Monday, 2 May 2011
55 The Colour Of Spring - Talk Talk
Purchased : February 1986
Tracks : Happiness Is Easy / I Don't Believe In You / Life's What You Make It / April 5th / Living In Another World / Give It Up / Chameleon Day / Time It's Time
This was bought in Leeds on a weekday afternoon.
It was my first "just out" purchase for quite a while. This was Talk Talk's third LP and the most commercially successful of their original albums, benefitting from the unexpected success of the single "Life's What You Make It" , their first Top 40 hit in over three years. It's also the last LP of their original incarnation as a modern pop band. To someone like me who hasn't yet found a way into their subsequent material (and is dreading having to write about it) it feels very much like a swansong.
The balance of power had altered significantly in the band with all the songs written by Mark Hollis and Tim Friese-Greene and original members Paul Webb and Lee Harris augmented by an expanded cast of session musicians although for promotional purposes the group was still a trio for the time being. This is the first LP in which the lyrics are reproduced in Hollis's barely legible scrawl.
Unlike the previous couple of LP's there's very little anger in any of the songs which are melancholy to the point of sickness. The release was well-timed as 1986 was bookended by harsh winters and the first provided a fitting background for listening to this LP.
It sets its stall out straightaway with the sardonically-titled and utterly mournful "Happiness Is Easy" with Hollis lamenting the abuse of religion to justify evil acts. It builds slowly from the shuffling percussion of the intro with xx's acoustic bass (Webb isn't on the track at all) wandering seemingly where it wants and acoustic guitar , Steve Winwood's organ and piano dropping in and out of the mix ( you really need headphones to catch everything going on ) . Hollis's point is driven home by the use of an unschooled children's choir singing a Christian nursery rhyme while he repeats the title, lower in the mix, shut out from their innocence (a potent reminder to me that I would soon be leaving the womb of the education system) . After six and a half mesmerising minutes they shuffle away leaving you numbed.
A reviewer on Amazon suggests that the whole LP is about the decay of a long-term relationship and while it's difficult to fit the previous track into that concept it's clearly what's going on in "I Don't Believe In You" . Hollis's vocal veers between despair and glum resignation on this slow-burning song which throws in a Floyd-esque slide guitar solo midway through and features brief contributions from The Lexicon Of Love harpist Gaynor Sadler. It fades out slowly without resolution just as the situation it describes can't be resolved. EMI bizarrely released it as a fourth single 6 months after the last and long after the tour had finished and unsurprisingly it tanked, a poor fate for a powerful song.
"Life's What You Make It" still baffles me; I can't see the hook that made it so popular. It's a mantra rather than a song with no chorus and no great melody either. Mark Hollis sings the tritely positivist lyrics like he doesn't believe a word of them. Webb (an under-rated backing vocalist) compounds the irony with his "Everything's alright" refrain. I guess the hook must be in the music, everything swirling round Hollis's unyielding bassline played on the far left of the piano and Harris's aggressive drumming. The scorching guitar and organ swells both sound like they're trying and failing to break out of the vortex of despair at the heart of the song.
And then "April 5th" lets a little light in with Hollis using the approach of spring as a metaphor for his own hopes of rebirth. The wintry piano chords at the beginning remind me of the Blue Nile's Easter Parade and this is similarly slow and stately . Webb and Harris are both absent with Hollis and Tim Friese-Greene providing most of the backing on organ and variophone. Hollis's "Come gentle spring " plea is a delicate whimper and his closing ad libs around the line "Let me breathe" are almost like blubbering. I do think this last section goes on a tad too long.
Side Two opens with the two follow up singles which reverted to the usual pattern of falling short of the Top 40. "Living In Another World" is the most uptempo track with nods to classic rock in Steve Winwood's Hammond contribution and Mark Feltham's harmonica. It's also has the most direct lyric with the first line "Better parted" summing up the whole theme of the song , a cry of pain from the wreckage of a relationship. Hollis alternates between resigned relief and grief (signified by the heart-stopping swell of Winwood's organ) . Besides laying down a proddiing bassline Webb provides an ironic counter-vocal interrupting Hollis's musings with the command "Forget ! " and closing out the chorus himself. The lengthy middle eight begins with a crashing piano chord echoing with terrifying finality before Feltham and David Rhodes chip in with solos. It was probably too rich a brew for a 1986 single but it's one of the standout tracks here.
"Give It Up" seems like an inner dialogue with Hollis posing unanswerable questions like "How can I learn if I don't undertsand what I see ? " . The anguished cries of the title set to the glorious Hammond sound on the chorus (where Friese-Greene proves himself the equal of Winwood) are the thrilling heart of the song with echoes of Joe Cocker at his peak. Webb and Harris are equally important in moving the song along with purpose.
They're both missed on the next track "Chameleon Day" which only features Hollis and Friese-Greene with variophone and sparing piano . Hollis's love of Miles Davis and John Coltrane is obvious. Full of pregnant pauses you can barely hear Hollis on the first verse then he bursts out on the second "eclipse my mind it's in some kind of disarray". It's effective in documenting a late night of the soul but not really my cup of tea musically. Unfortunately it's the best pointer to their subsequent material on the LP.
That leaves us with "Time It's Time". It's position on the LP means it's come to be seen as the swansong for Talk Talk the pop band and it fits well with its message of rebirth while at the same time carrying echoes of the Gothic despair of "The Party's Over". The warm beginning where Hollis purrs the soporific lyric suddenly gives way to a determination to move on -"As bad as bad becomes it's not a part of you" - and the Ambrosia Choir comes in with a wordless ethereal chant behinfd the simple "Time it's time to live" message. It's stunningly reminiscent of Pink Floyd especially the best bits of Atom Heart Mother with the same ambition to elevate the deeply personal into the universal. After five minutes there's a brief melodica solo and then the flutes come in with a gorgeous Pied Piper refrain which continues for the rest of the song , Hollis's last words being "rest your head" as the music slowly fades away and EMI 's great white hopes of 1982 leave pop music behind forever.
That wasn't quite the end of the story for me as I went to see them in Leeds in May 1986. At the time I was disappointed because they ignored "The Party's Over" altogether (although they did do "Talk Talk" on other dates) but now I'm pleased I saw them on their last ever tour. We'll discuss the subsequent albums at the appropriate time but the first three form a trinity of excellence that I'll always appreciate. There's never a time when I'm unreceptive to them but like the man said it was time to move on.
* This turned out to be the last purchase of my university days because I was losing control of my finances. The main cause was my moving out of the hall of residence for the last year and renting a house nearer the university with two other guys. One was no problem at all but I soon realised that living with the other with no constraints on his behaviour was a bad mistake . To make it worse he was actually taking a year out due to exam failure; you never knew what you were coming home to ( starting a fire in the cellar to keep himself warm despite the lack of a chimney was the classic ). On top of this there was a pack of Hostel -style feral kids in the neighbourhood who were reportedly targeting students. After one term I decided not to return and lived at home for the next ; there was some justification for this as my dissertation was on local politics in the Rochdale area so the research needed to be done in the local libraries.
The problem was that I'd already given the landlord post-dated cheques for the latter two terms and after taking legal advice I didn't have the nerve to cancel them. My attempts to sub-let the room foundered on the fact that it was little bigger than a shoebox. This took a toll on my bank account particularly in the summer term when I chose to rent a university flat rather than return to the house.
My head was in a strange place that year. I got worked up about things that were utterly trivial such as my former Hall's decision to withdraw the external member's scheme (basically you paid a fiver to be able to come in and watch TV or use the snooker table ) . Despite the fact that such facilities were available at the University Union much closer to where we lived and a much-improved security system had made the former policy impracticable, I took this as a personal affront. On the other hand the Careers Office had to track me down to go in for an interview and I didn't look at their literature until my last fortnight.
This neglect and a very sloppy application for funding for an MA which was quite rightly rejected meant an 8 month spell on the dole. Returning home shielded me from any real hardship but I couldn't walk in the house with a new LP while I still owed my mum money for the rent of the flat.
Which is a long explanation for the hiatus until Helen's birthday gift in December.
Sunday, 1 May 2011
54 Hanx - Stiff Little Fingers
Purchased : late December 1985
Tracks : Nobody's Hero / Gotta Getaway / Wait And See / Barbed Wire Love / Fly the Flag / Alternative Ulster / Johnny Was / At The Edge / Wasted Life / Tin Soldiers / Suspect Device
This was a careless purchase made on my annual post-Christmas spending visit to Manchester (probably from HMV). I was frustrated at not finding anything I really wanted at a discounted price and settled on this because it included "At The Edge" a favourite single from early 1980 that I'd never heard since. It wasn't until I got home that I realised I'd bought a live album.
Largely influenced by how rough The Jam sounded on stage I was never attracted to live albums especially from punk acts and would never have bought this if I'd realised it was a live recording. Of course Stiff Little Fingers were never really punk ; they were a young hard rock outfit that played with enough energy and passion to be assimilated into the post-77 scene. This LP was released in the autumn of 1980 falling between their second and third studio albums. It was originally intended for the U.S. market but released in the UK (always at mid-price so I wasn't even getting a bargain) for fear fans would otherwise pay high prices for imported copies. It captures them on the tour for their second LP "Nobody's Heroes" in July 1980 mostly at Friar's in Aylesbury but with one track recorded at The Rainbow in London. It reached number 9 in the charts.
I have the feeling this is going to be one of my shorter reviews since it's an LP that does what it says on the tin, captures four guys at their commercial peak bashing out their best-known songs for an appreciative audience. Without having the previous studio albums I can't compare the songs to the recorded versions so I have to take them as I find them here.
It begins with the applause for the band arriving on stage and they launch into "Nobody's Hero" the title track of the album they were touring at the time. It's a simple three chord rock track played ferociously. Jake Burns's vocals are surprisingly clear in the mix, sounding halfway between Joe Strummer and Kelly Jones . The song expresses Burns's discomfort with his role as a rock star/ youth spokesman (not that he'd hold it for long) - "Don't let heroes get your kicks for you / It's up to you and no one else " - which makes it an ironic choice for a big rock gig.
From the same album comes "Gotta Getaway" a straightforward angsty song about wanting to leave the parental home. It's played as a thrash and I can't think of anything else to say about it.
"Wait And See" is the song about the circumstances of their signing that most punk acts seemingly felt obliged to write (cf The Sex Pistols's EMI or The Clash's Complete Control ) though it turns into a lament for original drummer Brian Falloon who decided to quit when the band relocated to London in 1978 - "But you gave yourself the sack / Now there's no going back". Though still played with full-on aggression it's more melodic than the preceding tracks and unexpectedly has a Clash-style punk skank section towards the end.
"Barbed Wire Love" stands out for the sudden switch to a doo wop style for the second chorus and its excrutiatingly bad lyrics with Jake Burns mining the Troubles for increasingly painful sexual metaphors . "You set my arm alight" is bad enough but "The device in your pants was out of sight" is just unspeakable.
"Fly The Flag" is a presumably ironic expression of Thatcherite values -" A race of winners not cramped by the state / And only the helpless get left by the gate." It's suitably angry but not very tuneful.
Side One ends with their most famous song "Alternstive Ulster" an impassioned but unspecific plea for change and sticking it to The Man, here played at 100 mph after a crowd-teasing extended intro. It follows a similar pattern to a lot of their songs with melodic verses leading up to a fist-in-the-air chanted chorus though in this case not one that's easy to sing along to with six syllables squeezed in where only four should go. It's unsubtle but the excitement is palpable.
"Johnny Was" is the joker in the pack, the one recorded elsewhere and an eye-opening ten minutes long ( weren't punks supposed to shun that sort of thing ?) . As Jake Burns says in the intro it's a Bob Marley song about a man getting shot for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. By the time I bought the LP it had acquired an extra resonance as drummer Jim Reilly's brother had met exactly that fate the year before (an event that inspired Bananarama's Rough Justice ) . I also recalled it from John Peel's final all time Festive 50 in 1981 where it came in quite high to the DJ's chagrin. Though an early champion of the band Peel loathed the track and berated his listeners for voting for it. The first couple of minutes are largely taken up with Reilly's Cozy Powell routine to which the crowd clap along in true-ELP fashion and it's not hard to understand Peel's reservations although the jagged guitar riff that follows is pretty good. Halfway through there's a switch to a reggae bassline , Burns starts ad-libbing and the whole thing gets a bit tedious.
Then comes "At The Edge" . The original was their only Top 20 hit but you never hear it ; even 30 years on it's still too ferocious for radio. Here the Fingers play it even faster, Burns snarling out the lyric of teen frustration while the band gallop to the finish. Burns's spitfire delivery of "They're criticising something they just can't understand" in the bucking chorus remains impressive.
"Wasted Life" begins (or the previous track ends ) with a snatch of the opening chords of Won't Get Fooled Again. After that though it's musically very similar to "Edge" which is a shame since the powerful and brave lyric attacking the paramilitaries on both sides - "They're nothing but blind fascists" - deserves a better setting.
"Tin Soldiers" goes the other way. The music is a tightly-wound spring of palpable fury but when you study the lyric it's a relatively minor gripe about dishonesty in army recruitment advertising. The injustice of kids having to stay in the army until they're 21 doesn't cause me too many sleepless nights and makes the song's vehemence almost comical.
The album wraps itself up with "Suspect Device" another attack on the terrorists blaming them for the misery caused to the youth of Ulster. It's a standard thrash notable only for Burns losing his voice and skipping lines in the second verse. Then it's "Hanx! " and they're gone.
It's an interesting document of a band that have largely been written out of history highlighting both their strenghts and weaknesses. Their commercial decline afterwards was swift. Their 1981 LP "Go For It" failed to produce a Top 40 single and their "Listen " EP only scraped into the charts because it was marketed as a VFM package. When 1982's "Now Then" failed to reverse their fortunes they decided to split up the following year. They reformed in 1987 and have plugged away ever since presumably still finding an audience despite their new material having zero commercial impact. They're mostly remembered now for having kept former Jam bassist Bruce Foxton gainfully employed for over a decade. At the time of writing I have no other SLF records but never say never.
Friday, 22 April 2011
53 Argy Bargy - Squeeze
Acquired : 23 December 1985
Tracks : Pulling Mussels / Another Nail For My Heart / Separate Beds / Misadventure / I Think I'm Go-Go / Farfisa Beat / Here Comes That Feeling / Vicky Verky / If I Didn't Love You / Wrong Side Of The Moon / There At The Top
This was my 21st birthday present from Helen. It was one that I'd always expected from her because she was a fan too (in fact the only other Squeeze fan I knew) and had long had a copy of the follow-up "East Side Story". Funnily enough though, I can't recall her ever playing this
This originally came out early in 1980 when I would still cite them as my favourite band and be perplexed that no one else seemed to share my enthusiasm or even think them worth much attention. It was their third album coming after a strange year in which they'd hit the number 2 spot twice with successive singles and yet seen their "Christmas Day " single ( admittedly not their best work ) bomb completely, not even making the Top 75. They'd also made little impact on the albums chart with the previous LP "Cool For Cats" getting no higher than 45 despite its big hit singles. In that sense they were similar to my first identified favourite band, The Sweet. This LP too was a modest seller reaching number 32 and only spawning one Top 40 single though there was the consolation of making the US charts for the first time where it peaked at 71.
"Argy Bargy" is the transitional album in their original canon before the split in 1982. It was the last to feature Jools Holland and captures them on the cusp between their original New Wave leanings and the more mature pop sound of later LPs. It's stylistically quite diverse and very disparate in tone moving from the jokey laddishness of "Vicky Verky" to the dour, pessimistic "Here Comes That Feeling" . Although, obviously , I didn't acquire it until some years later I feel it does reflect where the 15-year old me was at at the time coming out of childhood and having to adapt to a greyer adult world . That Squeeze were only partially successful at doing so is apt too.
The album kicks off very strongly with its two singles. The second, "Pulling Mussels (From A Shell)" peaked at 47 despite a Top Of The Pops appearance. The song is probably the best evocation of working class holidaymaking in pop referring to Camber Sands, home to a big Pontins holiday camp. The verses are observational while the chorus (and title) hints at the vital ingredient in the young male's holiday, sexual adventure. The music is tight new wave pop with a lengthy middle eight giving room for both Tilbrook and Holland to solo while throughout the song is driven forward by Gilson Lavis's thrashing cymbals. Glenn Tilbrook's blaring vocal handles the wordy lyric as expertly as ever while conveying a real nostalgic ache for the subject matter. And that might be the reason for its failure, the song evoking an unromantic past that the aspirational council house buyers of 1980 didn't want to recollect ; they wanted to "do it in Waikiki" and the likes of Ottawan were a more appropriate soundtrack. Or maybe it was because A & M had their hands full with the mega-success of The Police and were too busy fleecing the public with an expensive catch-up package of their previous singles at the same time as this one came out.
Then comes my favourite Squeeze single of all "Another Nail For My Heart" a melody-fest from start to finish which at least made the Top 20. The song is the sort of beer-sodden public lament for a break-up that Paul Heaton would make his stock-in-trade a decade or so later. Chris Difford's account of relationship breakdown is fitted into a tight keyboard-led arrangement which means Tilbrook has to stretch "arrangements" and "engagements" to eight syllables. The song's arrangement is odd in that his guitar solo comes straight after the first rather than second chorus. It's also rather similar to Hugh Cornwell's in No More Heroes ; in fact the whole song feels like a less aggressive take on The Stranglers's sound.
"Separate Beds" seems even more anachronistic than "Mussels" . In an age where you can be prosecuted for refusing to facilitate buggery in your own property the era of provincial prudishness evoked by the song seems more than a lifetime ago. The song is home to one of Difford's justly celebrated couplets - "Her mother didn't like me, she thought I was on drugs / My mother didn't like her, she'd never peel the spuds" - encapsulating everyday family tensions with wonderful economy. It's let down by a very awkward arrangement. The verses have a Revolver-era Beatles feel with Tilbrook singing like Macca and playing like George before Lavis beefs things up to the chorus where Difford comes in to harmonise and the instruments drop out apart from synth and drum machine. A dash of Hammond organ swell then takes us back to the Beatles again. It sounds stitched together and lacks any great melody to compensate.
"Misadventure" is a frantic blast of power-pop with an obvious debt to the Attractions, Holland aping Steve Naive's organ sound. It's a shaggy dog story of a Londoner lured by a hitchhiker into getting involved in drug smuggling and then getting caught - "Then they discovered a shipment of Moroccan / And said excuse me sir there's something you've forgotten". Tilbrook delivers this and other great rhymes with breathless urgency before giving way to a neat little cowbell and drum solo from Lavis.
"I Think I'm Go-Go " is a rather glum travelogue in three parts with Difford's impressions of Amsterdam and New York before a third verse about London. It's another unusual arrangement dominated by synth and strings with a creeping bassline then for the second verse sung by Difford himself it's just cello and drums which together with Difford's blunt bass tones make it strikingly stark. The unsettling coda with its odd synth noises (odder still when you realise they're coming from Mr Boogie-woogie himself) is impressive but would do better on a song with more involving subject matter.
Side Two doesn't get off to a great start with "Farfisa Beat" an ugly song about leering at girls in a disco (slightly leavened by Difford describing himself as "Five foot seven of heavy duty wear") with a sideswipe at the Mod Revival. There's a nifty little rhythm guitar riff but otherwise it's power-pop by numbers and not worthy of much attention.
"Here Comes That Feeling " isn't very inspiring either. It's Difford's only lead vocal on the LP and he's in character as a depressed-sounding actor in a murder play. At just over two minutes long and with no chorus it sounds like a character-establishing number from a musical wrenched out of context. The first few seconds cheekily ape Shine On You Crazy Diamond and both Holland and Lavis work hard to give it some kick but it's not very good and the band have rarely thought it worth a live outing.
The LP kicks back into life again with "Vicky Verky" a tale of teenage sex and petty criminality worthy of Ian Dury. The line "And sometimes he would treat her when he'd done his mother's meter" is deathless. Tilbrook switches to acoustic and adopts the same plaintive tone that made "Up The Junction" such a winner and the appearance of strings in the verse dealing with abortion gives it a real emotional kick. Holland also does his bit with a rinky-dink organ solo in the middle eight and if they'd wanted to release a third single this should have been the one.
There's an abrupt change of tone with "If I Didn't Love You" a dark song of domestic doubts made all the more disturbing by the realisation that the first verse is addressed to a child in the bath. Tilbrook and Difford share the lead vocal (perhaps at the former's instance) while Lavis and bassist John Bentley inject some muscle after the flowery intro. Tilbrook also throws in a slide guitar solo that's very George Harrison.
He then takes a back seat for "Wrong Side Of The Moon" his place as Difford's co-writer and lead vocalist taken by Holland. Unsurprisingly that means the electric keyboards get swapped for his trusty joanna although the song has more of a Northern Soul feel than boogie-woogie and Tilbrook is allowed to throw in a fuzz guitar solo. Holland's piano riff is infectious and the song is a likeable enough tale of transatlantic separation but as ever Holland's voice makes it sound like a number from The Muppet Show. When the band finished touring the LP Holland quit to form his own boogie-woogie outfit and thus was headed for utter obscurity until labelmates The Police asked him to front a documentary about the making of their new album in 1981 and a TV legend was born.
That just leaves "There At The Top" another song which wouldn't win Difford any plaudits from Harriet Harman with its sour lyric about a woman sleeping her way to business success. Lavis pummels away at the snare in similar fashion to Terry Chambers on XTC's Life Begins At The Hop and both Tilbrook's guitar and Holland's keyboard contributions would fit on an early XTC album. Tilbrook's melody gives the chorus a wistfulness implying doubt in the woman's mind that she has reached "the top" by such methods but that's perhaps looking for excuses.
So it's not the classic LP the first couple of tracks promised. It's interesting but flawed, the band pulling in too many different directions at once and another line-up change was just around the corner. The next LP (which never inspired me to get my own copy) did a bit better and won them some critical plaudits at last but major commercial success would always elude them.
Tuesday, 19 April 2011
52 Crush - Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark
Purchased : November 1985
Tracks : So In Love / Secret / Bloc Bloc Bloc / Women III / Crush / 88 Seconds In Greensboro / The Native Daughters Of The Golden West / La Femme Accident / Hold You / The Lights Are Going Out
This was bought from Bostock's in Leeds.
Having passed on "Junk Culture" because I wasn't very impressed with the singles (I actively loathed "Locomotion") I bought this one on the strength of the first and third singles which I saw as a return to form. This was OMD's sixth album and is notable for being the first LP to be produced by Stephen Hague who got the break probably because they were going straight for the US market . The cover shows a 1950s couple in an open-top convertible a long way away from Stanlow oil refinery. Many of the songs reference US topics and some conventional guitar makes its first appearance on an OMD record.
The album kicks off with "So In Love" easily the best single since "Maid Of Orleans" in '82. With Hague as a co-writer it was their most straightforward love song to date although it's clear that McCluskey is singing about the past - "It's hard to believe I was so in love with you" and warning his ex against trying to rekindle the flame. The intro starts with a toytown synth riff similar to "Genetic Engineering" but thereafter the sweeping synths are more redolent of fellow Liverpudlians China Crisis with some quickfire guitar riffs for some added bite. McCluskey's vocal is touchingly unaffected and Martin Cooper's sax solo adds the right regretful tone. It's UK chart performance was very disappointing, peaking at 27 when the awful "Locomotion" had made the Top 5 just a year before. It got one place higher in the USA but established them as a presence over the pond for the rest of the original group's lifetime.
Disappointingly it's by far the best track. "Secret" , the follow-up single is pleasant enough but insubstantial. With Paul Humphreys doing the lead vocal it's basically a speeded-up retread of "Souvenir" with Malcolm Holmes giving it some extra welly on the drums. The nursery rhyme lyrics (with some really trite rhymes) and synthesised oboe riff aim at the pastoral but just make the track a bit vapid.
Things get worse with "Bloc Bloc Bloc". The title seems to be a metaphor for sexual shenanigans which I suppose is better than "zig-a-zig ah" but not much. The song, such as it is, hung on a stop-start synthesised bass line with a niggling guitar and a shrill brass riff presumably played by recent additions the Weir brothers but Hague makes them sound exactly like a Fairlight. Cooper's sax interjections threaten to turn it in to Glen Frey's The Heat Is On . As on "Telegraph" McCluskey duets with himself (although the video would have you believe the high parts are Humphreys) on some awful lyrics with heavy-handed references to Elvis and Man Ray (getting a namecheck in a pop song for the second time in as many months) and unwelcome sexual swagger - "I wanna get laid" ; "I'll take your sister to bed". Are they sending themselves up ? Whatever the intention it's not funny and it's probably the ugliest song in their canon.
Perhaps to make amends the guys try to get in the head of a suburban housewife in "Women III" but it never gets past arch observation - "At least she has a home to share, a man who comes to do her hair" . The swing beat and sax interjections suggest they're attempting to move into Steely Dan territory although the choral synth riff is oddly reminiscent of Antmusic.
The title track is a return to "Dazzle Ships" territory with the song based around a tape loop of four brief Japansese advertising slogans. It was inspired by the band's experiences on tour in Japan with McCluskey trying to get some sleep amid the hullabaloo of downtown Tokyo. The song's actually a bit of a dirge but McCluskey's murky vocal and Weir's drowsy trommbone do achieve the right neurasthenic feel.
Side Two begins with their attempt to write an angry rock song in the vein of Ohio. "88 Seconds In Greensboro" was inspired by the 1979 Greensboro massacre (so called) when American communists took on the Ku Klux Klan and lost with 5 of their number being killed in the encounter much of which was filmed by local TV. The lyric however is typically opaque. Apart from the Peter Hook-esque bassline, the music seems like a tribute to the Velvet Underground with the rudimentary two-chord guitar riff, Holmes's simple tub-thumping and Humphreys's synthesised string screech. McCluskey sings it with passion but it's only so-so.
"The Native Daughters Of The Golden West" carries on with the US themes and rock trappings . The song was inspired by a memorial statue to female pioneers bearing the titular inscription. With an untypical straight-down-the-line lyric McCluskey hollers over a fractured guitar riff while Humphreys's synth and the male backing vocals conjure up a Southern Gothic vibe. It's let down by being pretty tuneless.
"La Femme Accident" was the third single release , falling short of the Top 40 in November 1985. I loved it at the time , relating it to a girl who had a big crush on my uninterested best friend at university, a situation I observed with a mix of sympathy and jealousy. Away from that context it sounds a bit flimsy and too short , the lovely instrumental coda fading out at the two and a half minute mark. There's some lovely synthesised string and harp sounds on the song but there's just not enough of it . The reference to Joan of Arc in the lyric seems unnecessarily arch.
"Hold You" is a very straightforward song of having feelings for someone elses's girlfriend. Over a very simple two-note bassline and burbling electronic percussion McCluskey does a soft vocal while a Mellotron sighs sympathetically in the background and Cooper comes in for a sax solo. It's very hard to dislike but like so much of this LP it lacks the melodic inventiveness of their earlier work.
That just leaves us with "The Lights Are Going Out" which seems to be a continuation of the theme with McCluskey imagining a night encounter in which he's not involved - " And I can't see me with another girl". The mournful melodica and sampled female vocal loops conjure up the right late night atmosphere but the song doesn't really go anywhere after setting the mood.
And that's the story of the LP really - some interesting ideas but the songs simply aren't strong enough. I was quite disappointed with it and that's why it will be a while before the band crop up here again.
Saturday, 16 April 2011
51 Songs From The Big Chair - Tears For Fears
Purchased : 12th November 1985
Tracks : Shout / The Working Hour / Everybody Wants To Rule The World / Mother's Talk / I Believe / Broken / Head Over Heels / Broken (Live) / Listen
The date in my little red notebook reveals the context. This was bought in Leeds on a Tuesday afternoon on my way home for a Littleborough Civic Trust committee meeting (always the second Tuesday of the month) in the evening. I had been on the committee since 1981 (as a junior co-opted member) and stayed on it throughout my university years and beyond. This was a particularly exciting time (relatively speaking) as earlier in the year we'd shown the chairman the door (I was kept informed of the coup but it would have happened without me) and were in the process of repairing three years of neglect while fending off our ex's new rival organisation.
Anyhow back to Roland and Curt. After the last two non-charting LPs this was one of the biggest LPs of the year only kept off No 1 by Phil Collins's mega-selling No Jacket Required . It was a massive seller all over the world but most crucially in the USA making them curiously surly superstars in the mid-80s. It was also a fairly risk-free purchase as 5 of its 8 tracks had been released as singles by the time I bought it.
For this second LP Roland Orzabal and producer Chris Hughes went for a bigger glossier sound less reliant on synths than their debut. Though the title was inspired by a book about schizophrenia there is no overarching concept and while primal therapy definitely influences some of the lyrics this is a more expansive , less claustrophobic LP .Band politics at this time were interesting. TFF were still a duo on the cover but background keyboard player Ian Stanley co-wrote 5 of the tracks compared to a single credit for Curt Smith.
"Shout" (the single which broke them in America and restored them to the Top 3 in the UK) is the perfect bridge between the two LPs retaining some of the primal therapy themes - "Shout shout let it all out" - but swapping the Roland synths for a rich Hammond organ and a stadium-sized chorus. Actually the song is more a call for political protest ,an indication of Orzabal's more outward-looking worldview on this LP. The song's real glory though is Smith's bone-shaking bassline which turns a potentially whiney dirge into a juggernaut. Orzabal chips in a nifty guitar solo at the end but the battle's won by that point. At nearly 6 minutes it also heralds their move towards longer songs, a tendency that would seriously betray them on their next LP.
"The Working Hour" is even longer and dominated by the saxophones of Mel Collins and William Gregory with the song bookended by lengthy solos. Orzabal coming in at the 2 minute mark bemoans the lot of the working man in a rather vague way before letting rip on the final mantra -"Find out ! Find out ! What this fear is about" - with typical passion. At this point it harks back to the utter desolation of "Memory Fades" from the first LP but elsewhere the big piano chords and chattering percussion of Jerry Marotta lead to a certain FM radio-friendly blandness. It's the most obvious illustration of the stryggle between instinct and ambition on this LP.
Curt Smith takes the vocal reins for the LP's most enduring song "Everybody Wants To Rule The World" which again just missed out on the top spot in the UK. It is much lighter than the rest of the LP its presence a testament to producer and co-writer Chris Hughes's commercial nous. The song is a sober look at megalomania ; it starts out deliberately bland with its shuffle beat, tinkly synth part and Smith's smooth vocal then gets progressively darker as Manny Elias's drums get heavier and Orzabal comes in with his harder vocal and rock guitar. A masterpiece in pop consruction it cemented their reputation for the rest of the decade.
Then the low point. I regarded "Mother's Talk" their summer 1984 hit as a failed experiment so I was a bit disappointed that it re-surfaced on the LP. Lyrically it's OK , an anti-nuclear diatribe inspired by Raymond Briggs's When The Wind Blows, the mother of the title clearly Mrs T - "Follow in the footsteps of a soldier girl". It's the music that's ugly, an attempt to ape British contemporary Scritti Politti's flirtation with brutalist electro-rhythms . Of course Green Gartside knew to sugar the pill with his saccharin vocal stylings but here you have Orzabal at his most hectoring and tuneless and then he adds some abrasive guitar to make it worse. I didn't like it then and I don't now.
Side Two starts with "I Believe" (the patience-testing 5th single) which they originally inteneded to offer Robert Wyatt hence the dedication in the subtitle. Whether Wyatt appreciated it isn't known but it's clearly in thrall to his Shipbuilding from three years earlier with its combination of bluesy piano, downbeat jazz and drowsy but heartfelt vocal. The lyric sounds suspiciously like it's directed at Orzabal's estranged father - "I believe that if you're bristling while you hear this song, I could be wrong or have I hit a nerve ?" It's well-realised but not really my thing and unfortunately the album's best pointer to the sound of the next LP.
Then comes the confusion with two songs that share some lines and a keyboard motif. First up is "Broken" an unashamed rock track with another thunderous bassline and fast guitar licks. Orzabal comes in halfway through with another despairing lyric then it's over.
"Head Over Heels" follows , a close cousin to "Shout" with its steady pace and Hey Jude chanted refrain. The nearest thing to a conventional love song the group recorded (perhaps significantly Smith has a co-writer's credit here ) it doesn't quite live up to the promise of its superb grand piano and guitar intro (used to great effect in Donnie Darko ) . I don't think the constant shifts in pitch of Orzabal's vocal do it any favours either. After concluding with the same final verse as "Broken" it segues into a brief snatch of "Broken" from a live recording.
The final track "Listen" emerges from the subsequent applause. It's the only really synth-led track and does feel like a bone thrown to fans of their previous sound. That said, it owes more to Ommadawn-era Mike Oldfield and Pink Floyd (the blistering slide guitar in the latter stages had me checking the credits for a David Gilmour cameo; it isn't him) than their New Romantic peers. The haunting choral synth motif runs throughout the song apart from Smith's two brief verses about Russia and America which suggest a Cold War theme. It establishes a call and response structure where the answers come from Marilyn David's operatic stylings, Orzabal's African chanting, the odd sound effect and the aforesaid guitar. It's ambitious but they pull it off and it's my favourite track.
The public voted with their wallets to make this one of the big albums of the eighties. To me it's good but not quite great.
Monday, 4 April 2011
50 Forever Running - B-Movie
Purchased : October 1985
Tracks : Forever Running / Heart Of Gold / My Ship Of Dreams / Just An Echo / Remembrance Day / Switch On Switch Off / Blind Allegiance / Arctic Summer / Nowhere Girl
This was real unfinished business from school ; my friend Anthony and I had nurtured a passion for this group since 1981 waiting and waiting for them to break big and being consistently disappointed. Since "Nowhere Girl" hit the heights of number 68 in 1982 there'd been a David Jensen session in 1983 , a disappointing single with John Jellybean Benitez ("A Letter From Afar") but no hint of an LP until this suddenly arrived in the shops that autumn. I rang Anthony straight away (as I'd be seeing him at Rochdale's game the following day) and duly bought him a copy too.
B-Movie came from Mansfield and first attracted attention when they got a track on the Some Bizarre album and thereby attracted the "futurist" tag which probably did them no favours in the long run. Their first single and one of my all time faves "Remembrance Day" got to number 61 in April 1981 tantalisingly close to a Top of The Pops appearance which might have broken them in the UK. Instead the second single "Marilyn Dreams" failed to chart at all and while "Nowhere Girl " made 68 on the back of support from David Jensen it failed to go further. It seemed that they were falling between two stools, their themes were too dark for daytime radio and yet they were too melodically accessible to attract the student fanbase for bands like Sisters Of Mercy and Echo And The Bunnymen. Their progress was interrupted by keyboard player Rick Holliday leaving to form Six Sed Red and they were dropped by Deram. The Benitez single and this LP came out on Sire.
The opening title track gives some idea of what to expect with producer Stephen Stewart-Short (later to work with Fuzzbox) clearly given a brief to make their sound as big and contemporary as possible with the emphasis on the heavy drum sound of session man Graham Broad (the 80s' Clem Cattini) . Hence the first minute or so of false starts sounds like an Art of Noise sampler and you get a sense that the band, now slimmed down to vocalist Steve Hovington, Paul Statham doubling up on guitar and keyboards and bassist Martin Winter are bit part players on their own record. Eventually the song proper starts and it's pretty good with a punchy trumpet riff from Tim Hammond and a nifty piano break from Statham. Hovington sings of the escape provided by his lover from the life of a provincial bookworm - "From the balcony I'll throw Jean Genet" - and the music provides the appropriate propulsion.
"Heart of Gold" (a Hovington /Statham) stays with this theme of liberating love - "she melts the ice between my toes" - but the music is a bit lumpy by comparison. Broad's tub-thumping overpowers the acoustic strumming and one-finger keyboard motif. Jem Benson's saxophone adds a bit of colour to the song; the Scritti-esque hip hop break detracts.
"My Ship Of Dreams" was originally a song called "Amnesia" and featured in the 1983 David Jensen session but the lyric has been completely changed to produce a lighter song about daydreaming. It's round about this point that you start to notice Steve Hovington's vocal limitations ; his stern baritone stays in tune but is otherwise inflexible and becomes wearing on the lesser songs.
Certainly a greater use of backing vocals would have helped. Hovington actually speaks the second verse in the style of Richard Burgess on Landscape's European Man. The drums are toned down a bit to give the track an airier feel
"Just An Echo" is a good song struggling to be heard through the layers of over-production. Hovington struggles to sing the verses in a higher key as a deluded lover (possibly suffering from De Clerambault's syndrome) while reverting to the norm for the chorus which recognises the unreality. It ends rather strangely with a middle eight which becomes an outro when you're expecting another chorus.
Then we come to "Remembrance Day" which is a re-recording of their classic debut single. This was always fraught with danger since the song was pretty damned perfect to begin with and on first listen I loathed it and always skipped it thereafter. Quarter of a century on it's inferior but not that bad. Statham's new guitar part lacks the clipped urgency which gave the original version its momentum while Hovington starts declaiming instead of singing the lyrics in the last verse, a tell-tale sign of boredom with the song. However the essence of the song is intact, an unflinching look at death - "songs will never bring them back ! " - with a hauntingly simple keyboard hook.
Side Two starts with "Switch On Switch Off" , to the best of my knowledge the only single released from the LP by Sire. It sounds like a good choice, a pacy slab of contemporary pop rock extolling positive thinking that owes more than a little to Ultravox but it did nothing. With a modicum of airplay it could have been a sizeable hit but I didn't hear it once. Perhaps Sire were too busy pulling more tracks off Like A Virgin at the time to plug it effectively.
The album progresses with a couple of lesser tracks. "Blind Allegiance" is a ponderous treatise on conformity with Benson's clarinet and saxophone trying to compensate for the lumpen bassline and now-boring drum clatter.
"Artic Summer" is a slow burning keyboard ballad that would like to be New Dawn Fades (the ascending keyboard melody is very similar ) but falls well short due to Hovington's droning vocal and adolesecent lyrics and Broad's intrusive hammering. The closing piano coda is quite nice though.
That leaves "Nowhere Girl" also re-recorded but with better results. There's an added acoustic guitar line to make it sound less 1982 synth-dependent and Broad gives the drums more oomph than original drummer Graham Boffey but the song's more or less intact. Over a simple melancholic keyboard line Hovington sings of trying to reach a reclusive girl "in self-enforced exile" although there's a menacing undertone that suggests he's more stalker than sympathetic.
So that was it. After a four-year wait, an album that was good but not great. Commercially and critically it bombed despite a tour to promote it (I saw them at Leeds University Union a couple of weeks later despite being expected to help run the SDP Society disco elsewhere in the same building) . Record Mirror handed it to their hatchetman Robin Smith for a trademark one-star demolition job the essence of which was - hopeless futurist act that missed the boat. That's far too harsh when trash like King and The Thompson Twins were still selling but Smith had identified that there was a smell of failure around the band which probably accounted for the lack of radio interest that doomed them.
The band split in 1986. Statham found some US success working with Peter Murphy in the early 90s while Hovington re-surfaced in a group called One in the late 80s. I found their LP going cheap around 1992 and their name corresponds with the number of plays I gave it. I was so appalled it went to a jumble sale the same night setting a benchmark for the shortest duration of time spent in my record collection. The band have reformed recently.
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