Sunday, 13 March 2011
49 Giants - The Bolshoi
Purchased : October 1985
Tracks : Fly / Sliding Seagulls / Hail Mary / Giants / Happy Boy / By The River
This was one of two LPs bought on the same day on a Friday afternoon visit to the shopping centre in Leeds. As a mini-LP it was available at mid-price and was bought on the strength of the single "Happy Boy " which I'd heard a couple of times on the Janice Long show. I was also on the lookout for an upcoming guitar band with serious lyrics that I could sell to Sean, still wanting to taste-shape. I clearly remember that this is the one I played first.
The Bolshoi were from Yeovil and had previously released one poorly-received single "Sob Story" (not included here ) on Beggar's Banquet. They played a form of Goth-lite with - sometimes at least - an ear for melody and songs that were more rooted in every day provincial life than their peers.
"Fly" is fairly typical, a song of bedsit ennui and desire to escape. The first few bars suggest Rat Trap but it settles into a Goth rock mode with heavy snare, strutting bass and dense acoustic strumming allowing singer/guitarist Trevor Tanner to swoop around with Keith Levine slashes. It's a decent opening track.
"Sliding Seagulls" is a curate's egg of a song with discordant guitar sounds rubbing up against Paul Clark's keyboards on the tuneful bridge. It's not altogether pleasant with distasteful references to a leper and a suggestion that it's being sung from the point of view of a mentally -ill person - "So I'm out for the day". You also start to notice Tanner's mannered singing style, always likely to speak the next line in a camp voice like a modern day Rex Harrison.
"Hail Mary" conjures up a Welcome Home Roxy Carmichael scenario of small town envy at the one that got away - "She don't come down the club anymore" but it seems only half-formed. The first verse is an incoherent jumble of naff rhymes made worse by Tanner's grating self-indulgent key shifts . There's not enough melody either to compensate for the tom-tom battery throughout the song. You don't blame Mary for wanting to get away from this.
The title track opens Side Two and doesn't improve matters. Lacking either tune or chorus it's a very sub-Banshees slab of Goth rock about nightmares except that Jan Kalicki's pedestrian tub-thumping doesn't hold a candle to Budgie's work. The added colour of icy piano chords and harmonica doesn't help much. It concludes with Tanner's nursery rhyme incantation spinning out the song to nearly 5 minutes.
Relief is on hand with "Happy Boy" a tale of illicit gay love - "moving it up with a friend called Jimmy " and imminent escape that would have fitted in nicely on Suede's debut eight years later. This is a long version , perhaps a bit too long , but the band show a grasp of melody and song dynamics that's not in evidence elsewhere. Built around the brooding undulations of Nick Chown's bass Tanner's prowling verses explode into the tuneful chorus where Clark and Kalicki fill out the sound. Tanner even manages a brief guitar solo in the middle eight. It's head and shoulders above anything else here.
The semi-acoustic closer, "By The River" strives to be ethereal and mysterious but doesn't go anywhere after an attractive intro. There aren't enough ideas for three minutes let alone nearly six and your attention wanders.
So all told , the LP was a big disappointment. Luckily their next single was an absolute cracker so I was willing to give them another chance and write this off as a case of running before you can walk.
Thursday, 10 March 2011
48 Low Life - New Order
Purchased : August 1985
Tracks : Love Vigilantes / The Perfect Kiss / This Time Of Night / Sunrise / Elegia / Sooner Than You Think / Subculture / Face Up
This was bought on a visit to Manchester from HMV on a lovely sunny afternoon. I was taking a punt with it having fallen out of love with "Power Corruption and Lies" and never started with "Movement". I didn't rate "Confusion" or "Thieves Like Us" either and never actually heard "The Perfect Kiss" as it failed to reach the Top 40 (probably because it was one over-long single too many). However Smash Hits had given the LP a good review and it was very nicely packaged so I gave them another chance to impress me and they did.
Critical consensus says that 1989's "Technique" is their best LP but for me it's this one. The photos of the band on the sleeve are an indicator of their willingness to slew off the last trappings of post-punk belligerence and embrace the fame their music had earned them. Musically they were now writing proper songs rather than Barney coming up with some dogggerel to hang on a riff at the last moment. Why it wasn't more commercially successful is still a bit baffling to me but hey-ho they survived and prospered.
This LP set the template for their subsequent efforts . Although the songs are credited to the whole group it's clear from their work apart that Barney comes up with the aynthesiser - based dance tracks and Hooky the rockier ones with his bass the lead instrument. It's the friction between these musical poles and the suffusion of melancholy from their tragic past that makes them unique and compelling.
"Love Vigilantes" is probably the closest they came to re-writing Love Will Tear Us Apart with a similar ringing bass and guitar interplay although Steve Morris's crashing snare owes more to Springsteen's Dancing In The Dark and Barney adds some melodica at the beginning. The tongue-in-cheek lyric explores similar ideas to Stop the Cavalry with a soldier longing for demob to see his wife and family again. It's an effective opening statement of their intent to write conventional pop songs but there's better stuff to come.
"The Perfect Kiss" is next, perversely in shortened form. With deliberately simplistic lyrics Barney tells the tale of a suicidal friend and it's not hard to work out what the inspiration for that was. Hooky's dolorous bass is the melodic lead soon echoed by the synth while Steve Morris puts down a bed of electronic percussion. There's a long instrumental coda which throws cricket noises and cowbells into the mix before the bass re-asserts itself at the conclusion. It's a good song but over-busy.
"This Time Of Night" bridges Cabaret Voltaire and the Pet Shop Boys with a low synth rumble and whispered vocal loaded with sexual menace on the verses followed by a sweeping lovesick chorus. The Billy Currie - esque piano break in the middle is an interlude before a more aggressive second verse and chorus where Barney starts ad-libbing behind his main vocal suggesting the sexual storm is breaking.
Hooky leads us out of that track with a typical bass solo and into "Sunrise" where he's clearly in control. It seems at least in part a pastiche of their southern contemporaries The Cure who were a bit faster in embracing a poppier direction. Hook's Gallup-ing bass is the dominant instrument and Barney does a very creditable impersonation of Robert Smith's mawkish tones on a song full of unspecific complaint. The ascending synth break that takes the place of a chorus seems, along with the title, a deliberate reference back to New Dawn Fades.
Side Two throws a curveball with "Elegia" a haunting instrumental somewhere between Philip Glass and Mike Oldfield with Hooky's doleful bass prowling around beneath the pastoral synth melodies. Morris eventually intervenes as a herald of Barney's brief but devastating burst of distorted guitar bursting the bubble of bliss just as the world's realities erased Holden Caulfield's idyllic ambition. The band haven't done anything quite like it since.
The mood lingers into "Sooner Than You Think" which after a lengthy intro settles into a wistful song about the end of a holiday romance with the startling couplet "The price of a drink there is so much more reasonable / I think I'll go there when it gets reasonable." The most seamless meld of rock and dance on the LP it's a clear precursor to "World In Motion".
My favourite song on the LP "Subculture" follows. After a startling intro using the harpsichord pre-set it becomes a Hi-NRG disco song of sexual blackmail -" you can't shag without someone else" - on a bed of the sort of synth noises that Stock Aitken and Waterman would shortly flog to death. Barney provides a deapan vocal but the real killer is the middle eight where a percussion break gives way to the harpsichord motif and Hooky enters like a storm cloud with a ringing bass line that takes the drama to a new level. The band re-recorded it for a second single release and ballsed it up with superfluous clutter a la "Confusion". This remains by far the best version.
In this company the final track "Face Up" is a bit of a disappointment. After yet another excellent intro it turns out to be a virtual re-write of "Temptation" with a very similar mix of twitchy synths , heavy backbeat and throwaway lyrics. It's acceptable enough but seems like a backward step after what we've just heard.
I don't think New Order have strayed too far from the sound they first perfected here ; you can hear echoes of these songs in most of their subsequent material which isn't meant to be a criticism.
Accordingly we'll meet them again here but this one is the cherry on the cake.
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