Sunday, 20 February 2011
47 Rage In Eden - Ultravox
Purchased : August 1985
Tracks : The Voice / We Stand Alone / Rage In Eden / I Remember / The Thin Wall / Stranger Within / Accent On Youth / The Ascent / Your Name
This was bought in Leeds on a visit to change some library books.
It was originally released in September 1981 when, post-Vienna , Ultravox seemed poised to become superstars. Even an EP of material recorded by the John Foxx line-up had been a hit. With the combination of serious musicianship and accessible tunes they looked set to become the ELO of the Eighties. A strong LP would have consolidated their position.
But "Rage In Eden " was never going to do that. The band took a left turn and recorded the darkest of the five albums produced by the Midge Ure line up. It was poorly received and after hitting number 4 disappeared quickly from the charts in part because only two singles were lifted from it. Ultravox remained a popular act until Ure's departure and their greatest hits collection was a big seller in 1984 but they never again threatened to become seriously huge.
The album gets off to a flying start with a long version of one of their strongest singles "The Voice". Billy Currie's jolting phased synths lead in then Chris Cross's aggressive bass and Warren Cann's brittle drumming lock together and Midge Ure sings a low verse full of foreboding about being seduced by oratory. This gives way to a classic melodramatic chorus with the others offering a low almost monastic harmony to Ure's urgent tones. The middle eight is particularly good Ure's guitar squalls set off against Currie's grand piano chords before Cann brings them both to heel with emphatic crashes.
"We Stand Alone" ups the aggression factor with Cross 's brutalist bass synth, Cann's frantic pounding and Ure playing some choppy post-punk guitar behind his doleful main chords. The lyrics paint a picture of a doomed couple "this gigolo and gigolette" led astray and facing some aful fate but taking comfort in posthumous glory. Ure's vocal is suitably heroic and Currie adds colour with his sweeping synths and viola in the middle eight.
Then the pace slows down for the title track. This is the missing link between "Vienna" and Joy Division's The Eternal combining the mechanical rhythm of the former with the air of paralysed despair of the latter. It's not as good as either and doesn't benefit from Conny Plank's murky production which dissolves into Radioactivity crackle at the fade. I'm not sure what purpose using the hook from the following track played backwards as the chorus serves either.
"I Remember (Death In The Afternoon)" is possibly my favourite Ultravox song although again I would question Plank's production - Ure seems too low in the mix. The band said at the time it was inspired by the death of John Lennon though the lyrics conjure up more of a Big Chill picture of lamenting lost youth (it's worth remembering that all the band were round about 30 at this point in time). The greatness of the song lies in the tension between the urgency of the bass synth pulse and Cann's powerful drumming and Currie's stately piano chords. Ure sings economically but is allowed to let rip with a feedback guitar solo in the lengthy middle eight . He gradually disappears in the long fade out until all we're left with is Currie's questioning piano riff.
The weaker Side Two begins with "The Thin Wall" which I was disappointed by as a single with its ungainly tuneless verses and weak chorus. Interestingly there's a line "They shuffle with a bovine grace" which accurately describes the sound as Ure struggles to phrase the spiky words atop the too-upfront bass synth patterns. The lyric could be read as a critique of the New Romantic scene with a threat of imminent doom a la Einstein A Go-Go which is a bit like having your cake and eating it. It would have fit Visage better to be honest.
Despite being over seven minutes long "Stranger Within" is better. It's the most Kraftwerkian track despite Ure's choppy guitar and occasional bass plucks from Cross with Currie's sombre keyboard melody the main hook. Lyrically it's the darkest song its tale of paranoia and mental decay entering Ian Curtis territory and Ure's vocal is suitably anguished. The instrumental last couple of minutes do seem a bit unnecessary but it's still an impressive song.
"Accent On Youth" is the most uptempo track on this side with Cann reverting to real drums. The band avoid the usual pitfalls of writing about youth by portraying it as a time of torment subject to the tyranny of impulse "We stumble blindly chasing something new and something sinful". Ure's wracked vocal and wailing guitar and Currie's abrasively pitched synths convey this riot of Catholic conflict well.
"The Ascent" is really just an extended coda to the previous song and seems more of a concession to Billy Currie's desire to get his violin out than anything else.
It ends abruptly , an echoing drum crash heralding "Your Name (Has Slipped My Mind Again) " a sparse, funereal ballad wherein the process outlined in "Stranger Within" appears to have played itself out and not in a good way. Ure's numbed vocal and the vague murmurs from the rest of the band hint at white rooms and sedation with only Currie's minor chords and Cann's cavernous single beats for company. It's not melodic enough to really grab me but an impressive stab at real bleakness nevertheless.
That could be said for the whole album really. It's not perfect and the second side in particular is a bit hit-and-miss but it stands alongside other sombre offerings in the post-Closer period and has aged pretty well.
Saturday, 12 February 2011
46 A Word To The Wise Guy - The Mighty Wah
Purchased : August 1985
Tracks : Yuh Learn I / Weekends / Everwanna / The Lost Generation / Yuh Learn II / I Know There Was Something / Yuh Learn III / In The Bleak Body And Soul Midwinter / Papa Crack / What's Happening Here / Yuh learn IV / Come Back
This was another purchase from the WH Smith cassette sale.
Now known as The Mighty Wah this was the group's second proper LP released on their new label Beggar's Banquet in the summer of 1984 following another Top 20 hit with "Come Back". Despite this it barely peaked above their hitless debut and the band were dropped once more. When Wlie re-surfaced on Siren in 1986 it was under his own name.
As evidenced by the Baconesque cover art this is a grandiose concept LP in which Wylie attempted to match Alan Bleasdale in conveying the sufferings of Liverpool in the eighties this time in music. Wylie himself has since referred to it as "Boys From The Blackstuff - The Musical".
Does it live up to that billing ? - well, not really. Even the duller bits of Blackstuff were still watchable -some of this is awful. And it starts off badly with "Yuh Learn I" the first of a four part pseudo-rap lecture that pops up like a bad smell throughout the album each time more annoying than the last. The rapper is one Eugene Lange whose similarity to Craig Charles is his only calling card. His state of the nation address is backed by a very aggravating drum machine and a frantic fretless bass from Washington. It's barely two minutes long but feels like at least twice that.
Thankfully it gives way to "Weekends" one of the better songs and the second single though not a hit. More pertinent now than then, it concerns proletarian dreams of celebrity and travel namechecking the razor-advertising Victor Khayam and Duran Duran. Musically it sounds a bit like U2 if Larry Mullen were replaced by a cheap metronome but the tune's pretty good even if Wylie's vocal is a bit screechy.
"Everwanna" falls into the oh-so-eighties trap of aping black soul music for greater "authenticity". So you get frantic gospel singers on an over-busy sub-Dexy's track with blaring horns and talk of "your turn to testify". I like Wylie's cheeky Lulu impersonation on the intro and Washington's bassline but otherwise it's a pretty hollow experience.
"The Lost Generation " is more interesting.After an Abba-ish intro the song harks back to "Seven Minutes To Midnight" in its pace and air of foreboding. Against galloping acoustic guitars and some nice descending keyboard parts Wylie sings of the disappointment of youthful hopes. The didactism gets a bit wearing - "don't stand by, don't ever close your eyes" but it's a decent tune.
Chairman Lange then gives us the benefit of further wisdom in "Yuh Learn II" castigating a conman (probably "Minister for Merseyside" Michael Heseltine) and drug dealers before aggressively shouting "Listen ! " to fade. We've bought the bloody album mate what do you think we're doing ?
This leads into the eight minutes of "I Know There Was Something" which starts off promisingly with its big chords, melodic bassline and icy Closer synth washes but soon becomes a dirge. The lyric seems to be based on the Michael Angelis / Julie Walters episode of Blackstuff with the bleak outlook taking it's toll on a relationship - "the bubble's burst why don't you blow another ?"
It's interesting territory but Wylie's tuneless bawling and an unlistenable passage of atonal piano and unintelligible muttering four minutes in just destroy it
Side Two begins with "Yuh Learn III" mercifully shorter than the other sections and ending with a pointless percussion break. This leads into the album's best song "In The Bleak Body And Soul Midwinter". A dense intro leads into a fast paced rock track led by Washington's bass. The simple melody is within Wylie's range so for once the backing singers seem like they're complimenting , rather than compensating for him. Being addressed to Josie Jones there's a welcome hint of optimism in the lyrics too.
Unfortunately we then have the near-seven minute blaxploitation pastiche "Papa Crack". It's a fairly obvious attempt to re-write Papa Was A Rolling Stone for the 80s and the wah-wah guitars and Isaac Hayes floating flute are all there but there's no song just one verse and then vague murmurings and chanting. It sounds much more like the uneasy funk experiments of late-period Jam than The Temptations.
"What's Happening Here " isn't much better with its pounding Northern Soul beat and obvious re-cycling of the keyboard melody from their earlier single "Remember". The lyrics are a stale re-tread of themes he's already done to death -"it hurts to be helpless" - and there's a serious risk of boredom setting in by this point.
So along comes "Yuh Learn IV" dressed up with some Arabian flute but still as painful as before only you know it's the last part and there's only the safe harbour of the single to come.
"Come Back" is subtitled "The Story Of The Reds" but it was actually originally written about the bust-up with WEA before it became a politicised plea to those seeking to escape the city. There's a line towards the end celebrating the antics of the opportunistic shyster Derek Hatton which Wylie must surely regret now. That doesn't spoil a fine song with a rousing chorus and a thrilling climactic keyboard break before the last chorus.
So it's not really a heroic failure , more a case of a moderate talent over-reaching itself and not having enough good songs to make it work.
Tracks : Yuh Learn I / Weekends / Everwanna / The Lost Generation / Yuh Learn II / I Know There Was Something / Yuh Learn III / In The Bleak Body And Soul Midwinter / Papa Crack / What's Happening Here / Yuh learn IV / Come Back
This was another purchase from the WH Smith cassette sale.
Now known as The Mighty Wah this was the group's second proper LP released on their new label Beggar's Banquet in the summer of 1984 following another Top 20 hit with "Come Back". Despite this it barely peaked above their hitless debut and the band were dropped once more. When Wlie re-surfaced on Siren in 1986 it was under his own name.
As evidenced by the Baconesque cover art this is a grandiose concept LP in which Wylie attempted to match Alan Bleasdale in conveying the sufferings of Liverpool in the eighties this time in music. Wylie himself has since referred to it as "Boys From The Blackstuff - The Musical".
Does it live up to that billing ? - well, not really. Even the duller bits of Blackstuff were still watchable -some of this is awful. And it starts off badly with "Yuh Learn I" the first of a four part pseudo-rap lecture that pops up like a bad smell throughout the album each time more annoying than the last. The rapper is one Eugene Lange whose similarity to Craig Charles is his only calling card. His state of the nation address is backed by a very aggravating drum machine and a frantic fretless bass from Washington. It's barely two minutes long but feels like at least twice that.
Thankfully it gives way to "Weekends" one of the better songs and the second single though not a hit. More pertinent now than then, it concerns proletarian dreams of celebrity and travel namechecking the razor-advertising Victor Khayam and Duran Duran. Musically it sounds a bit like U2 if Larry Mullen were replaced by a cheap metronome but the tune's pretty good even if Wylie's vocal is a bit screechy.
"Everwanna" falls into the oh-so-eighties trap of aping black soul music for greater "authenticity". So you get frantic gospel singers on an over-busy sub-Dexy's track with blaring horns and talk of "your turn to testify". I like Wylie's cheeky Lulu impersonation on the intro and Washington's bassline but otherwise it's a pretty hollow experience.
"The Lost Generation " is more interesting.After an Abba-ish intro the song harks back to "Seven Minutes To Midnight" in its pace and air of foreboding. Against galloping acoustic guitars and some nice descending keyboard parts Wylie sings of the disappointment of youthful hopes. The didactism gets a bit wearing - "don't stand by, don't ever close your eyes" but it's a decent tune.
Chairman Lange then gives us the benefit of further wisdom in "Yuh Learn II" castigating a conman (probably "Minister for Merseyside" Michael Heseltine) and drug dealers before aggressively shouting "Listen ! " to fade. We've bought the bloody album mate what do you think we're doing ?
This leads into the eight minutes of "I Know There Was Something" which starts off promisingly with its big chords, melodic bassline and icy Closer synth washes but soon becomes a dirge. The lyric seems to be based on the Michael Angelis / Julie Walters episode of Blackstuff with the bleak outlook taking it's toll on a relationship - "the bubble's burst why don't you blow another ?"
It's interesting territory but Wylie's tuneless bawling and an unlistenable passage of atonal piano and unintelligible muttering four minutes in just destroy it
Side Two begins with "Yuh Learn III" mercifully shorter than the other sections and ending with a pointless percussion break. This leads into the album's best song "In The Bleak Body And Soul Midwinter". A dense intro leads into a fast paced rock track led by Washington's bass. The simple melody is within Wylie's range so for once the backing singers seem like they're complimenting , rather than compensating for him. Being addressed to Josie Jones there's a welcome hint of optimism in the lyrics too.
Unfortunately we then have the near-seven minute blaxploitation pastiche "Papa Crack". It's a fairly obvious attempt to re-write Papa Was A Rolling Stone for the 80s and the wah-wah guitars and Isaac Hayes floating flute are all there but there's no song just one verse and then vague murmurings and chanting. It sounds much more like the uneasy funk experiments of late-period Jam than The Temptations.
"What's Happening Here " isn't much better with its pounding Northern Soul beat and obvious re-cycling of the keyboard melody from their earlier single "Remember". The lyrics are a stale re-tread of themes he's already done to death -"it hurts to be helpless" - and there's a serious risk of boredom setting in by this point.
So along comes "Yuh Learn IV" dressed up with some Arabian flute but still as painful as before only you know it's the last part and there's only the safe harbour of the single to come.
"Come Back" is subtitled "The Story Of The Reds" but it was actually originally written about the bust-up with WEA before it became a politicised plea to those seeking to escape the city. There's a line towards the end celebrating the antics of the opportunistic shyster Derek Hatton which Wylie must surely regret now. That doesn't spoil a fine song with a rousing chorus and a thrilling climactic keyboard break before the last chorus.
So it's not really a heroic failure , more a case of a moderate talent over-reaching itself and not having enough good songs to make it work.
Sunday, 6 February 2011
45 The Smiths - The Smiths
Purchased : August 1985
Tracks : Reel Around The Fountain / You've Got Everything Now / Miserable Lie / Pretty Girls Make Graves / The Hand That Rocks The Cradle / Still Ill / Hand In Glove / What Difference Does It Make / I Don't Owe You Anything / Suffer Little Children
This was bought from HMV in Bolton prior to a pre-season Manx Cup game at Burnden Park. As mentioned in the post on Hatful of Hollow I originally borrowed this the previous summer and fell in love with it so this was a no-brainer purchase.
Despite the album's difficult gestation and the band's reservations about the production, I think it's their best and a contender for my favourite LP of all time. I hadn't fully appreciated Morrissey and his worldview from the singles I'd heard before the LP but he was a hero now. In the summer of 1984 I was having particular difficulties in handling the conflict between Catholicism and sexual feeling so hearing a singer that set himself against sex was a great comfort. And the music was great too.
Mike Joyce's drums kick off "Reel Around The Fountain" a tale of Maggie May-esque sexual initiation or is it - "take me to the haven of your bed was something that you never said" ? With the aid of lines copped from A Taste of Honey and imagery from William Wyler's The Collector, Morrissey keeps us guessing. Marr keeps it moving with a descending riff and the sound is filled out with guest musician Paul Carrack's plangent piano and emotive organ. Morrissey's vocal is careworn but warm - whoever he's addressing is still worthy of his affection.
This seems less likely with the accusatory "You've Got Everything Now" seemingly addressed to an old schoolmate. One of Marr's best riffs bucks along on Joyce's fat bassline while Mozza lurches between recrimination and self pity until the glorious point where Carrack's organ comes in on the line "No I've never had a job because I've never wanted one " . Morrissey presents this as a badge of pride and it's a much more subversive show of defiance than Wham Rap .
"Miserable Lie" probably isn't anyone's favourite as it lacks the melodic subtlety of their best work. After a deceptively mellow opening with Moz bidding farewell to someone, Joyce comes crashing in with a pounding drum pattern that continues for the rest of the song, Marr trying to keep up with him with some doomy rockabilly licks. Here is Mozza's most explicit rejection of sex as a salve for a bruised life -" I laugh at yours, you laugh at mine and love is such a miserable lie" sung in the flattest, entirely joyless, tones he can muster before wailing the last lines and ad libbing in a tuneless falsetto. The last minute or so is actually quite difficult to listen to but maybe that's the point.
In any case there's instant balm in the form of "Pretty Girls Make Graves" which is as near perfection as makes no difference. Here is Orwell's A Clergyman's Daughter or Bobby Goldsboro's Summer (The First Time) in reverse with Mozza fleeing from a sexually hungry girl and then watching in disgust as she finds a more willing beau at the seaside. But it's not one sided vituperation ; the girl is allowed to respond. "Give in to love, give up to lust, oh Heaven knows we'll soon be dust" is one of the greatest couplets in pop encapsulating the Northern fatalism of Elsie Tanner and Hilda Ogden in barely a dozen words. Little-used guest vocalist Annalisa Jablonska is allowed to insert a sarcastic "Oh Dear" after the second verse. Rourke nudges the story along with his melodic bassline, Marr gradually adding layers of acoustic and electric as the story reaches its climax. Mozza signs off with a ghostly echo of "Hand In Glove" indicating that this might be the end of the relationship in that song (in which case the LP is mis-sequenced) while Marr's gorgeous reflective arpeggios at the end (suggesting the empty beach after the drama has been played out) sound like a slowed down version of the Echo Beach riff.
Side One ends with the controversial "The Hand That Rocks The Cradle" which was accused of having paedophilic undertones. For the most part its's clearly a declaration of an abandoned father's love for his son which now calls to mind Cormac McCarthy's The Road ; it's the second verse's references to giving way to temptation "just like a moth to a flame" that cause unease. Morrissey's pushing the envelope here but it occurs; are there any areas where art shouldn't go ? We'll come back to this point shortly. Musically it's the least interesting track with Marr's Pretenders-like riff endlessly repeating and the band even sounding a little out of time in places.
"Still Ill" opens Side Two and who else would have come up with a title like that ? Still performed by Morrissey it allows a scintilla of self-doubt to creep in amidst the defiant anti-work stance (the line "England is mine and it owes me a living" could be a manifesto for the likes of Shameless Mick) and throws in another unsatisfactory sexual memory for good measure. Marr strings pearls along the top of Joyce's punchy drumming and Rourke's prodding bassline.
Then we have the first and third singles. Perhaps with such an embarrassment of riches on the album it would have been better to put them on the first side but that's a minor quibble. "Hand In Glove" remains a great clarion call , a gesture of defiance against the narrow-minded but laced with characteristic despair -"I'll probably never see you again". The music is a stewing cauldron of acoustic and electric held together by Joyce's strong-armed drums.
"What Difference Does It Make" was a remarkable third single. Its unmistakable stinging guitar riff leads into a Gothic tale of confession and recrimination that still intrigues more than a quarter century later. What heinous fault or deed has Morrissey just confessed to ? Joyce's hi-hats accentuate the most dramatic points while a blast of playground chatter crops up unexpectedly two thirds of the way through (bizarrely recalling fellow Mancunian Mick Coleman's Matchstalk Men and Matchstalk Cats And Dogs).
" I Don't Owe You Anything" was the only track I found disappointing at first ; its comparitively mellow sound seeming a bit bland in such exalted company. Then a few weeks after I purchased the LP it acquired a new resonance. Just after returning to Littleborough for the summer vacation I bumped into Sean (see the The Party's Over post) and we arranged another reunion meeting of the Travelling Society at his house that July. It went well so I suggested a follow-up at mine a few weeks later. I was playing this LP while waiting for people to arrive then I got a call from Sean to say that Michael , the great prize at such events had decided not to come (it was commendable of Sean to let me know that in advance). Crestfallen at this, the line in the song "You should never go to them , let them come to you" became all too relevant and sage and since then the song has been a favourite.
And then we have "Suffer Little Children" the subject of a belated Private Eye "expose" and still one of the most controversial songs in pop. Only the post-Lydon Sex Pistols had previously tackled the subject of The Moors Murders and then only by jokey allusion to Myra Hindley in the execrable No One Is Innocent. Morrissey tackles the subject head on in a song directly inspired by Emlyn Williams's seminal but not entirely factual account of the case, Beyond Belief. Williams's lyrical evocation of 1960s Manchester did much to fix the murders as a Northern rather than British tragedy - "oh Manchester so much to answer for" - however much the Daily Mail wound up its Home Counties readership against Lord Longford. Morrissey is merely following in his footsteps. All the band show great restraint in their playing and Morrissey's vocal is tinder-dry and curiously hollow-sounding (no falsetto histrionics or yodelling here) , all aware of the tightrope they were walking. Joblowska's imitation of a child's laughter is a dangerous addition but highlights the point about Hindley's exile from humanity effectively. It's not a song you want to listen to all that often but it's a powerful reminder that pop can go as far as other artforms in what it addresses.
A great, great LP. That's all that needs to be said.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)