soon to be exemplified by Mike Scott of the Waterboys.
Next up is the grim Cold War fable "California" whereby a worse for wear American captain mistakes a red balloon for a missile and starts World War Three as a consequence. Hang on a minute - haven't we heard this story somewhere before ? Well yes except the song we're hearing is from 1978 originally. I don't know if Nena's songwriter Carlo Karges was ever challenged about this but it's a strange coincidence if he hadn't heard this track. Musically there's no similarity this being a smouldering synth track with a brooding bassline that only briefly rouses itself for a chorus of sorts then falls back into its slow groove.
Finally we have the big hit "Waiting For A Train". This isn't quite the same as the single version which stripped out a fair chunk of the lyrics and added a whispered "cha-cha" vocal track over the rhythm. Young (like Paul Weller's protagonist five years earlier) is a man waiting at a staion and thinking of the meal that awaits at home. In this instance though he is not attacked but spots (in the omitted verses) a man he met in a bar and goes over a conversation they had about marital difficulties though it's not clear whether Young is the listener or the speaker. If the latter it sheds a new light on the chorus's emphasis on the train as agent of escape "heading for a bright time" underlined by a breezy Kraftwerkian synth line. Musically it's like a sped-up version of Timmy Thomas's Why Can't We Live Together, the world continuing to dance while the Pan's train whisks Young to an unknown destination amid overlapping counter-melodies.
And that's it for the duo as far as this tale goes, at least at the time of writing. Time to consult Spotify on their later releases I think.
Tracks : Down Among the Dead Men / Walking In The Rain / Captain Beware / Hole In The Middle / Hey St Peter / Atlantis Calling / Lights In The Night / Where Were You / California / Waiting For A Train
In the summer of 1984 W H Smiths had a cassette sale, mainly consisting of LPs from the previous year. The first I bought was The The's Soul Mining which I was so disappointed with that I sold it on within a year. This was the second, bought from the Lancaster store on my way back from a short break in Grasmere staying at Thorney How Youth Hostel on my own. I got some good walking in but the evenings were a desert of loneliness and boredom and it would be another three years before I went away again, this time to somewhere with a TV.
Anyhow on to Flash and the Pan. This album is a compilation of their first three LPs and briefly charted in the wake of the surprise Top 10 success of "Waiting For A Train" in June 1983. Their only other UK hit albeit a minor one was "And The Band Played On" which got a lot of plays from Simon Bates in the horrendously wet summer of 1978 but still couldn't crack the Top 40. Other than that they were known for being one of those English language acts like Fischer-Z and Chris De Burgh (pre-Lady In Red ) who were more popular in Europe than their natural markets.
Flash And The Pan were essentially a part-time studio project formed by two ex-members of 60s beat group The Easybeats, George Young and Harry Vanda. They were already successful producers (notably of AC/DC as George is the older brother of Malcolm and Angus) and writers (notably of John Paul Young's Love Is In The Air) before the first eponymous LP came out. Prior to 2008 I'd always assumed they were completely faceless but acquiring broadband and therefore youtube I discovered a series of jokey videos where the duo (with Vanda looking remarkably youthful) clown around for the camera.
Besides never playing live the project seemed to have two rules (at least up to this point; I haven't explored their three subsequent albums yet) . One, the lead instrument would always be a keyboard with minimal electric guitar on the records and two, at least the verses would always be drawled by Young in a cod-American accent and usually distorted by filtering, this despite Vanda being a competent singer. This renders their songs instantly recognisable and virtually uncoverable; it also made them an acquired taste, at least in the three main markets. This compilation is made up of five tracks from their debut Flash And The Pan (1978), three from Lights In The Night (1980) , and two from Headlines (1982).
The album begins with "Down Among The Dead Men" ("And The Band Played On" back under its original title) with its unforgettable earworm of a piano/organ riff that got the song to the cusp of the Top 40 despite a lyric about the sinking of the Titanic delivered in the style of Huggy Bear from Starsky and Hutch. There's no better track for illustrating the compelling tension between their dizzyingly melodic arrangements and the driest of vocals to deliver the lyric. The only sung line is the title just after a brass line that briefly shifts the mood in a very complex song structure. The last minute of the song is just stupendous with that riff played ever faster amid screeching strings and frantic drumming perhaps echoing the original musicians as they started to slide towards the Atlantic. Full marks to the commenters on youtube who spotted how much Jim Steinman's Holding Out For A Hero owes to this song.
"Walking In The Rain" follows , a sharp contrast in its apparent simplicity. Based on a constantly repeating six note bass line and sparse echoey fingerclicks for percussion with the synths washing in and out like passing cars this song is all insinuation (Grace Jones's hammy cover misses the point). At first Young's heavily-treated musings seem just the urban ennui of an ignored, middle-aged man but from the second verse there's purpose - "Feeling like a woman", "making when I can" and the third verse is downright sinister - "button up your lips!" . At the risk of upsetting Mr Tennant I'd say the road to West End Girls begins here.
"Captain Beware" is the most synth-heavy track the galloping acoustic-led rhythm emerging from a synth intro that sounds like a plane coming into land. The faster tempo means that Young has to proto-rap his warning of a dog about to turn on its master before the staccato bridge leads into a sung chorus with harmonies that recall The Sweet ;it may be no coincidence that there are klaxons on the track as well.
"Hole In The Middle" is probably the weakest song on the LP with its lazy stoner lyric but is interesting for the way it invents the classic Inxs sound with its strutting funk rock bassline , each run ending with a sharp synth chord in exactly the same way as Need You Tonight. The niggling synth on the verses also resembles Tim Farriss's choppy guitar style; someone was taking notes.
"Hey St Peter" was their debut single in 1977, a minor hit in the USA and a big one in Australia but not over here except when it was re-written by their Ensign labelmate Bob Geldof and reached number one as "Rat Trap" a year later. The original has Billy in New York chasing a comeback dream and one assumes living on borrowed time given his concern about the afterlife. The song is based around simple piano chords and acoustic strumming with the synths adding extra urgency and a background to the sung chorus. The middle eight is a classic with string synths swooping around a lengthy boogie woogie piano solo before everything slows down to Young and the piano (sounding very like The Buggles) for the punchline.
"Atlantis Calling" (not to be confused with a similarly-titled song by Eurobeat wallies Modern Talking which is unspeakable) begins with a harp chord like a lullaby then goes straight into a very bizarre song, nay anthropological lecture, about the influence of the Atlantis myth around the world, the list of examples putting me in mind of Alan Whicker. From their second LP Lights In The Night , it showcases the increasing influence of disco on their music with their drummer Johnny Dick sounding very like Chic's Tony Thompson . The propulsive piano playing which moves the track along anticipates house. A full decade before The Orb and their ilk these guys were setting quotes from Plato to a dance beat.
Then follows the title track from the same LP. A song of late night despair - "if the bottle doesn't get me, the thinking will" - set to funereal synthesisers and quietly swishing hi-hat work , one goes immediately to check the release date - May 1980. It's not therefore inspired by events in Macclesfield but an eerily contemporary echo from the other side of the world. On this one Young's morose mumble is absolutely right for the subject matter. The chorus has him speculating on extra-terrestrial life and it's easy to think this influenced Abba's The Visitors the following year with Frida alone in her home in a similar cocoon of synths.
"Where Were You" comes from their 82 LP Headlines and betrays the influence of Kid Creole and (gulp) Modern Romance in its Latin flavourings though it also throws in the only electric guitar solo on the LP. It's also very similar to their biggest hit as writers , John Paul Young's Love Is In The Air. And yet despite the upbeat trappings it's the most sinister song on the LP. Young is a guest at a party but the host is a former criminal associate who has thus far evaded the fall-out but now the chickens have come home to roost and Young is his gleeful nemesis -"we're all gonna help you on your way down !" Young can't get away with just talking on this one so adopts the half-yelling style soon to be exemplified by Mike Scott of the Waterboys.
Next up is the grim Cold War fable "California" whereby a worse for wear American captain mistakes a red balloon for a missile and starts World War Three as a consequence. Hang on a minute - haven't we heard this story somewhere before ? Well yes except the song we're hearing is from 1978 originally. I don't know if Nena's songwriter Carlo Karges was ever challenged about this but it's a strange coincidence if he hadn't heard this track. Musically there's no similarity this being a smouldering synth track with a brooding bassline that only briefly rouses itself for a chorus of sorts then falls back into its slow groove.
Finally we have the big hit "Waiting For A Train". This isn't quite the same as the single version which stripped out a fair chunk of the lyrics and added a whispered "cha-cha" vocal track over the rhythm. Young (like Paul Weller's protagonist five years earlier) is a man waiting at a staion and thinking of the meal that awaits at home. In this instance though he is not attacked but spots (in the omitted verses) a man he met in a bar and goes over a conversation they had about marital difficulties though it's not clear whether Young is the listener or the speaker. If the latter it sheds a new light on the chorus's emphasis on the train as agent of escape "heading for a bright time" underlined by a breezy Kraftwerkian synth line. Musically it's like a sped-up version of Timmy Thomas's Why Can't We Live Together, the world continuing to dance while the Pan's train whisks Young to an unknown destination amid overlapping counter-melodies.
And that's it for the duo as far as this tale goes, at least at the time of writing. Time to consult Spotify on their later releases I think.
Thursday, 7 October 2010
31 In The Studio - Special AKA
Purchased : July 1984
Tracks : Bright Lights / The Lonely Crowd / What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend / Housebound / Night On The Tiles / Nelson Mandela / War Crimes / Racist Friend / Alcohol / Break Down The Door
This was bought in Manchester during the summer break and like the Talk Talk LP had been eagerly awaited. This one was even more of a disappointment because the singles I already had were by far the best tracks on the LP and I've rarely played it since.
In a way this was the Chinese Democracy of its day. The original Specials had fractured even while their masterpiece Ghost Town was still at number one hence Terry Hall's strange smirk when they performed it on Top Of The Pops. Hall took toaster Neville Staples and second guitarist Lynval Golding into the Fun Boy Three while at the same time guitarist Roddy "Radiation" Byers feeling unwanted by the group's mainman, keyboardist Jerry Dammers quit to form his own group. Dammers responded by reverting to the original name The Special AKA with the remaining rhythm section bassist Horace "Gentleman" Panter and drummer John Bradbury. They released a couple of quick singles as a backing band for Specials associates Rhoda Dakar and veteran trumpeter Rico Rodriguez in 1982 between which Panter also decided to leave the band.
The fact that Panter's playing survives on three of the tracks here indicates that an early start was made on this LP but nothing emerged until the very end of 1982 when the single "War Crmes" was released, unveiling a new line-up with Dakar and Stan Campbell as co-vocalists. That bombed completely for reasons which we'll come to below then there was nothing until September 1983 and the double A-side "Bright Lights / Racist Friend". That at least restored them to the Top 75 but again it was six months before yet another single "Nelson Mandela" came out and became a Top 10 hit.
Finally the album , with its very dry title and cover shot came out in July 1984. In the time it took to record, the Fun Boy Three had released two albums and split up hence the re-appearance of the partially pardoned Golding as a backing vocalist on a couple of tracks. Things had moved on - Frankie were 1 and 2 in the singles charts and 2-Tone's heyday was long over. The Beat and Selecter had split up and Madness had little left in the tank. The album failed to crack the Top 30 and disappeared after only three weeks on the chart. The release of another single "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend" failed to revive it. This left Dammers £200, 000 in debt to the parent company Chrysalis and so scarred by the experience he effectively called time on his career as a recording artist, devoting his time to political activism , DJ work and avoiding reunions of the original band. 2 Tone itself was wrapped up the following year after a couple more obscure singles. The label which had seemed such a vital force at the turn of the decade expired almost unnoticed.
So what went wrong ? I actually think that if this LP had been put out by a new band (and arguably it was) it would have been applauded for its ambition and scope , encompassing soul, jazz, reggae, bossa nova and African music. Instead the reaction was "We've waited all that time for this !". The legacy was heavy - I think the run of 7 singles by the original band was the greatest ever - and this LP just wasn't strong enough to bear the weight.
The departures took a lot out of the band. There are no rock dynamics at all with Byers out of the band; his replacement John Shipley (from 2 Tone also-rans The Swinging Cats) is a scratchy rhythm player and unobtrusive throughout the album. While not entirely absent , the humour suffers from not having Hall and Staples to deliver it. Most of all the kinetic energy that made the original band so exciting has gone; even the most aggressive songs here sound laboured by comparison,
So we start with "Bright Lights" a tale of a naive lad disillusioned by what he finds in the big city. Musically it's best described as mid-tempo funk pop with Dammers' trademark doomy organ chords and Dick Cuthell's horns laid on top. When released as a single in 1983 it gave us the first chance to assess the new vocalist Stan Campbell and he's ceratainly impressive here delivering his own tale of seeking fame and fortune and all too prophetically failing to find it. The song marries humour with the sarky reference to Wham ! in the first verse and serious politics with the reference to Colin Roach, a dubious black suicide in police custody which happened earlier that year.
It's a good opener to the album and is followed by "The Lonely Crowd" which covers the same territory as Soft Cell's Bedsitter with Campbell , sounding very like a higher-pitched Seal, finding that a heartless throng offers little more comfort than the TV. It's now that the album starts betraying its long gestation, there's simply too much going on in the music with Dammers' gamelan-influenced organ breaks , Andy Adreinto's freeform sax and the switch from a sludgy dragging beat to light jazz. The song with its melodically weak verses just isn't sturdy enough to bear the weight.
"What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend" is a Dammers solo composition, retains Panter's work on bass and sounds very much like it was originally written for Terry Hall to sing. Instead we have the dubious benefit of Dammers himself in a tuneless falsetto (he was surely kidding himself when he released it as the final single) singing lyrics which are less amusing than the title. The music is light jazz pop with plenty of horn work from Dick Cuthell and Rico and it might have worked with Hall doing the vocal but we'll never know.
"Housebound " is another Dammers solo composition which on the surface is a surprisingly unsympathetic song about agoraphobia but was actually a pop at Terry Hall's initial difficulty in coping with recognition on the street. We change vocalists again with ex-Bodysnatcher and Dammers's squeeze Rhoda Dakar taking the lead. Dakar had been hanging around the original band since the Bodysnatchers split (and soon reformed without her as The Belle Stars) causing speculation that she was a factor in the original group's demise. The hard-faced Dakar can sing in tune but has a chilly tone which only makes the song more unpleasant with its taunting chorus. Musically it's a strange blend of bossa nova piano and jungle rhythms with Dammers and Shipley seemingly trying to ape the Fun Boy Three on percussion. It's probably the most mean-spirited song in my entire collection.
"Night On The Tiles" written by Shipley and Dammers is the most recent composition and accordingly the furthest removed from their ska roots. This bossa nova track is Shipley's chance to shine with a spindly electric line snaking its way through the furiously strummed acoustics. Dammers's organ is barely audible and Lynval Golding's presence on backing vocals isn't detetctable. Strangely the horns on the track aren't credited on the sleeve apart from Andy Aderinto's sax. He gets two solos, the second being the more palatable. Campbell takes the lead but sounds clumsy here not having the dexterity to match the music. He dreams of escaping a prison for a night on the razz ; the female chorus suggesting it's a metaphor for marriage, a sequel to Too Much Too Young perhaps.
Side Two begins with the new group's most famous song and only Top 10 hit "Nelson Mandela". For this one they were joined by a starry cast of backing vocalists including Golding, guest producer Elvis Costello , erstwhile Beatsters Dave Wakeling and Ranking Roger and singing trio Afrodiziak (who included future Soul II Soul vocalist Caron Wheeler). It still comes across as a strange record kicking off with a stop-start a capella rendition of the chorus followed by a trademark mournful horn line from Dick Cuthell then it suddenly becomes a joyful highlife record with David Heath's flute prominent in the mix. The song, a plea for support for the cause of freeing the jailed ANC leader as a prelude to dismantling apartheid has long since been superceded by events but was credited with raising Mandela's profile in the West and eagerly adopted as an anthem by the ANC. Ironically it also became the group's swan song as Campbell walked out of the group immediately after filming the video. He was coaxed back to appear on Top Of The Pops when it became a hit but didn't travel to Newcastle for The Tube so Costello and Afrodiziak did the lead vocal on that appearance. In recent years Campbell's appearance on this has taken on a sad irony for he himself is now banged up indefinitely in a mental hospital after abducting and assaulting teenage girls. He got a solo deal with WEA after this but when his album failed he went into a mental decline eventually sleeping rough and becoming a serial sex pest. In 2002 he was committed to a psychiatric hospital. Nelson has yet to make a record about his plight.
"War Crimes" was the single that announced the new line up (although it's Panter's bass which means the music must pre-date the lyric) in December 1982. A coal black lament about the Shabra-Shatila massacre in Beirut earlier that its failure to make the Christmas charts was predictable. Curiously, the Fun Boy Three were doing much the same thing with their single about the Troubles "The More I See The Less I Believe" which was similarly bereft of festive cheer. I bought the single despite not being a supporter of the Palestinian cause; Dammers's equation of the massacres with the Holocaust demonstrates a very dodgy sense of proportion. The main plus point is an achingly beautiful melody played on a rinky-dink organ which punctuates the verses. Dakar and Campbell sing not quite in harmony which may be deliberate for eerie effect before the song climaxes with strangely Sting-esque "ey-ohs". At least that was the single's climax ; here there's another two minutes worth of mainly instrumental coda which allows violinist Nick Parker (this is the only track not to feature any horns) to improvise but doesn't really improve it.
"Racist Friend" is almost certainly the oldest track as it retains some guitar work from Roddy Byers; his stabbing power chords a ghostly echo of past glories. Musically too it harks back to the old days being light reggae with horn work reminiscent of Uptown Ranking . Again I don't agree with the lyrical sentiment , an instruction to carry out a PC-purge of one's address book which even the right-on Helen found too hectoring. On the other hand the music is irresistible especially the drowsy organ and Cuthell's flugel horn which hint at a sadness in the process which makes the lyric more palatable. Dakar , Campbell and the otherwise underemployed Egidio Newton trade vocal lines in a way which makes the song seem less repetitive than it actually is.
"Alcohol" again features Panter on bass and has seemingly deliberate echoes of Ghost Town in the organ sound and ominously descending guitar work but the spell is abruptly broken by a burlesque horn riff and then a woefully off-key lead vocal from Dakar whose limitations are thoroughly exposed here. The lyric concerns addiction to heroin and alcohol but doesn't say anything partticularly new and sounds condescending rather than concerned.
"Break Down The Door" the final track gives Campbell a last chance to shine on a track he co-wrote with Dammers and Bradbury. Campbell gives an impassioned performance sounding like Sam Moore with an appropriately Stax-like arrangement to which Bradbury adds a modern sheen with some sneaky synth, that instrument's only appearance on any Specials record. The song's another plea for personal freedom but for all Campbell's ferocity it's not a great tune and Dakar's drony backing vocal is a minus; she's outstayed her welcome by this point.
Listening to it again with the singles in their proper context it doesn't seem so bad and probably deserved to do more commercially than it did but Dammers' perfectionism and inability to keep his singers on side eventually did for him. It's a fascinating record but not a brilliant one and that's what he needed .
Tracks : Bright Lights / The Lonely Crowd / What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend / Housebound / Night On The Tiles / Nelson Mandela / War Crimes / Racist Friend / Alcohol / Break Down The Door
This was bought in Manchester during the summer break and like the Talk Talk LP had been eagerly awaited. This one was even more of a disappointment because the singles I already had were by far the best tracks on the LP and I've rarely played it since.
In a way this was the Chinese Democracy of its day. The original Specials had fractured even while their masterpiece Ghost Town was still at number one hence Terry Hall's strange smirk when they performed it on Top Of The Pops. Hall took toaster Neville Staples and second guitarist Lynval Golding into the Fun Boy Three while at the same time guitarist Roddy "Radiation" Byers feeling unwanted by the group's mainman, keyboardist Jerry Dammers quit to form his own group. Dammers responded by reverting to the original name The Special AKA with the remaining rhythm section bassist Horace "Gentleman" Panter and drummer John Bradbury. They released a couple of quick singles as a backing band for Specials associates Rhoda Dakar and veteran trumpeter Rico Rodriguez in 1982 between which Panter also decided to leave the band.
The fact that Panter's playing survives on three of the tracks here indicates that an early start was made on this LP but nothing emerged until the very end of 1982 when the single "War Crmes" was released, unveiling a new line-up with Dakar and Stan Campbell as co-vocalists. That bombed completely for reasons which we'll come to below then there was nothing until September 1983 and the double A-side "Bright Lights / Racist Friend". That at least restored them to the Top 75 but again it was six months before yet another single "Nelson Mandela" came out and became a Top 10 hit.
Finally the album , with its very dry title and cover shot came out in July 1984. In the time it took to record, the Fun Boy Three had released two albums and split up hence the re-appearance of the partially pardoned Golding as a backing vocalist on a couple of tracks. Things had moved on - Frankie were 1 and 2 in the singles charts and 2-Tone's heyday was long over. The Beat and Selecter had split up and Madness had little left in the tank. The album failed to crack the Top 30 and disappeared after only three weeks on the chart. The release of another single "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend" failed to revive it. This left Dammers £200, 000 in debt to the parent company Chrysalis and so scarred by the experience he effectively called time on his career as a recording artist, devoting his time to political activism , DJ work and avoiding reunions of the original band. 2 Tone itself was wrapped up the following year after a couple more obscure singles. The label which had seemed such a vital force at the turn of the decade expired almost unnoticed.
So what went wrong ? I actually think that if this LP had been put out by a new band (and arguably it was) it would have been applauded for its ambition and scope , encompassing soul, jazz, reggae, bossa nova and African music. Instead the reaction was "We've waited all that time for this !". The legacy was heavy - I think the run of 7 singles by the original band was the greatest ever - and this LP just wasn't strong enough to bear the weight.
The departures took a lot out of the band. There are no rock dynamics at all with Byers out of the band; his replacement John Shipley (from 2 Tone also-rans The Swinging Cats) is a scratchy rhythm player and unobtrusive throughout the album. While not entirely absent , the humour suffers from not having Hall and Staples to deliver it. Most of all the kinetic energy that made the original band so exciting has gone; even the most aggressive songs here sound laboured by comparison,
So we start with "Bright Lights" a tale of a naive lad disillusioned by what he finds in the big city. Musically it's best described as mid-tempo funk pop with Dammers' trademark doomy organ chords and Dick Cuthell's horns laid on top. When released as a single in 1983 it gave us the first chance to assess the new vocalist Stan Campbell and he's ceratainly impressive here delivering his own tale of seeking fame and fortune and all too prophetically failing to find it. The song marries humour with the sarky reference to Wham ! in the first verse and serious politics with the reference to Colin Roach, a dubious black suicide in police custody which happened earlier that year.
It's a good opener to the album and is followed by "The Lonely Crowd" which covers the same territory as Soft Cell's Bedsitter with Campbell , sounding very like a higher-pitched Seal, finding that a heartless throng offers little more comfort than the TV. It's now that the album starts betraying its long gestation, there's simply too much going on in the music with Dammers' gamelan-influenced organ breaks , Andy Adreinto's freeform sax and the switch from a sludgy dragging beat to light jazz. The song with its melodically weak verses just isn't sturdy enough to bear the weight.
"What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend" is a Dammers solo composition, retains Panter's work on bass and sounds very much like it was originally written for Terry Hall to sing. Instead we have the dubious benefit of Dammers himself in a tuneless falsetto (he was surely kidding himself when he released it as the final single) singing lyrics which are less amusing than the title. The music is light jazz pop with plenty of horn work from Dick Cuthell and Rico and it might have worked with Hall doing the vocal but we'll never know.
"Housebound " is another Dammers solo composition which on the surface is a surprisingly unsympathetic song about agoraphobia but was actually a pop at Terry Hall's initial difficulty in coping with recognition on the street. We change vocalists again with ex-Bodysnatcher and Dammers's squeeze Rhoda Dakar taking the lead. Dakar had been hanging around the original band since the Bodysnatchers split (and soon reformed without her as The Belle Stars) causing speculation that she was a factor in the original group's demise. The hard-faced Dakar can sing in tune but has a chilly tone which only makes the song more unpleasant with its taunting chorus. Musically it's a strange blend of bossa nova piano and jungle rhythms with Dammers and Shipley seemingly trying to ape the Fun Boy Three on percussion. It's probably the most mean-spirited song in my entire collection.
"Night On The Tiles" written by Shipley and Dammers is the most recent composition and accordingly the furthest removed from their ska roots. This bossa nova track is Shipley's chance to shine with a spindly electric line snaking its way through the furiously strummed acoustics. Dammers's organ is barely audible and Lynval Golding's presence on backing vocals isn't detetctable. Strangely the horns on the track aren't credited on the sleeve apart from Andy Aderinto's sax. He gets two solos, the second being the more palatable. Campbell takes the lead but sounds clumsy here not having the dexterity to match the music. He dreams of escaping a prison for a night on the razz ; the female chorus suggesting it's a metaphor for marriage, a sequel to Too Much Too Young perhaps.
Side Two begins with the new group's most famous song and only Top 10 hit "Nelson Mandela". For this one they were joined by a starry cast of backing vocalists including Golding, guest producer Elvis Costello , erstwhile Beatsters Dave Wakeling and Ranking Roger and singing trio Afrodiziak (who included future Soul II Soul vocalist Caron Wheeler). It still comes across as a strange record kicking off with a stop-start a capella rendition of the chorus followed by a trademark mournful horn line from Dick Cuthell then it suddenly becomes a joyful highlife record with David Heath's flute prominent in the mix. The song, a plea for support for the cause of freeing the jailed ANC leader as a prelude to dismantling apartheid has long since been superceded by events but was credited with raising Mandela's profile in the West and eagerly adopted as an anthem by the ANC. Ironically it also became the group's swan song as Campbell walked out of the group immediately after filming the video. He was coaxed back to appear on Top Of The Pops when it became a hit but didn't travel to Newcastle for The Tube so Costello and Afrodiziak did the lead vocal on that appearance. In recent years Campbell's appearance on this has taken on a sad irony for he himself is now banged up indefinitely in a mental hospital after abducting and assaulting teenage girls. He got a solo deal with WEA after this but when his album failed he went into a mental decline eventually sleeping rough and becoming a serial sex pest. In 2002 he was committed to a psychiatric hospital. Nelson has yet to make a record about his plight.
"War Crimes" was the single that announced the new line up (although it's Panter's bass which means the music must pre-date the lyric) in December 1982. A coal black lament about the Shabra-Shatila massacre in Beirut earlier that its failure to make the Christmas charts was predictable. Curiously, the Fun Boy Three were doing much the same thing with their single about the Troubles "The More I See The Less I Believe" which was similarly bereft of festive cheer. I bought the single despite not being a supporter of the Palestinian cause; Dammers's equation of the massacres with the Holocaust demonstrates a very dodgy sense of proportion. The main plus point is an achingly beautiful melody played on a rinky-dink organ which punctuates the verses. Dakar and Campbell sing not quite in harmony which may be deliberate for eerie effect before the song climaxes with strangely Sting-esque "ey-ohs". At least that was the single's climax ; here there's another two minutes worth of mainly instrumental coda which allows violinist Nick Parker (this is the only track not to feature any horns) to improvise but doesn't really improve it.
"Racist Friend" is almost certainly the oldest track as it retains some guitar work from Roddy Byers; his stabbing power chords a ghostly echo of past glories. Musically too it harks back to the old days being light reggae with horn work reminiscent of Uptown Ranking . Again I don't agree with the lyrical sentiment , an instruction to carry out a PC-purge of one's address book which even the right-on Helen found too hectoring. On the other hand the music is irresistible especially the drowsy organ and Cuthell's flugel horn which hint at a sadness in the process which makes the lyric more palatable. Dakar , Campbell and the otherwise underemployed Egidio Newton trade vocal lines in a way which makes the song seem less repetitive than it actually is.
"Alcohol" again features Panter on bass and has seemingly deliberate echoes of Ghost Town in the organ sound and ominously descending guitar work but the spell is abruptly broken by a burlesque horn riff and then a woefully off-key lead vocal from Dakar whose limitations are thoroughly exposed here. The lyric concerns addiction to heroin and alcohol but doesn't say anything partticularly new and sounds condescending rather than concerned.
"Break Down The Door" the final track gives Campbell a last chance to shine on a track he co-wrote with Dammers and Bradbury. Campbell gives an impassioned performance sounding like Sam Moore with an appropriately Stax-like arrangement to which Bradbury adds a modern sheen with some sneaky synth, that instrument's only appearance on any Specials record. The song's another plea for personal freedom but for all Campbell's ferocity it's not a great tune and Dakar's drony backing vocal is a minus; she's outstayed her welcome by this point.
Listening to it again with the singles in their proper context it doesn't seem so bad and probably deserved to do more commercially than it did but Dammers' perfectionism and inability to keep his singers on side eventually did for him. It's a fascinating record but not a brilliant one and that's what he needed .
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