Saturday, 29 January 2011
44 A Walk Across The Rooftops - The Blue Nile
Purchased : July 1985
Tracks : A Walk Across The Rooftops / Tinseltown In The Rain / From Rags To Riches / Stay / Easter Parade / Heatwave / Automobile Noise
This was purchased in Oldham at HMV, my last visit there for record-buying purposes for some years. I was only looking for the single "Tinseltown In The Rain" but on being told it was deleted decided to splash out on the LP, at full price too !
They had that effect on me you see. The Blue Nile, the 80s' most enigmatic band , were my first entirely post-school enthusiasm. I'd neither heard nor heard of them until the early summer of 1984 when this album and its first single came out. I'd read the enthusiastic reviews in Smash Hits and Record Mirror and for once I thought the praise was justified.
The album came out on Linn records a record label created by a company better known for making electronic drums but whose representatives had been bowled over by the music the little-known band from Glasgow University had demo'ed for them as an advertisement for a piece of kit. The band were a three piece with Paul Buchanan on vocals and guitar, Robert Bell on bass and Paul Joseph Moore on keyboards. They were in their late 20s and that's important because this isn't kids' music ; it reflects adult emotions and preoccupations. It's also utterly timeless; no one coming to it cold could confidently place it in the brash world of Frankie's 1984.
The title track is first. It rises from a bed of barely audible ambient keyboards before a single horn cues in Buchanan. Buchanan's voice was never going to win them mass appeal, cracked and world-weary as it is and you can hear him really straining for the high notes, but its naked vulnerability is necessary to prevent some of these songs descending into Sade-like bland tastefulness. The title conjures up images of Mary Poppins and there's a filmic quality to all of these songs, Buchanan's lyrics containing vivid images such as "white rags falling slowly down, flags caught on the fences". The song is a sentimental farewell to the band's alma mater with its sandstone buildings and the nearby church of St Steven mentioned. It was the song originally supplied to Linn originally with just one instrument at a time playing to demonstarte their console's clarity. Thankfully that isn't the case here but a stop-start structure remains with the strings frequently coming to a sudden stop. I'm not too keen on the sludgy, over-loud bass and the sparse drums don't seem to conform to any recognisable time signature but its an effective opener.
Next up is "Tinseltown In The Rain" which doesn't stand out as much in the context of the LP as it did as a brave single in the brash summer of 1984. Again the setting is Glasgow although the Hollywood reference is surely deliberate and it's a wistful muse about the impermanence of love and joy- "will we always be so happy go lucky ? " which made my 19-year old self feel very mature in appreciating such an adult song. For them it's brisk with a sawing guitar line that strangely echoes How Soon Is Now and sweeping strings on the chorus. There's even a touch of funk guitar in the middle which should seem wildly out of place but doesn't. This version seems a tad too long when it repeats the killer "Do I love you" verse but that's the only possible criticism.
"From Rags To Riches" drops the strings and their debt to the more serious end of synth-pop , Kraftwerk, early OMD , late Japan, becomes more obvious. Amid a burble of synth noise and the echoey drum sound from OMD's Sealand , Buchanan sings of leaving home to make good, a theme stridently taken up by The Proclaimers three years later. He sees himself as a latter-day Joseph making good in a foreign land "I wear a coat of many colours". It's a provocative theme for polarised times, somewhat mitigated by Buchanan's parched delivery and the harsh synthesised horns that punctuate the verses make it one of the harder tracks to love.
"Stay" the second single, opens up Side Two and is the most conventional pop song on the LP with its conventional beat , clipped guitar and simple keyboard lines putting it firmly in China Crisis territory. The song is a plea from a dour, older man to a young and vivacious girl to stick with him - "Stay and I will understand you" , a sort of Elvis Costello song without the sneering. Buchanan's desperate cries at the end suggest it's not working.
The desolate "Easter Parade" follows , its images of celebration completely at odds with the sparse, mournful music, just a piano and doom-laden, heart-stopping synth washes. Whatever event Buchanan is witnessing he's not able to participate in the festivities which reminds me of having to cope with my mother's death at the start of the Queen's Golden Jubilee weekend in 2002.
"Heatwave" is quite strongly influenced by Japan's Tin Drum with its Oriental percussion and Mick Karn-aping fretless bass although these drop out for one of the album's most melodic choruses. It's one of the bitterest lyrics on the LP with Buchanan in accusatory mood before unleashing the sourest of hooklines "Why is it rolling down on the young and foolish " worthy of early Joe Jackson.
"Automobile Noise" the final track sounds like a corrective to the earlier pro-emigration sentiments with its unenthusiastic description of urban America and "climbing the ladder to all the money in the world". When he sings "saddle the horses and we'll go" it sounds like he's going to his doom .
The music is only really notable for the variety of percussion sounds used and it's a slightly disappointing end to the LP.
I must admit that 25 years on it has lost that special lustre for me though it still rests in its protective plastic cover. A follow-up which didn't significantly advance the sound after a five year wait and pale imitations like Deacon Blue's Raintown which is almost a tribute LP have seen to that. Like Joy Division they don't suit every mood and this goes for long periods without being played but it remains unique and rewarding.
Saturday, 22 January 2011
43 Mange Tout - Blancmange
Purchased : July 1985
Tracks : Don't Tell Me / Game Above My Head / Blind Vision / Time Became The Tide / That's Love That It Is / Murder / See The Train / All Things Are Nice / My Baby / The Day Before You Came
Good old W H Smiths had another cassette sale in the summer of 1985 which enabled me to catch up on some of the albums I'd missed the year before.
This was Blancmange's second and most successful LP released in June 1984. They were another odd couple synth act, gregarious Northern giant Neil Arthur ( the only pop star to hail from my wife's birthplace ) and scrawny synthster Steve Luscombe a Londoner four years Arthur's senior. They were around at the dawn of synthpop but took a while to get into commercial focus; after releasing an EP of avant-garde electronica called "Irene And Mavis" in 1980, they didn't put out a proper single until the excellent "God's Kitchen / I've Seen The Word" , a minor hit in April 1982, making their commercial breakthrough with the single "Living In The Ceiling" six months later.
Discounting a school punk band in 1980 they were the first band I ever went to see in May 1984.
This was released on the back of another Top 10 single "Don't Tell Me" which opens the LP. It was never one of my favourite songs ; it seemed to repeat the "Ceiling" formula - dance beat, Indian flavourings, troubled lyric - without that song's air of menace. It is an effective pop song with Pandit Dinesh's chattering tabla adding percussive colour and Neil Arthur, always an under-rated vocalist, adopting a softer tone on the verses then reverting to his customary baritone somewhere between Curtis and McCulloch on the chorus.
"Game Above My Head" is next. A less vocal version had already appeared on the 12 inch of their fourth single "Waves" and indeed the amount of previously-released material on the LP was disappointing. That said it's a great song, almost a synthpop Green Manalishi with Arthur suffering disturbed sleep and visions - "don't tell me I'm looking well" . Bobby Collins's spartan bass recalls Derek Forbes on Simple Minds's Seeing Out The Angel . There's a brief moment when the music approaches a resolution then the previous verses are repeated to deny this.
The oxymoronic "Blind Vision" follows , another top 10 single released a full year earlier. This hints even more strongly at mental illness with a side-helping of sexual innuendo -"it's getting harder ooh it's getting hard" while a full compliment of guests including Peter Gabriel cohort David Rhodes on guitar and the ubiquitous Jocelyn Brown brew up a storm of white funk. It owes a great deal to Talking Heads particularly Arthur's exclamatory vocal.
"Time Became The Tide" is the equivalent to "Waves" on the first LP , a big ballad furnished with strings, bells and grand piano like an early 70s Colin Blunstone track or Clifford T Ward. I'm not sure the song, chockfull of nautical metaphors, is strong enough to support the lush arrangement despite Arthur's careful vocal. It feels more like a demonstration of musical prowess than real inspiration.
The side concludes with "That's Love That It Is" a less successful single from November 1983 that was in and out of the charts so fast I'd only heard it a handful of times. The reason was probably the similarity to "Blind Vision" although it's more of a song. Unusually for them it's also very wordy with no real chorus which becomes a bit exhausting by the end of the track.
Side Two is thinner fare starting with "Murder" a non-song with aspirations to be Yello or Cabaret Voltaire. They could do this sort of hard electro-funk competently enough but they were much better as a pop band and this is a long five minutes of clattering percussion, guitar squall and tuneless chanting.
"See The Train" is a mild diversion, an a capella track with a multi-tracked Arthur doing a barber shop quartet routine apparently about a man preparing to throw himself under a train. Again, the song just isn't strong enough to achieve the desired effect.
The sample-heavy "All Things Are Nice" is interesting for its similarities to Paul Hardcastle's 19 which was released the following year. particularly a sample about First World War casualties. In turn it owes a lot to Byrne and Eno's My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts project with David Rhodes again on hand to add the requisite choppy guitar. It's B-side material really.
"My Baby" at least returns us to the world of the pop song a tongue-in-cheek tale of domestic strife which Arthur sings in the angst-ridden style of OMD's Andy McCluskey. The line "My baby's got a face like a long wet Sunday" shows that Arthur hasn't forgotten his Lancastrian roots but otherwise the song's rather unremarkable and could pass for The Thompson Twins.
The album closes with an extended version of "The Day Before You Came" the last single release from the LP in August 1984. The song was the last ever recorded by Abba and charted modestly less than two years earlier. Blancmange's version was only the second Abba cover to chart (following Sweet Dreams's Honey Honey in 1974 ) and beat the original by 10 places when it peaked at 22. The band's motivation for recording it seems to have been to raise its profile after such a poor chart showing and indeed its critical stock has risen over the years. It describes a mundane way of life that is about to be turned upside down by a fateful encounter but whether that's a good or bad thing is left open and the melancholy melody suggests that all may not be well. It could even be interpreted as a suicide song. The boys don't really explore that angle; although it's played fairly straight they substitute Barbara Cartland for the more cerebral Marilyn French as the author being read in bed and Arthur splutters the name out to underline the preposterous notion. The original's sparse arrangement is fleshed out by Dinesh's tablas and Valerie Ponomoren's trumpet. It has its merits but I think the original wins out.
Overall it is a rather disappointing LP and, despite having the biggest quota of hits, the weakest of the three they recorded in their original lifetime. At the time of writing they've just reunited so we will see if the new LP can better it too,
Monday, 17 January 2011
42 The Way We Wah
Purchased : May 1985
Tracks : Other Boys / Some Say / The Seven Thousand Names Of Wah / Seven Minutes To Midnight / The Death Of Wah / The Story Of The Blues Parts 1 & 2 / Sleep / You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory / Hope / Remember
I bought this at mid-price somewhere in Leeds.
This is a compilation of material Wah in their many guises recorded for WEA before being dropped in 1983, strangely ( for the time ) just after making their chart breakthrough. Hit singles the following year for Beggar's Banquet prompted this retrospective and also my going to see them at Leeds in November 1984. I was impressed enough to pick this up when I had the chance.
Wah were of course a vehicle for Pete Wylie who changed the group name as often as the line up. He is actually most remembered for coining the term "rockism" in the early 80s to describe the conservative attitudes in music criticism that he and fellow post-punkers were kicking against. Assuming you accept its existence , rockism can be viewed as either a benign attempt to elevate the best popular music to stand against the classical greats or a more malign endeavour to create a hierarchy in pop with white males at the top of it. Either way the concept has had a much longer shelf life than Wylie himself whose last hit (barring a guest appearance with The Farm in 1991) was in 1986 and who hasn't released anything in over a decade. Joe Strummer even credited Wylie 's "rockist " jibes with inciting Mick Jones to leave The Clash.
The album is roughly chronological so on Side One you get the uncompromising post-punk stuff that made Wylie the darling of the inkies while selling diddley-squat while Side Two shows how , like so many of his contemporaries, he took the New Pop shilling and headed for the charts.
"Other Boys" is one of six tracks from their debut LP "Nah Poo The Art Of Bluff" which charted for a few weeks in 1981 despite containing not even a minor hit. Starting with a whisper spelling out the title followed by an abrasive guitar blast it sets out their uneasy listening template, a brutalist drum machine, submerged bass, screechy keyboards and freeform guitar noise that looks forward to JAMC. Then you have the Wylie voice a phlegmy one-dimensional holler that always aims for the heroic but never quite gets there. There isn't even a hint of melody and I can't quite grasp what the song's about perhaps a vague call-to-arms with didactic phrases like "guess your number" and "try on new heads".
"Some Say" , a different version of which failed as a single, is more of the same although a more conventional guitar riff makes it slightly more accessible.Wylie rails against unspecified oppressors and false prophets - "they are liars, liars , liars" although the fourth verse seems to refer to Ian Curtis with the line "Dance dance to the music of the last chance man" referencing the hookline of Transmission. This is also the cue for some very Sumner-esque guitar thrashing. Elsewhere there's some very proggy keyboard abuse in the instrumental breaks.
"The Seven Thousand Names of Wah" affords a break from the Wylie voice as its almost entirely instrumental. With real drums and something approaching a melody this is a tad more accessible despite all the feedback howls and in places starts to resemble Love Sculpture's Sabre Dance with which it shares a similar tempo. Wylie comes in at the death with the line "One by one the stars are going out".
Next up is a live version of "Seven Minutes to Midnight" the most celebrated of their early singles but still not a hit. The title is a reference to the 1980 setting of the nuclear doomsday clock although the idea is used more as a metaphor (excuse? ) for existential despair in the song. And it is a proper song, the first hint of Wylie the songwriter as opposed to sloganeer. Long-term collaborator Washington lays down a Steve Severin -style pulsing bassline which anchors the song while big chords and more conventional keyboards add drama to Wylie's tale of confusion -"I've got a problem with balance now, there is no right or wrong". The self-lacerating climax - "I'm the lies that your kids should be told" - makes you warm to him.
The side concludes with "The Death Of Wah" a 5.5 minute epic which closed the "Nah-Poo.." LP.
It begins with a very Steve Morris drum pattern that runs right through the song accompanied by Washington's steely bass and echoey keyboards which also recall late Joy Division. The lyrics are very hard to decipher the most obvious phrase being "I can move mountains" . Three minutes in Wylie starts to have some fun and reveal some rather different influences. Washington's bass solo leads the way to Blinded By The Light keyboards and a verse of Everybody's Talking.
Apart from one more track from "Nah Poo", Side Two sees Wylie cleaning up the sound and heading for the charts. It begins with "The Story Of The Blues Parts 1 & 2 " their No 2 hit from 1983 and the biggest hit to emerge from the Liverpool post-punk scene until the Big In Japan diaspora started claiming the top spot a year later. It might have reached number one if the band hadn't been barred from a second Top Of The Pops appearance for breaching the rules on recording their backing track at the TV studio. I always thought it was a bit lucky to get so far, taking advantage of the post-Christmas lull, media interest in Liverpudlian poverty after the recent transmission of Boys From The Blackstuff and saturation coverage on Radio One from John Peel downwards (it was the subject of Peel's infamous "breaking wind" comment on TOTP). You never hear it on the radio these days and I think that's because the sound hasn't dated well, the primitive drum machines and Fairlight fake brass rooting it too firmly in the early 80s. Despite an obvious debt to The Associates it remains quite a good song with a nice build up to a rousing chorus and sensibly unspecific lyrics so you can take its message of coming through trials as either personal or political. Even with a liberal sprinkling of echo, Wylie's vocal struggles to stay in tune but the pill is vitally sweetened by having a couple of gospel singers to help him out on the trickier bits.
All the above really relates just to part 1. Although the transition is seamless on here Part 2 was the B-side and is a spoken rant to the same backing track about poverty and oppression that could have come from Blackstuff's George Malone but for the supposed quote from Sal Paradise in On The Road. In fact it comes from a different character in another of Kerouac's novels which I find quite amusing; if you're going to be pretentious at least get the facts right ! Actually the whole thing is a bit unnecessary making Wylie sound like a self-righteous berk who takes himself too seriously.
We then back track to "Sleep" from the first LP subtitled "A Lullaby For Josie" the first of a number of songs in Wylie's career addressed to his girlfriend and muse Josie Jones. Although relatively accessible it's hardly a lullaby. The prowling bassline and questioning piano reveal a love of 70s soul. The song conjures up an atmosphere of late night dread with Josie exhorted to keep moving and ignore the ramblings of an ageing pub bore.
Midway through there's a mini-cover of Johnny Thunders's "You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory " which condenses the song about resignation to loss into a single verse and chorus. With a near- identical single acoustic arrangement Wylie's restrained vocal is actually an improvement on Thunders and leaves you wanting more. When I saw them in Leeds Wylie thoughtfully dedicated the song to George Best who'd been committed to prison for drink driving earlier that day.
The album ends with the two singles that bookended the big hit though in reverse order. "Hope" was seen as a disappointing follow up and its failure to advance past number 37 proved that Wylie hadn't become a superstar overnight. I think it's a better song and ironically sounds much more authentically bluesy than its predecessor. With a slow soul beat played on real drums and a gospelly intro Wylie reins himself in on this unambiguously personal song of hurt and betrayal and allows the impressive backing singers to lead him on almost every line. The chorus is particularly good ; the girls deliver the lead line "You lied to me; I wish you'd believe me " to which Wylie responds with a wordless cry of pain then recovers for a bittersweet plea "Remember the time in the park remember the time after dark" underscored by a plaintive piano. The best bit of music on the LP by some way.
Finally we come to "Remember" released in March 1982 under the silliest of his nom de plumes, Shambeko Say Wah, and widely seen as Wylie's first attempt at a hit single. That didn't quite come off , competition for the charts being unusually strong at the time, but the change in the sound is quite plain. With a driving Northern Soul beat and the guitar barrage dropped for a power-pop riff that makes for a great intro it's likely the future Boo Radleys were listening at this point. Alas the song that follows is a bit disappointing. Wylie bludgeons the ear with an unfocussed rant that owes more than a little to Dexys" There There My Dear minus Rowland's beguiling eccentricity.
Wah never got out of the second division and I don't play this very often now but it is a good reflection of an interesting period in pop and certainly has its moments.
Monday, 10 January 2011
41 Hysteria - Human League
Purchased : May 1985
Tracks : I'm Coming Back / I Love You Too Much / Rock Me Again And Again And Again And Again And Again And Again / Louise / The Lebanon / Betrayed / The Sign / So Hurt / Life On Your Own / Don't You Know I Want You
This was purchased on cassette from Bostock's in Leeds. I already had two of the three singles but crucially not the one I most wanted.
This was the much-delayed follow-up to their multi-platinum selling "Dare" in 1981. Released two and a half years later, after a couple of standalone singles and a remix album, "Hysteria" has been marked down as a critical and relative commercial failure. It brought their brief spell as chart superstars to an abrupt end. It had a difficult birth with first , "Dare" producer Martin Rushent and then Chris Thomas being dropped from the project before Hugh Padgham completed the sessions. The title is reputed to be a reference to behaviour in the studio. None of this is very evident from what's on tape. Apart from the introduction of Jo Callis's guitar the sound isn't a great jump forward from "Dare" ; it's clean and spare synth pop that doesn't seem to leave much scope for quarrels with the producer.
Ironically the first song is titled "I'm Coming Back" and it's a muted resurrection to say the least. Written by Phil Oakey and Adrian Wright it's a mid-paced electro-dance number about defiance without a strong tune and most notable for the introduction of Callis's power chords in the bridge to the chorus. The electro-percussion break in the middle eight resembles Yazoo's Don't Go which is ironic given Oakey's public dismissal of the latter group.
"I Love You Too Much" was written by the two musicians, Callis and bassist Ian Burden with some input from Wright and is much sprightlier with arching harmonies from the girls Joanne Catherall and Suzanne Sulley and an impressive Bernard Edwards-inspired funk bassline from Burden. Callis plays some sizzling guitar in the middle eight of a song about obsession which could have been a single.
"Rock Me Again And Again And Again And Again And Again" reminds you of Oakey's taste for ironic cover versions carried over from the original line-up, this time taking on a song by the sainted James Brown. I've never been a great fan of Brown's music so I just take the track on its own merits. You fear the worst from the intro with Oakey really straining on the exclamatory "oh's but after that he does a credible job in a style well outside his comfort zone. Musically too its interesting with a minimalist staccato synth line and ironic Shaft guitar commentary from Callis. A decent false ending too.
Next up is "Louise" a delayed third single in December 1984 released as a follow-up to Oakey's big hit with Giorgio Moroder, Together In Electric Dreams that autumn and like the others peaking in the teens. Written by Oakey, Callis and Wright it's hung on a nagging synth bassline that would be irritating on a lesser song. Conceived by Oakey as the long-delayed reunion of the two protagonists of Don't You Want Me it's touching and sincere despite the hammy spoken bit and has a good claim to be his best lyric.
Side One ends with "The Lebanon" the fan-flummoxing first single whose failure to reach the Top 10 foreshadowed the fate of the LP. With the synths taking a back seat and even the drum machine programmed to a rock rather than dance beat the sound is dominated by Callis's searing PiL guitar and Burden's thundering bassline which combine for a great intro. Written by Callis and Oakey as a response to the Palestinian camp massacres of 1982 it understandably avoids getting into the ferociously complicated politics of the hotspot state concentrating on the observations of a couple of individuals caught in the mayhem. I think the much-criticised line "And where there used to be some shops is where the snipers sometimes hide" is actually quite good at highlighting the human tragedy involved. The girls do let it down a bit singing their lines off-key with all the passion of an answering machine and this version goes on too long merely repeating musical passages from earlier in the song.
"Betrayed " is another Wright / Oakey composition and like the previous one displays their tendency to write dirges when Callis and Burden aren't involved. But for Callis's neat surf guitar break in the middle eight this could have come from Travelogue (the girls don't feature at all) setting unspecific images of desolation and desperation to slow and ominous synth lines. It's OK but B-side material really.
"The Sign" actually was a B-side to "Louise" and lives down to it. A lousy attempt at a What's Going On state-of-the world address, it pootles along at mid-pace with a decent bassline and the pay-off " I saw the sign" line copped from Blancmange's I've Seen The Word.
"So Hurt" picks things up again with another great funk bassline from Burden who co wrote it with Oakey and a keyboard riff that suggests Oxygene. Addressed to a deserted man the song has a similar feel to "Love Action" with the same shrill harmonies on the chorus.
Then comes the delayed gratification of "Life on Your Own" my favourite HL single both then and now. Released as the second single not long after the LP it perhaps suffered as a result of the lukewarm reception to its parent and only reached 16, disappointing Virgin who had hoped for another number one. It should also be mentioned that having an opening line of "Winter is approaching there's snow upon the ground" didn't help it sell in June. The classic intro starts with just the percussion track then the synth bassline comes in followed by some warm minor chords on the synth. That sort of gradual introduction of the instruments is always a winner with me and the song itself lives up to it, a mature reflective ballad from the point of view of a man resigning himself to his unsuitability for commitment - "other people settle down ; I never do". Even the girls do it justice with their mournful harmonies on the chorus.
That just leaves "Don't You Know I Want You " written by Callis, Burden and Oakey. The synths again take a back seat to Burden's brooding bassline and Callis's white funk guitar at least until the soaring chorus with its impressive ascending harmonies. I like the skittering synths on the middle eight and Oakey's line "You can act like a monarch or a pillar of the bourgeoisie" seems like a sly poke at the often ponderous socialism of his ex-bandmates in Heaven 17.
I personally prefer this to "Dare" ( which we will get round to eventually ) for its more adult songs and smoother sound but I guess I'll always be in a minority there. By the time of their next LP half the band had been shed and much of the group's personality had been surrendered to Jam and Lewis who , the big hit single "Human" apart, produced a very uninspiring album. Oakey and the girls have soldiered on ever since dividing their time between 80s revival tours and sporadic hit singles which haven't persuaded me to invest in the relevant LPs.
Wednesday, 5 January 2011
40 Heart Twango & Rawbeat - Original Mirrors
Purchased : February 1985
Tracks : Heart Twango & Rawbeat / Dancing With The Rebels / Teen Beat / When You're Young / Things To Come / Darling .... in London / Don't Cry Baby / Please Don't Wear Red / Swing Together / Time Has Come
Well this one's a bit of a joker in the pack. It was bought in Leeds HMV, possibly at the same time as "Meat Is Murder" , despite my never having heard a note of the band's music. There were two reasons. One was that I had read a lot ( mainly favourable ) about them in Record Mirror in the early 80s and there'd been post-mortem comments like Suggs's that Duran Duran were an inferior version plus the Record Mirror review of Talk Talk's Today that they were taking "a huge lump out of the much-missed Original Mirrors". That suggested I'd missed something. Secondly, four years after its release, it was only £0.99 in a sale.
For those who don't recall them at all they were formed out of the Liverpool post-punk scene in 1979 by future Lightning Seed (then just a pip) Ian Broudie and a singer Steve Allen from another forgotten band, Steve Allen. The band also included bass player Phil Spalding, Jonathan Perkins who'd been in the pre-recording line up of XTC and experienced drummer Pete Kircher who went on to a three year stint with Status Quo including playing at Live Aid. Despite supportive press and a tasty support slot with Roxy Music in 1980 their two LPs (of which this is the second) bombed completely and they split up in 1981.
Now obviously the sleeve (see above ) didn't help it shift many copies but what's in the grooves ? Well the first , title, track's a throwaway near-instrumental with yobbishly shouted dance instructions though no one in 1981 was going to take the floor to this horribly dated sub-Devo jerky guitar pop. It is useful in establishing the parameters of the sound with Broudie's guitars and Kircher's big drums ( his impression of Mick Tucker on Ballroom Blitz is the best thing about this track; the cod-Elvis sign- off, the worst) upfront and Perkins kept on a very tight leash . Not a great start.
Next we have "Dancing With The Rebels" as resounding a flop as a single as its parent album. This starts with an intro of drum clicks similar to Antmusic then Kircher and Spalding lay down an ominous rumble and clatter offering a solid platform for a good song. Glitter Band massed whhoah-ohs don't bode well and then Allen comes in and the reason for their failure becomes apparent. His hiccoughing pub-singer drawl with added Elvis inflections (copped from Alan Vega) is ugly and grating and doesn't hide his inability to sing in tune. In a cartoon metal band he might fit ; in a sleek and shiny new pop group he is a disaster. The song itself is another call to arms directed at "the kids" with a rather offensive nod to Jonestown - "Kool Aid lying on the floor" . For all its faults there's a certain frisson in Kircher's pounding that makes it one of the better tracks.
"Teen Beat " is dismal. The influence radar picks up on Perkins's Radio Radio keyboards on a song that's as superficial as the title suggests. Quite what their 36-year old drummer thought of this slavish obsession with chasing the youth dollar would be interesting to know.
And here we go again with "When You're Young" (not The Jam song of the same name) , another patronising yoof anthem which is utterly vacuous despite the busy bass, drum flourishes and acid guitar solo.
"Things To Come" is an improvement. An excellent intro with Spanish guitar , castanets and Russianesque male harmonies leads into a song with a relatively interesting lyric about The Lone Ranger. While the chorus doesn't make much sense in that context - Kemo Sabe wasn't noted for fretting about the future - it does achieve a sense of foreboding and drama for which they're clearly striving.
"Darling ... In London" on Side Two continues the Russian theme retaining the mass harmonies on a folk reel melody before the song proper begins and the lyric seems to concern Russian sailors looking to make the most of a brief stopover in the West (pre-dating Letter To Brezhnev) . There's some interesting phased guitar and keyboards in there too.
"Don't Cry Baby" takes us back to the 70s by melding two acts from the opposite ends of the glam spectrum with verses that are pretty similar to Bowie's Golden Years and a chorus that recalls the over-produced Spectorisms of the Rubettes. It's competent pastiche, nothing more.
"Please Don't Wear Red" is one of the two sole Broudie compositions (the title track is the other) and he gives us a break from Allen by singing it himself. There are few pointers to The Lightning Seeds here though. The thunderous drums, scratchy guitar and screechy keyboards are more reminiscent of early XTC. I can't make out enough of the lyrics (the vocals are very low in the mix) to get a sense of what the song's about but it lumbers along without having enough melody to leave a lasting impression.
"Swing Together" brings some welcome space in the sound being mainly acoustic guitar and distant keyboards with the occasional bass drum thump from Kircher. It's a good arrangement but the lyrics are the same dismal we are the youth nonsense previously peddled by Secret Affair and hearing Allen more clearly doesn't make him any better.
"Time Has Come" sees Broudie trying on a Banshees ringing guitar sound for size and the main riff is quite similar to Siouxsie and the Banshees' contemporary Spellbound which may be connected to the fact Broudie and Banshee drummer Budgie were previously in Big In Japan together. That's the only interesting thing about the track which has empty modernist lyrics and no tune. The chorus line goes "The time has come but not for you". Couldn't have put it better myself boys.
So no I hadn't really missed anything. Duran Duran and Talk Talk owe nothing to these guys. They had the sound but not the songs , the precursors of Re-flex and Wang Chung instead.
Monday, 3 January 2011
39 Meat Is Murder - The Smiths
Purchased : February 1985
Tracks : The Headmaster Ritual / Rusholme Ruffians / I Want The One I Can't Have / What She Said / That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore / Nowhere Fast / Well I Wonder / Barbarism Begins At Home/ Meat Is Murder
This one was no doubt a fairly predictable choice as the first purchase of the new year. I was one of those who helped it to become the band's only number one album. Despite that it doesn't seem to be anyone's favourite ; the critics all favour its successor. Disappointed with the production compromises on their debut the band produced this one themselves though this effectively meant Johnny Marr with help from Stephen Street as engineer. Sonically it's a huge step forwards with Marr greatly expanding his range of guitar sounds and the rhythm section much more assured. Morrissey's vocals are also much improved.
Lyrically the album is much less introspective with Morrissey picking more external targets and introducing a political edge to the band perhaps fired up by the Band Aid project he had scathingly dismissed. There's also a sense of threat running through the album with many of the songs dwelling on violence whether at school, home, the fairground or the abbatoir . Morrissey's first target was his old secondary school in "The Headmaster Ritual". Many years later I discovered that my father had taught in the girls' school that had been hived off from Morrissey's alma mater St Mary's and he concurred with Johnny Rogan's description ( in Morrissey & Marr The Severed Alliance ) of the headmaster Vince Morgan as a martinet. Though the events described occurred at least a decade earlier the song bristles with anger at the institutionalised sadism ; the world of bullying Brian Glover not Roger Waters' hpocritical bleatings or Suggs's classroom gangsters. The song's yodelling coda has Morrissey echoing down the empty corridors like a vengeful fury. The musical attack is in the fiercely strummed acoustic guitars and Joyce's emphatic drumming with the electric arpeggios vaguely reminiscent of Don't Fear The Reaper prodding Morrissey to catharsis.
The following song switches the focus to the fairground in a riot of plaigiarism with the music a clear lift from Elvis Presley's His Latest Flame (the first clear nod to 50s rockabilly in Mozza's career) and much of the lyrical imagery cribbed from a poem by the execrable Victoria Wood though the added violence is all Morrissey. Latterly better known for student digs and its Curry Mile the Rusholme of the seventies supplied the hooligans who disrupted the fairs of Morrissey's childhood and it's his juxtaposition of this memory with the teenage romances for which he's relying on Wood - "then someone falls in love then someone's beaten up " that makes the song compelling although Rourke's bass playing is also worthy of note.
"I Want The One I Can't Have" returns to more personal concerns. Lyrically it seems a cut-and-paste job with verses about the mind/body dichotomy previously explored on "Still Ill" , working class sex and a teenage delinquent bundled around the title line achingly delivered by Morrissey amid lashings of rock guitar at times recalling the Jam's Private Hell.
"What She Said" is possibly the most aggressive Smiths song of all with Marr's fast- fingered guitar work seemingly locked into a race to the finish with Joyce's dense drumming. Above the din Morrissey arily sings of a female kindred spirit a bookish recluse who's rough sexual encounter with "A tattooed boy from Birkenhead" has only reinforced her view that life isn't worth living.
After the storm comes the calmer "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore" which was released months later as a single and became the only one apart from "Hand In Glove" to miss the Top 40 (after which they were obliged to make promotional videos) . It's the most musically ambitious track, in waltz time (with Joyce's crashes in unusual places) with backwards guitar and a false ending where the band return without Morrissey as if they've sneaked back in when he wasn't looking. The lyric chastises Morrissey's critics although exactly what was the joke is never quite clear. It climaxes with a repeated incantation of a Katherine Hepburn line from her 1935 film Alice Adams "I've seen it happen in other people's lives and now it's happening in mine" Marr's guitar swooping around the multi-tracked vocal.
"Nowhere Fast" the opening track on side two always strikes a personal chord with me for the line "And when a train goes by it's such a sad sound" because I lived near a railway for my first thirty-three years and the heavy goods trains going by did indeed become a comfort sound. Over another rockabilly rhythm Morrissey seamlessly blends the personal and political with his wish to moon the queen in the second verse while he bemoans his emotionless stasis elsewhere in the song. Joyce's rimshots in the middle eight are recorded to sound like gunshots (pre-dating Stone Roses' s Elizabeth My Dear ) but it's the choking melancholy in Morrissey's voice and sympathetic sadness in the guitar after each line that make the track a classic.
"Well I Wonder " lets Andy Rourke's bass take a more prominent role with Marr sticking mainly to acoustic while Morrissey delivers , latterly in falsetto, a sparse lyric about wanting to figure in someone's consciousness when he dies, their first explicit death song. He fades out early in the coda which eventually dissolves into affecting Mancunian rain falling . It's good but does seem out of sequence, an obvious closing track placed too early.
Then we have "Barbarism Begins At Home" a popular live track extended in the studio and for me the only misfire on the LP. It's also controversial for the lack of a writing credit for Rourke whose funk bassline is the rock of the song. Certainly Morrissey's contribution is relatively spartan, effectively just one verse bemoaning arbitrary parental violence, repeated then its lines ad libbed and yodelled up to the 5 minute mark before Rourke and Marr are allowed to play at being Chic for a couple of minutes. It's not bad at all but it would have been better suited to being on a 12 inch single ; here it seems like an odd, flabby indulgence on an otherwise very lean and tight LP.
Thankfully the album ends on a real high with the title track. You don't need to support the cause to appreciate Morrissey's passion about his vegetarianism and the fabulous musical setting provided by Marr. Beginning in a Floydian fashion with cattle lowing and chainsaw noises (Lulubelle being hacked to pieces ?) Marr interweaves simple piano lines with a bottomlessly mournful guitar riff while Morrissey in a brittle tone (slightly treated) decries the treatment of animals and specifically the Bisto ad presentation of meat eating -"It's not comforting cheery or kind". The chainsaws return at the end of the song to drive the point home. It's The Smiths at their least subtle but it still packs a powerful punch.
With only one belated single the album didn't hang around for long and has been overshadowed by its successor but it's still a fabulous work of art.
Tracks : The Headmaster Ritual / Rusholme Ruffians / I Want The One I Can't Have / What She Said / That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore / Nowhere Fast / Well I Wonder / Barbarism Begins At Home/ Meat Is Murder
This one was no doubt a fairly predictable choice as the first purchase of the new year. I was one of those who helped it to become the band's only number one album. Despite that it doesn't seem to be anyone's favourite ; the critics all favour its successor. Disappointed with the production compromises on their debut the band produced this one themselves though this effectively meant Johnny Marr with help from Stephen Street as engineer. Sonically it's a huge step forwards with Marr greatly expanding his range of guitar sounds and the rhythm section much more assured. Morrissey's vocals are also much improved.
Lyrically the album is much less introspective with Morrissey picking more external targets and introducing a political edge to the band perhaps fired up by the Band Aid project he had scathingly dismissed. There's also a sense of threat running through the album with many of the songs dwelling on violence whether at school, home, the fairground or the abbatoir . Morrissey's first target was his old secondary school in "The Headmaster Ritual". Many years later I discovered that my father had taught in the girls' school that had been hived off from Morrissey's alma mater St Mary's and he concurred with Johnny Rogan's description ( in Morrissey & Marr The Severed Alliance ) of the headmaster Vince Morgan as a martinet. Though the events described occurred at least a decade earlier the song bristles with anger at the institutionalised sadism ; the world of bullying Brian Glover not Roger Waters' hpocritical bleatings or Suggs's classroom gangsters. The song's yodelling coda has Morrissey echoing down the empty corridors like a vengeful fury. The musical attack is in the fiercely strummed acoustic guitars and Joyce's emphatic drumming with the electric arpeggios vaguely reminiscent of Don't Fear The Reaper prodding Morrissey to catharsis.
The following song switches the focus to the fairground in a riot of plaigiarism with the music a clear lift from Elvis Presley's His Latest Flame (the first clear nod to 50s rockabilly in Mozza's career) and much of the lyrical imagery cribbed from a poem by the execrable Victoria Wood though the added violence is all Morrissey. Latterly better known for student digs and its Curry Mile the Rusholme of the seventies supplied the hooligans who disrupted the fairs of Morrissey's childhood and it's his juxtaposition of this memory with the teenage romances for which he's relying on Wood - "then someone falls in love then someone's beaten up " that makes the song compelling although Rourke's bass playing is also worthy of note.
"I Want The One I Can't Have" returns to more personal concerns. Lyrically it seems a cut-and-paste job with verses about the mind/body dichotomy previously explored on "Still Ill" , working class sex and a teenage delinquent bundled around the title line achingly delivered by Morrissey amid lashings of rock guitar at times recalling the Jam's Private Hell.
"What She Said" is possibly the most aggressive Smiths song of all with Marr's fast- fingered guitar work seemingly locked into a race to the finish with Joyce's dense drumming. Above the din Morrissey arily sings of a female kindred spirit a bookish recluse who's rough sexual encounter with "A tattooed boy from Birkenhead" has only reinforced her view that life isn't worth living.
After the storm comes the calmer "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore" which was released months later as a single and became the only one apart from "Hand In Glove" to miss the Top 40 (after which they were obliged to make promotional videos) . It's the most musically ambitious track, in waltz time (with Joyce's crashes in unusual places) with backwards guitar and a false ending where the band return without Morrissey as if they've sneaked back in when he wasn't looking. The lyric chastises Morrissey's critics although exactly what was the joke is never quite clear. It climaxes with a repeated incantation of a Katherine Hepburn line from her 1935 film Alice Adams "I've seen it happen in other people's lives and now it's happening in mine" Marr's guitar swooping around the multi-tracked vocal.
"Nowhere Fast" the opening track on side two always strikes a personal chord with me for the line "And when a train goes by it's such a sad sound" because I lived near a railway for my first thirty-three years and the heavy goods trains going by did indeed become a comfort sound. Over another rockabilly rhythm Morrissey seamlessly blends the personal and political with his wish to moon the queen in the second verse while he bemoans his emotionless stasis elsewhere in the song. Joyce's rimshots in the middle eight are recorded to sound like gunshots (pre-dating Stone Roses' s Elizabeth My Dear ) but it's the choking melancholy in Morrissey's voice and sympathetic sadness in the guitar after each line that make the track a classic.
"Well I Wonder " lets Andy Rourke's bass take a more prominent role with Marr sticking mainly to acoustic while Morrissey delivers , latterly in falsetto, a sparse lyric about wanting to figure in someone's consciousness when he dies, their first explicit death song. He fades out early in the coda which eventually dissolves into affecting Mancunian rain falling . It's good but does seem out of sequence, an obvious closing track placed too early.
Then we have "Barbarism Begins At Home" a popular live track extended in the studio and for me the only misfire on the LP. It's also controversial for the lack of a writing credit for Rourke whose funk bassline is the rock of the song. Certainly Morrissey's contribution is relatively spartan, effectively just one verse bemoaning arbitrary parental violence, repeated then its lines ad libbed and yodelled up to the 5 minute mark before Rourke and Marr are allowed to play at being Chic for a couple of minutes. It's not bad at all but it would have been better suited to being on a 12 inch single ; here it seems like an odd, flabby indulgence on an otherwise very lean and tight LP.
Thankfully the album ends on a real high with the title track. You don't need to support the cause to appreciate Morrissey's passion about his vegetarianism and the fabulous musical setting provided by Marr. Beginning in a Floydian fashion with cattle lowing and chainsaw noises (Lulubelle being hacked to pieces ?) Marr interweaves simple piano lines with a bottomlessly mournful guitar riff while Morrissey in a brittle tone (slightly treated) decries the treatment of animals and specifically the Bisto ad presentation of meat eating -"It's not comforting cheery or kind". The chainsaws return at the end of the song to drive the point home. It's The Smiths at their least subtle but it still packs a powerful punch.
With only one belated single the album didn't hang around for long and has been overshadowed by its successor but it's still a fabulous work of art.
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