Do you have someone in your life who a) likes music b) likes books and c) doesn’t deserve a Christmas present that costs more than £20?
If so, they could be the lucky recipient of a signed and PERSONALISED edition of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club - the feelgood book of September 7th, 2017.
2) When you get to the payment page, just enter whatever message you want, to whoever you want, and I will write this in the front of the book for you and sign it. Honestly, put whatever you want - marriage proposals, death threats, Half Man Half Biscuit Lyrics. It’s totally up to you. You’re in charge.
Or you can just wish someone a Happy Christmas.
If you can’t think of anything to write just tell me ONE FACT about the person receiving the book and i’ll do the rest.
Just don’t ask me to draw anything. Because I can’t.
3) Sit back and cross someone off your Christmas list knowing that they’ve got a unique Christmas present that money can’t buy*
Place your order before December 8th to guarantee Christmas delivery.
*That bit technically isn’t true. Each book costs £20 and, yes, that does include postage and packing.
David is a columnist at The Times
newspaper, a broadcaster and the author of three books, the most recent of
which – Party Animals: my Family and
Other Communists - was published last month. He is married to Sarah Powell,
has three daughters and a dog called Dora. He lives in North London.
David’s Top 3 albums
ever?
Santana: Abraxas.
Beatles: White Album.
Bob Dylan: Bringing It
All Back Home.
What great
album has he never heard before?
Enter the Wu
Tang by The Wu Tang Clan
Released in
November 1993
Before we get to David, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of Enter The Wu Tang (36 Chambers)
1993 Was The Worst Year In The History Of Music: Part 2 -
America.
Long term readers of this blog may remember an edition
where we made John Darnielle from The Mountain Goats listen to Giant Steps by The Boo Radleys.
For the following reasons, it was one of my favourites -
1) John Darnielle was a great guest and afforded the
album club an air of Lo-fi credibility that it was previously lacking.
2) Martin Carr from The Boo Radleys read the piece and
enjoyed it so much that he also wanted to be a guest. His subsequent edition,
listening to Ram by Paul McCartney, was also brilliant. He’s stayed in touch
and, in my head, we’re basically best mates now.
3) This week’s guest, David Aaronovitch, got in touch
after reading Martin Carr’s piece and asked if we could make him listen to an
album too.
So, as you can see, a lot of good resulted from that
edition. Without it, you wouldn’t be reading this and I wouldn’t have a pop
star for an imaginary best mate.
But more than all of that, the Giant Steps edition gave me an opportunity to bang on about one of
my favourite subjects - how 1993 was the worst year in the history of music
ever.
For those that don’t remember, the previous edition
concentrated on the British music scene in that year. We laughed at Dodgy, Paul
Weller’s ongoing battle with his own hair, and also declared a soft spot for
Dreams by Gabrielle. In just under 2000 words, 1993 got the kicking it deserved
until Martin Carr saved the day with a great album that he made in-between
drinking pints of Dogbolter and playing on his Sega Megadrive.
What a great bloke.
This week, we’ll now complete the story of that terrible
year, and focus on what was happening in America.
So, put your army trousers on, tie something around your
waist (preferably a plaid shirt with loads of holes in it because all you did
in 1993 was smoke cheap solid), and come and join me on a trip down memory
lane.
Here we go.
Firstly, it needs pointing out that all the good American
guitar bands in the ‘80s had either split up or become rubbish by the time we
get to 1993. Sonic Youth, Husker Du, The Pixies, Mudhoney, Dinosaur Jr, and The
Replacements - to name just a few. To make matters worse, the only good band
standing (Nirvana) were causing all sorts of problems.
In short, they were so brilliant they became too
successful - far bigger than a band like that should have been. At the time it
was all fun and games. We hoped they were the start of something, but the truth
was actually the opposite - they’d opened the doors so wide that they let
EVERYONE in. And unfortunately EVERYONE meant a bunch of dreary bands that took
great care of their hair and wore their dad’s jeans.
You want me to name names? My pleasure.
Alice in Chains, Stone Temple Pilots, Creed,
Soundgarden, and, worst of all, Pearl Jam. Somehow they’d all taken the pop
sensibility inherent in Nirvana and replaced it with an earnest dirge that
never got going amidst songs about people called Jeremy. Frankly, it was all a
bit Nickelback - in the halcyon days before four Canadian fellas had the nerve
to form a band called Nickelback.
I know. I know. Someone is probably reading this and
shouting the following at their computer -
“PEARL JAM WERE BRILLIANT AND SOLD MILLIONS OF
RECORDS YOU DICKHEAD!”
I’m bound to say that proves my point. Pearl Jam fans are
EXACTLY the sort of people who can’t see this for the light hearted nonsense it is and end up
shouting at computers whilst they wait for their hair to dry.
And anyway, they’re wrong.
With the exception of In
Utero by Nirvana and Siamese Dream
by The Smashing Pumpkins it was a terrible year for American guitar music. Ok
ok, The Red House Painters album with the rollercoaster on the cover is really
good and so is Gentlemen by Afghan
Whigs but look, i’ve started this “1993 was rubbish” thing so I’m bloody well sticking to it.
Even the usually reliable R.E.M took one look at 1993 and
decided to take the year off.
“Looks a bit shit this 1993 lads. We should probably
give it a miss”
“I agree. Let’s just keep releasing singles from
Automatic for the People and hope no one notices”
Still not convinced?
Ok, try this.
Two Princes by
The Spin Doctors was released in January of 1993 and that’s obviously the worst song written by anyone other than Enya.
So I repeat, for the last time - American guitar bands
were dead to me in 1993.
Right, what else was there?
Well, thankfully, something was stirring - the most unlikely set of influences were coalescing
in New York and, with apologies to Martin Carr, were about to produce the
greatest album of the year.
In 1993, hip hop had issues of its own.
The great bands
of its second generation (Public Enemy, De La Soul, NWA) were burnt out and the
overall sound had been diluted into a chart friendly mush. Everyone was funny
and everyone was pretty - everyone was coming to the centre of the city to jump
around to House of Pain.
What no one saw coming, though, was Robert Diggs
Diggs had grown up in the housing projects of the least
developed borough of New York - Staten Island.
At the age of 8 he stumbles into a block party in his
neighbourhood and hears hip hop for the first time. A year later he sees his
first Kung Fu film - The Shaw Brothers’ Five
Deadly Venoms. Whilst everyone at school was talking about The Empire
Strikes Back, he was banging on about obscure martial arts films. Most people ignored him, The Empire
Strikes Back is pretty good after all, but he ploughed on regardless.
Next on his list was The
36th Chamber of Shaolin. Diggs was again blown away by a story about
oppression and transformation, - a college student called San Te who learns
martial arts to fight evil. San Te completes the 35 Chambers of training quicker
than anyone else and starts a new one of his own - The 36th Chamber, designed
to teach his wisdom to the world.
So here is Diggs as a teenager - big into his hip hop and
big into his martial arts. He divides his time between writing rhymes of his
own and mostly doing loads of push ups. It’s also around this time that he gets
heavily into, er, chess and becomes fascinated by Bobby Fischer.
Then the big one happens.
Diggs, now 17, was running around Manhattan one
night with a couple of friends. Tired, cold, they start looking for a place to
keep warm and stumble into a cinema on 42nd street. It’s there they catch the
last 20 minutes of a film called Shaolin
and Wu Tang.
In Diggs’ own words, it “woke me the fuck
up”
The Wu Tang were portrayed as bad guys - they had
attitude and an invincible sword style. When they got expelled from the Shaolin
Temple they simply looked back and said -
“We may be expelled, but we’re still the best - Wu
Tang!”
The gang stayed and watched the film again, this time
from the start. They left transformed and suddenly everything was “Wu
this” and “Wu that”. Before there was even a group, it was just
a bunch of lads obsessed with Wu Tang and referencing it in virtually every
conversation.
Diggs, meanwhile, took a backward step. He changed his name to Prince Rakeem and
attempted a solo career with exactly the sort of chart friendly mush I was referring
to earlier - namely an awful single called Ooh
I love you Rakeem. As if that wasn’t bad enough, honestly it was, he then
gets arrested for attempted murder. On the plus side he was acquitted of the
charge but, on the down side, his record label dropped him and spat him back into
the streets of Staten Island.
Now comes the moment.
Legend has it that Diggs went for a massive walk and,
whilst he pounded the streets, he hatched his strategy - he was going to war.
He rounded up all his Wu Tang obsessed mates, got some
fella to design a logo, and then decided Staten Island should be called Shaolin
instead. I love that, he just renamed his home because he felt like it. He then
changed his own name to RZA and called the group The Wu-Tang Clan.
The philosophy was simple - we haven’t got any swords but
we’re probably going to cut your head off anyway. In that sense, their first
single, Protect Ya Neck, can be
viewed as both a warning and good advice.
And what an opening line -
“Wu Tang Clan coming at ya, watch your step kid,
watch your step kid”
The Wu Tang Clan had dispensed with the funk tinged
melodies of the day and, in their place, were sparse jazz samples and 9 M.Cs
ruthlessly competing with each other. It sounded like it was recorded in a
small basement, because it was recorded in a small basement. It felt close, on
top of itself, and it sounded like nothing else around.
After a small bidding war, RZA signed the band to Loud
Records on the condition that each solo member was allowed to negotiate their
own deals through other labels. Such a deal was unheard of at the time but it
was all part of the Wu strategy - to take on and infiltrate the industry under
one banner.
In November of 1993, just when I was considering cutting
off my own ears because it was the worst year ever, the Wu Tang Clan released Enter the Wu Tang (36 Chambers).
It was one of the best things I’d ever heard - a mixture of sword fights and
threats that put a much needed spring in my step.
It went on to sell millions and, along with Snoop Dogg’s Doggystyle (also released in November), precipitated a golden age of
hip hop. As RZA knew he would, he then developed each member as a solo artist
to glorious effect.
What a great bloke.
But all that talk of influence is for other people. I like
to keep things personal so I’m going to leave you with two stories about the
band that always make me smile.
Firstly, there’s a lovely interview with Ghostface Killah
where he’s charmingly incredulous about people with Wu Tang tattoos.
“All the little motherfuckers with W’s, they gonna
die with that….It’s only a W, a fucking bird. I’m like, goddamn, it’s really
that big? They going to the grave with that, with our emblem on their body”
What I love about the interview, apart from the fact that
Ghostface Killah seems to be coming to terms with how tattoos work for the
first time, is his acknowledgment of their own success. Not in record sales,
but in loads of dead people under the ground with a W on them.
Now that’s a legacy.
Secondly, nine years after the release of Enter the Wu Tang (36 Chambers), RZA
made the pilgrimage to the original Shaolin and the actual Wu Tang Mountain.
He looked out across a range of peaks known as the Nine
Dragons and saw 3 mountains forming a giant W - the symbol he had chosen to
represent his clan of 9 men, that he formed 9 years before. For a man who was
seemingly in a never ending phase of epiphany, he had one more.
“I saw that we really were what we’d always claimed
to be: men of Wu-Tang”.
Again, it’s a lovely image and marks a fitting end.
The leader of the Wu Tang Clan, standing on The Wu Tang
Mountain, and telling himself that he’d made it.
No one could have seen that coming, least of all me in
1993 - The Worst Year In The History Of Music.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics
on Enter the Wu Tang
MTV declared it among “The Greatest
Hip-Hop Albums of All Time”
Blender named the album
among the “500 CDs You Must Own”.
Oliver Wang, author of Classic Material: The Hip-Hop Album Guide described it
“as timeless an album as hip-hop has ever seen.
So, over to you David.
Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
You ask me
why I haven’t listened to this album. Until you provided me with a list of
three bands/performers to choose from I had never even heard of the Wu Tang
Clan. For some reason I thought they might be a Finnish Indy outfit whose music
deeply influenced the young Bjork, or something like that. Lots of synthesised
flutes and a CD cover of a dark lake.
And how
would I have heard of the WTC? In 1993 when the album was released I was
dead-ended into a job in middle management of the BBC’s current affairs, we had
our second daughter and the most radical thing I did that year was give up
smoking. Black music to me was reggae, soul (which I got into much later) and
Bob Marley.
I mean, I
knew that there was such a thing as rap in the same way that Bart Simpson knew
there was such a thing as geometry. And I’d heard some of the usual moral panic
about how this particular form of musical craze was leading to violence and
social disorder, but where would I have heard it? I was taking the kids to
Tafelmusik to bang triangles and then to learn swimming in a pool in Finchley.
Neither place played much Wu Tang.
“Get your
motherfuckin’ swimmin’ costume on, yeah!”
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
The first thing you need to know is that I
watched the first series of The Wire
with subtitles on. Only later when I found out that Idris Elba was English did
I comprehend why his was the only gangsta accent I understood. The second thing
is that, in any case, I am famous among family and friends for not being able
to work out what lyrics are. For two decades, for example, I thought that
Manfred Mann’s Pretty Flamingo“frightened all the neighbourhood”.
So the first words “sung” on this album were
almost the last that I managed unaided. And to remind you they are:
“Motherfuckin’
ruckus.
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da
mother, bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus.”
I caught
lyrics rhyming gonorrhoea and diarrhea and I listened to the preamble to Method Man in which, among other threats
to a person whose identity I didn’t quite catch one, of the Clan offered to
“sew your asshole closed and keep feeding you and feeding you and feeding you.”
Which isn’t quite Sergeant Pepper.
In fact
downloading the Wu Tang Clan on i-tunes quintupled the number of songs in my
library marked as “explicit”. But at least I can cite the name of songs like Wu Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing t’ fuck With,
because there are others on this album that I cannot repeat. There’s a repeated
word that I may not say. Others can say it, but I can’t. And if I use the usual hypocritical convention
for this thing then in that case I might as well say it. So I won’t do that
either. In fact I began to suspect Ruth and Martin’s Album Club of a plot to get me no-platformed at all British universities.
The beat, of
course, is constant, very loud and the words often yelled, so that I had to
listen to no more than four tracks at a go to avoid getting a headache. Often,
running behind the words and the smash-beat, though, is a subtle and melodic piano,
now vaguely classical, now jazzy. This has the effect of suggesting that the
anger of the words is not the only emotion being evoked.
This undertow is
intriguing.
So I cheated.
It was obvious that the words were what really mattered and since I couldn’t
hear them I’d have to read them. Even then some of lyrics made no sense to me. But
some of it did and some of it was brilliant. Take this passage, for example
(and there were many more):
“No
question I would speed, for cracks and weed
The
combination made my eyes bleed
No question
I would flow off, and try to get the dough off
Sticking up
white boys in ball courts
My life got
no better, same damn 'Lo sweater
Times is
rough and tough like leather.”
This is The Times They Are a Changing in a world
where hope has gone. Don’t laugh – it could be TS Eliot. The writer of this is
an artist. But I had to read it to get it.
Would you
listen to it again?
No point. But I might go to see them perform.
A mark out of 10?
That’d be
silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’ circumstances.
RAM Rating– 9.5
Guest Rating - That’d be silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’
circumstances.
Overall– 9.5 plus “That’d be silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’ circumstances” divided by
two.
So that was week 59 and that was David
Aaronovitch. Turns out he’d never listened to Enter the Wu Tang before because he thought The Wu Tang Clan were
from Finland. So we made him listen to them and he sort of liked it, I think. If previous editions are anything to go by, we should be hearing from RZA any day soon offering his services as a guest.
Next week, Stewart Lee listens to something from
1972 for the first time but in the meantime, here’s Protect Ya Neck from Enter
the Wu Tang (36 Chambers)
David is a columnist at The Times
newspaper, a broadcaster and the author of three books, the most recent of
which – Party Animals: my Family and
Other Communists - was published last month. He is married to Sarah Powell,
has three daughters and a dog called Dora. He lives in North London.
David’s Top 3 albums
ever?
Santana: Abraxas.
Beatles: White Album.
Bob Dylan: Bringing It
All Back Home.
What great
album has he never heard before?
Enter the Wu
Tang by The Wu Tang Clan
Released in
November 1993
Before we get to David, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of Enter The Wu Tang (36 Chambers)
1993 Was The Worst Year In The History Of Music: Part 2 -
America.
Long term readers of this blog may remember an edition
where we made John Darnielle from The Mountain Goats listen to Giant Steps by The Boo Radleys.
For the following reasons, it was one of my favourites -
1) John Darnielle was a great guest and afforded the
album club an air of Lo-fi credibility that it was previously lacking.
2) Martin Carr from The Boo Radleys read the piece and
enjoyed it so much that he also wanted to be a guest. His subsequent edition,
listening to Ram by Paul McCartney, was also brilliant. He’s stayed in touch
and, in my head, we’re basically best mates now.
3) This week’s guest, David Aaronovitch, got in touch
after reading Martin Carr’s piece and asked if we could make him listen to an
album too.
So, as you can see, a lot of good resulted from that
edition. Without it, you wouldn’t be reading this and I wouldn’t have a pop
star for an imaginary best mate.
But more than all of that, the Giant Steps edition gave me an opportunity to bang on about one of
my favourite subjects - how 1993 was the worst year in the history of music
ever.
For those that don’t remember, the previous edition
concentrated on the British music scene in that year. We laughed at Dodgy, Paul
Weller’s ongoing battle with his own hair, and also declared a soft spot for
Dreams by Gabrielle. In just under 2000 words, 1993 got the kicking it deserved
until Martin Carr saved the day with a great album that he made in-between
drinking pints of Dogbolter and playing on his Sega Megadrive.
What a great bloke.
This week, we’ll now complete the story of that terrible
year, and focus on what was happening in America.
So, put your army trousers on, tie something around your
waist (preferably a plaid shirt with loads of holes in it because all you did
in 1993 was smoke cheap solid), and come and join me on a trip down memory
lane.
Here we go.
Firstly, it needs pointing out that all the good American
guitar bands in the ‘80s had either split up or become rubbish by the time we
get to 1993. Sonic Youth, Husker Du, The Pixies, Mudhoney, Dinosaur Jr, and The
Replacements - to name just a few. To make matters worse, the only good band
standing (Nirvana) were causing all sorts of problems.
In short, they were so brilliant they became too
successful - far bigger than a band like that should have been. At the time it
was all fun and games. We hoped they were the start of something, but the truth
was actually the opposite - they’d opened the doors so wide that they let
EVERYONE in. And unfortunately EVERYONE meant a bunch of dreary bands that took
great care of their hair and wore their dad’s jeans.
You want me to name names? My pleasure.
Alice in Chains, Stone Temple Pilots, Creed,
Soundgarden, and, worst of all, Pearl Jam. Somehow they’d all taken the pop
sensibility inherent in Nirvana and replaced it with an earnest dirge that
never got going amidst songs about people called Jeremy. Frankly, it was all a
bit Nickelback - in the halcyon days before four Canadian fellas had the nerve
to form a band called Nickelback.
I know. I know. Someone is probably reading this and
shouting the following at their computer -
“PEARL JAM WERE BRILLIANT AND SOLD MILLIONS OF
RECORDS YOU DICKHEAD!”
I’m bound to say that proves my point. Pearl Jam fans are
EXACTLY the sort of people who can’t see this for the light hearted nonsense it is and end up
shouting at computers whilst they wait for their hair to dry.
And anyway, they’re wrong.
With the exception of In
Utero by Nirvana and Siamese Dream
by The Smashing Pumpkins it was a terrible year for American guitar music. Ok
ok, The Red House Painters album with the rollercoaster on the cover is really
good and so is Gentlemen by Afghan
Whigs but look, i’ve started this “1993 was rubbish” thing so I’m bloody well sticking to it.
Even the usually reliable R.E.M took one look at 1993 and
decided to take the year off.
“Looks a bit shit this 1993 lads. We should probably
give it a miss”
“I agree. Let’s just keep releasing singles from
Automatic for the People and hope no one notices”
Still not convinced?
Ok, try this.
Two Princes by
The Spin Doctors was released in January of 1993 and that’s obviously the worst song written by anyone other than Enya.
So I repeat, for the last time - American guitar bands
were dead to me in 1993.
Right, what else was there?
Well, thankfully, something was stirring - the most unlikely set of influences were coalescing
in New York and, with apologies to Martin Carr, were about to produce the
greatest album of the year.
In 1993, hip hop had issues of its own.
The great bands
of its second generation (Public Enemy, De La Soul, NWA) were burnt out and the
overall sound had been diluted into a chart friendly mush. Everyone was funny
and everyone was pretty - everyone was coming to the centre of the city to jump
around to House of Pain.
What no one saw coming, though, was Robert Diggs
Diggs had grown up in the housing projects of the least
developed borough of New York - Staten Island.
At the age of 8 he stumbles into a block party in his
neighbourhood and hears hip hop for the first time. A year later he sees his
first Kung Fu film - The Shaw Brothers’ Five
Deadly Venoms. Whilst everyone at school was talking about The Empire
Strikes Back, he was banging on about obscure martial arts films. Most people ignored him, The Empire
Strikes Back is pretty good after all, but he ploughed on regardless.
Next on his list was The
36th Chamber of Shaolin. Diggs was again blown away by a story about
oppression and transformation, - a college student called San Te who learns
martial arts to fight evil. San Te completes the 35 Chambers of training quicker
than anyone else and starts a new one of his own - The 36th Chamber, designed
to teach his wisdom to the world.
So here is Diggs as a teenager - big into his hip hop and
big into his martial arts. He divides his time between writing rhymes of his
own and mostly doing loads of push ups. It’s also around this time that he gets
heavily into, er, chess and becomes fascinated by Bobby Fischer.
Then the big one happens.
Diggs, now 17, was running around Manhattan one
night with a couple of friends. Tired, cold, they start looking for a place to
keep warm and stumble into a cinema on 42nd street. It’s there they catch the
last 20 minutes of a film called Shaolin
and Wu Tang.
In Diggs’ own words, it “woke me the fuck
up”
The Wu Tang were portrayed as bad guys - they had
attitude and an invincible sword style. When they got expelled from the Shaolin
Temple they simply looked back and said -
“We may be expelled, but we’re still the best - Wu
Tang!”
The gang stayed and watched the film again, this time
from the start. They left transformed and suddenly everything was “Wu
this” and “Wu that”. Before there was even a group, it was just
a bunch of lads obsessed with Wu Tang and referencing it in virtually every
conversation.
Diggs, meanwhile, took a backward step. He changed his name to Prince Rakeem and
attempted a solo career with exactly the sort of chart friendly mush I was referring
to earlier - namely an awful single called Ooh
I love you Rakeem. As if that wasn’t bad enough, honestly it was, he then
gets arrested for attempted murder. On the plus side he was acquitted of the
charge but, on the down side, his record label dropped him and spat him back into
the streets of Staten Island.
Now comes the moment.
Legend has it that Diggs went for a massive walk and,
whilst he pounded the streets, he hatched his strategy - he was going to war.
He rounded up all his Wu Tang obsessed mates, got some
fella to design a logo, and then decided Staten Island should be called Shaolin
instead. I love that, he just renamed his home because he felt like it. He then
changed his own name to RZA and called the group The Wu-Tang Clan.
The philosophy was simple - we haven’t got any swords but
we’re probably going to cut your head off anyway. In that sense, their first
single, Protect Ya Neck, can be
viewed as both a warning and good advice.
And what an opening line -
“Wu Tang Clan coming at ya, watch your step kid,
watch your step kid”
The Wu Tang Clan had dispensed with the funk tinged
melodies of the day and, in their place, were sparse jazz samples and 9 M.Cs
ruthlessly competing with each other. It sounded like it was recorded in a
small basement, because it was recorded in a small basement. It felt close, on
top of itself, and it sounded like nothing else around.
After a small bidding war, RZA signed the band to Loud
Records on the condition that each solo member was allowed to negotiate their
own deals through other labels. Such a deal was unheard of at the time but it
was all part of the Wu strategy - to take on and infiltrate the industry under
one banner.
In November of 1993, just when I was considering cutting
off my own ears because it was the worst year ever, the Wu Tang Clan released Enter the Wu Tang (36 Chambers).
It was one of the best things I’d ever heard - a mixture of sword fights and
threats that put a much needed spring in my step.
It went on to sell millions and, along with Snoop Dogg’s Doggystyle (also released in November), precipitated a golden age of
hip hop. As RZA knew he would, he then developed each member as a solo artist
to glorious effect.
What a great bloke.
But all that talk of influence is for other people. I like
to keep things personal so I’m going to leave you with two stories about the
band that always make me smile.
Firstly, there’s a lovely interview with Ghostface Killah
where he’s charmingly incredulous about people with Wu Tang tattoos.
“All the little motherfuckers with W’s, they gonna
die with that….It’s only a W, a fucking bird. I’m like, goddamn, it’s really
that big? They going to the grave with that, with our emblem on their body”
What I love about the interview, apart from the fact that
Ghostface Killah seems to be coming to terms with how tattoos work for the
first time, is his acknowledgment of their own success. Not in record sales,
but in loads of dead people under the ground with a W on them.
Now that’s a legacy.
Secondly, nine years after the release of Enter the Wu Tang (36 Chambers), RZA
made the pilgrimage to the original Shaolin and the actual Wu Tang Mountain.
He looked out across a range of peaks known as the Nine
Dragons and saw 3 mountains forming a giant W - the symbol he had chosen to
represent his clan of 9 men, that he formed 9 years before. For a man who was
seemingly in a never ending phase of epiphany, he had one more.
“I saw that we really were what we’d always claimed
to be: men of Wu-Tang”.
Again, it’s a lovely image and marks a fitting end.
The leader of the Wu Tang Clan, standing on The Wu Tang
Mountain, and telling himself that he’d made it.
No one could have seen that coming, least of all me in
1993 - The Worst Year In The History Of Music.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics
on Enter the Wu Tang
MTV declared it among “The Greatest
Hip-Hop Albums of All Time”
Blender named the album
among the “500 CDs You Must Own”.
Oliver Wang, author of Classic Material: The Hip-Hop Album Guide described it
“as timeless an album as hip-hop has ever seen.
So, over to you David.
Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
You ask me
why I haven’t listened to this album. Until you provided me with a list of
three bands/performers to choose from I had never even heard of the Wu Tang
Clan. For some reason I thought they might be a Finnish Indy outfit whose music
deeply influenced the young Bjork, or something like that. Lots of synthesised
flutes and a CD cover of a dark lake.
And how
would I have heard of the WTC? In 1993 when the album was released I was
dead-ended into a job in middle management of the BBC’s current affairs, we had
our second daughter and the most radical thing I did that year was give up
smoking. Black music to me was reggae, soul (which I got into much later) and
Bob Marley.
I mean, I
knew that there was such a thing as rap in the same way that Bart Simpson knew
there was such a thing as geometry. And I’d heard some of the usual moral panic
about how this particular form of musical craze was leading to violence and
social disorder, but where would I have heard it? I was taking the kids to
Tafelmusik to bang triangles and then to learn swimming in a pool in Finchley.
Neither place played much Wu Tang.
“Get your
motherfuckin’ swimmin’ costume on, yeah!”
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
The first thing you need to know is that I
watched the first series of The Wire
with subtitles on. Only later when I found out that Idris Elba was English did
I comprehend why his was the only gangsta accent I understood. The second thing
is that, in any case, I am famous among family and friends for not being able
to work out what lyrics are. For two decades, for example, I thought that
Manfred Mann’s Pretty Flamingo“frightened all the neighbourhood”.
So the first words “sung” on this album were
almost the last that I managed unaided. And to remind you they are:
“Motherfuckin’
ruckus.
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da
mother, bring da motherfuckin ruckus
Bring da motherfuckin ruckus.”
I caught
lyrics rhyming gonorrhoea and diarrhea and I listened to the preamble to Method Man in which, among other threats
to a person whose identity I didn’t quite catch one, of the Clan offered to
“sew your asshole closed and keep feeding you and feeding you and feeding you.”
Which isn’t quite Sergeant Pepper.
In fact
downloading the Wu Tang Clan on i-tunes quintupled the number of songs in my
library marked as “explicit”. But at least I can cite the name of songs like Wu Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing t’ fuck With,
because there are others on this album that I cannot repeat. There’s a repeated
word that I may not say. Others can say it, but I can’t. And if I use the usual hypocritical convention
for this thing then in that case I might as well say it. So I won’t do that
either. In fact I began to suspect Ruth and Martin’s Album Club of a plot to get me no-platformed at all British universities.
The beat, of
course, is constant, very loud and the words often yelled, so that I had to
listen to no more than four tracks at a go to avoid getting a headache. Often,
running behind the words and the smash-beat, though, is a subtle and melodic piano,
now vaguely classical, now jazzy. This has the effect of suggesting that the
anger of the words is not the only emotion being evoked.
This undertow is
intriguing.
So I cheated.
It was obvious that the words were what really mattered and since I couldn’t
hear them I’d have to read them. Even then some of lyrics made no sense to me. But
some of it did and some of it was brilliant. Take this passage, for example
(and there were many more):
“No
question I would speed, for cracks and weed
The
combination made my eyes bleed
No question
I would flow off, and try to get the dough off
Sticking up
white boys in ball courts
My life got
no better, same damn 'Lo sweater
Times is
rough and tough like leather.”
This is The Times They Are a Changing in a world
where hope has gone. Don’t laugh – it could be TS Eliot. The writer of this is
an artist. But I had to read it to get it.
Would you
listen to it again?
No point. But I might go to see them perform.
A mark out of 10?
That’d be
silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’ circumstances.
RAM Rating– 9.5
Guest Rating - That’d be silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’
circumstances.
Overall– 9.5 plus “That’d be silly, wouldn’t it? In the motherfuckin’ circumstances” divided by
two.
So that was week 59 and that was David
Aaronovitch. Turns out he’d never listened to Enter the Wu Tang before because he thought The Wu Tang Clan were
from Finland. So we made him listen to them and he sort of liked it, I think. If previous editions are anything to go by, we should be hearing from RZA any day soon offering his services as a guest.
Next week, Stewart Lee listens to something from
1972 for the first time but in the meantime, here’s Protect Ya Neck from Enter
the Wu Tang (36 Chambers)
I was
adopted into a nice family as a small child, and benefitted from a charity bung
and part scholarship to a private school, which was followed by reading English
at Oxford University. All these factors contributed, I think, to a confused
sense of self, an uneasy notion of being out of place, an outsider even, and
yet despite these feelings, I never felt it necessary to seek comfort in the
music of David Bowie.
Today,
I am a stand-up comedian by trade, but I reviewed records for a national
newspaper from 1995-2015, and have written for Q, Mojo, Uncut, Bucketful of
Brains and The Wire, and yet I have never knowingly listened to a David Bowie
album.
Stewart’s
Top 3 albums ever?
Today
it’s The Fall – Hex Enduction Hour (which is always number 1) and Miles Davis’ Kind
Of Blue, and Guided By Voices’ Bee Thousand.
What
great album has he never heard before?
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders
from Mars by David Bowie
Released in 1972
Before
we get to David, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks
of Ziggy Stardust
Another Lesson in Persistence.
One day in 1955, Haywood Jones walked into his house in
Bromley with a bunch of Rock and Roll singles that some fella had just given
him. As far as I know, there’s no record of who that fella was, or why he was
going around giving singles away in post war Britain. The important thing, and
frankly all that matters, is that he did.
Haywood Jones, who didn’t really like Rock and Roll,
decided to give the singles to his 9 year old son - David.
The kid commandeered the family turntable and began to
familiarise himself with the music. Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Frankie Lymon and
The Teenagers - one by one he went through the 45s with varying degrees of
excitement and interest.
Then he played Tutti
Frutti by Little Richard and his head fell off.
He would later say that the room filled with energy,
colour, and outrageous defiance and, from that point on, Little Richard became
his idol. With historical perspective, it’s easy to see why. The sex, the
glamour, the outrageous costumes - all fitting motifs that you’d expect to
light a fire under Jones. But the truth is probably less aware than that - Tutti Frutti is, of course, a total
banger. I stopped writing this to listen to it and had the best 2 mins and 27
seconds of my life since I was 15.
If it’s having that effect on me now, imagine hearing it
in 1955 when your favourite song up to that point was probably The Chattanooga Choo Choo.
My head would have fallen off too.
But back to the story.
Jones quickly learnt the ukulele and washboard and formed
a little Rock ‘n’ Roll “gang” at school that used to practice under
the stairs in between lessons. At evenings and weekends he would spend his time
shopping for records in Bromley High Street and hanging out at either of the
two Wimpy Bars that had just opened in town. I know, first Little Richard had
come into his life, and now Wimpy. Its little wonder that his school report
described him, generously, as a “pleasant idler” - he was probably
still trying to get his head around the fact you got your burger on a plate with
a knife and fork.
Oh, the only other incident worth mentioning from his
schooldays is that he had his left eyeball scratched after being punched in a
fight over a girl. As a result, he had a permanently dilated pupil which made
his left eye appear much darker than his right.
So here he is as a teenager. The '60s are starting to
take shape around him and he’s itching to get involved. His instrument of
choice is now the saxophone and he’s got different colour eyes.
What could possibly go wrong?
Well, for a while, everything.
He joins a band called The Konrads and the first thing
you need to know about them is the amount of chances they were given to
succeed. They auditioned for legendary producer Joe Meek, appeared on the TV
talent show Ready Steady Win (best name for a talent show ever), and even tried
out for Decca, during that phase where they signed everyone after turning down
The Beatles. They also met Brian Epstein, manager of The Beatles and Eric
Easton, co-manager of The Rolling Stones.
As I said, they had a series of open goals and, if they
were any good, they definitely would have made it. But they didn’t, because the
second thing you need to know about The Konrads is they were bloody awful. And
Jones knew it too, eventually leaving them after he wanted to do a cover of
Marvin Gaye’s Can I Get a Witness and
the rest of the band didn’t.
Seems perfectly reasonable to me.
Next up, he joins a group called The King Bees as their
singer. The next part of the story is literally the maddest thing I’ve ever
heard.
David Jones, with his dad, wrote a letter to a fella
called John Bloom - a successful entrepreneur who had made his fortune selling
white goods. The letter ended with the following sentence -
“If you can sell my group the way you sell washing
machines, you’ll be on to a winner!”
I did warn you. It’s basically the equivalent of sending
your demo to Comet.
Remarkably, though, it worked. Bloom was charmed and
passed the letter on to his friend Les Conn, who actually did have a track
record in managing artists and had nothing to do with fridge freezers at all.
Conn went to see The King Bees live and, whilst he thought they were mostly
terrible, he was impressed with Jones. So much so that he gets them a record
deal and they release a single called Lisa
Jane.
But again, they weren’t very good.
The single fails to chart and Jones, impatient, decides
to leave his second band and join his third - The Mannish Boys. As you may have
come to expect by now, they didn’t get anywhere either - they were basically a
'60s version of The Ordinary Boys which was the last thing anyone needed back
then. They did however have a fella in the band who went on to create the weird
'80s TV show Metal Mickey and so, for that reason alone, I thought they
deserved a paragraph.
His next band though, David Jones and The Lower Third,
only warrant a sentence - i.e. they were slightly better than The Mannish Boys
but without the Metal Mickey angle.
Around this time Jones also has a brief spell in The
Small Faces until they decide to get rid of him because he liked Bob Dylan too
much - obviously the worst reason to ever sack anyone from a band ever.
So, finally, after jettisoning virtually every band in the
'60s, Jones decides to try his luck as a solo artist. In the process, he also
changes his name to David Bowie.
“Ah now we’re getting somewhere!” I hear you say.
Well, sort of.
David Bowie’s debut album, brilliantly called David
Bowie, was a typical piece of late '60s English whimsy and psychedelia - songs
about Laughing Gnomes disastrously mixed with music hall numbers about the
Moors Murders. Unsurprisingly, such material also failed to trouble the charts
and the whole thing wasn’t helped by an album cover showcasing one of THOSE
haircuts.
It would be his last release for two years.
For the first time, his natural positivity now deserts
him and he immerses himself in other pursuits for a while - namely dancing,
listening to Jacques Brel and, in what must have been his lowest ebb, a bit of
miming. But mostly he’s in a world of his own, one of his friends at the time
brilliantly describing him as "the sort of bloke who wouldn’t talk about
the weather or the latest Who single”.
By all accounts he then spends most of 1968 sitting with
his legs crossed waiting for something to happen. And finally it does - he
smokes a load of pot and goes to see Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.
The song he wrote afterwards, Space Oddity, represented a
temporary breakthrough. Not only was it the first time a song came naturally to
him, it was also the first time he wasn’t trying to catch a trend. It was
different, it had its own sound, and it was REALLY good. Rick Wakeman, who
played Mellotron on the song, said it was one of the few times in his career
that the hairs on the back of his neck stood up - an anecdote made all the more
believable when you actually consider the rest of Rick Wakeman’s career.
Once the BBC realised the Apollo 11 astronauts were home
safely, and wouldn’t be stuck in space forever, they added it to the playlist.
It reached number 5 in the charts.
At last - it’s starting to happen.
Bowie then makes alliances with two people who are
crucial to what happens next - a wife (Angie) who he meets in a Chinese
Restaurant and a hotshot guitarist (Mick Ronson) who was living in Hull and
creosoting a fence at the time. Bowie turned up, asked him if he wanted to be in his band, and he obviously said yes.
Both would have a massive influence - Ronson becoming
Bowie’s left hand man for the next four years and Angie working wonders with
Bowie’s wardrobe, not to mention his hair. There’s a lovely picture of them at
the time - strolling around Beckenham, hatching plans and looking like nothing
on earth.
You can only wonder what the baby was wearing.
The next album, The
Man Who Sold The World, is again an improvement on what’s come before but
it still lacks something. Now, you can see where it was going. Then, I’m not
sure that you could. Bowie was in danger of being classed as a “one hit
wonder” - that guy who wrote that good song about Space a couple of years
ago but hasn’t done much since.
And then, massive drum roll, huge deep breath, he finally
does it - he moves his piano into a different room in his house and writes some
of the best songs ever. Sometimes that’s all you need to do. For all the talk
of the muse and the complexities of the creative process, sometimes all you need to do is try a different room.
The result, of course, was Hunky Dory - the best morning album of all time.
What he does next, though, is brilliant.
Hunky Dory
hasn’t even been released, he hasn’t yet wallowed in acclaim and adoration, but
he’s off already with a new collection of songs that travel in a different
direction. For his next album he takes Hunky
Dory on a night out - eyebrows arched and dressed to kill. The past is
forgotten and, like a new man, he struts around town like no one has ever
strutted around town before or since.
He glows in the dark, drawing ALL the attention.
We’re nearly there, it’s almost happened.
Before recording the album, he debuts it live in a small
club in Aylesbury. He takes to the stage nervous - dressed in baggy black
culottes, red platform boots, and a woman’s beige jacket. With his new band
behind him, they begin tentatively before finally taking off, spectacularly.
The place goes mad, Bowie surges with confidence, and says to a journalist
afterwards - “That was great. And when I come back, I’m going to be
completely different”
I know. I know.
It’s because you know you’re about to fall for him.
Because, you know, and HE knows, that’s he’s about to become BOWIE.
He records the album, in a basement below an escort
agency, and nails Suffragette City, Starman, and Rock and Roll Suicide in one
day. He isn’t messing about anymore, he tells everyone he’s going to be huge
and that he’s going to be EVERYWHERE.
He still hasn’t even released Hunky Dory yet but, he knows. He absolutely fucking knows.
His wife suggests a new haircut and the band go shopping for
boiler suits and wrestling boots. As I said, he wasn’t messing about anymore.
He was all in.
Now he goes back to Aylesbury to fulfill his promise.
The queues are around the block because of what he did last
time but, now, he goes further. He takes to the stage, without any nerves at
all, and he launches Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders from Mars at the eager
crowd. Now there’s no doubt. Now the audience know as well.
He walks off stage and says, to the same journalist
as before, “I told you it would be different.”
The headline in the local paper the next day, a headline
that had been such a long time coming, finally gives us the perfect ending -
“A Star is Born”
He’d done it.
The excited child, the “pleasant idler”, the
bit part, and the one hit wonder. He’d been through it all, with a smile on his
face, and had finally arrived.
And now he was here to stay. Forever.
Martin Fitzgerald
(@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on Ziggy Stardust.
In a retrospective
review, Pitchfork gave it 10/10
Rolling Stone Magazine
rated it the 35th best album of all time.
So, over to you Stewart. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
I have listened to thousands of albums.
This year alone so far I have listened, all the way through, to 44. I
didn’t like a lot of them. But for the record, some of them were the new one
from The Owl Service, Crumbling Ghost’s Five Songs,
The Golden Void’s Berkana, The Fall’s
Wise Old Man and loads of old stuff
like six Stiff Little Fingers albums, a compilation of Australian glam rock,
Sam Gopal’s Escalator, every Byrds album, a dj clash of Dillinger And Trinity,
Van Morrison’s 1967 New York Bang session, eight Warren Zevon albums, Hendrix’s
Are You Experienced?, Yamasuki ‘s Le Monde Fabuleux de Yamasuki, every REM
album in order as a kind of endurance test, and, for the first time, The Rise & Fall Of Ziggy Stardust.
I don’t know why I have never
listened to it, or indeed any David Bowie album. I’m not necessarily an
inverted snob who avoids the popular or the canonical – I like Dylan, Miles
Davis, Neil Young. But I don’t think I
ever really got Bowie and I’m not sure I ever will.
I was already listening to
post-punk noise on Peel when I first encountered David Bowie on Top Of The Pops
in the early ‘80s. In my mind I remember, because I didn’t know anything about
him, and because he was in a Pierrot hat dancing around on a beach to some
synth music, thinking he was one of the New Romantics like Duran Duran and Visage,
who I disliked on principle. But this must be some kind of false memory
syndrome, because Ashes To Ashes predates all that stuff by a year or so. So I
don’t know what I remember really.
Either way, as a teenager I’d
already bypassed Bowie and had found, via The Fall and the songs covered on early
REM b-sides, all those counter-culture legends
(The Velvet Underground, Krautrock, Stooges) that Bowie is praised for
providing a pop-friendly gateway into. I
simply didn’t know he had form, and nothing I saw in his 80s pop-soul
incarnations – Let’s Dance, Dancing In
The Street, Peace On Earth, Modern Love - encouraged me to think he would
be for me. I thought he was like Howard Jones or someone. I didn’t understand.
People tell me if I’d encountered
the Berlin trilogy as an impressionable younger man I’d have been sold on
Bowie, but I just didn’t know he was this ‘figure’ and by the time I did it was
too late to take him on board really, too late to get past the legend.
I remember going to the Phoenix
festival in Stratford-Upon-Avon in 1996 and not even being tempted to watch
him, seeing instead an amazing punk-psyche set by Neil Young and Crazy Horse, a
dramatic meltdown from The Fall, The Cocteau Twins in full “sonic cathedral” ™
mode, The Sex Pistols’ unexpected second coming, The Dirty Three, the now
venerated Earl Brutus with their art school chip shop aesthetic, The Chemical
Brothers, Goldie and the late great Terry Callier, and I still wouldn’t trade
having seen any of those sets for Bowie in his drum and bass period in a Union
Jack frock coat.
People a generation older than me, best friends, who I trust and
respect, spoke upon Bowie’s demise with heartfelt sincerity of how he got them
through terrible times, his alien rock star persona speaking to all these
confused seventies kids, but I think maybe I was an era too late to buy into
it.
Indeed, in 2011, in a supposedly funny article for the Observer about
what it means to be ‘an artist’, I believe it was I who wrote…
“For example,
if viewed as an “artist”, David Bowie makes no sense at all. He seems
to be little more than a perpetually spooked moth in slip-ons, sputtering, in a
series of self-shaming leaps towards imagined relevance, from one swiftly
guttering fad to another – grunge metal, drum and bass and having a skellington
face. But imagine Bowie instead as a cunning lichen, an adaptive tuber or a
semi-sentient mould, endlessly reshaping himself in search of the moisture of
acclaim, and it is easy to understand him.”
That was what I thought then, in my ignorance, albeit exaggerated for
comic effect.
But now I have listened to Ziggy
Stardust, at least three times.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
All I knew of
the album, honestly, was Starman, Ziggy
Stardust and Sufragette City, so
the thing as a whole piece in of itself was mainly new to me. But you can’t come to it clean, especially
now, after all the obituaries.
I don’t
like it to be honest. I’m told it’s supposed to be about an alien who becomes a
pop star but I can’t make head or tail of the story.
I hate
his voice on the second one, Soul Love,
like a weird old lady. It’s so reedy and bloodless and thin. I don’t like the honking sax sound and the
showbizzy horn solo.
I hate
the opening lines of the next one, Moonage
Daydream. “I’m an alligator, I’m a momapoppa coming for you. I’m a space
invader. I be a rock and rolling bitch for you. Keep your mouth shut. You’re
spooking like a big monkey bird.” This
kind of thing is ok if it sounds like spontaneous madness – like say Iggy Pop’s
Africa Man– but it sounds really
prepared and calculated, like he actually thought it was worth saying that he
was an alligator, a momopoppa, and a space invader. Time’s been unkind to words
like that. Generations of pop-surrealists (Noel Fielding for example), have
made them absurd. I can’t get back into it after that opening. It annoys me so
much.
I know
this Starman one, of course, and
quite like it, but my kids got fed up with me having it on in the car and the
five year old was singing her own words over it today, “I’m a poopoo sitting in
the loo” and stuff like that, which I can’t get out of my mind. I like the one
note morse code guitar lick before the chorus – like the lead in Jimmy Webb’s Wichita Lineman– but I hate the
handclaps and the bendy lead guitar sound.
I can’t
even think of anything to say about It
Ain’t Easy, or Lady Stardust or Star.
It’s just not my sort of music. It’s not anything I want. I know lots of
people really love this sort of thing. I think it’s a taste issue. It’s not
necessarily bad…. I just can’t get it. To be honest, I envy people getting such
a lot out of it. I wish I could be transported as powerfully by it all as
others have. It’s annoying me now that I’m not seeing it, like when you can’t
focus on a magic eye picture.
I really
hate Hang On To Yourself. I think
that kind of glam-pop thing with an old rock and roll type riff under it is
probably my least favorite kind of music.
It just sounds like Mud or The Rubettes to me, but not as good. It’s
been a real chore having to get through this middle bit of the album over and
over again. I never want to have to hear these songs again.
I really
like Ziggy Stardust. The lead guitar
is brilliant. On my friend James’ cd of the album, which we had on in the car,
there was a demo of it as an extra track, and you can see that all the memorable
musical parts were there in Bowie’s vision of it, just waiting to be fleshed
out. The lyrics get on my nerves – Weird and Gilly, some cat from Japan, a fly
that tries to break people’s balls and the leper messiah. For fuck’s sake. The
singing annoys me but I like the music so much that it survives it.
Weirdly,
the first time I ever heard this song was Bauhaus doing it on TOTP in 1982. I
loved it. I didn’t know it was a Bowie song, I thought it was one of theirs.
It’s still the definitive version for me, which I appreciate is ridiculous, but
that’s how I first encountered it.
Bauhaus say more to me, because of who I was at the age I heard them,
than Bowie, even though it’s clear that Bowie is ‘better’, objectively. Likewise if I had a choice between Bad
Manners’ first album and any Bowie record for a desert island disc, I’d take
Ska’n’B because it would make me really happy to remember loving it as a
pre-teen rude boy where as Bowie has no emotional ties for me.
Lip up
fatty!!!
Actually,
I think Bauhaus’ Bela Lugosi’s Dead
is genuinely better than this whole Bowie album. I’ve just put it on. I feel
purified. It’s cleared all this glam out of my tubes. It’s a proper pop art
cultural collision that Bauhaus single, and it’s loose enough to feel
spontaneous, whilst still being conceptual. It makes the whole of this album
seem stilted and stiff.
Suffragette City is pretty good. I like the insistent piano. But it’s International
Women’s Day as I write this and I can’t see that it has anything to say about
the Suffragettes.
I don’t
like the last one either. I don’t really like this whole album much. I have a quite visceral response to it. It
makes me feel physically sick throughout and I’ve not enjoyed living with it.
It’s not Bowie’s fault, but because of all that Jimmy Saville Top of the Pops
footage that whole early 70s glam rock guitar sound now just makes me think of
children being harmed. That’s what it
reminds me of, and I can’t get past it, which is awful, but people get a
similar thing with Wagner. Something becomes associated in your mind with
something and you’re stuck with it, sadly. There’s not much you can do about
it. It’s pavlovian.
Although
a nice thing happened to me recently – and to believe this you have to bear in
mind that I don’t really know what’s going on in popular culture. A few days
after Bowie’s death I was in an HMV somewhere on tour and there was this music
on – a strange sepulchral space jazz, a kind of weird cold ambient music with
harsh atonal free saxophone playing and clusters of beats, like pebbles or the
milky way. It was like the sort of experimental music I might buy but,
inexplicably, it had the production values of expensive popular music. I loved
it. I asked the assistant what it was.
“David Bowie,” he said, incredulous that anyone could not know, Blackstar.
I found
it genuinely amazing that this was Bowie. I went home and watched it on
Youtube, but the video was prescriptive nonsense, full of advertising type
overstated imagery, which diminished and permanently disfigured my memory of
that incredible moment of coming across – and being astounded by – Bowie in
ignorant innocence.
Would
you listen to it again?
I will never listen to this album again in my life. I will give the copy
I bought away. There are 100s of records I’ve never listened to properly on my
shelves in front of me. I would rather listen to something I have never heard
before and didn’t know what it was than any Bowie album.
A
mark out of 10?
This isn’t fair. It’s a significant, groundbreaking and well
made record. It’s just not to my taste. Thousands of other things are. I am
grateful for the opportunity to have been asked to think about it. It’s made me
think that disliking something doesn’t necessarily mean it isn’t any good, and
vice versa.
RAM Rating– 9/10
Guest Rating - This isn’t fair
Overall Rating– 9/10 plus “This isn’t
fair”, divided by two.
So that was Week 60 and that was
Stewart Lee. Turns out he’d never heard Ziggy
Stardust before because all the previous incarnations of Bowie has never
appealed to him – particularly the one at The Phoenix Festival. So we made him
to listen to it and he didn’t like this incarnation either and would rather be
on a desert island listening to Bauhaus and Bad Manners. I can only hope that,
somewhere now, Pete Murphy and Buster Bloodvessel are high-fiving each other in
delight.
Here’s some other bits
and bobs that Stewart is involved in -
Stewart Lee’s Comedy
Vehicle is currently on BBC2
His co-writer Baconface
currently hosts Global Globules on Resonance 104.4 fm
Finally, he has curated
at All Tomorrow’s Parties at Pontins Prestatyn 15-17 April, to which tickets
are on sale
Next week, we’re having a week off if
that’s ok with everyone but we’ll return on March 25th where Lavinia
Greenlaw will listen to something from 1977 for the first time.
Until then, here’s Suffragette City from Ziggy Stardust.
I write books, mostly poetry but also including The Importance of Music to Girls and a
novel about Seventies Essex and the coming of punk called Mary George of Allnorthover.
Lavinia’s Top 3 albums ever?
Mary Margaret
O’Hara – Miss America
The Pop Group
- Y
Can – Monster
Movie
What great album has she never heard
before?
Bat out of Hell by Meat
Loaf
Released in 1977
Before we get to Lavinia, here’s what Martin of Ruth
and Martin’s Album Club thinks of Bat out of Hell
All right everyone.
I had this week’s edition all planned out.
It was going to be all about “Guilty Pleasures”
and how that’s such a strange concept in relation to music.
Basically, to cut 2000 words short, why the guilt? Why
not just like what you like and be proud of it?
Why did my mate Dave, for example, feel like he had to
apologetically “come out” as a Beautiful South fan that time, as if
confronting some dark secret that had tortured him all his life -
“You see…….the thing is…..when all’s said and
done….they do write some really good pop songs you know.”
"It’s fine Dave.”
So that was the plan. There’d be no potted biography this
week - just a load of stuff about “guilty pleasures” and a bit where
I publicly humiliate Dave for liking that song about the fella who loves girls
from the bottom of his pencil case.
I was all set, looking forward to it.
And then I read Meat Loaf’s autobiography, To Hell and Back, and my head fell off.
It’s genuinely unlike any other biography I’ve ever
read, in fact it’s unlike any book I’ve ever read. There was NO WAY I could
not tell his story.
Dave was out, and Meat was in.
Here we go.
In my humble opinion, most artist biographies make the
mistake of dwelling far too long on the subject’s childhood. There’s always at
least a page about the occupation of the Grandparents (WHO CARES!) and loads of
quotes from unknown school kids who have since been interviewed as unknown
adults - “You could always tell XXX was going to make it,” mumbled
Kevin, an allotment supervisor from Barrow in Furness.
Meat Loaf, though, turns this convention on its head and
provides the best childhood biography I’ve ever read. In fact it was so good, I
almost didn’t want him to grow up and become famous.
Just in case you don’t believe me, I’ve collected here
for the first time, my Top 7 moments from Meat Loaf’s childhood.
1) He absolutely
LOVED a 7-Eleven.
In an effort to stop him visiting the store, his mum tied
him to the clothesline in the garden with a massive rope.
Meat Loaf would always manage to untie the knot though
and his parents would eventually find him in the 7-Eleven, covered in Dr Pepper
and Hot Dogs.
Eventually, and this isn’t a joke, the family thought it was
easier to move to somewhere without a 7-Eleven nearby.
I know, right. What a great start. There’s another 6 of
these.
2) He had a terrible imaginary friend called Bad Bob.
Bad Bob convinced him to pull a wasp’s nest out of a
tree. As he held the nest, he started to hear it buzz (no shit), and lost his
balance. He fell to the ground, with the wasp’s nest on top of him, and was
stung multiple times.
He had to be wrapped up in bandages and looked a bit like
an overweight Invisible Man.
All I’m saying here is that Bad Bob is the worst
imaginary friend I’ve ever heard of, even worse than that one out of The
Shining.
3) His real name
was Marvin Aday and he changed it because of a Levi’s ad.
Even as a child, he was always big and struggled to find
clothes that could fit him. Then a Levi’s ad came along with the tag line -
“Poor fat Marvin can’t wear Levi’s”.
He was devastated - as if the advert was deliberately
mocking him and he was the punchline to everyone else’s joke.
So he started going by the name Meat Loaf instead
because, er, the last thing he wanted was a name that’s going to draw attention
to his size.
He’s still never forgiven Levi’s either and, in a
fantastic exchange, writes -
“I’ll buy Wrangler. I’ll buy Guess. I’ll buy
anything, but I refuse to this day to wear Levi’s"
If someone could put that to music I reckon he’d have
another number one.
4) Other parents
didn’t want him playing with their kids.
He tried to play with this kid once and his mother came
out of her house and yelled - "You can’t play with my son, you’re too
fat!”
He picked up a broom and smashed her window.
Reflecting on the incident, he writes -
“Being too fat to play with the other children
probably has a lot to do with the way I am today. I’m usually alone in my hotel
room from right after the show until the next day’s sound check. And I’m never
bored; I don’t get bored. Probably because mothers wouldn’t let their kids play
with me.”
I mean, I’ve read as much Camus as the next guy but that
is some proper existential shit from Meat Loaf.
5) He didn’t really
like music as a kid.
In fact, he only liked 4 songs.
3 of them are really good - Sixteen Tons by Tennessee
Ernie Ford and Running Bear and Teen Angel by Johnny Preston. But the fourth
one was Life in the Fast Lane by The Eagles and that massively disappointed me.
It reminded me of when Michael Owen admitted to only
seeing 5 films and one of them was Cool Runnings.
6) He kept getting
knocked out.
In the course of his childhood, Meat Loaf gets knocked
out 17 times in a variety of comic accidents - the best one being when he got
hit on the head by a shot put at an athletics meeting.
I know it’s one of the best ones because he’s helpfully
included a chapter entitled My Favourite Concussions - a first in
all the rock star biographies I’ve read.
7) Meat Loaf and
the JFK Assassination.
I know, that’s a sentence I never thought I’d write
either.
On the 22nd of November 1963, Meat Loaf and his mates went
to greet JFK when he arrived at Love Field Airport in Dallas - managing to
sneak through a gap in the fence and get up close to the President and his
wife.
An hour later, they’re driving along when a secret
service man stops their car in the middle of the road and makes them drive him
to Parkland Hospital. He tells them the President has been shot.
They get to the hospital and see all the chaos first hand
- Jackie covered in blood, a wounded Governor Connolly, and loads of people in
hysterical grief. Apparently there’s a photo somewhere of a group of African
American women crying their eyes out next to a confused Meat Loaf - the would
be singer, not the meal.
Again, reflecting on the incident Meat Loaf indulges in
wondrous speculation about what happened that day and even considers whether
the secret service man that stopped him was part of the conspiracy. He ends by
saying that Oswald definitely didn’t do it before adding his own helpful
conclusion -
“Not that I know who did it. I don’t”
Thanks Meat.
Long term readers of this blog, all 8 of them, will
remember that the JFK assassination is a particular hobby of mine and I’ve been
“studying” it for years. As I read Meat Loaf’s account, a thought
suddenly struck me that I’ve been unable to shake ever since.
As the presidential limousine turned on to Elm Street,
with the book depository overhead and the grassy knoll on the right, what if
JFK actually turned to Jackie and said -
“Remember those kids back at Love Field Jackie? Was
it me, or were they calling the big one Meat?”
What if they were his last words?
I guess we’ll never know.
Right then, that’s the 7 complete. So let me now up the
tempo and race through the transformation from childhood to Rock legend - not
that the story gets any more sensible.
After his abusive father tried to kill him with a
butcher’s knife (I told you), Meat Loaf escapes to L.A. and starts performing
in a series of bands until he forms one of his own - Meat Loaf Soul.
To say they were an odd bunch is probably an
understatement. Meat Loaf was barefoot and wore a tuxedo, the drummer was
dressed like a clown, and the bass player wore an Indian costume. Oh, and there
was woman called Sue who was dressed like a swan.
Did I mention the drummer didn’t have any fingers?
The drummer didn’t have any fingers.
After receiving zero interest from record companies, the
band split up.
He also had a weird encounter with Charles Manson where
the would-be serial killer told Meat Loaf he used to be a cat in a former life.
Again, not vital to the story, but how am I supposed to
not mention that?
Right, what’s next?
During a job interview for a parking attendant in a
theatre, a nearby casting director asks Meat Loaf if he can sing and offers him
a part in the musical Hair. The show is a huge success and he finds himself on
Broadway singing that Aquarius song.
It’s also around this time that he meets Jim Steinman - a
slightly weird fella who wore leather gloves and had a portfolio of REALLY long
songs where people lost their virginity to spine tingling baseball commentary.
We’ll come back to him in a bit.
Next, Meat Loaf gets offered a part in a new musical
called The Rocky Horror Show. Again,
it’s a massive success and EVERYONE came to see the show - John Lennon,
Elvis Presley, and Keith Moon to name a few. In fact Moon was so taken by Rocky Horror that he was a regular at
the theatre, sitting in the front row with 9 bottles of champagne on the stage
- one for each member of the cast.
The musical then gets made into a film, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, but bombs
on its release. Meat Loaf then appears in a Shakespeare musical called Rock a Bye Hamlet, which sounds like the
worst thing ever, and decides to quit musicals for good.
Instead, he went back to that Steinman fella and started
working on those REALLY long songs.
What happens next is my probably my favourite bit in the
whole story.
Rather than doing what normal bands do, i.e. record a
demo tape, Meat Loaf decided it would be a good idea to perform the songs live
in front of label executives. Typically this would involve Meat Loaf, Jim
Steinman on piano, and a singer called Ellen Foley going through an early
version of Paradise by The Dashboard
Light.
The record labels hated it as soon as it started and were
further appalled when they got to the bit in the song where Meat Loaf and Ellen
Foley started to make out with each other RIGHT IN FRONT OF THEM!
It’s some image - a 25 stone man in a frilly shirt
getting off with a slim blonde, whilst some weirdo sits in the corner playing
the piano with his leather gloves on.
Unsurprisingly, they didn’t get a deal.
It was only when the songs came to the attention of Todd
Rundgren, the former New York Dolls producer, that they started to get somewhere.
He thought the songs were so “out there” that he had to get involved
- giving the material a whole new arrangement and recruiting various members of
the E-street band to flesh out the sound.
The turning point came when Steve Van Zandt heard the
intro to You Took the Words Right Out of
My Mouth and decided it was the best 15 seconds of music he ever heard.
With his help, they brokered a deal with a small label called Cleveland
International and, finally, in 1977 they released Bat out of Hell.
You all know the rest - it stayed on the charts for a
thousand years and everyone has an opinion on the album.
Very briefly, here’s mine.
It’s brilliant.
Who on earth opens an album with a song like Bat out of Hell? The
song tries to end about 10 times and when it finally finishes you wish it hadn’t.
I love that bit where he spells it out -
“THEN. LIKE. A. SINNER. BEFORE. THE. GATES. OF.
HEAVEN. I’LL. COME. CRAWLING. ON. BACK. TO. YOU.”
I love the handclap ending of You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth.
I love everything about Paradise by the Dashboard Light and Ellen Foley’s “Stop Right
There!” is an absolute fucking moment. I mean, if you’re going to
interrupt one of the best songs ever that’s how you do it.
But more than all of that, I think I just love him. It’s the
way he seizes his moment - not with anxiety but with total joy.
I love the fact that he turns his autobiography into a
picaresque comedy and invites you to laugh with him - Bad Bob, his Favourite
Concussions, and his ongoing feud with Levi’s. It’s so brilliant, he’s taken me
over my word count and I don’t even care. In the hands of anyone else his story
would be a rags to riches cliché and the seriousness would kick in when he made
it - “I’m an artist now. Remember Kevin? He always told you that I would
be.”
In the hands of Meat Loaf, though, it’s fun all the way.
I imagine he’s exactly the sort of guy that doesn’t have
guilty pleasures.
Martin Fitzgerald
(@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Bat out of Hell
Rolling Stone
ranked it the 343 greatest album of all time.
There isn’t a
retrospective Pitchfork Review, which I’m gutted about, but they’d definitely give
it a 10.0
It still sells 200,000 copies every year and I reckon
those 200,000 people are the happiest 200,000 people on the planet – for at
least a week.
So, over to you Lavinia. Why haven’t you listened to
it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
In 1977, I
was confused. I had been immersed in disco, funk and soul, but was terrible at
being a girl and unable to adhere to disco-girl standards. That year I
abandoned all attempts to fit in. I cut off my hair, ripped my jacket, hid my
Motown and then I hesitated. I was thrilled by punk but it kept hesitating too.
I watched The Jam perform on Marc Bolan’s TV show and The Pistols torment Bill
Grundy, and couldn’t understand why this didn’t immediately change everything.
I was
forgetting the torpor that lay on the land. When I was eleven, my family moved
from London to an Essex village. Growing up in Seventies provincial England was
like being subjected to a stronger form of gravity. Teenagers plodded about,
oppressed by maxi-skirts and flares, platforms and drooping hair, lumbering
humour and hushed violence. There was a deep-held suspicion of foreigners and
glamour, art and sex, which were just the things I was looking for. I wasn’t
going to find them in pub rock, prog rock or rock operas, and Meat Loaf draws
on all three.
Nothing
prompted me to seek Meat Loaf out. At the time, I would have categorised this
as music for people who aren’t serious about music. It seemed generalised and
efficient. I had friends who felt strongly about Yes, Led Zeppelin, Bowie, The
Carpenters and Marvin Gaye but I didn’t know anyone who felt strongly about
Meat Loaf so no one made me listen. Up until last week I couldn’t have told you
the names of more than a couple of his songs although fragments have apparently
stuck: ‘Like a bat out of hell something something something dawn’, ‘Will you love me for ever? Let me sleep on
it something’, ‘You took the words right out of my mouth. It must have been
while something something something’.
In 1978 I
caught Meat Loaf on The Old Grey Whistle
Test singing Paradise by the
Dashboard Light. I couldn’t have told you that was the song – I had to
look it up. What I remembered was his hair, so baby-fine and overgrown, as if
uncut from birth. And that he was wearing a shirt with precision frills and
clutching a massive handkerchief. The song and his voice made no impression but
then from behind Mr Loaf appeared this gorgeous woman, all weary and fierce,
being theatrical as hell but in a way that made everything sharper and deeper.
This was Ellen Foley, and her voice was also sharp and deep. She was all needle
while he was all handkerchief.
The problem
was also that I’d seen this before and done much better by The Tubes with Don’t Touch Me There: a motorbike not on
the album cover but onstage, not just kissing but writhing, extreme theatre,
and music that broke itself open.
You’ve now listened to
it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
Now I know
that Bat Out of Hell was intended to
be a musical, I can practically hear the curtain going up. At first I thought I
was listening to a medley from Tommy.
There’s a two-minute frenetic overture that says we’re going to give you this
and this and this: proggy piano twiddles, yawning guitar breaks and great walls
of everything else. On first listen I found
the album over-structured and under-formed, although those hooks that have stayed
with me for almost forty years now seem quite brilliant. Having listened three
times, I still can’t get a grip on what lies on either side of them, nor can I
get them out of my head.
I approached
each song full of good will only to be frustrated by all the stopping and
starting. By third listening this felt
less jarring as I knew what was coming but I didn’t feel I could dance or drive
to this, that I would be made to move and keep moving. Even slow songs should
bring about a kind of delicious implosion. Something should happen other than
noise.
Meat Loaf’s
voice has a dry fragility that reminds me at source of Robert Wyatt or John
Martyn, but he lacks their sense of how to use it. He isn’t helped by such a
featherbed of backing vocals either. It
was good to be able to hear him properly on Heaven
Can Wait until the oo-ing chorus
steps in. Is this a great song trapped inside a poor arrangement and casual
production? For Crying Out Loud is
similarly ruined. The whole thing is part X-Factor, part-Eurovision when these
ballads could have been heartbreakers.
These songs
strike me as being built in ordinary ways which are then repeated so that they
pile up into something that sounds monumental and teetering but is actually all
a bit ho-hum. By my third listening, I enjoyed bits more and more but I didn’t
look forward to wading through an entire track to reach them. The record kept
raising my hopes - motorbike noise! (Where are the Shangri-Lahs?) It’s ended!
No it bloody hasn’t.
The
experience was made worthwhile by - no
surprise – Ellen Foley who arrives four tracks in, wakes it all up and prompts
Meat Loaf to raise his game. The pub-rock tempo and overwhelming melodic ordinariness
of All Revved Up are a shame but
things are lurching now and he is yelling in a way that isn’t just about
sounding louder. Foley’s voice seems immune to the general mulch around her. Now
we have acceleration and almost reach lift-off only there’s another bloody
ballad on the way.
Foley is
back with Paradise by the Dashboard Light
which I enjoyed more and more. It works from start to finish (minus the
school-boy joke of the baseball commentary). He is cracking and breaking, and
the song is strong enough to hold its lurches from pomp to skittering
boppiness. God I love her voice. When she takes charge with her list of
demands, her voice warms up and so does his. For once the repetitions work. His
prevarications are exquisite.
So it grew
on me. Or the bits that had been quietly growing on me for forty years grew
more. But as I got to know it better, I didn’t settle in or find any further
surprises. I realise I haven’t said anything about the lyrics.
I have
nothing to say about the lyrics.
Would you listen to it again?
If he didn’t sleep on it.
A mark out of 10?
6 (but 10 for Ellen Foley)
Ram Rating – 9
Guest Rating – 6
Overall – 7.5
So that was week 61 and that was Lavinia Greenlaw.
Turns out she’d never listened to Bat out of Hell before because she prefers
needles to handkerchiefs. So we made her listen to it three times and the
hankies grew on her, but not as much as the needles.
Next Week, David Quantick listens to something from
1972 for the first time.
Until then, here’s Paradise by The Dashboard Light
from Bat Out of Hell.
David
Quantick is an Emmy-winning TV comedy writer and author. He has two books out
right now, a novel called The Mule (“the Da Vinci Code with jokes” -
Independent) and a collection of interviews called How To Be A Writer (“If only
Morrissey had read this book” – John Niven).
David’s
Top 3 albums ever?
The
White Album - The Beatles
Low - David Bowie
Another Music In A
Different Kitchen – Buzzcocks
What album has he never heard before?
Foxtrot by Genesis
Released in 1972
Before we get to David, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album
Club thinks of Foxtrot
All right everyone.
This is the second Genesis album we’ve done and, I must
admit, I’m feeling a certain amount of pressure.
Let me explain.
Last year we did Selling
England by The Pound, with Andrew Male from Mojo as the guest.
We started, gently, with the following line -
“Imagine a band so bad that the one you’d most like
to go out for a pint with is Phil Collins”
The article then descended into an affectionate
“hate” piece that mostly took the piss out of Genesis, particularly
Tony Banks, before Andrew and I apologetically admitted that we were rather
taken by the album.
Par for the course really.
But then a thread on a thing called The Steve Hoffman Music
Forum appeared and it was called, “The Funniest Genesis Article
Ever”.
For those of you who are blissfully unaware of The Steve
Hoffman Music Forum, firstly let me say that I envy you. Secondly let me now
ruin your life by introducing you to it - it’s basically a website where very
serious people argue about hi-fi systems and important matters like whether, on
balance, disco was a good thing or not.
As you can imagine it’s a slightly weird place that
conjures up all the imagery of an un-aired room and a website that was designed
in 1998.
Today, for example, there’s a 6 page thread entitled
“Songs with audible breathing”.
The starting point for that particular thread is -
“Does anyone know of any songs that feature the
performers breathing, intentionally or unintentionally? There are many
instances of inhaling right before a big note, but I’m thinking more as an
instrument."
Obviously, I’ve read all 6 pages - before nearly setting
fire to myself.
Anyway, when "The Funniest Genesis Article
Ever” thread appeared I was initially flattered. After all, there’s
probably been loads of Genesis articles and to be labelled “the funniest
ever” by a group of people who had definitely read them all was quite the compliment.
But then some of the members got angry at me and Andrew.
One of them even called me a “young punk idiot” which I strongly
refute on account of being a “middle aged twee indie pop idiot”.
Nevertheless, I dusted myself down and continued to read
a thread where people argued whether it was acceptable to take the piss out of
Genesis or not. Eventually it collapsed in on itself and, as is often the case
with these things, the fight for the last word fizzled out amongst a pile of wearily typed emojis and acronyms.
As I said, it’s a weird place. Often, I’ve considered the
possibility that the members are in a hostage situation, perpetrated by Steve
Hoffman himself.
“Hello, is that the Police?”
“Yes”
“Good. I’m fairly sure there’s a fella called Steve
Hoffman and he’s got a load of people imprisoned in a room where he forces them
to discuss things like what’s the best Bob Dylan live album to listen to when your wife has ran off with another man?”
“Ok. We’ll look into it”
“Thanks. It’s Hard
Rain by the way”
"No it isn’t, it’s Live ‘66″.
Anyway, anyway.
Now you can understand why I’m under so much pressure.
Oh no, it’s not the fact that I’ll get abused again or called a punk. That
bit’s fine. It’s the fact that we’ve already done "The Funniest Genesis
Article Ever.”
How are we supposed to follow that?
Well, fortunately the band have been generous enough to
provide enough comedy moments in their own history to get us through this.
So, here we go. The 5 stages of Genesis before we get to
Foxtrot.
1) In The Beginning
The band were formed whilst studying at Charterhouse and
the initial strategy was to write a load of songs that they hoped to sell to
other artists.
One of their early efforts was called The Hair on the Arms and the Legs and
another one was called Lost in a Drawer.
Unfortunately they were both rubbish and, as a result,
we’ll never have that anthem that sums up the frustration of losing something,
probably batteries, in a drawer.
2) The Difficult First Album
The band’s first album, From Genesis to Revelation, was a concept album loosely based
around the books of the bible. As if that wasn’t bad enough (trust me it was),
a load of record shops incorrectly filed it in the religious section.
It’s tempting to feel a degree of sympathy for Genesis here.
However, my real sympathy is reserved for those people that actually thought
they were buying a religious album.
Imagine the horror when they got home.
3) The Difficult Second Album.
After the debacle of the first album, Genesis decided to
move into a big cottage.
By all accounts, they just stayed in for months listening
to that King Crimson album with the mad cover. No visits to the pub, no country
walks, no outside influences at all.
Basically, imagine an episode of The Monkees directed by
Ingmar Bergman.
After a while, even they got bored and decided to go on
tour in an old bread van, supporting the likes of Bowie, T-Rex, and Nick Drake
in the process.
Charisma Records sign them and release their second album
- Trespass.
The good news is that it wasn’t filed under the religious
section this time. The bad news was that meant more people heard it and it
still wasn’t very good.
4) Phil Collins
I love this bit.
Genesis decided they needed a new drummer so put an ad in Melody Maker that said the following -
“Wanted - a drummer sensitive to acoustic
music"
Phil Collins, a man not known for his sensitivity to
acoustic music, answered the ad and was invited to audition at Peter Gabriel’s
parents’ house in Surrey. When the day came, Collins arrived early and was told
to make use of the pool whilst he waited for his turn.
So he did, swimming around whilst listening to a series
of drummers trying to play the same song over and over again. By the time he
got his chance, he knew exactly what to play and got offered the job.
And that’s it everyone.
That’s exactly how Phil Collins happened - he gained an
unfair advantage by spying on a load of drummers whilst having a massive swim.
He would later go on to front the band, have a massively successful
solo career, and dominate the ‘80s with a series of badly produced songs about
ex-wives.
You really have got to hand it to him.
5) A New Guitarist
Around the time that Collins joined the band, a guitarist
called Steve Hackett put his own ad in Melody Maker that said -
"Imaginative guitarist/writer seeks involvement with
receptive musicians determined to strive beyond existing stagnant music
forms”
All I’m saying here is if that ad appeared on The
Steve Hoffman Music Forum then he’d need at least 3 new servers to cope with
the demand.
But back in 1971, the rest of Genesis simply thought
“he sounds good, let’s get him in” and phoned the number in the ad.
With that, the classic Genesis line-up was in place and they made their first
TV appearance - on a BBC 2 show called Disco 2.
To be honest, it’s probably the only time you’ll see the
words “Genesis” and “Disco” in the same sentence.
The band now start to take off.
Enhanced by the twin talents of Collins and Hackett, and
a Mellotron that they bought off King Crimson, the band write their best songs
so far. Not only that, they actually started to feel like a band - a proper
band. Collins and Hackett spoke the language of experienced musicians and this,
as much as anything, gave the other three the confidence that they could
develop further.
Their next album, Nursery
Cryme, is easily their best to date and has a brilliant cover with a couple
of girls playing croquet with people’s heads. On top of that, guitar
aficionados will also tell you that it saw the introduction of Hackett’s guitar
tapping technique which went on to influence people like Eddie Van Halen.
I’m obviously not a guitar aficionado though, I just got
that bit from Wikipedia.
Fresh from a triumphant set at The 1971 Reading Festival,
which included loads of pyro and Peter Gabriel’s new Egyptian style haircut,
the band started work on the next album - Foxtrot.
Firstly, let’s do the funny bits.
There’s a song called Get
Em Out by Friday which tells the story of ruthless property developers in
2012. From what I can work out, the developers evict some poor family and then
place a 4 ft height limit on future tenants so they can cram more people in the
property.
I know, I can’t imagine that’s been used as the first
dance at many weddings.
And it goes on for 8 MINUTES AND 36 SECONDS!
But it gets better.
The entire second side is taken up by a song called Supper’s Ready which goes on for - wait
for it - 23 MINUTES AND 3 SECONDS!
I couldn’t even begin to tell you what it’s about other
to say it’s supposed to be 7 songs rolled into one and the last part of the
song is apparently called As sure as eggs
is eggs.
Does that help? No, I didn’t think so.
Still, I’m generally in favour of songs about
“supper” as it’s an underrated meal and needs all the
publicity it can get. Distinguishable from a dinner, it’s something light and
straightforward after a big lunch, something that your mum brings you - a few
cold cuts and a slice of Battenberg cake.
Not that they get a mention in Supper’s Ready - it’s all
butterflies and Winston Churchill.
Ok, no more jokes. Let me end with something half
serious.
I really like Genesis.
The difficulty for someone like me, though, has been trying to get
to prog cleanly - to get past the aftermath of 1976 that was writ so large and
simplistically when I was growing up. You couldn’t help be influenced by its
message - "there was a massive
battle of the bands when you were a kid and those guys lost. Whatever you do, don’t have anything
to do with them or you may as well become a Geography lecturer on The Open
University or, even worse, Jeremy Clarkson.“
You’re never told about the Genesis fans who were also
into The Clash.
But ultimately you get past it.
Old punks now embarrass themselves with their war stories
and there comes a point when you realise you’ve been misled and this wasn’t
about music at all - it was about class. It was about people staking a claim
for authenticity and the rights to the truth.
So you’re told that a bunch of posh kids from
Charterhouse can’t possibly say anything about your life.
But you’re never told the same thing about Kraftwerk.
You’re never told that something now defined as
"classic” or “mature” was actually just a bunch of kids,
that it’s ALWAYS just a bunch of kids - that the oldest one in the band was
just 22 when Foxtrot was released.
You’re never allowed to remove the context and, for
better or worse, experience the freeze frame of a band like Genesis in 1972.
Because there’s always someone taking the piss.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Foxtrot
Rolling Stone
ranked it the 14th Greatest Prog Rock Album of all time.
Q and Mojo ranked
it number 2 in a list they actually called “40 Cosmic Rock Albums”
So, over to you David. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
I like two songs by Genesis, both from the album And Then There Were Three which is one
of the first with Phil Collins as the singer. I couldn’t stand early Genesis
when it was played on the sixth form record player in the ‘70s and I loathed
the slick pop Genesis of the ‘80s (like everyone else, I’ve never heard the invisible
Genesis of the 1990s).
In recent years I’ve accepted that my dislike of
prog may just be thoughtless bias so I’ve gone out of my way to listen to bands
I would once have rejected. I am also quite bored of people laughing at the
paraphernalia of prog – the clothes, the twin-neck guitars, the time changes.
All music looks silly to someone; in the end it’s what it sounds like which
matters.
And so time has eroded my stronger feelings toward
this complicated, musicianly form of rock. I am no longer a hater for hating’s
sake. I like a bit of Yes, for example. I absolutely love King Crimson. And I
have seriously tried listening to Genesis, with a view to liking them. Last
year I even asked friends who liked Genesis to recommend me songs I might
enjoy. I didn’t enjoy any of them except some of I Know What I Like In Your Wardrobe and maybe a bit of Carpet Crawlers.
So when I was allocated Foxtrot in the harsh lottery of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club, I did
not have high hopes. Or any hopes, really.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
The overall impression of Foxtrot
is of a boat on a stormy sea, pitching and tossing as it lurches up and down
the enormous waves. There’s a lot of drama, a great deal of variety, and a
slight sense that the whole thing is kept in check with enormous, if precarious
skill. Playing this stuff must be very difficult – as soon as you’ve had a
verse and a chorus of one song, the whole thing charges off again in a
different direction, with new melodies, tempo and feeling. It must be
knackering to play; it’s certainly exhausting to listen to.
I instantly liked the parts that sounded familiar: the Procol Harum-ish
melody of Time Table, for example, the staccato riffs of Watcher In The Skies. I pretty much really liked Watcher In The Skies; it‘s a rocker. I
enjoyed the beginning of Supper’s Ready and found Gabriel’s lyric and vocal
both warm and human, like he’s singing about being at home with someone he
loves. And there’s a great guitar break in the middle of Supper’s Ready as well.
Apart from that, I was less happy. The endless tempo and tune changes
got on my nerves after a while; it’s like the band had lots of songs they
hadn’t got round to finishing so they stuck them together in the manner of Abbey Road’s side two medley. Just as
you’re starting to enjoy something (say, the start of Supper’s Ready) the track sees a shiny object in the distance and
gallops off and you’re mired in a series of riffs which go round and round
until they find another, boggier bit of song to crash around in. And there are
boggy bits galore. Several times when playing this album (I listened to it six
or seven times) I would find my attention wandering and suddenly realise that I
was in the middle of another pointless instrumental section or a rant from
Gabriel about something or other. Most of it was pleasant enough, but it was a
bit odd to keep being dragged back from a daydream about laundry or dog walking
and discover that you were listening to some music.
That was the good stuff. The bad stuff was very bad indeed. And by “bad
stuff” I mean Get ‘Em Out By Friday,
a track I hated so much I can barely bring myself to publicise its existence by
typing its name. What a horrible,
horrible song. Eight and a half minutes of some inane story about evictions
which turns into satirical drivel about shrinking people or something. Awful. I
made the mistake of looking it up, too. The “character” of “The Winkler” would
be the most patronising portrayal of a working class person ever – Keith Moon
voice, cockney cackle and all – were it not for the other character in the song
– the Sad Poor Person who is Being Evicted. And the bit where the Sad Poor
Person sings that they’re prepared to pay “double the rent” suggests that
Gabriel’s visits to the Real World were at this point infrequent. It’s an
embarrassing and horrible piece of music with all the time changes, amateur
theatrics and just sheer uggh arrgh make it stop of Genesis at their worst. I
did not enjoy it at all.
And it tipped the balance for me, from this album being “OK” to
“unbearable.”
Would
you listen to it again?
Apart from Watcher In The Skies
and some of Supper’s Ready, no. I
would run away if I heard it again.
A
mark out of 10?
3.
RAM
RATING – 7
Guest
Rating – 3
Overall
– 5
So
that was Week 62 and that was David Quantick. Turns out he’d never listened to Foxtrot before because he tried it once in 6th
Form and didn’t like it. I had a similar experience with Sociology. Anyway, we
made him listen to it 3 times and he got a bit seasick and threw up all over
the place. These things can, unfortunately, happen.
Next
week, Chris Addison listens to something from 1971 for the first time.
In
the meantime, here’s Watcher in the Skies
from Foxtrot. It sounds a bit like Battles if you ask me.
I
direct some things, act in some other things, write still other things and now
and then do stand-up for coins and/or accommodation.
Chris’s
Top 3 albums ever
I
really don’t have a Top 3, but big moments for me in pop include:
The
Smiths – The Queen Is Dead
Sugarcubes
– Life’s Too Good
The Leisure
Society – Into The Murky Water
What
great album has he never heard before?
What’s Going On by Marvin Gaye
Released in 1971
Before
we get to Chris, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks
of What’s Going on.
All right, everyone.
On Monday we announced this week’s album and, if I’m
honest, I’ve never seen anything like it.
What typically happens is 50% of people tell us the album
is brilliant whilst the other 50% tell us it’s rubbish and they hope the guest
gives it a right good kicking. But this week was different. It was 100%
pro-album - the first time that’s ever happened.
And it wasn’t just an expression of light hearted joy
either - it was weightier than that. There I was on Monday afternoon, trying my best to
relax with a bag of Wotsits, when I was suddenly confronted with a load of
tweets laced with reverence and implicit threat.
Here are just some examples -
@StuartBunby, who has an avatar of a chimpanzee playing
baseball, said,
“I really hope
he likes it. It would be really good if we could all continue to get
along”
I’ll admit, the double use of the word “really”
scared me a bit and made me think that this Bunby character was a great deal
more menacing than his surname suggests - I.e. Not menacing at all because he’s
called Mr Bunby.
@John_p_d, who describes himself as a “jazz
lover” said,
“I can’t see
how it would be humanly possible not to love this record.”
I can’t see how it would be humanly possible to love jazz.
And finally, @tillyv lived up to her Twitter bio (”Ambiguity alludes me”) by saying -
"Woah. He
won’t be able to write with the religious experience he is about to have.”
I found this one particularly odd because one of the reasons
the world is in such a mess is precisely because of people writing about the
religious experiences they’ve had.
But never mind. I decided not to pull her up on this
because a) she seems nice and b) I’m not Ricky Gervais.
On Tuesday, I then ventured off my timeline for a routine
check-up at the dentist. Brian, the dentist, is a jovial sort and long term
reader of our blog who occasionally chastises me for telling silly jokes about
the bands he loves.
Again, Tuesday was different.
He had me upside down in his chair, shone the bright
light RIGHT in my face and, whilst prizing my mouth open with what seemed like
half of B & Q, said,
“You do know What’s
Going On is one of my favourite albums, don’t you?”
It was a bit like that scene in Marathon Man, except
Brian isn’t a Nazi trying to escape his past.
Well, he says he isn’t anyway.
So, with all these expectations, I struggled with what
approach to take and was conscious that I had to do the album
“justice.”
With that in mind, here are some potential angles that I
considered -
1) - The Father
and Son angle with some amateur psychology thrown in for good measure.
Any piece about Marvin Gaye is usually dominated by
accounts of a ruthless father who used to beat him mercilessly as a child.
Some people go even further and seek to explain his entire career as an attempt
to simultaneously escape his father whilst also making him proud.
That may be true but it sort of ruins the jaunty opening.
With that in mind, just like we did with Pet Sounds, I
decided to move on and ignore the “terrible dad spawns great artist”
angle.
Sorry, terrible dads.
2) The Motown
angle.
I considered doing the entire piece on how Motown is easily
the best record label ever and, with the possible exception of Chess, no one
else even comes close.
In fact, it’s so good that it’s now an adjective in its
own right and people quite naturally walk around saying “I’m into
Motown” in a way that no one has ever said “I’m into Sony” or
“I’m into Bella Union”.
No doubt there’s someone shouting “I PREFER STAX, ACTUALLY!” at their computer right now, but surely that’s just one of
those weird things that people say - like Salt and Vinegar crisps belong in
green packets.
Everything about Motown, particularly in the early days,
makes me happy - they produced entertainers rather than singers; they recorded
within hours of writing the song to capture the spontaneity; and they often
ripped up their own release schedules because they were so excited about
whatever brilliant song they just recorded.
Do you know what Motown’s first million seller was?
Shop Around by
Smoky Robinson and The Miracles.
Do you know what Shop
Around is about?
It’s about Smoky Robinson’s mum pulling him to one side
and basically saying “before you get married, son, have as many girlfriends
as you possibly can."
What a woman. I wish my mum had said the same to me.
My love of Motown also explains my suspicion of Northern
Soul. Why is everyone messing about with b-sides and rarities? Just put Needle
in a Haystack on by The Velvelettes and be done with it.
And why are we in Wigan? And why’s everyone covered in
talcum powder?
Sorry, it’s not for me.
Finally, I love the fact that all you needed for a career
at Motown was to be in close proximity to the recording studio. That was it.
Just hang around and your time will come, like it did for Diana Ross and Martha
Reeves - office girls that were put on the production line just because they
were within reach.
“Excuse me Martha, can you stop typing for a second and come in here and sing Heatwave please.”
“Sure, no problem.”
“Great, and can you bring the Vandellas with you please.”
I’m fairly sure that if I’d been working there as a
cleaner then I’d probably have had 15 Top Ten hits by now and currently be on
tour somewhere with the surviving members of The Four Tops.
That’s how good it was.
Yet, when you look at Gaye’s career it’s complex and goes
against the grain of the other artists. He starts out as a drummer, then gets
marketed as a Nat King Cole style crooner, before he decides to rebel against
the company ethos. This basically involved smoking a load of weed, snorting a
load of coke, and being a terrible pupil at the John Roberts Powers School for
Social Grace where he was sent to be groomed.
He’s also not helped by a stop start discography that
never quite takes off in the same way as The Supremes, The Four Tops, or The Temptations.
For every Can I get a Witnessand How Sweet It Is (to be loved by you)
there’s a string of unforgettable songs that aren’t hits. It’s only really when
he teams up with Tammi Terrell in 1966 that he has consolidated success for the
first time.
Tragically, though, Terrell collapses in his arms on
stage one night in 1967 and is later diagnosed with a brain tumour. She dies 3
years later, at the age of just 24.
So, despite everything that I associate with Motown, the
opposite appears to be the case for Marvin Gaye. His success is, at best,
sporadic and his personal life is littered with tragedy and unease.
Come the end of the ‘60s, with the label starting to fall
apart, Marvin Gaye is still hanging on and looking for another move.
And he’s just had his biggest hit so far - I Heard It Through The Grapevine.
3) The Political
Angle
One of the more interesting aspects of Gaye’s career is
how he became overtly politicised towards the end of the ‘60s in a way that
other Motown artists didn’t. Throughout his life he had personal battles with
authority (his Father, Motown), and as the decade wore on he embraced an
emerging subculture that was defiantly anti-war and anti-government.
He tells of a time when he heard one of his own songs on
the radio interrupted by a newsflash about the Watts Riots.
He tells of how his brother would come back from Vietnam
with stories that would terrify and infuriate him.
Yet, all the while, Motown are still pushing him to "entertain”,
to meet their expectations of who
Marvin Gaye was.
He couldn’t do it anymore.
Instead, he started wearing hoodies, grew a beard, and
refused to pay his taxes in case the government used them to bomb Vietnam.
It’s in this frame of mind that he starts work on What’s
Going On - an album that turned its back on a career of love songs and focussed
on the Vietnam war, spirituality, environmentalism, and saving babies instead.
So here we are. Having considered the three obvious
angles I still felt dissatisfied. None of them seemed to adequately sum up the
album and I felt there was still something missing.
For example, there’s The James Jamerson story.
For those of you that don’t know, Jamerson was the
legendary bass player at Motown who played on practically all their hits.
Naturally, Gaye wanted him for What’s Going On so tracked him down to a club
and dragged him into the studio to record his part. There was only one problem
– Jamerson was so drunk that he could barely stand up.
It didn’t matter, though, Jamerson lay on the floor,
pissed out of his head, and nailed his part in one take. To this day it’s one
of the best bass lines ever and I’ll never know how he did it.
So, yeah, at one point I considered doing 2000 words on a drunk
bass player.
Finally, desperate for a new angle, I even considered a
piece of fan fiction based on the following photo.
The idea was based around this being the opening scene to
a story where Marvin Gaye goes searching for those two kids out of The Shining. It even had a title – Marvin Gaye Goes Searching For Those Two
Kids Out Of The Shining– and there was a bit where he chased them around
The Alps singing Ain’t No Mountain High
Enough.
But that was as far I got.
And that was nearly that. I’d given up trying to find
something that captured the essence of What’s
Going On and, instead, settled for what I had - some biography plotlines
and a few daft jokes.
Par for the course, really.
Then I saw it.
In an interview just before he made What’s Going On, Marvin Gaye said the following -
“I had to be an artist, and artists work in the
privacy of their own imaginations”.
It was that final phrase that really struck me.
I couldn’t stop thinking about it and it went round my head
for hours. He’d come up with the perfect description for the creative process,
one that explained why debut albums are often the best, why you should never
cater for your audience, and why you should always ignore other people’s
expectations.
But more than that, he explained his own transformation.
He explained that What’s Going On is as much about
personal politics as it is about a wider context - the legacy narrative that
now gives the album its weight.
He let you in on the secret of what happened and, in the
process, reminded me that these stories are ALWAYS best kept personal. So if
you’re asking me what I think of What’s
Going On, to do it justice, I would say its magic is in that
phrase.
After 12 years and 10 albums, Marvin Gaye finally discovered what he’d
been looking for the whole time - the privacy of his own imagination.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on What’s Going On
In 1985, the NME voted
it the best album of all time.
A 1999 critics’ poll for
The Guardian named it “The Greatest Album of the 20th Century”
Sorry
Chris, just thought I’d add MORE PRESSURE.
So, over to you Chris. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
It takes me a long time to get round to things –
the films of Billy Wilder, tax returns, writing this – and Motown was just
another one of those foolishly neglected items on my very long list. When I was
little most of the music in our house was classical. That came from my Dad, the
son of an Austrian woman who brought the Viennese love of chamber music with
the suitcase of possessions she packed when she fled the Nazis. My childhood
was all schnitzel and sauerkraut and septets. There was the occasional burst of
pop too but only really through the records my mum had bought, which she seemed
to have stopped doing once her children came along. It would be ten years until
I’d hear of the existence of David Bowie. My first exposure to any kind of
R&B was in the form of Boney M’s 1978 Nightflight
To Venus.
Charities have been started for less.
Leaving aside an early flirtation with the works of
Queen, my own pop education began quite late under the tutelage of my schoolbus
comrade Bob, who filled the vital role of Slightly Older Kid with Advanced
Record Collection. He made me a copy of The Smiths Strangeways Here We Come and since TDK D90s had two sides slung in
The Pogues’ If I Should Fall From Grace
With God too. These were a revelation. The energy of the Pogues, the sly
gallows wit of Morrissey, the music from Marr the like of which I’d just never
imagined existed blew out a wall to my left and when the clouds of plaster
thinned, there was this whole other world – whole other part of my brain,
actually – a valley of possibilities, stretching away. I let slip Queen’s hand
and off into that valley I gambolled, writhing around in Indie like an extra in
a drug scene from a 1960s movie: The House of Love, The Sugarcubes, They Might
Be Giants and the fey, pre-Roses la-la pop that Manchester put out (God, I loved
The Man from Delmonte like only a weedy nerd could). By the time Madchester
came along, I was an old Indie hand in the right place at the right time.
For years after that I was pretty tribal about pop,
as the gauche often are; I was an indie kid, all fanzines and certainty. That
probably lasted about a decade until I met my wife, who is on every level a
better person than me. She loves all the things I took pride in disdaining:
soul, musicals, celery. And in a war of attrition over the last almost twenty
years, she’s got me round to the first two. (I will die before admitting celery
is a foodstuff, mind.) Now among the thousands of LPs, CDs and downloads I own there’s
stuff in every genre. Except metal, which continues to elude me. But what all
those lost years meant was that in spite of listening to (and loving) a great
deal more of it in recent times, whole swathes of soul, funk, R&B and
related sub-genres that would be bunged in the same grey slots in HMV have
passed me by, including all but the title track of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
God, the pressure. People love this, don’t they? I mean, really
fanatically love it as an album, an artefact, a milestone. God, the pressure.
I’ve been on a bit of an up and down journey with this one. See, that
opening track is so strong, such a great piece of music, that I think I was
waiting for an album of something similar – something that immediately grabs
you, a constantly startling adventure in music, twists and turns and
revelations at every corner. This is not that album. That first listen was a surprise.
No, I’ll be more honest: it was a disappointment. But that’s the problem with
the expectations we build up, isn’t it? That’s why so many critics level that
utterly redundant opinion “I would have preferred it if it was a bit more like…,”
the correct response to which is “Well, it isn’t, so suck it up and take it on
its own terms, you solipsistic imbecile.”
So, having washed my expectations
away, I went back to it and I must say I liked it a good deal better, which was
exciting and pleasing and something of a relief because I’m a cultural coward
and I’d hate to be seen as a dunce who can’t appreciate A Classic. The third
time I put it on, I was truly looking forward to being in its company again,
but as the record turned… nothing. It just didn’t take. To be absolutely
straight with you, I got a bit bored.
I hope that we can still be friends.
Marvin starts out asking What’s Going On and neither having received a
satisfactory answer nor being the kind of fellow to let a thing go, he investigates
further with a song called What’s Happening, Brother. Actually, there’s no
question mark, so it’s difficult to tell whether he’s just reframed his
original question or is now providing the answer to it. My guess is that it’s a
supplementary enquiry related to the first one since it starts with exactly the same musical sequence the last
song finished with. Because what seems to happen after the belting opener
is that Marvin noodles around for fifteen minutes or so asking vague questions
over music that doesn’t seem to change pace or go anywhere different to any
great degree, making breaks at arbitrary moments when he’s thought of another
question. I find the meandering makes it hard to get hold of anything.
Flyin’
High (In The Friendly Sky) and Save The Children together sound like an
extended improv looking for a hook, which is occasionally glimpsed before we
lose all sight of it again. It’s like variations on a theme without an actual,
you know, theme. I liked God Is Love and Mercy, Mercy Me (The Ecology) better.
They seemed to have more of a shape. The latter even surviving the addition of
a saxophone, an instrument which when blown with any vigour rarely doesn’t
sound like a pig trapped in a barrel. And Inner City Blues is simply great. It
has more purpose than anything since the title track, marching forward on the
hookiest of hooks. It’s simpler at its core than a lot of the other tracks and
perhaps that’s why I like it. Maybe here’s the focus I’ve been sub-consciously
looking for; the song seems to develop, rather than wander.
I hope that we can still be friends.
I hesitate to say this, but there just don’t seem to be as many ideas
here as there are songs. STOP! NO! LISTEN! I’m aware that I’m hearing it
forty-five years after the event and that in fact any of the extraordinary,
ground-breaking musical things he may well have done here will have been so
appropriated and re-used over the time since that it’s impossible for me to see
them clearly from my vantage point. I know someone who hates Monty Python
because before he saw any of their work he’d seen a million thudding sixth-form
acolytes attempt to synthesise their genius, their turns of phrase. So by the
time he got to Python itself, it was ruined for him.
That could well be
happening with me and this album because, oh look, here are the strings I find
so cheesy and awful in disco and here’s the jazz flute that I’ve hated since
1970s Italian kids cartoon Mr. Rossi and
the sound of Right On has been parodied so often in Blaxploitation/cop spoofs
that its hard to take it seriously, but
maybe I’m just looking the wrong way up the tube. Even so, it’s the only way I
can look.
I hope that we can still be friends.
I also know that this album is supposed to be an explosive political
statement and so I’m chary of not liking it for reasons of cultural sensitivity
and – more importantly – the aforementioned cowardice. Yet, the songs are so
frustratingly vague. He starts with
the general thesis that there’s something going on and then goes on to specify only
that some of the things that are going on are going on with drugs and other things
that are going on are going on with children.
Following that is a quick side bar in which he’s keen to point out that
none of it is God’s fault before he’s right back to it, noting that something’s
also going on with “The Ecology.” He’s really no more specific about the
problems than this. I have started to suspect that if I were to buy the deluxe reissue
of this album, I’d find tracks that didn’t make the original cut called
‘Seriously Mate, Right?’ and ‘Cuh. Life, Eh?’ His obvious sincerity is not in
any doubt and I’m certain that at the time it was released this was something
quite extraordinary, but I want my explosive political statements to be all
fire and revolution and lyrical petrol in a musical bottle, Marvin, get out of
second gear! But yet again, I’m falling into the idiot’s trap of measuring this
thing by my own expectations, so let’s take the lyrics on their own terms.
Here’s a segment of Save The Children:
“Oh what a shame, such a bad way to live
All who is to blame, we can’t stop livin’
Live, live for life
But let live everybody
Live life for the children
Oh, for the children
You see, let’s save the children
Let’s save all the children
Save the babies, save the babies.”
I mean, I can’t say I disagree with him. In fact I loudly applaud the
whole notion, but it just doesn’t come as any great revelation, you know, the
idea that we should really try to
save the babies. To be brutally plain, you could absolutely take those lines
and alternate them between two old men nursing Guinness at a bar, drunkenly
agreeing with each other over and over.
ARTHUR: Live life for the children.
PETEY: Oh, for the children.
ARTHUR: You see, let’s save the children.
PETEY: Let’s save all the children.
ARTHUR: Save the babies.
PETEY: Save the babies. Have you any Scampi Fries back there, love?
I confess I’m being slightly harsh to hammer the point, but as great
statements go it does all feel a bit undercooked.
I hope that we can still be friends.
But look, I don’t like not liking this album since it’s so important to
so many people I know (+ cowardice etc. etc.) I’m comforted by the fact that a
friend of mine who is an enormously knowledgeable classical music buff took
until he was in his 50s to get his head round Mozart; maybe I just haven’t
found the key that unlocks What’s Going
On yet. So let’s focus on the positive: I did really enjoy it the second
time I heard it and if you incorporate the fact that I adore the title track and
Inner City Blues is fabulous, then I enjoyed it at least 60% of the time I was
listening to it. Which also means that I very well might enjoy it again. The
best things grow on you, don’t they? Apart from athlete’s foot – that one’s the
exception. So that’s what I’m taking from this: an acquaintance that if worked
at might one day become a firm friendship.
I really do hope that we can still be friends.
Would
you listen to it again?
I definitely will. Late at night with whisky next, I think. But I won’t listen to it as A Classic, just some
music. See what happens if I come at it from that angle. See if it can breathe
a bit more out from under the weight of everyone telling me how good it is.
A
mark out of 10?
I
enjoyed 60% of my listening, so 6. For now.
RAM
Rating – 8
Guest
Rating – 6
Overall
– 7
So that was Week 63 and that was Chris Addison. Turns out he’d
never listened to What’s Going On
before because the man who listened to the Man from Delmonte said no. So we
made him listen to it, and he sort of liked and he sort of didn’t. More
important than all of that though, he nearly made me sick by pairing Scampi
Fries with Guinness. Everyone knows it should be Mini Cheddars.
Next week, the MP Shabana Mahmood listens to something from 1979
for the first time.
In the meantime, here’s What’s Going On from, er, What’s Going On.
Labour MP for Birmingham Ladywood; born and
bred Brummie, practising Muslim, cooker of Kashmiri cuisine, weight training
addict, recovering Netflix-holic and lover of all things Marvel.
Shabana’s Top 3 albums ever?
Oh the
pressure of a List. With the words Top and Ever. After (too) much deliberation,
a fair amount of stress, and feelings of guilt and disloyalty that are totally
unbecoming for a 35 year-old adult, I finally settled on:
A Northern Soul – The Verve
50 Greatest Hits - Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
Everything Must Go – Manic Street Preachers
What great album has she never heard before?
Setting Sons by The Jam
Released in 1979
Before we get to Shabana, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s
Album Club thinks of Setting Sons
“Hello Richard”
“Oh, hiya Martin, you alright?”
“Yeah, great thanks. What you up to?”
“I’ve just got a new job haven’t I”
“I don’t know, have you?”
“Yeah, I’m working on that Large Hadron Collider aren’t I”
“I don’t know, are you?”
“Yeah, I start on Monday.”
“Oh aye, what’s all that about then?
"Well, basically we fire a load of particles together.”
“What for?”
“So we can try and understand more about the basic laws governing the
interactions and forces among the elementary objects, the deep structure of
space and time, and in particular the interrelation between quantum mechanics
and relatively"
"Bloody hell.”
“Anyway, what you up to?”
“I’m writing an article that will try and reclaim Paul Weller from his
haircut and convince people that he used to be really cool.”
“Fucking hell mate, good luck with that.”
All
right, everyone.
It’s
The Jam this week so I thought I’d take a leaf out of their book and just crack
on with it.
Here’s my 11 reasons why The Jam are one of the best bands ever.
1) Accidents
will happen.
In
the mid ‘70s, The Jam were a terrible band that wore black shirts, black and
white brogues, and huge white kipper ties. Basically, imagine a version of Bugsy Malone that’s set in Woking and everyone sings Small Faces’
songs instead of that one about wanting to be a boxer.
This
is how they originally lined up -
Steve
Brookes - Guitar
Bruce
Foxton - Guitar
Rick
Buckler - Drums
And playing
a Hofner bass, just like his hero, was a 17 year old Paul McCartney fanatic
called John Weller. In fact, he idolised McCartney so much that he called
himself Paul.
Anyway,
one day there was a big fight in the back of the van and Bruce Foxton sat on
Weller’s bass and snapped the neck in two. Weller responded by saying
"right, you can play bass now, I’m on guitar.”
Shortly
after, he bought a Rickenbacker 330, a copy of The Who’s My Generation, and off
they went.
That’s
right everyone. Paul Weller’s entire career comes down to a fight in the back
of a van because someone sat on his bass.
As pivotal moments in rock history go, it’s probably my favourite.
Oh
yeah, they got rid of that Steve Brookes fella too and, crucially, stopped
wearing kipper ties.
2) Off they
went.
After
gate-crashing the London Punk scene, The Jam released their first album, In the City, in May 1977.
Over
the next 4 years and 10 months, the band released 6 studio albums of which 3
are brilliant (All Mod Cons, Setting
Sons, Sound Affects), 2 are very good (In
the City and The Gift) and 1 is
just good (This is the Modern World).
To
make this even more impressive, they also released 19 hit singles - 9 of which
they couldn’t even be bothered to put on the albums.
So
yeah, the complete discography takes place in less than 5 years and sees them
dabble with Punk, Mod, New Wave, and Soul in the process.
The
secret to this?
Well,
other than an incredibly pushy record company, they treated the band as if it
was a job - they worked 10-6 in the studio so Weller could get home to watch
Coronation Street, and they had a Christmas party every year.
The Jam
- what a great place to work.
3) When you’re
young.
Paul
Weller was only 23 when The Jam recorded their final album. If you really think
about that, about everything The Jam did, that’s mad to have that ticked off at
such a young age.
The
only other band I can think of that broke up at such a young age were Bros and
they don’t count because they wrote the following lyric -
“I read Karl Marx and
taught myself to dance.”
4) A forensic
analysis of Down in the Tube Station at Midnight.
I’ll
be honest, this is one of the most ridiculous songs I’ve ever heard and it
actually keeps me up at night.
The
story is basically this - Paul Weller is in a tube station at midnight when a
couple of dodgy fellas approach him and ask him if he has any money.
Weller
replies -
“I’ve a little money and
a take-away curry, I’m on my way home to the wife.
She’ll be lining up the
cutlery, you know she’s expecting me,
Polishing the glasses and
pulling out the cork.”
Firstly,
if someone approaches you late at night and asks if you have any money, the answer
is always “No mate.”
Secondly,
what’s going on in the Weller household?
Why does the poor Mrs Weller have to
stay up till past Midnight before she can have her meal? It’s not really fair,
and if I’m being honest, I’ve spent the best part of 37 years feeling sorry for
her and hoping that she finds someone else - someone who lets her eat her tea earlier in the evening.
And
why is she opening a bottle of wine? And setting the table? For a curry?
I
could understand all of this if the song was called “Down in the Tube
Station at about 7pm” but it isn’t.
Anyway,
back to the story..
The
two fellas proceed to mug the witless Weller before leaving him beaten on the floor. As he lies there, no doubt regretting
his entire approach to this incident, he says -
“I’m down in the tube station
at midnight. The wine will be flat and the curry’s gone cold.”
Paul,
I hate to break this to you mate, but WINE IS FLAT!
Before
anyone makes a case that Mrs Weller might have opened a bottle of Babycham, or
any other fizzy wine, let me point you to a lyric in The Jam’s Saturday’s Kids -
“Saturday’s kids work in
Tescos and Woolworths,
Wear cheap perfume 'cause
it’s all they can afford,
Go to discos, they drink
BABYCHAM”
There
you go, Paul Weller is quite capable of specifying Babycham if he wants to.
Notwithstanding
all of this, “Tube Station” is a brilliant song, and the one that
gave their career a kick start after being written off as “punk
has-beens.”
What’s really remarkable, though, is that it nearly didn’t happen.
By
all accounts Weller had thrown the handwritten lyrics in the bin where they
were found by their producer - Vic Coppersmith Heaven. It was Heaven who then
convinced the band to record it.
“But
Vic, it doesn’t make any sense. The whole wife thing, it’s crazy. And the time
contradiction too. Basically, I’ve set a scene in the house that’s definitely
early evening but the scene in the tube station is at midnight. Oh, and it IS
Babycham that she’s opened. Me and the wife, we love a bit of Babycham with our curry but I
couldn’t get the lyrics to scan because it has too many syllables. So I used "wine”
instead, even though I know wine is obviously flat. That’s why the song doesn’t
really work and I threw it in the bin.“
"Don’t
worry Paul, no one will pick up on that.”
“Ok,
let’s record it tomorrow. Coronation Street starts in an hour.”
5) I’m so bored
of the U.S.A.
In
1980 The Jam were on tour in America when their label phoned them with the news
that Going Underground had entered
the charts at number one.
They
immediately cancelled the rest of the tour, flew back to England,
and appeared on Top of the Pops where Paul Weller wore an apron.
I
don’t know what other evidence you’d need to convince you that, along with
Robert De Niro and Bjorn Borg, Paul Weller was the coolest man on the planet
between 1980 and 1982.
6) Rick
Buckler’s Autobiography.
I’d
always assumed that Rick Buckler, the drummer in The Jam, was a no-nonsense
sort of fella – a bit like Terry in Minder.
Then
I read his autobiography and discovered that he’s actually more like Alan
Bennett.
Consider
this paragraph -
“My dad was a postman
and, along with a lot of others from his generation, smoked cigarettes. Smoking
was the norm and he would get into trouble when he lit up in the sorting
office. Postmen weren’t allowed to do that in case they set fire to the mail,
but he was always sneaking a fag here and there though. Players Number Six was
his brand of choice and they came with coupons that could be saved up and
eventually swapped for something, like a new teapot.”
I
didn’t think anything could happen that could increase my love for The Jam, but
imagining Rick Buckler as a frustrated Alan Bennett made me like them even
more.
I
also imagined Alan Bennett trying to play the drums on Funeral Pyre but, to be
honest, that didn’t really work.
7) I don’t even
like Mods.
That’s
an understatement actually, I hate mods. There’s no excuse for that haircut and
anyone that does their top button up without wearing a tie is obviously mad.
I
wish they’d all just have a day off, by which I DON’T mean have a day off and go to
the seaside with your other mod mates and do mod stuff. I literally mean - have
a day off.
Every
time I see a mod in the 21st Century I think about a TV show that I
haven’t written yet called Brit Pops.
“So
what’s the idea behind Brit Pops
then?”
“Well,
it’s about those mods who persist with that haircut whilst struggling with the
responsibility of fatherhood. In the first episode, two of the dads meet at the
school gates to discuss how many mirrors on a scooter constitutes "too
many mirrors”. They’re so absorbed in their conversation that their
children get kidnapped and the dads end up having to sell their original
pressing of Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake to
pay the ransom.“
"Is
it a comedy?”
“Not
really.”
Look
I get it, every generation watches Quadrophenia
and thinks it might be a good idea to be a mod. And don’t get me wrong, I LOVE Quadrophenia - I used to have it on VHS
and watch it all the time.
But
I also loved The Blues Brothers and you don’t see me driving around in an old
police car ordering four fried chickens and a coke every 5 minutes do you?
No,
you don’t.
So,
look, it’s testament to how brilliant The Jam are that I can get past the mod
thing.
8) Guitar Hero.
Bruce
Foxton wrote an average song called News
of the World and then Paul Weller decided to make it brilliant by adding a
great solo.
Off
the top of my head, the only other solo that he does in The Jam is the one on Start. I imagine his thought process
there was –
“Everyone’s
going to say I took the chords from Taxman
so, just to shut them up, I’m going to show Paul McCartney how he should have
done the solo.”
Paul
Weller’s guitar style then – helping out his mates and starting fights with The
Beatles.
Often
these “bonus endings” were entirely different from the rest of the song but
always brilliant. See Smithers Jones,
Strange Town, When You’re Young and, best of all, Little Boy Soldiers.
Paul
Weller has continued the “bonus ending” theme in his solo career too, but with
a slight variation –i.e. it’s a bonus when any of his songs end.
Fair
play to him.
10) The Video
for “The Bitterest Pill.”
Possibly
the strangest 4 minutes of film I’ve ever seen. From what I can work out, Paul
Weller has broken up with his partner and she decides to go out with the other
two members of the band – probably because they’ll let her eat before midnight.
At
one point, Paul Weller looks through a window and sees his lost love having a
great time in front of the fire with Bruce Foxton and Rick Buckler.
You
can see why The Jam broke up shortly afterwards.
11) The Break
Up.
The
second best decision Paul Weller ever made was to break up The Jam at their
absolute peak. Their last single, Beat
Surrender, had entered at number one and, having sold out 5 nights at
Wembley Arena, they had to plead with the promoter to stop adding any more.
And
his reasons were impeccable – he didn’t want to damage the legacy, to drag it
out and become a middle aged man singing songs that were written by an angry
young man. He wanted to create a time capsule, a body of work that was preserved
forever and would never fade.
The
best decision he ever made, the one he makes every single day, is to never reform
The Jam and ruin that.
Bonus ending
“Hello Richard.”
“Oh hiya Martin, you alright?”
“Yeah, good thanks. How’s
that job at the Large Hadron Collider going?”
“It’s mad you know. Sometimes
I have to marvel at the scope of what we’re trying to achieve, y’know, trying
to recreate the circumstances of the big bang and all that.”
“It does sound mad.”
“One of the fellas there has
this theory that we’re all in a Large Hadron Collider.”
“You what?”
“Yeah, he reckons that we’re
living out a previous experiment where some other scientists had created the
big bang and our whole world is being monitored in another Large Hadron
Collider somewhere else.”
“Bloody hell. I don’t think I
can cope with this Richard. My head’s starting to hurt.”
“That’s quantum physics for
you Martin. Anyway, how did that Paul Weller article go?
“Alright. I did this
whole bit about “Down in the Tube Station at Midnight.””
“I LOVE that song. It’s was mine and Julie’s first dance when we got married.”
“Your first dance was “Down
in the Tube Station at Midnight?””
“Yeah. We met in Tottenham
Court Road tube station, at around midnight, and there aren’t many songs that
cover that. It just seemed appropriate and we both really love the song. We listen
to it all the time and it reminds us of when we first met and, of course, our
wedding.”
“Oh.”
“Anyway, what did you say
about it?”
“Not much. I just pointed out
the internal contradiction within the heart of the song - namely the time
inconsistency between the two places, the issue with the wine, and the fact
that it makes no sense whatsoever. But then you probably knew all that anyway.”
“Richard? You knew all that
right?”
“Richard?”
Martin Fitzgerald
(@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Setting Sons
Smash
Hits gave it 9/10 and that’s all you need to know.
So, over
to you Shabana. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH
YOU?????
Well I really wish I could lay claim to some
irrational prejudice against The Jam
in order to answer your question but I don’t have one. I had definitely heard
of them, because there seemed to be a time (during my peak Oasis obsession) where you couldn’t read a Noel Gallagher interview
without him talking about how much he loves Paul Weller.
I wonder if he still does that?
I definitely remember being reliably informed, I
believe by Heat magazine, that the whole mod thing was a thing. But me actually
listen to their music? It just never happened.
And the reasons for that? Well it’s a bit
complicated.
“English” or “Western” Music did not feature much in
my house when I was growing up. Both my parents are first generation immigrants
who came to this country from Pakistan - my Dad in the 60s and my mum in the
late 70s. The soundtrack to my early childhood therefore has a very deep “sub-continent”
flavour; qawwaali, naaths and ghazals. Lots of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
(hence his inclusion in my top three ever list). I absolutely loved this music
even though most of the time I hadn’t a clue what was actually being said because
a) I am appalling with music lyrics which I often get wrong and b) I didn’t
learn Urdu or Punjabi until my very late teens.
So for a long time I just didn’t have other music on
my radar. But part way through secondary school, when I was about thirteen I
knew this had to change. My “major swot” status, which I secretly revelled in, already
made me massively uncool. Retaining “total music loser” on my charge sheet didn’t
seem very smart as it was something I could actually change. And so it came to
pass that my first proper and concerted foray into non-Asian music, at the
tender age of about 13, was East 17.
I fully realise this probably puts me firmly back
into the “total music loser” box, perhaps forever, but in my defence it was
what my friends were in to, and though this is a very low bar, they were much
cooler than me. And my deeply religious, strict parents definitely didn’t
approve. And I, their deeply religious, strict daughter also didn’t entirely
approve so that had to be a win, right? And East
17 were way better than the pretty boys of Take That. Even I knew that.
After that, most of of the music I got in to was
through my friends, and all the staples of the 90s and Noughties featured – Oasis, Radiohead, Nirvana, Manics, Kings of
Leon, The White Stripes, Eminem, (even Coldplay,
for mention of which I sincerely apologise) interspersed with the pop music
which we all publicly derided but secretly loved (Britney, Sugababes, Backstreet Boys, Kylie).
There were some random obsessions too along the way
which I seemed to have conjured up all by myself for which I blame MTV (does
MTV still exist?) - Linkin Park and Staind to name but two. I have no idea
how these happened and they are not things I actually admitted to at the time.
But my abiding obsession is the first proper band I discovered for myself and
not through someone else - The Verve.
And being a tech-know-nothing I seem to have
bypassed most of the turning points in the way in which music is consumed. I
have gone from cassettes to CDs straight to injecting Spotify directly into my
bloodstream with nothing in between. The only constant is Heart FM, which
basically means I have spent 20 years listening to Careless Whisper on repeat.
So in a nutshell I haven’t listened to The Jam before (not just Setting Sons, but no Jam at all, ever) because I got in to (non-Asian)
music quite late (its my parents’ fault), none of my friends ever suggested
them to me (its all their fault), I didn’t discover them for myself in that
haphazard and random way in which people like me come across new/old music,
Heart FM never seem to have them on, the Spotify algorithm obviously doesn’t
think I would like them and they’re not The
Verve.
And lastly, because this album was released in 1979
and I was born in 1980. I’m just not that good with music from before my time. Even
the stuff I have heard of and listened to I usually don’t like or get. I am
afraid this includes some biggies like The
Beatles. And The Rolling Stones.
So I approach this task with some trepidation,
especially given the fervour with which fans of The Jam have been filling up my twitter timeline, and cause these
days I am a politician and seeking approval is a thing, indeed a professional
requirement in this line of work…
You’ve
now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
It’s a bit complicated.
The first listen was awful. I
barely understood most of the lyrics. I told you I am appalling with music
lyrics. And before anyone wisecracks about me needing to refer myself to one of
David Cameron’s English classes for Muslim women, let me assure you English is
my first and only fluently spoken language. And there really isn’t anything
wrong with my hearing, I’ve had it checked. I’m just bad with music lyrics. So
part way through the first listen I am barely understanding it and feeling all
defensive. But without getting all of the words, the music on its own was not
enough to hold my attention which wondered straight to “why do people think
this is A Classic?” “what degree of
music loser does this make me?” and a fervent prayer that none of The Jam fans reading this live in my
constituency.
And the brutal truth dear reader
is this: if I wasn’t listening to this album for the purposes of this blog, I
would have gone straight back to my current Spotify list of Florence + The Machine and the soundtrack to Rocky IV.
But the listen to it three times
rule is a good one. So for my second listen I armed myself with the lyrics and
gave it another go. The slight downside of this though was that knowing I had
to listen to the music, read the flipping lyrics and write this, meant that by this time the whole experience felt
like my weekly essay crisis at uni minus the 2am trip to Hassan’s kebab van to
buy chips.
So, still not enjoyable.
It took me another five listens
before I had enough familiarity to start to work out what I think. And I still
don’t understand why it’s A Classic.
Its too confusing to be A Classic
surely?? Girl on the Phone and Heatwave are both incongruous and feel
out of place. That they are placed at the beginning and end of the album just
messed with my head. I know every song doesn’t have to “fit” for an album to
make sense and hang together but these two songs feel out of step in a way that
doesn’t sound like its deliberate. Or if it is I’m afraid I just don’t get it.
And Girl on the Phone is a stalker
song which might have been ok in 1979 but feels a bit creepy in 2016.
I thought the songs about
friendship (Thick as Thieves, Burning Sky)
were ok, sort of sad but not memorable.
The bit of the album that
reflects on ordinary lives (Private Hell,
Wasteland, Smithers-Jones, Saturday’s Kids) with its critique of society,
and honesty about boredom and despair was good but in my world that’s what the Manics are for. I realise that middle
aged men and women who love The Jam reading
this will be thinking something along the lines of “bloody kids these days know
nothing” but there you have it. If I’m looking for leftist politics and culture
in my music its James Dean Bradfield not Paul Weller for me.
But I did love The Eton Rifles. I thought it was powerful,
I got it straight away. There was no need to check the lyrics, not because I
could make them all out (I couldn’t but he definitely mumbles some of them I’m
sure) but because I didn’t need to in order to get the song. It was just ace, A Classic even. I sincerely hope I
don’t now discover that this is the one song on this album considered Not A Classic.
But on its own is it enough to
carry the whole album? As good as I think it is, the answer is no.
Would you listen to
it again?
I’d listen to The Eton Rifles, but probably not the
rest of it.
A mark out of
10?
The Eton Rifles – 10/10
The album as a whole – 4/10
RAM
Rating – 9.5/10
Guest
Rating – 4/10
Overall –
6.75/10
So that was Week 64 and that was
Shabana Mahmood. Turns out she’d never listened to Setting Sons before because
she was listening to someone called Nusrat
Fateh Ali Khan who hadan album
called 50 Greatest Hits. I’ve never heard of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan but anyonewho has had 50 Greatest Hits is alright with me. Anyway, we made her listen
to Setting Sons and she really liked Eton Rifles.
Next week, Geoff Lloyd from
Absolute Radio listens to something from 2012 for the first time.
In the
meantime, here’s Little Boy Soldiers from Setting Sons. Watch out for the bonus ending.
I host a radio show with my friend Annabel Port at
6pm, weekdays on Absolute Radio. I never know how to describe it, but the Radio
Times once called it ‘near hip’. Annabel and I witter on with ourselves, and there
are interviews with comedians, writers, musicians, scientists and so on. It’s a
podcast, too.
I also host Beatles
Brunch on Absolute Radio 60s – two hours of Beatle music, Sunday mornings
from 10am.
Geoff’s Top 3 albums ever
(With the
caveat that this top three is non binding)
The Beatles -
Abbey Road
Aztec Camera
- High Land, Hard Rain
Billy Bragg –
Workers Playtime
What great
album has he never heard before?
Good Kid Maad
City by Kendrick Lamar
Released in
2012
Before we get to Geoff, here’s what
Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of Good Kid Maad City
All right, everyone.
When we booked Geoff Lloyd as a guest, we’d just come off
the back of editions about Led Zeppelin, Neil Young, and The Beach Boys.
Knowing that we also had Meatloaf and Genesis to come, I was worried that we might
start to get a reputation and people would start knocking on our door.
“Er, is this
the right place?”
“For
what?”
“You know. To
discuss Curved Air. I’ve brought the entire discography with me.”
“No.”
“Are you
sure?”
“I’ve never
been more sure of anything in my life.”
“This is Ruth
and Martin’s Album Club isn’t it?”
“Yes.”
“Well, look. If you’re only going to feature old albums then occasionally you’re going to
get fellas like me knocking at the door wanting to discuss Curved Air.”
“But last year we did Taylor Swift and Sun Kil Moon?”
“Did you? Well
I only started following in January and the most recent album you’ve done this
year is from 1993.”
“The worst
year in the history of music.”
“Pardon?”
“Never mind.
Look the thing is, I have nothing against modern music, it’s just that the
intros are easier to write for the older albums.”
“Hmmm”
“It’s true.
You can say what you want about Genesis, and trust me I have, but it’s easier
to write 2000 words on them than it is about FKA Twigs. I’ve got a full time
job you know. I need to make this as easy for me as possible.”
“Look, can I come in and discuss Curved Air or not?“
"No.”
“How about
Frumpy?”
“Who?”
“Frumpy.
They’re a German prog rock band. I’ve brought some of their albums too.”
“Definitely
not.”
“Suit
yourself.”
With awkward conversations like this on my mind, I
decided to limit Geoff’s choice to some of my favourite albums that have been
released since 2012 - minus FKA Twigs of course.
This is what we offered him, along with some potential
ideas that I had for the intro -
Killer Mike - Rap Music
There’s a song on this album called Reagan which is probably my favourite protest song from the last 10
years. The best bit is a sample of one of Reagan’s speeches on the
Iran/Contra affair where he actually says the following -
“A few months
ago I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. My heart and
my best intentions still tell me that’s true, but the facts and the evidence
tell me that it’s not.”
That sentence is easily the maddest thing an American
president has ever said and I could have spent at least 70% of my intro talking about that.
Cloud Nothings - Here and Nowhere Else.
I’m a huge fan of their drummer and, when I listen to this album, I often think he
would win that Omelette Challenge on Saturday Kitchen.
For those of you unfamilair with the concept, the Omelette Challenge is a thing where professional
chefs race each other at making an omelette. It includes lots of vigorous
stirring, hence being ideally suited to a drummer with incredibly fast hands.
This led me to think of an Omelette Challenge that
exclusively involved musicians and I concluded that, with a shadow of a doubt,
Leonard Cohen would come last.
This could have been my best intro yet.
Father John Misty - I love you, Honeybear.
This album really reminds me of early Elton
John and I LOVE early Elton John.
The repeat chorus in Rocket Man is amazing,
Bennie and the Jets is the best name for a band ever, and wouldn’t it have been
amazing if he actually sang Crocodile
Rock at Diana’s funeral instead of that dreary re-write of Candle in the
Wind. Imagine that - funny glasses, outlandish costume, and a full band joining
in -
“I remember
when rock was young,
Me and Susie had so
much fun.”
That would have got the assorted dignitaries dancing and,
let’s be honest, it’s what she would have wanted.
It then occurred to me that I should probably just get
someone to do an Elton John album one day so I could expand on this.
Sufjan Stevens - Carrie and Lowell.
No idea why I included this. There are literally no
jokes.
Kendrick Lamar - Good Kid Maad City
And here we are - the album that Geoff picked.
So, let’s begin.
1) The Good Kid.
Kendrick Lamar was born and raised in Compton.
Once asked about his childhood, he said,
“I’m 6 years
old, seein’ my uncles playing with shotguns, sellin’ dope in front of the
apartment. My moms and pops never said nothing, ‘cause they were young and living wild too.”
When he was 9 years old it got even worse - after
finishing his cereal one morning he ventured on to the streets of Compton only
to see someone get their head blown off.
I know, maybe Sufjan Stevens wouldn’t have been so bad after all.
Fortunately, for the sake of this story as much as
anything, something happens that doesn’t involve anyone getting shot - his father
took him to the Compton Swap Meet to watch Dr Dre and Tupac film the video for California Love.
Hundreds of people turned out to watch the homecoming of
the two heroes and a star struck crowd greeted them accordingly. The young
Kendrick Lamar witnessed the whole thing, perched on his dad’s shoulders and
later said -
"I knew then,
consciously or subconsciously, that this is what I wanted.”
It’s also around this time that Lamar begins a process of
meditation that he’ll continue for the rest of his life. Every morning, for 10
minutes, he would stare at himself in the mirror to try and discover his true
self.
When I read about this, I thought I would try it myself.
So I went into the bathroom and started to
look at myself in the mirror. At first it just seemed weird but then after a while
I could feel something happening, that I was being taken off somewhere and
losing all sense of my surroundings. Then after about 6 minutes my partner
knocked on the door because she needed a shit.
It sorted of ruined the whole thing to be honest.
2) The Mad City.
As a teenager, Lamar gravitated towards the Compton street
life and became involved in gangs, drugs, and shootings.
Like any teenager, he tried his best to fit in with his peer group - it’s just that they were either in gangs or in jail.
What set Lamar apart, though, and sent him on a different
path, were two parents that encouraged him to do better – that
relentlessly warned him against repeating their mistakes. He worked hard in
school, becoming a straight ‘A’ student, and, when he wasn’t studying, he
devoted himself to music - perfecting his lyrics and performing in a series of
rap battles in the neighbourhood.
Everyone rated him, they knew it straight away, and
when he recorded his first mixtape, he knew it too.
“The first
time I heard my voice play through the speakers I was addicted. That was it.”
I love that. Most people recoil when they hear themselves
for the first time. Not Kendrick Lamar, though - he literally loved the sound of
his own voice.
3) The Education.
At the age of 16, Kendrick Lamar was signed by Top Dawg -
an independent record label working out of Compton.
What follows though is one of the longest apprenticeships
ever. He spends the next seven years working in studios and learning the art of
production. Seven years! And all he really has to show for it is a hook here, a
guest verse there, and 6 mix tapes that he releases under the name of K Dot.
Still, all the time he’s learning – figuring out his
sound and delivery.
His problem, which he ultimately recognises, is that he’s
too susceptible - he’s too influenced by the legends of Gangsta Rap and swayed
by everyone’s advice on how he should sound. Tired of it all, and bored of
going nowhere, he does something brilliant - he changes his name back to
Kendrick Lamar and decides to do it his
way.
4) What a great
bloke.
He releases his first EP and it has 17 songs on it!
People in the industry were confused by such an obvious
breach of convention and questioned what he was doing.
He didn’t care though,
"I don’t give
a fuck”, he said. “Play it and call it whatever.”
See, I told you he didn’t care.
He was beginning to gain confidence in his own
identity and stand out from the crowd. You can see the transformation in any of
the videos filmed around Compton at this time. Whilst his friends are pranking
and excitable, fluttering all over the place, he’s perfectly still and assured.
He quickly followed his 17 song EP with his first
official album - Section 80. It would go on to sell 100,000 copies in the first
few months, a decent performance for an independent artist, and it earnt recognition from the wider Hip Hop community. In 2011, he’s invited to
perform at a concert with Dr Dre, Snoop Dogg, and The Game, where they anoint
him as “The New King of West Coast Hip Hop.”
He broke down in tears on stage and would later say, "That’s the moment I realised I made
it.”
Under Dr Dre’s wing, Lamar starts work on his
second album in 2012 - Good Kid Maad
City.
What he does is remarkable - he reverts back to an album
that he’s had in his head for years - the cover, the idea, the story - it was
all premeditated and a long time coming. It was the prequel to everything that’s happened since - the story of his
own life, told through a series of events that take place over a single day in
2004.
Everything’s there - the family, the neighbourhood, the
peer pressure to succumb when, instead, you want to achieve. It’s a story that,
on the one hand, is resolutely set on the streets of Compton but, on the other,
is told from a new perspective - the good kid that wants the permanent happy
ending rather than the short lived honour.
That’s what I love most about Kendrick Lamar - he went
backwards to tell his own story and, in the process, gave himself a future.
Rather than being anchored within his environment, and the traditions of
Gangsta Rap, he created something that transcended both.
He gave himself the freedom to move, and the opportunity
to become a superstar.
What a great bloke.
A week later.
“Er, is this
the right place?”
“For
what?”
“You know, to
discuss Kendrick Lamar.”
"Do I know
you?”
“Er, no.”
“You sure we
haven’t met before?”
“Er, no”
“Why are you
wearing sunglasses? Why are you wearing a brand new baseball cap?”
“I can wear
what I want mate. Look, can I come in or not?”
“I’m not sure.
Let me look at those records you’re holding.”
“Here you
go.”
“Right, let’s
see what you’ve got. Run the Jewels 2, To Pimp a Butterfly by
Kendrick Lamar, Rap Music by Killer Mike, Old by Danny Brown. Ok this is all good. Maybe I’ll let
you in and we’ll become best mates. Hang on though, what’s this?”
“What’s
what?”
“There’s an
album here that’s tucked inside one of the others. As if someone’s trying to
hide it!”
"Oh.”
“The Best of
Frumpy!”
“Shit.”
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on Good Kid Maad City
Pitchfork rated it 9.5 out of 10 and the best album of 2012
Vibe rated it the 19th best album on its “50 greatest albums
since 1993” list
So, over to you Geoff.
Why haven’t you listened to
it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
I’m at pains
to point out it’s not because I’m anti hip-hop.
If that
sounds overly- defensive, it’s because I’ve spent the best part of two decades
working at a radio station which has occasionally embarrassed itself by claiming
to play only ‘real music’ (defined as The Stereophonics, Razorlight and
everything in between.) At one particularly low point, they made jingles that
said “All rap is crap” and featured a sound effect of Ms Dynamite exploding. I
don’t subscribe to this: I’m always delighted when a rapper headlines
Glastonbury – not out of any particular desire to buy a ticket, but because of
how much it enrages a certain type of narrow-minded, Shine compilation indie-music fan.
All that
being said, I can’t remember the last time I listened to a hip-hop album. It’s
a very underrepresented genre in my collection, and most of what I have is
almost thirty years old – 3 Feet High and
Rising, It Takes a Nation of Millions,
Paid in Full etc. Clearly, I stalled at some stage. A similar thing happened to me
with swimming – after a few weeks of lessons, I got a perforated eardrum and
wasn’t allowed in the water for months. I only ever mastered the breaststroke,
but I keep telling myself I’ll get back to learning one day, possibly in
retirement. I’ve resigned myself to the same policy on hip-hop.
By the
mid-nineties, I was already falling behind. My go-to type of music is fey,
jangly pop, and it was a boom time for that subset of music fans who also enjoy
bookshops, stationery, and cardigans. My head was full of Belle and Sebastian,
Pulp, Saint Etienne, Divine Comedy etc. My friend Chris would stick hip-hop stuff he
thought I’d like under my nose, but I was losing even a vague grasp of what was
around. I finally admitted defeat around the time of that Jay-Z song which
sampled A Hard Knock Life from the Annie soundtrack. I was done for: I
couldn’t reconcile the worlds of musical theatre and rap – those weren’t things
that belonged together. People went nuts for it, and I didn’t understand. I
couldn’t keep up. I decided to set hip-hop aside, to be revisited at a later
date.
I’ve been
fairly resolute since then. A few things have trickled through - Outkast, MIA, Scroobius Pip – but even the
biggest of names have passed me by. A young person once mocked me for calling
50 Cent ’50 Cents’. I know who Kanye West is married to, and that he enjoys his
anus being interfered with, but I’ve never knowingly heard one of his records. My
most frequent exposure to modern hip-hop is seeing it performed by mostly
white, middle-class people at karaoke, and nothing about that makes me want to
dip back in.
And so to
Kendrick Lamar: I’d heard the name, but I genuinely thought he was a former Fame Academy contestant, and it would be
R&B. I’m not joking. Since I’ve now learned he’s one of the biggest and most
critically acclaimed stars of his generation, I’m deeply ashamed of this. I can
offer little by way of a defence; I rarely listen to music radio, save for a
bit of BBC 6Music here and there, and Radio 2 while I’m performing my
ablutions. Most of the new music I hear is through recommendations from friends
and social media, so I must be mixing with the wrong kind of people.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what
do you think?
I didn’t get
along with it on my first go. I listened on headphones whilst distracted –
popping to the post office, taking the bus, buying some light bulbs. The music
was the soundtrack to my errands, but I was only dipping in and out of the
lyrics; I wasn’t really hearing them in context of the songs, let alone the
whole album. I felt terribly self-conscious with ‘bitch’ this, and ‘pussy’ that
ringing in my ears as I pottered around my neighbourhood. I’ve always struggled
to circle the square of misogyny in hip-hop: I know that it’s a reflection of a
culture, but I’m squeamish when it’s so blatant. Objectification of women tends
to be insidious in most of the music/film/TV I consume, so I don’t actually
have to confront it.
The only
thing I liked on my initial listen was the track where he says that, like
Martin Luther King, he has a dream. He then goes on to explain that his dream
is that his penis will grow to the size of the Eiffel Tower, so he can fuck the
world for 72 hours. It suggested a sense of humour I wasn’t expecting. By and
large, though, I was pretty nonplussed the first time around. I tried to write
down some positives, and scribbled ‘great production!’ which boded poorly: If
you’ve got nothing nice to say, say something about the production.
I gave it
another go a couple of days later, this time at home. On the previous listen,
I’d found it on Spotify and immediately shoved my phone back into my pocket.
This time I looked at the artwork, and saw it was subtitled ‘A Short Film by
Kendrick Lamar’. Embarrassingly, only then did I realise there was a narrative
arc to the album, and it probably deserved more careful attention. This
terrified me – I associate album-as-story with stuff like Jeff Wayne’s War of the Worlds, or the work of
Meatloaf.
I read some
background on the album to give me context, and I’m so pleased that I did. I’m
the sort of person who doesn’t even like to read the labels in art galleries –
I’ve convinced myself it’s because I want to have a pure emotional reaction to
the paintings, but it’s probably more to do with laziness. Doing a bit of
homework on Kendrick was one of two things that unlocked the album for me. The
other was reading along with the lyrics while I listened. My friend Annabel has
started watching all television with subtitles, to stop her mind from drifting.
I applied the same technique to Good Kid,
M.A.A.D. City, and I was gripped.
I preferred
the tracks that adhered to the story structure. I could live without Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe (although it
has become my new catchphrase around the house), and as much as I enjoyed the
Eiffel Tower/penis dream in Backseat
Freestyle, it didn’t do much to drive the plot forward. I really liked
almost all of the rest of the album, though. I loved the way the opening track
(Sherane a.k.a. Master Splinter’s Daughter)
left me itching to know what happened next, like finishing a TV boxed set
episode and immediately having to watch the next one. Another early-ish track I
liked was The Art of Peer Pressure - I
particularly enjoyed the line ‘hotboxing like George Foreman, grilling the
masses.’
My favourite was
Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst–
it’s brilliant, character-led storytelling. In fact, that’s true of fairly much
the whole LP; it does an incredible job of applying the classic
get-your-protagonist-up-a-tree/throw-rocks-at-him/get-him-down-again formula to
an album, which is a trick I’ve never heard pulled off before. It’s properly
filmic, and although on first listen, I really didn’t like the inclusion of answerphone
messages and clips of dialogue, finding it to be a handbrake, I’ve done a
complete volte-face, and now think it’s a very smart structural device.
It’s a shame
about the last track, Compton. It’s
awfully cheesy compared with the preceding three quarters of an hour. I was
especially disappointed, because it featured Dr Dre, and I’ve heard him. It’s
like a big ensemble number at the end of a stage musical. And I enjoy musical
theatre, but as I established earlier, I strongly feel it’s something that
should be kept away from hip-hop.
I think I
really enjoyed this album. I think I’m excited to listen to the follow-up, To Pimp a Butterfly. However, a tiny
part of me wonders if I forced myself to like it, to prove I’m still
open-minded about hip-hop. There’s an episode of The Larry Sanders Show where Hank tries to demonstrate he’s still
hip and relevant by telling the Wu Tang Clan how much he enjoys their latest
album. He (of course) humiliates himself. I hope I haven’t just done the
same.
Would you listen to it again?
I intend to,
but I’ll probably keep putting it off.
A mark out of 10?
8
Ram Rating – 10
Guest Rating – 8
Overall – 9
So that was
Week 65 and that was Geoff Lloyd. Turns out he’d never listened to Good Kid
Maad City before because the musical Annie put him off Hip Hop for life. So we
made him to listen to it, and he thinks he likes it, but mostly he’s just walking
round the house saying “Bitch don’t kill my vibe” to his family.
Next week,
Hadley Freeman listens to something from 1992 for the first time. Until then,
here’s Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst
from Good Kid Maad City.
Hadley Freeman is a journalist and is mainly to be found in
The Guardian. She’s also written a couple of books, the most recent one, Life Moves Pretty Fast, is a slightly
obsessive fan letter to 80s movies. She was born in New York and now lives in London
with a sportswriter from Somerset, their 7 month old twins and a 5 year old
Norfolk terrier named Arthur.
Hadley’s
Top 3 albums ever?
Madonna, Like a Prayer
Beastie Boys, Paul’s Boutique
The Cure, Disintegration
What
great album has she never heard before?
Slanted and
Enchanted by Pavement
Released in 1992
Before
we get to Hadley, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks
of Slanted and Enchanted
All right, everyone.
I’ve got so much to say here that we’re launching right
into it - I don’t even have enough time for one of those imaginary
conversations that I like to do.
“Oh go
on.”
“No.”
Here’s my story of Pavement in 10 parts.
1) Our Hero
A fella called Joseph Campbell once wrote a book called The Hero Has a Thousand Faces. In it, he
argues that all heroes follow the same journey which is essentially this - an
innocent youth meets an older “guide” and they embark on an arduous
quest before a decisive victory is won.
He uses various ancient myths and legends to support his
case - from Jesus to that Athenian bloke who killed a Minotaur in a maze - and
it’s been argued that his work has inspired contemporary stories such as Star
Wars, Harry Potter, and The Lion King.
Anyway, here’s Pavement’s Stephen Malkmus talking about
his childhood -
“I was a
playful kid, like good champagne. I wore little Lacoste jumpsuits and went to
the beach with my grandma, who loved me. I had a good tan.”
So there you have it, the repetition of a theme - a child
being mentored by an elder.
But unlike Luke Skywalker, Harry Potter or Simba, Stephen
Malkmus was dressed in Lacoste and looked after his tan.
What a great start.
2) Stars of track and field
Whilst Malkmus was at school in Stockton, California, he
thought American sports were a complete waste of time and decided to play
Soccer instead.
This fact alone automatically makes him cooler than
virtually all other Americans.
It’s also led to me having a series of incredibly
pleasant daydreams about Stephen Malkmus playing football. I’d imagine him as an American version of Alan Hansen - elegant and graceful, a last line of
defence wearing a plaid shirt.
To satisfy my curiosity, I asked him on Twitter what
position he played.
Unbelievably, he replied,
“The guy at
the edge of the wall who ducks when the free kick comes.”
I should have known.
It was on the football pitch, though, that Malkmus would
meet another cool kid - Scott Kannberg.
3) The ridiculously easy first EP
In 1989, 14 years after they first met on a football
pitch, Malkmus and Kannberg form a band and borrow enough money to record a single.
Naturally, they decide the best place to do this is at a local studio run by an
alcoholic hippy called Gary Young.
Young describes their music as “weird guitar
noise” and asks if he can join in on drums. Malkmus and Kannberg agree,
the three of them make the whole thing up as they go along, and four hours
later they’d recorded their first EP - Slay Tracks.
Upon hearing the finished product Young said - “this
Malkmus idiot is a complete songwriting genius.”
1000 copies of the EP were produced and, before the
inevitable happens, I want you to consider one thing - imagine if Gary Young
couldn’t play drums.
4) Big in Austria
As Slay Tracks
is due to be released, Malkmus decides it might be a good idea to go travelling
around the world.
In a record shop in Austria, he hears the EP playing on
the stereo and is so shocked that he asks whether he can see it. After
confirming that it was indeed the single he recorded with his mate and some
weird hippy fella, he told the shop assistant that Pavement were his band.
He replied -
“That’s a good name, somebody had to use it.”
Malkmus phones Kannberg back in the States and tells him
that he’s just heard the single being played in Austria. Kannberg, who doesn’t
remember sending any copies to Austria, wonders what on earth is going on.
The Austrian shop assistant was correct in his assessment
by the way - Pavement is a brilliant name and, according to The National Word
Association of America, it’s one of the twenty most pleasant sounding words in the
English language.
“Serendipity” is also on that list though, and
I just want to make it clear that I would set fire to any band that had the
nerve to call themselves that.
5) Bigger in Leeds
After Austria, the Slay Tracks EP then fell into the hands
of The Wedding Present - a sort of indie pop prequel to Last of The Summer Wine.
They liked the EP so much that they covered one of the
songs, Box Elder, and this led to
generous airplay on John Peel’s radio show. Before long, people wanted to know
more about Pavement.
Who were they? Why have they got such a brilliant name?
The Wedding Present didn’t even know, they’d never met
them or even asked their permission to cover the song. It was a mystery. The
only information available was on the liner notes to the Wedding Present EP -
“Box Elder,
written by Pavement from Stockton, California.”
Again, word reaches Kannberg of the news - this time that
indie legends in the UK have covered one of their songs. He goes mad.
Who do they think they are? How dare they cover our songs
without asking us?
He then realises that the exposure might be good for the
band and calms down.
And how does Malkmus react?
No one knows because he’s still on his holidays.
6) The best story ever
Malkmus finally decides to return home.
Pavement release another couple of EPs, again with Gary
Young on drums, and then Malkmus decides on another brilliant career move - he
goes to New York to become a security guard.
Whilst in New York he moves into an apartment with Bob
Nastanovich and David Berman where they form a side project called Silver Jews.
Then this, the best story ever, actually happened -
Somehow they managed to get the home phone number for
Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon from Sonic Youth. Once or twice a week, they’d
get drunk, phone the number and record a jam on their answering machine!
Imagine that, Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon come home
from a gruelling tour, listen to their messages only to find that some
experimental art band have been playing songs down their phone for a laugh.
Again, I reached out to Twitter to satisfy my curiosity.
This time I asked Bob Nastanovich whether Sonic Youth
ever discovered the identity of the band who left all those songs on their
answering machine.
Unbelievably, he replied,
“I honestly
don’t know. Seems like Malkmus would have told Kim. They’re good friends.”
Bob Nastanovich would later go on to join Pavement and
become a massive fan of horse racing.
Wanna hear a great fact about him?
He’s the
only known American to have visited all 60 race courses in the UK. Weird that
isn’t it? If someone had told you that only one American had achieved such a
feat, I’m guessing the last person you’d think of was a fella who used to be in
Pavement.
I have two more things to say on this section.
Firstly, the former members of Pavement give great
customer service on Twitter. I’ve asked two of them questions now and they’ve
both got back to me within an hour. East Midlands Trains could really learn a
lot from this.
Secondly, I’ve already written a letter to the BBC to try
and get funding for my new sitcom - Stephen
Malkmus, Security Guard.
7) Slanted and Enchanted
During the Christmas of 1990, Malkmus stopped bothering
Sonic Youth via their answering machine and returned home to Stockton,
California.
It’s here that Pavement record their first album -
Slanted and Enchanted.
The process, if you can call it that, was just as
shambolic as the first EP. Malkmus and Kannberg would turn up at Gary Young’s
home studio at around noon and eat chicken and vegetables that had been cooked
in the fireplace. They would then work on barely rehearsed songs, often making
lyrics up on the spot, and jam until about 10pm.
When they felt they had something they could commit to
tape, Young would go into the laundry room, start the tape, and then run
barefoot back into the studio to play drums. After the song was finished, he
then ran back into the laundry room to stop the tape. As you can imagine, this
became exhausting after a while so they eventually decided to settle on the
earlier takes of each song.
10 days later Pavement have finished their first album.
Two kids who met playing football, messing about with an alcoholic who just
happened to be a brilliant drummer.
It’s one of the best albums of the ‘90s.
8) A real band
Pavement now recruit two new members – the aforementioned
Bob Nastanovich and Mark Ibold.
Mark Ibold played bass and smiled a lot, and Bob
Nastanovich was brought in as “Assistant Time Keeper” - essentially
to keep the brilliant, but erratic, Young in check.
In fact, they’re the only band I know of where one of the
members is an assistant to another one.
Yet, off they go.
The initial live shows are reminiscent of a debauched frat
party and Young, in particular, is quite the character. He couldn’t understand
why bands would hang out backstage before the gigs so, instead, he would greet
the fans at the door as if they were coming round his house.
Often he would say things to them like “May I ask you what brings you here this
evening?”
Most people just thought he was mad and ignored him, and
virtually no one believed he was in the band until they saw him on stage.
On another occasion, he made toast for the entire
audience.
“I could sit
there and play drums”, he said, “but where’s the fun in that? Don’t
you think it’s more fun to give out Cinnamon toast? I sat there for 45 minutes
at London University with a toaster and four loaves of bread and a tub of butter
and some cinnamon and I made cinnamon toast for the audience.”
At a gig in Berlin, he greeted fans at the door and gave
them a cabbage.
Like me, you’re probably reading these snippets of
Young’s behaviour and thinking he sounds brilliant. Pavement, on the other
hand, had to live with it on a daily basis and the antics, and his alcoholism,
soon wore thin.
As a result, Young and Pavement parted company.
The new drummer was a fella called Steve West. He
probably wasn’t as good a musician as Young but, on the plus side, he didn’t
greet you at the door with a vegetable.
9) The rest of their career in 190 words
They release five more albums and become one of the best
bands of the '90s - providing much needed relief from Britpop and the drummer
from M People who was absolutely everywhere.
In Range Life,
Malkmus improvised some lyrics that took the piss out of The Smashing Pumpkins
and The Stone Temple Pilots.
In Unseen Power of
the Picket Fence, he wrote an entire song dedicated to how brilliant early R.E.M
were.
There’s this lyric by The Hold Steady -
“It’s a funny bit of chemistry, how a cool car makes
a guy seem that much cooler.”
I can’t drive and I hate cars so, to me, that lyric is
about Pavement.
Let me explain.
Take the most uncool person you can think of - for
example Chris Grayling, the current Leader of The House of Commons. Now imagine
that you’ve just read an interview with him where he says his favourite band
are Pavement.
See, suddenly Chris Grayling is much cooler.
That’s Pavement in a nutshell - they were brilliant and,
whether by accident or design, they were the coolest band around.
But even more importantly, they weren’t Weezer.
10) Everything’s ending here
Stephen Malkmus once said Pavement didn’t have any real plans
because they weren’t a real band.
Yet, that’s exactly what they became. And in 1999, he
decided he didn’t want that anymore.
Their final show was at Brixton Academy and Malkmus
played the whole gig with a pair of handcuffs attached to his microphone.
During the gig, he told the audience that they symbolised what it’s like being
in a band for all these years.
They end the show, beautifully, with Here from Slanted
and Enchanted and then their record label put out the following statement -
Pavement are
retiring for the foreseeable future in order to:
1) Start Families!
2) Sail around the
world!
3) Get into the
computer industry!
4) Dance!
5) Get some
attention!
The bit they left out, and it’s crucial, is that a
decisive victory had been won.
Dear Mr Fitzgerald,
We’d like to thank
you for sending us the script for “Stephen Malkmus, Security Guard.”
Whilst we thought
the idea had its merits, and at least 4 good jokes, we have decided to pass on
the opportunity and focus all our efforts on a new sitcom called “Brit
Pops”.
Whilst I’m here,
I’d also like to thank you for your script for “ATP vs The Walking
Dead”.
Your idea for a
zombie apocalypse at a music festival in Pontins amused me mildly and, like
you, I also think Pavement would survive the longest on account of looking like
Zombies in the first place. Unlike you, though, I wasn’t very happy that you
killed off Yo La Tengo in the Little Tykes Play Area in episode 3.
For this reason, we
have decided to pass on this too.
All the best.
Bobby Hundreds
Head of TV.
The
Critics on Slanted and Enchanted
Pitchfork awarded
the album their maximum grade of 10.0/10.0 and ranked it as the fifth greatest
album of the ‘90s.
Rolling Stonemagazine called Slanted and Enchanted "the
quintessential indie rock album.“
So, over to you Hadley. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
There is a two word answer to why I have never listened to
this album by Pavement or, indeed, any album by Pavement: Jamie Macintosh.
Jamie Macintosh was the cool boy at my school, or, at least,
he seemed like the cool boy to me: he was a bit of a skater and he smoked weed.
To a sheltered teenager from Manhattan’s Upper East Side that is pretty much
the bleeding cutting edge. In fact, he was a lot like Travis in Clueless, who I
still maintain is the real heartthrob in that film (sorry Paul Rudd.) He was
also – and this is possibly not entirely relevant to today’s discussion, but
what the hell – cute as a button, with sad eyes and curly hair and a long lanky
body. Obviously, I knew he had no idea who I was, but I knew everything about
him, such as that he was a big Pavement fan, and I didn’t need to be Sherlock
Holmes to work that out because he wore a Pavement t-shirt to school pretty
much every other day.
Now, some girls might spot a boy they fancy, figure out what
band that boy likes and then obsessively listen to that band so as to have
something to discuss with him. I, however, am a girl who didn’t even kiss a boy
until she was almost 20 so obviously my flirting technique as a teenager was
somewhat lacking. No, my conclusion upon learning Jamie’s musical taste was
that I should never listen to Pavement because it was obviously cool music and
therefore I’d hate it.
I was not a cool teenager.
When people say that now they mean they were a cool geek, in
a sort of Michael Cera or Jesse Eisenberg way. Let me reiterate this point: I
was not a cool teenager. I was not a cool geek teenager. I was just a big dork.
Or at least, that’s how I saw myself so I had this idea that anything cool
people liked would be utterly alien to me, whether that was smoking, music festivals
or Pavement.
When I was in my 20s and mildly less self-loathing than I was
in my teens, I tried out two of those things and it turned out that I was right
about smoking (disgusting) and wrong about music festivals (fun, sometimes.)
But I never bothered to investigate Pavement, mainly because it continued to be
the band all boys I fancied liked, and, even in my 20s, I found that weirdly
offputting.
Maybe I found these boys so weirdly incomprehensible anyway
that I avoided any further evidence of their difference from me. I remember one
boy telling me when he was 25 that he once housesat for Stephen Malkmus. I knew
enough at this point to pretend to be impressed, but I also suspected that this
guy was lying. That tableau – of him lying about Stephen Malkmus to impress me
and me pretending to be impressed to impress him – pretty much captures all my
memories of dating in my 20s.
There was another issue: I was not really into a lot of 90s
music. 90s music to me seemed to be divided into four categories: R’nB, dance, grunge
and Brit pop. Of those four, only r’n’b and some dance music were acceptable –
everything else was depressing and pretty much unlistenable, and I strongly
suspected Pavement would fall into the “tedious miserable grunge” category.
So there you have it,
that’s why I never listened to Pavement: because I was a total dork who was too
busy listening to Boyz 2 Men
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
The first time I listened to it I was basically Baaaaaddad
from The Adam and Joe Show in the episode when he reviewed The Prodigy: what IS
this? It’s just NOISE! I hate this! O cruel world!
The second time I didn’t hate it: I was mainly amused at how
it seemed like a sonic encapsulation of the 90s, with Malkmus sounding slightly
bored but then also CARING VERY INTENTLY; the guitar feedback; the song titles
that make absolutely no sense. All that was lacking was someone encouraging me
to wear a Kookai floral dress over a pair of French Connection black trousers
(classic look.) For a moment I wondered if I’d once made out with a boy to In the Mouth a Desert, but then I
realized it just sounded like the kind of song I thought I’d make out to in the
90s (in fact, the first time I made out with some guy to music it was to The
Verve, and I bloody hated The Verve.)
The third time I actually listened to it and thought it was…
fine. I thought it was fine. I couldn’t do with to the ones where Malkmus is screaming
into the mic (No Life Singed Her, Conduit
for Sale!), and the strummy ones (Zurich
is Stained, Trigger Cut / Wounded Kite at :17) bored me, but others – like Summer Babe and In the Mouth a Desert– were rather lovely. I also liked how
obvious it was that Damon Albarn had been listening to Here on loop before he wrote Tender,
and I see why: it’s a good song to listen to if the love of your life has just
left you.
So of course I can see the appeal in the album – I’m a dork
but I’m not deaf - but it just isn’t for me. If an album isn’t going to make me
want to dance (Madonna) or rap in front of my mirror (Beastie Boys), then it
has to have moments of transcendent beauty (The Cure), and Slanted and Enchanted just didn’t have that for me. And I guess I
knew all along that’s how it would be for me and Pavement.
So here’s a funny story about Jamie Macintosh, because I’m
sure you’re all dying to hear how that turned out. So I left the school I went
to with Jamie after my GCSE’s to go to boarding school for my A-levels, and it
was about two weeks after I started my new school that something incredible
happened: Jamie called me. Three times! In one month! Can you imagine how
shocked I was? Can you fathom what it would take to make a 16 year old boy call
up a boarding school just to speak to some random girl he’d hardly ever spoken
to before? Can you grasp just how badly I misread the whole situation the year
before?
And then something even
weirder happened: I did not encourage his phone calls. What I mean is, I never
asked him to call again, let alone visit, and I never called him, and
eventually he stopped bothering – and who can blame him? At the time, I put my
handling of the situation down to me being a giant dork with no social skills.
But in retrospect, I think the truth was that I liked to look at him, but I
knew we actually had nothing in common, so I left it at that. Just like
Pavement, really: I can see the appeal, but not for me. And you know what? I
think I’m fine with that.
Would
you listen to it again?
Probably not deliberately, no. But I wouldn’t leave the room
if it came on. How’s that for high praise?
A
mark out of 10?
7
RAM Rating – 9.5
Guest Rating – 7
Overall – 8.25
So that was Week 66
and that was Hadley Freeman. Turns out that she’d never listened to Slanted and Enchanted before because some
handsome fella called Jamie wore a t-shirt and put her off. So we made her listen to
it and she liked it but not enough to dance, rap in front of a mirror, or hand
out vegetables to people turning up at her house.
Next week, Eddie
Argos from Art Brut listens to something from 1983 for the first time.
In the meantime, here’s that final performance of Here at Brixton Academy.
I am Eddie Argos, I am the singer in a band called Art
Brut and a few other bands, I’m a lo-fi punk rock motherfucker and I also write
and paint a bit.
Eddie’s
Top 3 albums ever?
Just like everybody else says, this changes on an
almost hourly basis. At 22.59pm on Tuesday May 3rd it is
1.Shiney On The Inside by David Devant and His Spirit Wife
2.Sexy World by The Yummy Fur
3.The Kids Are All Square by Thee Headcoats
What
great album has he never heard before?
Murmur by R.E.M
Released in 1983
Before
we get to Eddie, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks
of Murmur
All
right, everyone.
Here, without any ado at all,
is the story of R.E.M.
1) Buck meets Stipe
The young Peter Buck was the sort of fella who listened to so much music that,
had we existed at the time, he would have thought that even Ruth and Martin’s
Album Club couldn’t find a blind spot.
“I’ve heard everything”, he’d say. “I got heavily, and I mean
HEAVILY, into Exile on Main Street by The Rolling Stones when I was 15. After
that I bought as many albums as I could. At last count, I had 25,000.”
“That’s what they all say”, I’d reply. “But I always find
something.”
“Not with me you won’t. I’m dedicated. I once found a Velvet Underground
record in a garage sale and spent about a year trying to solve The Murder
Mystery.”
“Sounds a bit Steve Hoffman Music Forum that mate.”
“Excuse me?”
“Never mind, look here’s Achtung Bono by Half Man Half Biscuit. I need
your review by next Friday and, remember, you need to
listen to it three times.”
“Half Man Half Biscuit? Ok, you’ve got me there.”
Back in 1979, Peter Buck does the two most obvious things that all fellas like
him end up doing - he learns how to play guitar and gets a job in a record shop
so he can listen to even more music.
One of the regular customers catches his eye - another teenager that was always
surrounded by beautiful girls and buying EXACTLY the same records as
him. They get talking and discover they both bought Horses by Patti Smith
on the day it came out.
For this reason, as much as any other, Peter Buck and Michael Stipe decide to
form a band and move into a disused church in Athens, Georgia.
2) Berry meets Mills
Bill Berry was a juvenile
delinquent and a bully.
Mike Mills was a smart
bespectacled kid who all the grown-ups liked. He looked a bit like Richie
Cunningham in Happy Days.
“We hated each
other”, Berry would later say. “He was the class nerd, straight A’s,
and I was just getting into drugs and stuff.”
Alright Bill, calm down mate.
“He was everything I
despised: great student, got along with teachers, didn’t smoke cigarettes or
smoke pot”
Alright Bill, you’ve made your
point.
During 10th grade, one of Bill
Berry’s mates asked if he would like to play drums on a “Boogie
Woogie” jamming session. Berry agrees and drives across town to the house
where the rehearsal is due to take place. Once he arrives, he carries his kit
down a load of stairs to the basement.
Shortly after, the bass player
arrives - Mike Mills.
Berry has since said that if he
was playing any other instrument, I.e. something more portable, he would have
stormed off there and then. However, because he couldn’t be bothered to move
his drums again, he decided to stay put and make peace with his nemesis.
“This is ridiculous”
Berry said to Mills.
“Yeah”, Mills
replied.
With that, they shook hands.
The mad part of this story
isn’t that they’ve been best friends ever since, or even that they became the
rhythm section in one of the biggest bands in the world.
No, the mad part is that anyone
other than Jools Holland would agree to take part in a “Boogie
Woogie” jamming session.
3) Everyone Meets Everyone
At the start of 1980, the two
halves of R.E.M were still unknown to each other - Peter Buck and Michael Stipe
were trying to get something going in a disused church, whereas Bill Berry and
Mike Mills were in a series of bands that went nowhere.
A mutual friend was needed and
she came in the shape of Kathleen O'Brian. Kathleen lived in the church, and also had a huge crush
on Bill Berry. So, knowing that her two churchmates needed a rhythm section,
she brought everyone together.
This is it.
It’s THE pivotal moment in
alternative American music and Bill Berry sums up the meeting perfectly with
the only thing he can remember about it -
“It was cold out and we
are all wearing coats.”
Thanks Bill.
Stipe, on the other hand,
remembers meeting a really drunk Mike Mills who could barely stand up.
“No way! NO WAY!”
said Stipe. “I’m not going to be in a band with this guy, there’s no way
on earth!”
Berry eventually talked him
round and the four of them set a date to rehearse at the church. When the day
arrived, though, somebody didn’t turn up so they decided to knock the whole
thing on the head.
A couple of weeks later Peter
Buck bumped into Berry, purely by chance, and said “Let’s give it one more
try.”
4) Kathleen’s Birthday
Having brought the band
together, Kathleen now decides that their first gig should be at her birthday
party, held in the church.
I have to say that I’m a big
fan of this Kathleen. We’ve done over 70 of these now and I think she’s the
first person I’ve come across that has formed a band and then made them play
their first gig in her honour.
I mean she’s pushy, but I like
her.
Exactly 125 people were invited
to the party but something like 600 turned up - ready to witness the first
performance of a band that, at this stage, were called The Twisted Kites.
Despite the fact they were
playing a gig in their own house they were, in Bill Berry’s words, “scared
shitless.” They proceeded to get drunk and staggered through as many
covers as they could remember - including God Save the Queen by the Sex Pistols
and a 15 minute version of Roadrunner by Jonathan Richman.
However, towards the end of the
gig, members of the audience had to take over on vocals as Michael Stipe had
badly burned himself with a cigarette.
And that was supposed to be
that. A one off gig for a friend’s birthday.
5) A Second Gig
An unexpected downside of the
debut gig was that the brilliant Kathleen was now in debt - largely because
everyone drunk a load of booze that she only paid a $200 deposit for. In order to help her out, the
band decided to put on a fundraising gig at the 11:11 Koffee Klub.
“I really didn’t want to
play there,” says Bill, “but we had to get some money for
Kathleen."
This
story really would be awful without Kathleen you know.
The band also decided they
didn’t want to be called Twisted Kites anymore so they held a meeting at the
church where everyone got drunk and wrote a load of names on the wall.
They awoke the next morning and
whittled it down to the following choices -
Slut Bank
Cans of Piss
R.E.M.
I know, they picked the worst
one.
To make matters worse, the gig
at the Koffee Klub was a disaster. The police were called and shut it down after a
couple of songs because the club didn't have a license for alcohol. Everyone had their names
taken and the establishment was subsequently closed for good.
It’s probably worth a quick
recap of where we are.
A woman called Kathleen formed
a band from two kids that met in a record store and another two kids who used
to hate each other. During their first gig the singer nearly set fire to
himself and their second gig resulted in a local venue going out of business.
What a great start.
6) Their First EP
In 1983, R.E.M. start work on
their first EP - Chronic Town.
Michael Stipe was so nervous
about his voice that it was mixed as low as possible. Then, just to make sure,
he sang all 5 songs with a rubbish bin on his head.
You
could barely hear him, and you had no idea what he was singing. Still, the EP
was so good that when a record label called IRS heard it they offered them a
deal.
”But
our singer sings with a rubbish bin on his head"
“Don’t
worry, it’ll be fine”
7)
Murmur
They
start the sessions by putting two dinosaur mascots on the speakers for good
luck.
Despite
these, Stipe is still so nervous that he records his vocals lying down in the
dark - on top of a staircase outside the main studio. Bill Berry has to play
alongside a click-track in order to keep in time, and Peter Buck plays an
acoustic guitar for the first time in his life.
When
they record Talk about the Passion it’s the first time they’ve ever played it
the whole way through - it was supposed to be a rehearsal take. It was
brilliant though and the producer told them they needn’t bother playing it
again.
That’s
the final version you hear on the album.
It’s
not only one of the best debuts ever, it’s one of the best albums ever. For all
the jokes, the haphazard approach, they came out of the blocks as the most
assured band in America.
They
kept the dinosaurs and brought them along for all future albums.
8)
Their First TV Performance
In
1983, R.E.M appeared on Letterman and performed Radio Free Europe.
Whilst
the rest of the band throw themselves at the occasion in the spirit of a dream
come true, Stipe looks absolutely terrified. He spends the whole performance
motionless, hiding behind his long hair and clinging to the microphone for dear
life.
After
the performance, Letterman walks over and Stipe exits the stage so he can watch
the host interview the rest of the band. Stipe then comes back on and sings So.
Central Rain - again nervously attached to the microphone the whole time.
Stipe
was so absent from the “performance” that the Musicians Union assumed
Peter Buck was the band leader and paid him twice as much money as everyone
else.
9)
The Tube in 1985
It’s
now two years later and R.E.M appear on The Tube to perform Can’t Get There
From Here from Fables of the Reconstruction.
The
band are still as energetic as before, they look virtually identical, but Stipe
is a changed man. He’s dyed his hair with mustard, he’s found his feet, and
proceeds to show us his moves.
For
the next 3 minutes and 29 seconds he doesn’t touch the microphone once.
To
this day, it’s my favourite TV performance from any band ever.
10)
Stipe, Buck, Mills, Berry, Me
Stipe
would go on to become one of the great frontmen. By 1989 he was topless on Top
of the Pops and signing Orange Crush through a loud speaker.
Peter
Buck started out as the weakest musician in R.E.M - a guitar band where the
guitarist wasn’t that good - but he got much better. He also got so drunk on a
plane once that he tried to insert a CD into the drinks trolley because he
thought it was a CD player. What a great bloke.
Mike
Mills sang the best backing vocals of all time on It’s the End of The World As
We Know It (And I Feel Fine) and is the member of R.E.M. I’d most trust to
look after a cat.
Bill
Berry was so good, so important to the band, that they were never quite the
same when he left in 1996. He also wrote Perfect Circle, which may be the best
song ever written by a drummer.
Being a fan in the ‘80s was the
nearest thing I’ve ever had to being a member of a secret society. It warranted
its own handshake - a sign that you could give to others that you were also
into this band with unintelligible lyrics that once lived in a church in the
Deep South.
And it never wore off. Even
when the lyrics made sense and the mystique had faded, they were always capable
of being brilliant.
Put simply, the 10 albums from
Murmur to New Adventures in Hi-Fi are probably the best run of 10 albums that
anyone has ever produced.
Kathleen
should be really proud.
Hi Ruth and Martin,
Hope you’re both well.
I just wanted to drop you a
line to let you know how I’m getting on with Achtung Bono.
I
have to say, upon first listen I’ve spent most of my time on Google trying to
work out all the references in the lyrics. So much of it was new to me - Ogwen
Lake, Del Boy, Nick Knowles, Matalan. I mean, how can they expect to be big in
Athens, Georgia when they’re focussing on all this esoteric English stuff?
No
wonder I’d never heard of them.
But
then I heard Joy Division Oven Gloves.
I
haven’t laughed so much since we released Shiny Happy People and Bill Berry
suggested we should change our name to Cans of Piss.
All
the best.
Peter Buck
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on Murmur
In a retrospective
review Pitchfork gave it 10/10 and ranked it the 5th best album of
the ‘80s
Rolling Stone Magazine
ranked it the 8th best of the ‘80s,
So, over to you Eddie. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
It’s not just Murmur, I haven’t listened to any REM
albums. I mean what’s the point? I’ve heard enough REM songs on the radio to
know what REM sound like, they warrant about as much investigating of their
back catalogue as Coldplay do.
I suppose the problem is that Murmur came out when I
was three years old. By the time I was old enough to start getting excited
about music, REM were already defined by their MASSIVE HITS.
I know what I like about music. I like it to be
experimental, to be about empowerment or reinvention, to contain heart on the
sleeve sincerity. I like songs to be about something and to have a bit of
personality. I can only really get passionate about bands that do interesting
things or have some kind of punk or independent outsider spirit to them. REM as
defined by their MASSIVE HITS contain none of these qualities.
Perhaps if REM had been less ubiquitous in my
formative years I would have had an inclination to go back and find out more
about them.
But they were everywhere.
My least favourite song by REM is Everybody Hurts. I find that song to be an annoying litany of
patronising greeting card style platitudes, cynically designed to sell mawkish
sentimentality to anguished angsty teens and middle-aged people who should
definitely know better. I hate it. The first time I heard it I knew I never
wanted to hear it again. It is a completely empty song devoid of any actual
real feeling. It is the song equivalent of someone not really listening, but
just nodding along and making sympathetic noises to you as you tell them your
problems. It is an insincere bastard of a song.
Despite the fact I have actively avoided Everybody Hurts, I could definitely sing
- well maybe not sing but certainly speak - all of it to you right now, just
from the sheer number of times I’ve had to endure it by being close to a radio
I’ve not been in charge of. The very fact I have a least favourite song by a
band I have no real interest in shows you just how inescapable REM are.
I suppose the short answer to why I have never heard
Murmur before is that REM get played a sufficient amount everywhere I go without my permission, so I’ve never really felt
the need to play them at home.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
I just want to say, before I begin, that even though I
have just ranted about REM, I really was genuinely excited to give this album a
try. I’m a big fan of The Replacements and when I’m sneaking around on the
internet reading about the Replacements on forums and facebook groups and
whatnot, I see a lot of their fans also like early REM. This has always made me
feel that perhaps I’m missing out on something, that maybe REM were
amazing in their early days, before
their massive career defining hits, and I just arrived too late to the party.
Being asked to listen to Murmur seemed like a great opportunity to find out.
I never normally listen to music in the shower but
because I was excited about hearing Murmur for the first time, and because I
didn’t have a lot of time, I made an exception. I brought my iPad into the
bathroom, turned the water on and put the album on as loud as I could - so it
was possible to hear it over the top of the running water.
Murmur begins with some strange noises and in the
shower it sounded a lot like somebody hitting the underneath of a car with a
spanner. That was unexpected, I thought, and quite exciting. Fuck! I think I
might actually really enjoy this record.
Then Radio Free
Europe began and it sounded a lot like Roadrunner
by Jonathan Richman. I believe that Roadrunner
by Jonathan Richman is mankind’s greatest achievement, and always have a
lot of time for any song that bares even a passing resemblance to it. My
curiosity was piqued. I turned the shower off, sat in the bath and started to
give Murmur my full attention.
I could hear the REM that I know in Radio Free Europe for sure, but to my
ears, on this first listen, it was a more provocative REM than the one I know
from their HITS. REM
songs often have very similar choruses, and this one definitely followed the
same format, but on this occasion it caught me completely off guard. I loved it. It sounded like it had been flown in from a different
song, and flawlessly fitted on to this Roadrunner pastiche. In a good way. All of
a sudden the song was new and vibrant and exciting; it made me think of how
exhilarating it must have been for REM to record THIS, the first song on their
debut album. They weren’t fully moulded yet, not really, they were still
playing with style and form and I imagined how they might have even surprised
themselves with how great Radio Free
Europe had come out. I thought of all the amazing potential this debut
album must have coursing through it, to have made everybody listen to it at the
time, helping REM become one of the
biggest bands of all time. This album was a big deal, it is a lot of people I
respect’s favourite album. All my cynicism went, I even had goosebumps thinking of the treat that lay in store
for me.
Then with a feeling of dread I suddenly realised:
'Oh shit, I’m totally going to massively enjoy this
album and have to write that I had an epiphany about how amazing REM are while I was sitting in
an empty bath. I’ve become the sort of person I despise.’
Then Pilgrimage
began. It used the same ‘weird noises before the song starts’ trick as Radio Free Europe but then the most
amazing bass guitar part comes in, and again I thought:
'FUCK! I really am going to have to write about having
some kind of transformative experience with REM while lying naked in an empty
bath. (Sorry for putting that image in your head.)
Thankfully though, once the singing starts the song
turns out to be totally shit, an unbelievably boring dirge. I wait for the next
song, just in case this is the exception, but it turns out to be the rule. The
next song is called Laughing and
again, despite a promising intro, it turns into what sounds like a discarded
Tom Petty demo.
I stand up and turn the water back on. While I’m
thankful I don’t have to write about having an epiphany in
an empty bath tub, I am still hopeful that something will grab my attention and
make me sit down and turn off the water again, totally enthralled. Nothing
does.
The second time I listen to the album is later the
same day, I’m not in such a rush this time and so give it my full attention. I
lie down on my bed with my headphones on and promise to myself that I will give
it a fair trial.
There is no water running this time, so I hear that
what I thought was a spanner hitting the bottom of car at the beginning of
Radio Free Europe is actually just some kind of synthesiser noise, or a sound
the studio made and they just decided to leave it on the recording. Not as
interesting as I thought. I don’t enjoy Radio
Free Europe this time as much as I did in the shower, mainly because now I
know it’s not the beginning of an exciting odyssey into a band I’d been denying
myself, but just an ok song at the beginning of quite a slog of an album. I
brace myself for what is to come.
That intro to Pilgrimage
sounds great still, as does the intro to Laughing
and 9-9, but this now feels like a
cruel trick as I know what the songs that follow those intros sound like, and
it is a sudden and very steep drop in quality.
On this second listen through Murmur, I can kind of
hear in places why some Replacement fans also like early REM. I can definitely
hear shades of that life changing incredible band on songs like Laughing and Catapult. I manage to convince myself I would actually like Catapult if Paul Westerberg from The
Replacements had been involved in some way, it has a nice tune. Unfortunately,
Michael Stipe has none of the wit, charisma, talent, intelligence, passion,
humour or presence of that immense front man. In fact, by the time I’ve reached
Catapult on my second listen through the album, I start to doubt that Michael
Stipe exists at all. Perhaps, he is also just a strange studio noise
'accidentally on purpose’ left on the recording.
I persevere. I finish the album. I was ambivalent
after the first listen but as I cross the finish line this time I have decided
that I hate this record and anybody who likes it. This makes me a little bit
sad. I’m definitely the type of man that enjoys having a strong opinion, but I
also love having my expectations confounded, and I really was secretly hoping
this is what was going to happen with Murmur.
To celebrate making it through Murmur without falling
asleep I have a chocolate biscuit and start toying with the idea of only
pretending to listen to it a third time.
But I am a man of my word, Martin from RAM album club
seems like a good guy and I did promise him I’d listen three times, so
reluctantly I give Murmur one last seemingly never-ending run around the
block.
I hate Radio
Free Europe now, it is still by quite a large margin my favourite song on
the album, but the false promise it gave me on that first listen has made me
despise it. I feel conned.
However, by this point it is the only song on the
record that can conjure up any emotion from me whatsoever, so I savour the hate
I feel for it and prepare myself for the beige blank page that is the rest of
the album.
I find it very hard to concentrate. I really don’t
understand the point of this record. It is a nothingness. I’ve been listening
to it using my girlfriend’s spotify account. Yvonne has a premium account and
I’m beginning to sort of wish she didn’t as some shouty adverts might break up
the tedium of Murmur, anything with a bit of personality would be welcome at
this point.
Murmur could easily be radio static, my mind starts to
drift, I start to think about my favourite conspiracy theory - that the CIA
funded the Abstract Expressionism art movement because they wanted to give
prominence to an art form that you can’t put any kind of message or meaning
into. I start to think that perhaps the CIA also funded REM’s rise to
prominence too, because, just like Abstract Expressionism, it is also
impossible to put messages or meaning into REM songs.
Murmur drifts onwards, I start to think that if I
hadn’t had to write down my feelings about it, I might have forgotten it exists
at all. Are these three play throughs really the first time I’ve heard it?
Perhaps it is just the first time I’ve managed to recall listening to it.
Mediocre music, no personality, weird for weird’s sake, laughable lyrics that are
understandably buried deep in the swampy mix; there is nothing here to hold
onto and certainly very little to enjoy.
On the upside, like the REM songs that I know, at
least these ones will be gone by the morning.
I look forward to forgetting
Murmur again.
Would
you listen to it again?
No
A
mark out of 10?
I’m really sorry as I know a lot of people love this
album, but I give it nothing out of 10. It is not for me.
RAM Rating
– 9.75
Guest
Rating – 0
Overall –
4.875
So that was Week 67 and that was Eddie Argos. Turned out he’d
never listened to Murmur before because Everybody
Hurts used to make his head hurt. So we made him listen to it and, despite
a promising start in the bath, he hated it once he got out and dried
himself off.
Next week, Rachael Krishna from Buzzfeed listens to something from
2000 for the first time.
Until then, here’s R.E.M’s first TV performance on David Letterman
– singing Radio Free Europe and So. Central Rain.
Oh and here’s that performance of Can’t Get There From Here on The Tube.
I am Rachael Krishna, I’m 23, I’m a junior reporter for
BuzzFeed News. Most of my life is spent trying to explain the things I see
teenagers post on Tumblr to regular folk. Outside of this, I read a lot of
comics and stalk Shiba Inus on Instagram.
Rachael’s Top 3 albums ever?
Whilst I can name the last three albums I listened to in
full (Drake’s “Views”, Skepta’s “Konnichiwa” and Beyonce’s “Lemonade”),
pinpointing three I still have on regular rotation is a lot more difficult.
Off the top of my head,
1) You’re Gonna Miss It All - Modern Baseball
2) My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy - Kanye West
3) Biffy Clyro - Puzzle
What great album has she never heard
before?
Stories from the City, Stories
from the Sea by PJ Harvey
Released in 2000
Before we get to Rachael, here’s
what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album
Club thinks of Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea
All right, everyone.
Something a little different this week.
Here’s MY PJ Harvey story - told through her first five
albums.
1) Dry - 1992
I was 21 at the time - into Sonic Youth, Nirvana, The
Fall, R.E.M, and The Wedding Present. More than just a list of bands though, or
a collection of t-shirts, it was a period of my life where music was
everywhere. In clubs like The Venue in New Cross, pubs like The George in
Beckenham, and my mate Brian’s living room - all everyone did was listen to and
talk about music.
Everyone was endlessly 21, always finding somewhere else
to go. No one went home, no one went to work, and no one had to be adult and
mature about other people’s music taste.
Entire friendships were built upon a shared record
collection and, likewise, actual human beings were shunned for being into a
shit band. At the London School of Economics, where I was pretending to be
mature, I successfully managed to avoid a man called Jeremy for 3 whole years
just because he once wore a Marillion t-shirt from their Misplaced Childhood Tour.
No hard feelings eh Jez.
The first PJ Harvey song I ever heard was Sheela-Na-Gig.
In this musical network of people and places it was unavoidable,
and I loved it immediately. It quickly replaced Kennedy by The Wedding Present as the song I most liked to dance to
on a Saturday night whilst wearing army trousers and drinking snakebite and
black. Her guitar, all top strings, her great line about taking her hips to a
man that cares, and those really mad drums by Rob Elllis.
I had no idea that a sheela-na-gig was a carving of a
woman holding her vagina open and laughing madly. I had no idea that some of
the lyrics came from South Pacific. All I really knew, and arguably all that
mattered, was that those drums really did my head in and I never tired of
dancing to them.
Shortly after, I saw pictures of her in the NME and
Melody Maker. She looked just like the girls down The Venue - leggings and
Doctor Marten Boots.
Obviously I bought the album and loved that too.
2) Rid of Me -1993
I’ve gone from being endlessly 21 to being bloody 22.
Having graduated from the LSE I spent 18 months being
unemployed. Suddenly I had nowhere to go. Friends had moved on, got jobs or
left town, and I was left trying to make a pack of Golden Virginia last as long
as possible whilst watching The X Files with a face on.
I think I got turned down for over 100 jobs in the end -
as a result of being overqualified, inexperienced, and looking like I was in
Mudhoney.
To make matters worse, regular readers will know that
1993 was the worst year in the history of music. Everything had gone dark, the
problem was there for all to see - it was a band called The Red Hot Chilli
Peppers.
It’s hard to explain exactly how this band ruined my life
but let me assure you they did. Imagine an idyllic indie club of angular
fringes and people wearing their mum’s cardigans. Sounds great doesn’t it? Well
that was my weekend for years - the occasional bit of dancing mixed with
cautious looks at some girl who looked a bit like her from The Sundays.
I was so happy, even though I never showed it.
Then all of a sudden a bunch of pricks in shorts entered
the club, swooshing their hair about to that awful Give it Away song. Some of them even took their tops off. For those
of you that were fortunate enough to miss it, here’s a picture of a dog that
looks like every Red Hot Chilli Pepper’s fan dancing to Give it Away.
The whole thing was unsightly and made me want to stay in
forever. Somehow they’d simultaneously ruined my weekends and spawned a load of
other bands who were, remarkably, even worse.
To this day, I don’t think the world of indie clubbing
has ever fully recovered from what happened here.
In fact, the only person in 1993 who was having a worse
time than me was PJ Harvey. She’d had a breakdown following the pressures of
early fame and couldn’t even manage basic functions like washing and eating. Even
I wasn’t that bad, although I did go 4 days once without knowing the clocks had
gone forward.
Still, Harvey pulled herself together to make Rid of Me - recording the entire album
on a diet of potatoes. The mood in the studio was so dark that Steve Albini,
the producer, used to set fire to his feet just to cheer everyone up.
I saved up and bought the album the day it was released,
such was my Harvey fandom at that point, and I thought it was even better than Dry. It had jokes on it (50 ft Queenie), stuff about licking her
legs, and a song about Yuri Gagarin.
And the drums, THE DRUMS! It was that same combination
that I’d fallen in love with a year before. She’d come good and achieved
something brilliant in a terrible year.
As for me?
Well I finally got a job in December, working in the
Ticketmaster Call Centre for £3 an hour.
3) To Bring you my Love - 1995
It’s two years later and I’m still at Ticketmaster, trying
to turn a job into a career. On the plus side, I’ve started to earn more than
£3 an hour but, on the downside, I’ve started to come into contact with people
who like Rugby Union.
At heart, though, I’m still a whiny indie kid who is now
listening to the likes of Pavement and Yo La Tengo. But something’s changed -
music is not quite the pervasive thing it used to be in my life. I know, I’m
only 24 but somehow I don’t seem to have the time anymore - I’m going to clubs
less, barely listening to the radio, and only occasionally reading the music
papers.
Already, it feels like I’m hanging on and finding it
harder to keep up. Rather than being round Brian’s house ranking R.E.M albums
in ascending order, I’m now having after work drinks with a bunch of people who
would rather discuss why Dave in managament is a total and utter cunt.
Meanwhile, PJ Harvey has a new album out and it sneaks up
on me. My first exposure to the material is her singing Down by the Water on Jools Holland. Gone are the leggings and
Doctor Marten boots, absent is the mad drummer, and in their place is dramatic
makeup, high heels and a bald fella playing his guitar with a knife. It’s a
little avant garde, a bit bluesy, and, I’ll be honest, I hate everything about
it.
With all the tenacity of someone who no longer has the
time nor the inclination, I decide I’m done with PJ Harvey based on that one
performance. There’ll always be Dry
and Rid of Me but this new stuff
really isn’t for me.
No hard feelings eh Polly Jean.
“Polly Jean? I think you’ll find that To Bring You My Love is now acknowledged
as a classic. It’s not my fault you were working too hard and didn’t have the
time to give it a proper chance you wimp.”
“Oh.”
4) Is this Desire? - 1998
God I’m old.
I’m now 27 and have a career that involves me going straight
home after work whilst people go to the pub to discuss whether I’m a total cunt
or not.
As for music, I’m basically a full time Belle and
Sebastian fan and listen to them to the exclusion of everything else. That’s
the stage I’ve got to - I’ve gone all in on one band because it’s easier and
saves time.
I don’t even know what a radio is anymore, I haven’t
danced in a club for years, and I’ve given up with the music press because the
biggest band in Britain contains a fella called Bonehead.
Someone called PJ Harvey, who I used to really like,
releases an album called Is this Desire? and I couldn’t tell you the name of a
single song. I vaguely remember reading somewhere that the new sound was
“industrial” which, coincidentally, is my safe word for when anyone
tries to make me listen to Industrial Music.
I also vaguely remember reading that the album came out
after the break up of her relationship with Nick Cave. At the time, there was
lots of wild and sordid speculation regarding their sex life - how they
probably made animal sacrifices before going at it in some gothic palace full
of candles, patchouli oil, and voyeuristic bats.
The reality was they probably just did it in their
bedroom, after Match of the Day like everyone else.
The album passed me by. I was now an ex PJ Harvey fan.
5) Stories from the City, Stories from the
Sea - 2000
Having spent seven years building a career at
Ticketmaster I suddenly decide to leave my job. It was a spur of the moment
decision - I’d come back from a long weekend in Bridlington and was depressed
by an inbox that told me exactly what had happened when I was away.
I handed in my notice and decided to take 6 months off
before even looking for another job.
My plans didn’t stretch any further than doing nothing
and enjoying the freedom - watching films till the early hours and sleeping in
the next day. I had a vague notion that I wanted to be a writer and I had a
very real notion that maybe I could use the time to become really good at darts
- that maybe if I practiced every day I could secretly become brilliant and
turn professional.
I wrote a short story about a kid who got a pair of shoes
that changed his life but, to this day, I’ve never got a 180. Both careers were
abandoned in their infancy.
In terms of music, I was now mainlining an MTV
alternative channel whose name escapes me and something called VH1. The latter
used to have a program called Pop Up
Video which was basically a load of videos with information bubbles. It was
the greatest TV program ever made.
But this was how I consumed music in 2000 - through two
channels that I flicked between every time a Limp Biskit came on.
It was here that I saw and heard PJ Harvey again, for the
first time since that Jools Holland performance. She had a song out called Good Fortune and the video showed her
swinging round lamp posts and twirling a gold bag like she’d had a big win at
bingo. It was celebratory, a huge laugh, and a great song.
More importantly, though, the drums were back.
It was like catching up with an old friend - one that
wore leggings and DMs at University but now looks like she works for a big firm
in the city. I listened to all her news and caught up with everything I missed.
To Bring You My
Love - it’s brilliant. I was now ready to hear it and The Dancer became my favourite ever PJ Harvey song.
Is this Desire?
- it wasn’t industrial at all. It was nothing like Front 242 or Nine Inch
Nails. It was just as good as everything else she’d ever done.
Then we caught up on what she was doing now - Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea.
More than anything else she’d done, at this moment she sounded beautiful and confident.
She was in a good place and it was great to be reunited.
Years later, I saw her at a party. She was in the corner
of a room, with a couple of fellas, drinking a bottle of Budweiser.
At one point my partner had gone to get a drink and her
mates had got involved with another crowd. I’m standing there on my own,
probably 5 yards away from PJ Harvey who is reading the label on the bottle for
something to do. I could easily say hello, tell her I’m a fan and thank her or
something. She’d probably be dead nice, no doubt she’s used to that sort of thing.
But there’s something about her and, like today, I
resisted the temptation to intrude.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Stories from the City,
Stories from the Sea
Q Magazine named it the greatest album of all time by a female artist.
In 2009, NME named it the 6th best album of the decade
So, over to you Rachael. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S
WRONG WITH YOU?????
Being
age of 23 I’d like to plead that I have had less time on this earth than most
to explore the rich back catalogue of most of the greats, let alone keep up
with the weekly new releases that become part of the lexicon required to do my
job covering internet news.
Nevertheless,
growing up in the late 2000s, hearing the name PJ Harvey brought to mind a
stuffy sort of institutional approval that my somewhat rebellious self took
great care to avoid. Harvey was nominated for Mercury prizes and praised by
music critics, the same award shows and music journalists who judged my beloved
emo, nu rave, and pop punk music with a type of snobbery that immediately set
me against anything they loved. For the 14 year old me, the glitter loving,
rave promoting band The Klaxons winning the Mercury prize in 2007 was a small
act of rebellion against this.
Away
from this, I had always associated Harvey with a sort of matured music taste
that I had yet to acquire – or simply decided not to – and so avoided it all
together. I imagined people listening to her music in comfy Surrey kitchens,
before switching over to Radio 4 for the Archers. I could never see people
dancing, let alone forming a mosh pit to her music, so I was uninterested. I
went to gigs to cause minor injury to myself, not appreciate composition.
This
may be something to do with how my music taste was initially shaped: I started
playing drums aged 10 in 2003, right around the release of Green Day’s American Idiot and the formation of the
emo scene. I’d learn and play along to whatever album was newly released,
ensuring early and intense exposure to drum-heavy chaotic music. I continued to
follow this scene as it developed into Nu Rave, and when I did briefly break
from this trend in my late teens to embrace a folk acoustic revival, my
attention was more drawn to artists such as The Smiths and Belle and Sebastian,
perhaps foolishly overlooking Harvey as too mature. In the last few years, a
focus on rap and hip hop artists has yet again allowed me to avoid what I
assumed was Harvey’s more somber tones.
In
short, I’ve never thought I was ready or right for Harvey’s music.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
I didn’t expect the
album to open the way it did, and it was a pleasant surprise.
The revving guitar
and Harvey’s aggressive vocals made me think immediately of Iggy Pop’s I Wanna Be Your Dog, and I loved it. It
was totally punk in a really swirling and summery 90s way and I couldn’t help
but wish to be dancing around in a long swirling dress, reaching my hands up to
the sun. The album’s opening three tracks really warmed me in a nostalgic way.
I’m aware it was released in 2000, but I couldn’t help but listen to those
opening tracks and think in a sepia-like tone, flicking through a faded photo
album.
It was super
comforting.
The drop between One Line and Beautiful Feeling is jarring and to be honest I switched off for a
bit at this point. I guess maybe because this is the type of track that I
thought might appear, and so I became disinterested – the kind of song at
drowsy gigs where people politely sway and take in the ‘atmosphere’. This is
what I feared. This seems to happen throughout the album: a whispery song like Beautiful Feeling jumps to Harvey
screeching on The Whores Hustle and The
Hustlers Whore. This happens again after one of my favourite tracks, This Is Love; a song that’s a pure sex
anthem. Why does it cut to the barely audible Horses in My Dreams?
It really feels like
there’s two albums happening here, one I really love and another pit against
it. The contrast between the two made it difficult to immerse myself in the
album fully – once I’d found a track I loved, I was thrown out again.
Upon my first listen
I completely missed This Mess We’re In;
a collaboration between Thom Yorke and Harvey, and a track raved about by my
friends. After repeated listens, I can see the appeal in Yorke’s mystical
vocals on the chorus, but again I can’t tell what album this song is meant to
be on. I like it, but that doesn’t mean I’m not confused as to why it’s even on
this album.
When I reached the
final two tracks of the album, Harvey had seemed to decide that experimental
was her vibe, waiting nearly two minutes to make any noises on the final track,
This Wicked Tongue. This is probably
a statement of some kind, but by the time I’d got to the song and had been
thrown about by the rest of the album, I’d honestly given up. Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea
would have worked better as two albums and saved me a hell of a lot of skipping
back and forth to check I hadn’t zoned out and missed a track.
Also that opening
verse on You Said Something made me
cringe. I welcome fights about this.
Would you listen to it again?
The 7
tracks I like, yes.
A mark out of 10?
6/10
RAM Rating – 8
Guest Rating – 6
Overall – 7
So that was Week 68 and that was
Rachael Krishna. Turns out she’d never heard Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea before because she was
too busy being into emo and assumed PJ Harvey was a bit like Annie Lennox. So
we made her listen to it and she really liked half of it and now has a new sex
anthem.
Next week, Iain Lee listens to
something from 1997 for the first time.
In the meantime, here’s Good Fortune from Stories from the City,
Stories from the Sea.
Iain Lee hosts a late night radio
phone-in show on www.talkradio.co.uk
weeknights from 10. He recently got canned from the BBC for calling a bigot a
‘bigot’. He also got in trouble online for suggesting that maybe Beach Boy Mike
Love is ‘an alright guy’.
You may remember him as the bloke
from the 11 O’ Clock Show or Big Brother’s Bit On The Side.
He’s also started his own record
label to release obscure Monkees material www.7aRecords.com
Iain’s Top 3 albums ever?
3 – Instant Replay by The Monkees
2- Revolver by The Beatles
1 – Sunflower by The Beach Boys
What great album has he never heard before?
I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One by
Yo La Tengo
Released in 1997
Before we get to Iain, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of I Can Hear
The Heart Beating As One
All right, everyone.
Here’s the story of Yo La Tengo - my favourite band.
1) Ira Kaplan’s conversation with Ray
Davies.
Ira Kaplan grew in Hoboken, New Jersey, and was obsessed
with music from an early age. In particular, he was a huge fan of The Kinks and
saw them play approximately 30 times when he was growing up.
In 1975, he went to see them three nights in a row.
On the first night, during a break in songs, he shouted
for Autumn Almanac.
Ray Davies responded with “Oh, that’s a terrible
song”
On the second night, he shouted for Dead End Street - another song that wasn’t in their repertoire at
the time. Davies heard him once more and responded with “Oh, that’s a good
song. We’ll do that one tomorrow.”
On the third and final night, The Kinks played Dead End Street and the young Ira Kaplan
went crazy.
We’re only 154 words into our Yo La Tengo edition and if
you don’t already think Ira Kaplan is the coolest bloke ever then, frankly, you
may as well not bother with the rest.
Not only is he dictating The Kinks’ set list from the
audience, not only is he right about Autumn
Almanac when Ray Davies is wrong, but he’s also about to become the indie
rock star that sounds most like a protagonist in a Philip Roth novel.
Note: I’m not even going to mention the fact that Kaplan
also loved The Monkees and once wrote, individually, to all four of them asking
a load of fanboy questions.
That would obviously be unfair to Iain.
2) Ira the Music Journalist.
Ira continued being an A+ music nerd and became a regular
at CBGBs - catching early performances from the likes of Television, Patti
Smith, Talking Heads, and Blondie.
Desperate to join the conversation, he began to write
articles and reviews for the SoHo Weekly News where he also launched the
brilliantly named “Swinging Singles” review column. From there, he
would go on to work at the New York Rocker and Village Voice, becoming one of
the most respected music journalists around.
For example, he was one of the first writers in New York
to pick up on an act from Georgia who he described as possessing “wistful
minor chords and jangling Byrds’ guitars”.
He finished the article by saying - “By all means,
check out R.E.M. live.”
In short, he was a far better music journalist than I’ll
ever be, and if he had registered the domain name swingingsingles.com he would
have made an absolute fortune.
3) Ira the Promoter.
After a terrible time interviewing Kiss, Ira decided he
didn’t want to be a music journalist anymore so became a promoter instead,
working out of Folk City in Greenwich Village. His remit was to put on a night
of new music every Wednesday which he called “Music for Dozens” - his
optimistic projection of how many people would turn up.
He does two brilliant things though -
Firstly, he operates a strict “No Guest List”
policy which, trust me, is the best guest list policy.
Secondly, he books Sonic Youth and is the first promoter
in New York to put on The Replacements, Husker Du, and The Minutemen.
He’s now in his late 20s and so far he’s been a brilliant
fan, writer, and promoter. It’s probably about time he stopped mucking about
and found someone to form a band with.
4) A Partner.
Like Ira Kaplan, Georgia Hubley was a total music geek
who lived in Hoboken, New Jersey.
She saw The Kids
are Alright and thought that Keith Moon was having so much fun that she
decided to become a drummer - the entirely correct response for anyone watching
that film.
Having seen each other in record shops around town, Ira
and Georgia finally met at a Feelies gig. They were both immediately taken by
the similarities in each other - a certain degree of shyness they hoped to
overcome, a love of baseball and, of course, a shared obsession with music.
Ira and Georgia decided to form a band and get married -
the entirely correct response to meeting anyone of the opposite sex at a
Feelies gig.
5) The Advert
With Ira on guitar and Georgia on drums, they placed an
advert in The Village Voice looking for others. It read -
“Guitarist and bassist wanted for band that may, or
may not, sound like The Soft Boys, Mission of Burma, and Love.”
A huge part of me thinks this advert is a work of art, in
the way that it simultaneously encourages and discourages people from applying.
I mean, do you apply if you’re a massive fan of Love or not? It’s like an
unsolvable puzzle - intriguing yet utterly confusing.
The other part of me thinks it probably explains why they
went through 14 different bass players before they settled on James McNew.
Of the previous 13 candidates, my absolute favourite is a
fella from Switzerland called Stephan who was so tall that he couldn’t fit in
their rehearsal space. As if being an actual giant wasn’t bad enough, he barely
spoke either - a friend of the band once described him as “literally the
quietest person with the known capacity for speech I’d ever met”
One day he asked the rest of the band the following
question -
“What is a puddle?”
This is what happens if you place cryptic adverts in the
music press.
6) Yo La Tengo
Regular readers will know that I’m childishly obsessed
with band names and the story behind them. So, it’s with great fanfare that
I’ll tell you how Yo la Tengo acquired their’s.
In 1962, The New York Mets had one of the worst seasons
in the history of baseball - losing 120 out of 160 games. Despite the multitude
of problems that contributed to this failing, i.e. being terrible at baseball,
there was one particular issue they looked to resolve -
Every time a ball went up for a catch, a fella called
Richie Ashburn kept colliding with another fella called Elio Chacon.
Ashburn would track the ball in the air, shouting
“I’ve got it! I’ve got it!”. Meanwhile Chacon, who only spoke
Spanish, would also track the ball and eventually run into him. Rather than doing
the obvious thing and teaching Chacon the one English phrase that would solve
the problem, they did the opposite - they taught the rest of the squad the
Spanish for “I’ve got it! I’ve got it!”
They even had a meeting, an actual meeting, where all the
players were told to shout the new phrase when the ball was in the air.
During the next game, the ball went up in the air and
Ashburn tracked it, this time shouting “Yo la tengo! Yo la tengo!” - Spanish
for "I’ve got it! I’ve got it!” Chacon understood this time and
backed off, leaving Ashburn clear to make the catch.
Unfortunately, there was one player who didn’t attend the
meeting - a left fielder called Frank Thomas who ran straight into Ashburn. As
the pair got up, and dusted themselves down, Thomas said -
“What’s a yellow tango?”
Ira and Georgia were huge fans of the Mets and decided to
take their name from this mad anecdote. It’s obviously one of the best names
ever and, if you don’t believe me, just ask Iain Lee.
In 2016, I sent him a list of about 30 albums to choose
from and he picked Yo La Tengo because a) he thought they had a cool name and
b) he couldn’t stand the prospect of listening to Roxy Music.
7) The Career.
Yo La Tengo begin with all the professionalism and confidence
you would expect from a bohemian couple with a revolving door of comedy bass
players. During their first gig, Ira is paralysed by fear and can barely sing.
He also forgets the importance of taking a back-up guitar with him so every
time he broke a string, basically every night, he would sit at the side of the
stage and take ages re-stringing his guitar.
“Georgia, maybe tell the audience how we got our
name whilst I sort this out”
“Sure thing, Ira”
When they eventually enter the studio to record their
first album, Georgia is so nervous about singing that they have to build a
screen for her to sit behind. Notwithstanding this, or because of it, the first
album is a charm and includes the best liner note ever -
“Ira Kaplan - Naive Guitar."
Over the next 10 years, whilst contemporaries like R.E.M
and Sonic Youth rise and fall, Yo La Tengo plough their own unique furrow -
never becoming THE band of any moment or nailing their sound to any particular
genre. They become, if anything, the sound of their own eclectic taste - happy
to follow a 10 minute thrash with a 3 minute bossa nova.
They also manage to avoid the darker clichés of rock, the
moods and the drugs, and present an image that’s often undervalued - they’re
nice people. They sit around and watch game shows like The Wheel of Fortune,
they play charades, they make homemade granola, and when they’ve done all that, they’ll go on stage and burst your eardrums.
An indication of the level of confidence and independence
they achieve is best illustrated by an incident in 1992.
Their record label ask
them to come up with a hit - something that can be played on the radio. Yo La
Tengo present the label with a 24 minute jam called Sunsquashed.
"Ira, it’s 24 minutes long!” an executive
complained.
“Yes”, he replied. “But it only feels like
17.”
What a great bloke.
8) Murdering the Classics.
Throughout their career, they never forget their own
fandom and maintain a strong commitment to the cover version. In fact their
knowledge is so encyclopedic, their enthusiasm so complete, that they even
decide to raise funds for a radio station by renting themselves out as the
house band.
Listeners were encouraged to phone up and pledge for Yo
La Tengo to perform a song of their choice live. They did this every year
between 1996 and 2003, taking requests from listeners, and covering songs as
diverse as Downtown by Petula Clark, Raw Power by The Stooges, and The Night Chicago Died by Paper Lace.
During the cover of Rock
The Boat by The Hues Corporation Ira forgets the words so just sings -
“Our love is like a ship on the ocean
Got something something with love and devotion"
I’ll be honest, I’m not sure I’ve ever heard a band
having so much fun in my entire life.
9) This week’s album in 58 words.
I Can Hear The
Heart Beating As One was released in 1997 and sounds like about 10
different bands making one great album.
Personally, I like all of them, but my favourite song is Autumn Sweater.
"We could slip away, wouldn’t that be better,
me with nothing to say, you in your Autumn sweater.”
Have that Ray Davies.
10) My Favourite Band
It’s now 2016, 32 years since Yo La Tengo were formed,
and they’re still going - an achievement to be celebrated. That’s not because I
think they’re brilliant, or that everyone should like them, it’s just that I
admire the spirit that drives their career.
That’s why they’re my favourite band - not necessarily
because of the music they’ve produced but because of who they are, or at least
who I think they are. They’re fans, they’re what happens if people like me,
Ruth, Iain Lee, and the 38 people who read this every week try and channel our
inner music geek into actual sounds. It’s an unbridled enthusiasm, a commitment
to music that’s so strong that it’s hard to imagine them ever breaking up, or
deciding it would ever be a good idea to stop being in Yo La Tengo.
The end game, the entire point of the enterprise, was
just to be a band - the career and achievement summed up in one goal. Seems
obvious but you’d be amazed how they’re the exception - how their own fandom is
the only agenda they ever had.
They called their first compilation album Prisoners of Love.
More than the 2000 words I’ve just written, it perfectly
sums them up.
“Enjoyed that
Martin.”
“Thanks
Ruth.”
“You’ve got me
thinking, though. I reckon it’s probably about time we formed a band.”
“Sure. Let’s
do it, I can play naive guitar.”
“And I can
play drums.”
“Really? You
never said.”
“Well I’m
really good at table tennis, I figure it’s pretty much the same thing.”
“Ok, we need a
bass player.”
“Iain
Lee?”
“Could work.
He’s definitely tall.”
“Ok, let’s see
how he gets on with the album.”
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One
Pitchfork
gave it 9.7 out of 10 and ranked it the 25th best album of the ‘90s
Something
called Paste ranked it the 22nd best album of the ‘90s
So, over to you Iain. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
As you can tell, I like albums by bands that start
with the definite article. THE Beatles, THE Beach Boys. When I was growing up
in the 80’s, I was really into THE 60’s. I became obsessed with THE Monkees at
a very young age and they kind of dominated everything for, well, pretty much
all of my life so far. I tended not to stray too far from the formula.
Yo La Tengo never really entered my consciousness.
This album came out in 1997. I was 24 and, well, I think I was getting drunk a
lot. I thought I had heard of them before, when I saw the name on the list
offered to me by RAM I was convinced I’d heard a reference to them in a John
Hughes film, but I can find no evidence to back that up so I suspect I made
that ‘fact’ up.
I WAS listening to some crazy stuff in ’97
actually, Pizzicato 5 who are on the same label, so there is some crossover,
but…oh no, hang on. I was in Pakistan for 3 months that year, working as a
Christopher Lee double (actual true story) and I was discovering Hanson (again,
true story) for myself.
I chose this album from the long and ever changing list sent
to me because I knew nothing about them. I knew nothing about a lot of the acts
on there, but something about the name grabbed me. I honestly thought that with
a name like that, they would be a fun, upbeat, Spanish group playing world
music in a similar vein to The Buena Vista Social Club. I have to stress here,
I have never actually heard The Buena Vista Social Club, and I’m not sure if
they really are a band or just a film, but I imagine if they are a band they
make fun, bouncy, Spanish type music.
I ordered a CD of it as I really wanted to invest myself in
this by owning a physical copy. I’m not a huge fan of streaming, so actually
purchasing something I could touch and feel, to me, is important if I want the
music to mean something to me. It’s a hard (and expensive) album to get hold of
but I really, really wanted to like this.
I joke that I have enough bands and don’t need any more, but
actually, I’m aware that I am a bit of a gag myself because I always bang on
about The Monkees and The Beach Boys. ALL. THE. TIME. I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One would be my sonic ticket into
new, uncharted spheres of music. The tunes would enchant me, and I would be
transported to sonic places I had never dreamed existed. I’d buy the entire
back catalogue, and spontaneously purchase all the ‘Customers who bought Yo La
Tengo also bought….’ recommendations on Amazon, because I finally I would have
found something new.
OK, well, let’s just say, it didn’t quite work out like
that.
You’ve now listened to
it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
I didn’t want to read anything about the group before I
wrote this piece as I wanted the writing to be pure, based entirely on my
musical experience and not any pre-conceived ideas I might pick up for
Wikipedia. But I just had to have a look and see exactly which part of Spain or
South America they were from -
Ah. Right. Disappointing. Well, let’s see what happens
when I listen.
The CD arrived and I played it in the car on the way
to the radio show one night. I remember John Peel being interviewed years ago
and saying he preferred to listen to new CD’s in the car as, well, I can’t recall
the actual reason, but I do remember thinking that was a bit sad. Life,
however, doesn’t really give me much time apart from when I’m driving to listen
to an entire album, now that really is sad.
The opening track was totally not what I was expecting,
which is of course, not always a bad thing. A somber instrumental, I quite
liked it. It reminded me of a downbeat version of the theme tune to Kids In The Hall, a Canadian sketch show
from the 90’s I was once briefly obsessed with. This was going to be brilliant!
A moody opener followed by light hearted, catchy and amusing pop songs from a
quirky American band.
Then track two, Moby
Octopad, kicked in and fuck me, it was shit. The sort of tuneless,
‘artistic’ drivel that the cool kids would listen to when I was at college and
I would sagely nod along to as I didn’t want to stand up and shout ‘what are
you all thinking? This is obviously bollocks! There’s no tune. They’re chancers
and you’ve all been sucked in by it. The emperor is not only naked, but he’s
doing a massive poo at the same time and you’re all applauding him!’
It really was that bad. Wikipedia had told me that Yo
La Tengo were considered ‘the quintessential critics’ band’ and this particular
album ‘received considerable acclaim from music critics.”
Music critics.
There’s your problem right there.
Damn. I wanted to write a positive piece and look, I’m
slagging off some people who made a record. I’ve never made a record. It must
be hard. But some people do it so well, and Yo La Tengo, in my humble,
worthless opinion, haven’t done it very well at all here.
Let me try and find some positives, and there are a
few. Yes, the cover of The Beach Boys Little
Honda is an abomination, one that sucks all of the youthful exuberance of
the original, throw away ditty. And the 10 minute and 40 second instrumental Spec Bebop is, and I say this as fact, the worst piece of music I have ever
heard but…but…but…
But. There are some gems tucked away. First listen I
came away feeling angry. Angry with the band for making such a racket. Angry
with me for not choosing Roxy Music from the list of albums I’d been offered.
Angry that I had to listen to this twice more. I’m glad I went back though, because
I did find some very sharp moments of sunlight amidst the darkness.
The songs that I liked were when the band dropped the
noise and went soft. Soft guitars and soft vocals from the female singer. There
was still angst and uncertainty and disappointment in the music, but it was
actually quite beautiful.
Centre Of
Gravity is a fey, bossa nova love song. Dumb fifth form
poetry lyrics that were stunning in their naivety. A joyful celebration of the
simplicity of being with someone who is everything to you, expressed in almost
‘aw, gee, shucks’ language. Absolutely brilliant.
Another highlight is their attempt at country. One PM Again is a cracking tune. It may
be a joke, I can’t tell as it is so out of character with the rest of the
record, but who cares? It’s pitched perfectly. Beautiful harmonies and even a
faithful pedal steel guitar solo in the middle. Stunning.
There are just enough of these slow, thoughtful, beautiful
tunes, that by the third listen, I get angry again. Not because I feel I’ve
wasted my time. But because I feel the band are wasting THEIR time with the
industrial noise that is the main thrust of this record. Yo La Tengo, can
obviously DO IT. They have the skills to make good music (by good music, I of
course mean, music I like). Instead of using their powers for good, they use
them for evil.
I’m reminded of when I used to tape my sister’s early REM
LP’s. I’d just record the poppier tunes and ignore the rest, so that worked out
at about 3 songs a record for the first few albums. I’d have done the same with
this back in the day.
It wouldn’t have taken up much space on a C90.
Would you listen to it again?
What do you think? Really? You ask me that after
what I’ve just written?
A mark out of 10?
3 (although Centre Of Gravity gets an
8)
RAM Rating – 9
Guest Rating – 3
Overall – 6
So that was Week 69 and that was Iain Lee. Turns out he’d
never listened to Yo La Tengo before because, well, he’d never heard of them.
So we made him listen to them and he mostly hated them. More importantly,
though, he has failed the audition for our new band – El Hombre En (Spanish for
Man On!). As a result, we’ll not only have to continue with this album club but
we’ll also have to cancel our wedding.
Thanks Iain.
Next week Tim Farron, the leader of something called The
Liberal Democrats, listens to something from 1988 for the first time.
Until then, have a great week and here’s Autumn Sweater by Yo La Tengo
Tim Farron is Leader of the Liberal Democrats and Member of
Parliament for Westmorland and Lonsdale in the Lake District. He was born in
Lancaster and before entering politics he worked at Lancaster University.
In
his spare time Tim enjoys walking in the countryside with his wife Rosie and
their four children, and watching his beloved Blackburn Rovers’ attempts to
return to the Premier League.
Tim’s Top 3 albums ever?
Steve McQueen
- Prefab Sprout
The Clash’s first album (but the US version because it’s got
white man in Hammersmith Palais and Complete Control on it)
Since I left you - The Avalanches
What great album has he never heard before?
Straight
Outta Compton by N.W.A
Released in 1988
Before we get to Tim, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of Straight Outta
Compton
All right, everyone.
Here’s the story of N.W.A - told over 4 meetings.
1) Prologue - 1985
Consider the following -
Los Angeles is spread over 465 square miles and has 8400
police officers.
New York is spread over 321 square miles and has 39,110
police officers.
If you boil that down, it means that Los Angeles has to
maintain law and order with 103 fewer police officers per square mile.
The odds don’t seem right do they? How can such a small
police force effectively cover such a large area?
The answer was simple - they were brutal, they
intimidated the streets. They would say, generously, they were preventing
crimes before they happened, laying down the law whether it was broken or not.
Yet the truth was less about police work, or justice. They were sending a
message.
Indeed their own Police Chief, Daryl Gates, once said the
following -
“Casual drug
users should be taken out and shot.”
That’s not an overheard remark, or a slip of the tongue,
that was a comment made before the US Senate. The Los Angeles Chief of Police,
in front of the country’s elected representatives, actually said that casual
drug users should be taken out and shot.
And no one did anything.
If there was one particular district in L.A. that was
singled out for special treatment from the LAPD it was Compton. Unemployment
and poverty were widespread, and the largely African American population were
in the grip of a crack cocaine epidemic that was destroying nearly everything
in sight.
The police decided to resort to extreme measures to solve
the problem - they acquired a tank and flattened properties in a notional
search for drugs and criminality. On one occasion Nancy Reagan, cheerfully sat
in on one of the raids.
She ate a fruit salad as the tank knocked down the walls
of someone’s home.
After finding just one gram of crack, she was quoted as
saying -
“I saw people
on the floor, rooms that were unfurnished… all very depressing. These people in
here are beyond the point of teaching and rehabilitating. There’s no life, and
that’s very discouraging.”
And no one did anything.
2) The First
Meeting
Jerry Heller had brought Elton John and Pink Floyd to
America. He’d represented Van Morrison, ELO, Marvin Gaye, The Who, Journey,
Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Four Tops, and Black Sabbath. Yet, in the mid
‘80s, he’d run out of talent and found himself loitering around L.A. trying to
catch a break.
His friend Lonzo approaches him in 1987 -
"Hey, Jerry. I
got this Compton guy keeps saying he wants to meet you.”
“Yeah? A
rapper?” Jerry asks.
“Nah. He’s
like a street guy, got a lot of big ideas. He says he wants to start a record
store or something.”
Jerry’s heard it all before. 47 and world weary, he tells
his friend to spare him the story and move along.
But he doesn’t. Over the next weeks and months, Lonzo
keeps chasing Jerry about the kid from Compton -
“Hey, man. You
got to see this Compton guy. He’s on at me all the time about it."
Heller became simultaneously exasperated and intrigued.
On the one hand, he berated his friend whilst, on the other, he knew that
playing hard to get was a deliberate move and only the most determined would
get through his defences. The kid from Compton, whoever he was, was playing his
part to perfection.
Finally, Lonzo approaches Heller again -
"Listen,
Jerry. The guy says he’ll pay me for an introduction to you.”
Heller’s ears pricked up.
“How
much?”
“Seven hundred
and fifty.” Lonzo replied “And
to be honest I could use the money.”
It wasn’t the money that swayed Heller, or a sense of
duty to his friend. He just appreciated the initiative, the fact that some kid
he didn’t even know was prepared to offer $750 just to meet him.
Heller gave in.
On Tuesday 3rd of March, 1987, a car pulls up outside
Heller’s business premises and out steps a short kid wearing wraparound
sunglasses and a Raiders cap.
Lonzo introduced them, “Jerry, this is Eric Wright aka Easy E.”
Easy said nothing and just pulled out a roll of notes
from his sock and paid Lonzo his finder’s fee on the spot. Heller watches on,
charmed by the fact that the kid didn’t once move his lips whilst he was
counting the money.
Heller asks, “You
want to play me something?”
Easy speaks for the first time.
“Sure.”
He played him Boyz
n the Hood, 8 Ball and Dopeman and Heller thought it was the best thing
he’d heard in years.
Easy then began to talk -
“I want to
start my own label. A place where an artist could work without anyone looking
over his shoulder, telling him what he could and could not do - a free
environment, no rules, no catering to any taste other than the artist’s
own.”
Heller asked him if the label had a name.
“Ruthless Records”, Easy said
Heller asked him if his group had a name.
“N.W.A.”
Easy said
“What’s that
mean, No Whites Allowed?” asked Heller.
Easy laughed for the first time during the meeting.
“Sort
of”, he said.
3) The Second Meeting
Heller spins through his Rolodex, his life’s work rolling
before him. He needs a friend, someone to help him distribute. He finally arrives at Joe Smith, chairman of Capitol
Records - nicknamed The Gentleman.
Heller visits The Capitol Building, optimistically
designed to look like a stack of hit singles, and excitedly enters Smith’s
office.
He played him Boyz n the Hood.
Smith was horrified.
Heller then flipped it over and played Dopeman.
Smith was still horrified.
“Stop,
stop!”
There was an uncomfortable silence between the two men.
And then Smith gave his verdict -
“Jerry, what
makes you think anyone is going to buy this garbage? Who’s going to listen?
Tell me, who’s going to play this? No radio station in the world.”
Heller tried his best to convince Smith. He reminded him
of The Stones, The Sex Pistols and a whole host of other bands that seemed
“too much” to one generation but never enough for another.”
Smith held his ground.
“This crap is
never going to make it.”
He then offered Heller a million dollars, just for the
rights to the name Ruthless Records.
“It’s a great
name. Really, I’ll have my girl bring in the chequebook.”
“I don’t want
to sell the name. I want to sell the music.” insisted Heller.
“Never. It’ll
never sell.”
Heller left the office dejected, the vibration of another
door slammed behind him. He gave Easy E the bad news.
“The Gentleman at Capitol said no.”
Easy absorbed the information, without a hint of
reaction.
“That’s
cool”, he said. “Fuck
'em”
4) The Third Meeting
Heller was desperate, everyone had turned their back on
him and he was running out of options. In a move befitting the situation, he
set up a meeting with Priority Records.
Who was the biggest act on Priority at the time?
A bunch of animated raisins called The California
Raisins. They mostly sang Motown covers.
Heller walked into their offices, this time accompanied
by Easy E, and played Straight Outta
Compton.
“You are now
about to witness the strength of street knowledge.”
The room was silent.
“Straight
outta Compton
Crazy motherfucker
called Ice Cube
From the gang
called Niggas with Attitude.”
It was a shock to the system for a label used to dealing
with dried fruit.
Heller then played Fuck
tha Police -
“Fuck tha
police coming straight from the underground
A young nigga got it bad cos I’m brown"
The room was still silent.
Then Heller went in, business to business. He used all
his old tricks, about why these were the perfect label and how Priority was the
best "fit” for N.W.A. All the while he’s trying to read their body
language because, still, they haven’t spoken since they heard Straight Outta
Compton.
Finally, Easy interjected. He’d watched the whole
performance from the corner and felt it was time to say something -
“Why don’t you
at least come down and hear the band play?” he asked
“Ok”,
they replied
Easy E knew he had them.
5) The Final Meeting
It could never last. The tension, and the attention,
brought on by success started to tear it down.
Ice Cube, the band’s lyricist, had left amidst
accusations of being ripped off.
Dr Dre, the producer, was being courted by record labels
that, all of a sudden, were ready to listen.
“We got to
work this shit out”, Dre says as he picks up the phone to Easy.
Easy doesn’t say anything
“This is
important.” Dre pleads. “You
want to get with me up here?”
They arrange to meet at the studio, two old friends from
Compton trying to work out how they can keep this thing together. When Easy arrives
though, Dre isn’t there. Instead, Suge Knight walks in, flanked by bodyguards
holding baseball bats.
Easy knows he’s been set up.
“You got to
sign this.” Knight says, holding up a contract that releases Dre from
his commitment to Ruthless Records.
Easy doesn’t move.
“You see that
white van parked down there on the street?” Knight continues. “We got Jerry Heller tied up in the
back of that van, gun to his head, blow his goddam fucking brains out.”
Easy doesn’t move.
“We can get
your moms too. You want us to?”
Easy signs.
It was the end of N.W.A. They’d sent a message of their
own but now it was time for the start of something else.
6) Epilogue
On March 3rd 1991, three African American men were
driving along the freeway in The San Fernando Valley. A police car noticed the
driver was speeding and started to pursue him.
The driver started to panic.
He was on parole for a previous robbery conviction and
was concerned that this could be seen as a violation. He’d also drank some alcohol
during the evening and wasn’t sure whether he was over the limit or not.
Rather than taking any chances, he decided to put his
foot down and outrun the police. The pursuit raced through residential suburbs,
with multiple police cars joining the hunt, and a helicopter calmly watching
overhead.
Eventually, they cornered the car and ordered the
passengers out of the vehicle.
The first to emerge, Bryant Allen, was kicked, taunted,
and threatened.
The second to emerge, Freddie Helms, was hit on the head while lying on the ground.
Finally, the driver emerged - Rodney King.
He laughed, he smiled, he waved to the helicopter
overhead.
The police officers forced him to the ground, kicked him
6 times and struck him 33 times with their batons whilst, unbeknown to them, the
entire incident was being filmed from across the street. King was eventually
arrested and taken to hospital where he was treated for a fractured facial
bone, a broken right ankle, and an assortment of bruises and lacerations.
During his treatment, a nurse watched as the police
officers that brought him in were laughing and bragging about how many times
they’d hit him.
But then the film of the incident went public.
America saw how the LAPD policed its streets and was
rightly horrified. There were calls for both justice and calm. The Police had
to be arrested, the men who were so guilty, who were seen to be so guilty, had
to be punished and brought before the law that they themselves had bent out of
shape.
On April 22nd, 1992, a jury of 10 whites, 1 Latino, and 1
Asian acquitted the police officers and they were free to go.
And this time, the people did do something.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Straight Outta Compton
In a retrospective review, Pitchfork gave it 9.7
out of 10
Rolling Stone ranked it the 144th
greatest album of all time.
Chris Rock ranked it the best Hip Hop album of all
time.
So,
over to you Tim. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
NWA's Straight Outta Compton is a
classic album, one those albums you must listen to before you die.
So, question number one is: given that I am a
self-proclaimed music nerd, why did I never buy this record and why have I
never knowingly listened to it all the way through before?
Well, I’m not completely sure. Maybe there’s only so many
hours in the day and you can’t listen to everything? Maybe rap is not my thing?
But then again I bought, love and still listen to De La Soul's 3 Feet
High and Rising… but De La Soul are safe and cuddly, so maybeStraight
Outta Compton is too edgy, sweary, violent and misogynistic for a tame
chap like me? Actually, that might well be it… but perhaps the main reason is
that I felt it wasn’t for me.
Forgive me, but I’ve always had a problem with David
Cameron saying that he likes the Smiths, in particular that he likes The
Queen is Dead. There’s a line in Panic that goes
’…the music he constantly plays, it says nothing to me about my life…’ I
don’t want to be an inverse snob, but The Smiths do not sing to David Cameron
about anything in his life at all. What Morrissey sings cannot possibly
resonate with him. I’m a Northern working class bloke, an angsty 1980s
teenager, The Smiths say plenty to me about my life.
Now, for some music that
doesn’t matter. Even fairly avante garde or ground breaking stuff like
the White Stripes, Cocteau Twins, Blur aren’t setting out a manifesto or
representing anyone or anything. There isn’t an ideology simmering away there,
they aren’t speaking of their particular life experiences, offering a personal
sense of belonging to those who share that identity and that’s absolutely fine
- and I love all three of those bands by the way and, for what it’s worth, I
would have no complaints if the PM liked any of them - indeed he has my
blessing!
But NWA have a simmering ideology, a boiling one even. They speak about their
lives, they share their identity. There is fury in this album which is as
authentic and sincere as it is foul-mouthed and misogynistic. But I’m not
straight outta Compton, I’m straight out o’ Preston and what I knew about NWA
is that they said little to me about my life… Which is absolutely ok, but I
simply - in my over earnest way - felt that I would be insincere, inauthentic,
a wannabe, a fake if I got into NWA. So I listened to all the Madchester stuff
instead.
So, excuses over…
Over the years I’ve come to accept that music is music and that I should stop
being so up myself and just listen to stuff!!
You’ve now listened to
it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
It’s a good piece of work. To misquote Public Enemy, you
can believe the hype. This is an important and influential album but it is also
a great musical accomplishment. It’s full of energy, sincerity and lyrical
intelligence. It’s also pretty funky, decent tunes. The last track Something 2 Dance 2 is preceded by
several other tracks that you can most certainly dance to. In fact listening to
the album I have flash backs of being at university in Newcastle dancing to a
few of these - in particular track 4 If It Ain’t Ruff which has a knowingly
jazzy feel to it.
Much of the rap that I’d listened to in the 80s was about the samples that
underpinned the rap as much as the words themselves. This album is well
produced, it’s full of good tunes, clever mixes but the words are King. All
music is derivative, there’s nothing new under the sun, but my first impression
is that the lyrical focus of this album owes more to Gil Scot Heron than to
earlier rap artists. Only Gil Scot Heron didn’t swear so often, he appeared to
respect women and he had a few solutions to the problems he identified.
And I now sound like my dad…
So let’s get my criticisms out of the way. The swearing is ridiculous - it
sounds like a pastiche of itself, I couldn’t help laughing at it, thinking to
myself of Chris Morris’s 'Uzi lover’ from Brass Eye or even the appallingly
toilet-mouthed Rude Kid from the pages of Viz.
Worst of all is the way in which women are spoken of. The language is more than
misogynistic- it is a blanket treatment of women as sex objects and nothing
more. Some will say that we have to accept this as social realism and all
that - and again I don’t doubt their sincerity - but to be angry against
society and authority, or to celebrate hedonism, does not need to bring with it
such a loveless, graceless and damaging assault on womankind.
Oh, and I should point out that much as I admire Eazy E, Dr Dre and Ice Cube,
the Liberal Democrats take a rather different position to them on law and
order…
That may all sound pretty damning, but on balance I have to say I liked the
record.
The opening burst of the title track, F***
Tha Police and Gangsta Gangsta
leave you very clear over what these guys are about! Self- referential,
dramatic backdrops, fresh, brave, resonant of early punk, hedonism with a bit
of nihilism…and no Chic bass lines.
Having established themselves, NWA then seem to feel free
to let the tunes elbow their way in.
If It Ain’t Ruff, Parental Discretion, Something Like That and
Express Yourself, contain laid back grooves, the occasional recognisable
sample, and an odd piano loop.
The rest of the album focusses again heavily on the
rhymes and the lyrical content. Ice Cube’s rant against women in I Ain’t Tha 1 contains the delightful
line addressed to his female companion 'I got what I want, now beat it’ which I
suppose makes this track the closest thing NWA get to tender love song…
Compton’s N The
House sounds clichéd but only because
I’ve heard so many copying this kind of impressively egotistical attack on
wannabes, copycats and also-rans over the last 20 years. It’s easy to forget
that this isn’t a cliché, we are listening to the originals. We finish
with Something 2 dance 2. Great
track, and incredibly well produced… Indeed the album is a great piece of
production as well as a great musical work.
Music is all about connections and 'what does this remind me of?’ The
album it reminded me of the most is The Sex Pistols, Never Mind the Bollocks. They share the same air of desperation, of
churning out a shocking but brilliant piece of work almost as if they had no
choice to do anything else. And both albums were influential beyond compare.
Both albums made music accessible - and the making of music affordable and
comprehensible. To me, almost everything worthwhile in music in the last
40 years owes something to the Pistols. Straight Outta Compton is
certainly worthwhile, and it owes plenty to Johnny Rotten and co.
Would you listen to it again?
I would listen to it again, but not with the kids around….
A mark out of 10?
I’d give it 8 out of 10 artistically, but for my personal
enjoyment of it more like 6 out of 10
RAM Rating – 9.5
Guest Rating – I’ve done
some maths and decided that’s a 7
Overall – 8.25
So that was Week 70 and that was Tim Farron. Turns out he’d
never listened to Straight Outta Compton
before because he wasn’t sure if the music that NWA played said anything about
his life. So we made him listen to it and he rather enjoyed it, apart from the sexism
and the lack of songs about proportional representation (old Lib Dem joke there
everyone).
Next week, Anita Rani listens to something from 2000 for the
first time.
Anita
is an English radio presenter and journalist. You may have seen her on
Countryfile, The One Show, or Strictly Come Dancing with a fella with a nice
chest.
Anita’s
Top 3 albums ever?
The
Smiths – The Queen is Dead
Various
Artists - Soundbombing 2
Michael
Jackson – Off the Wall/Thriller/Bad (all three)
What
great album has she never heard before?
Is This It by The Strokes
Released in 2001
Before
we get to Anita, here’s what Martin thinks of Is This It
All
right, everyone.
Here’s how The Strokes released a classic Rock ‘n’ Roll record whilst some
people were listening to Nu-Metal.
1) An Early Test
Julian Casablancas was minding his own business at college one day when a bunch
of mates suddenly invited him to their room and shut the door.
Apprehensive, apprehended, Julian stood there and considered his fate.
The leader of the gang spoke - asking Julian to state his name, swear a loyalty
to their fraternity, and declare his favourite sexual position.
As pivotal moments in the history of Rock and Roll go, it’s a big one. If
Julian plays this wrong he could end as a frat boy for life or, even worse, a
member of Blink 182. However, if he plays it right there’s still a chance that
the best album of 2000 will happen.
He considered his options.
Then he spoke.
“My name is Julian Casablancas. I don’t want to join your fraternity and I
don’t know why I’m here.”
What a great bloke.
2) A Gang
Having avoided hell, Julian then got some new mates and formed a band.
Let me quickly introduce the line-up -
On vocals we have the aforementioned Julian Casablancas
On guitar we Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jnr.
On bass we have Nikolai Fraiture
And last, but definitely not least, on drums we have Fab Moretti.
You’d be forgiven for assuming that some of these are made up, or from a Rock
and Roll Comic Strip, but remarkably they’re all real. Put simply, they’re the
best five names that any collection of five people have ever possessed and,
without even hearing a note, you already know they’re going to be better than a
band with names like -
Liam Gallagher
Noel Gallagher
Tony McCarroll
Paul McGuigan
Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs
In fact, the only downside of the brilliance of these names is a tinge of sympathy
for Julian Casablancas. In any other band he’d immediately hold the title of
“The One with The Coolest Name” but here he’s denied that honour
because he’s in a band with a fella who has the best name ever - Fab
Moretti.
Oh, and one last thing - The Strokes is a great name too. It’s practically
impossible to come up with a good “The” name these days.
Just ask The Pigeon Detectives.
3) Phwoar!
Ok, they’ve got the names, it would now help if they also had the looks. The
last thing The Strokes need is to look like a bunch of trainee vicars, or
Radiohead (actually that’s the same thing.)
But fear not. Look who just walked in -
As you can see, The Strokes are probably the only band to achieve a 100%
“I would” ratio - considerably better than The Rolling Stones (60%), The
Beatles (50%) or The Who (0%). Only The Monkees come close but I’ve decided
they don’t count because a) there’s only four of them and b) they’d be too
tired to have sex because they run around a lot.
Even modern boy bands, who are specifically put together based on their
“sex appeal”, always have one who’s a bit chubby and would rather be
hugged or taken seriously - like that bloke in Westlife who looks like someone
has drawn a good looking person on a jacket potato -
The Strokes, however, have no such problem. To a man they all look like male
models. Even the bass player who looks like a butler in a horror film looks like
a REALLY good looking butler in a horror film.
And finally, whilst I’m being shallow, they complimented their good looks with
an impeccable wardrobe. At a time when people were wearing hoodies and huge
jeans with hundreds of pockets, they came along with a classic denim and
leather look that was simultaneously timeless and refreshing.
Nick Valensi once told the rest of the band to “dress every day like we’re
going to play a show”.
That’s great advice to be honest.
Unless you’re Genesis
4) A Guru
In our Pavement edition you may remember that I referenced a book called The
Hero Has a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell.
“I didn’t read your Pavement edition mate.”
“Don’t worry, I’ll quickly summarise it here.”
The book suggests that all mythical heroes essentially follow the same journey
and points to the fact there is always an older guide to help them along their
way. For every Luke Skywalker there’s an Obi Wan Kenobi, for every Frodo
there’s a Gandalf, and for every Terry McCann there’s an Arthur Daley.
The Strokes were no different and had their own guru to point the way - JP
Bowersock.
Bowersock’s initial role was to teach Albert Hammond Jnr how to play guitar but
he was so knowledgable that the rest of the band started to turn up to the
lessons to hear what he had to say. He’d spend a lot of time talking to Julian
about the craft of songwriting, collaborating on ideas and testing out
different structures. He played Nick Valensi a load of records he’d never heard
and that massively influenced his guitar style.
The whole band were mesmerised by him and quickly received a comprehensive musical
history that took in everything from Elmore James, to Link Wray, to the Nuggets
compilations.
Such was his influence that he even made the album artwork.
Oh, and I hate to labour the point, but JP Bowersock is a brilliant name -
considerably better than Dumbledore.
5) The Velvet Underground Rule
During an interview in 2002, Julian Casablancas said The Velvet Underground are
the only band that all five members of The Strokes like.
Along with the whole “dressing like you’re always going to play a
show” thing, this is another great piece of advice that all bands should
be forced to adhere to from the beginning.
Had it been a legal requirement there’d be no Red Hot Chilli Peppers, half of
Arcade Fire, that fella in M-People who calls himself Shovel, The Rembrandts,
that bloke out of The View who thinks it’s a big deal to wear jeans for four
days, Scouting for Girls, The Orb, Mani, Babybird, Ugly Kid Joe, and John Cale.
Would Pete Best have liked The Velvet Underground?
No, and the rest of The Beatles knew it.
6) Rehearsals
With all the hard stuff in place, The Strokes now just needed to do the easy
bit - become a decent band.
At the start of 1999 they diligently rehearsed in a tiny studio in the Hell’s
Kitchen district of Manhattan - the same place Madonna had rehearsed when she
first arrived in New York. Starting at 10pm each night and working through
to 8am,
they financed the entire enterprise with a series of day jobs including selling
frozen yoghurt, working in second hand record stores, and bars
Even Nick Valensi getting mugged three times in the same night by the same man
couldn’t put them off. They never missed a rehearsal and, crucially, they never
thought they were ready until they actually were.
6 months after they started, 6 months of working through the night, they
finally emerged and decided to play their first gig.
7) A Live Band
The Strokes’ first gig was at a small New York club called The Spiral. The
audience contained 6 people and Casablancas was so nervous that he threw up
before going on stage.
Despite an inauspicious start, which left the band demoralised, they dissected
the performance in minute detail and decided to soldier on - playing a series
of local “toilet” venues where Casabalancas still used to throw up
before taking the stage. One of these included playing a lobster restaurant in
Delaware in front of a family of five who were trying to enjoy a meal.
Eventually they got bored of all these venues and decided to do what all great
bands do - just find one venue and let the audience find them. They secured
a residency at the Mercury Lounge in New York, just over the road from where
they started out at The Spiral. 50 people turned up for the first gig, which
quickly became a 100, and before long they had sold out.
They’d
found their Cavern, quit their jobs, and developed into something like the band
you hear on the first album.
8) The Demo
By the time they entered the studio, everyone had stopped throwing up and they
produced one of the best demo tapes ever, containing the songs The Modern Age, Barely Legal, and Last Nite.
Geoff Travis at Rough Trade was half way through the first song and made an
offer to their manager before it had finished. In fact, he was so impressed
with it that he decided to release in its current form.
How often has that happened? A 100% strike rate with a record company and a
demo that’s so good it becomes your first single. It’s tempting to view this as
a remarkable chain of events but, in reality, Travis’s response was entirely
sensible and level headed. When I first heard the chorus of The Modern Age I thought it was the best
thing I’d heard in years. When I later heard Last Nite my head actually fell off.
Had I been in charge of a record company, had anyone been in charge of a record
company, they would have followed exactly the same course of action.
A few weeks after Rough Trade had signed them, Noel Gallagher was at The
Strokes’ first London gig, trying to crane his neck to see what all the fuss
was about whilst wishing he wasn’t called Noel Gallagher.
9) Is This It?
Yes it is, thank you very much.
We’ve all been taken in only to be let down by someone who turns out to be
Babylon Zoo. Yet, whatever anyone thinks about The Strokes’ later career, and
the terrible bands they spawned, you have to give them the debut. I loved it at
the time but I can safely say, listening to it all week, that I love it even
more now.
More than that though, as if liking the songs isn’t enough, there was a
refreshing quality about it that belied its obvious influences. In 2001, I’d
been listening to The Flaming Lips and Lambchop, both of whom I liked but only
in that way people in their 30s like bands that make music for people in their
30s. I never thought they were exciting, or even cool. I just thought
they were age appropriate and had a load of good songs.
Then
The Strokes came along with no keyboards, a wardrobe of denim and leather, Red
Marlboros, and even better songs.
Just like The
Velvet Underground, just like Television, just like The Jesus and Mary
Chain.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on Is This It
The NME gave it 10/10
Pitchfork gave it 9.1/10
David Browne of
Entertainment Weekly said “the record just feels right, and sometimes that’s
enough”
So, over to you Anita. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
When I was a kid, music was my world. I remember singing Olivia Newton
John’s Let’s Get Physical in the
playground aged 3 at my Day nursery. I distinctly recall trying to discuss Top
of the Pops with the other kids in kindergarten, who probably had sensible
bedtimes and weren’t allowed to watch anything beyond Rainbow.
Aged 11, I
discovered New Kids on The Block and then woke up aged 13, with taste, a die
hard fan of The Smiths. There followed a period of Grunge, Pearl Jam, Nirvana,
New Model Army, which morphed into dance and electronic music.
Once I began Uni
in 1996 my musical education exploded. I was soaking it up wherever I could.
Discovering more and more. The beauty of opening one album and it leading into
portals and portals of new genres. From Manchester to Bristol, Chicago to
Detroit. Paris to Mumbai
I’d pop into Crash
records in Leeds on a weekly basis to hungrily listen to the latest Drum and
Bass releases. Hours could disappear in Jumbo records discovering bluegrass
albums or hip hop compilations.
Back then I was a
muso nerd and, along with it, a total musical snob.
I remember clearly when Is This It was released and exactly why I didn’t listen to it.
It was 2001 and I was 21 years old. I had landed a job for a TV company which
specialised in music, in London. I was finally leaving my beloved North. This
was exactly where I wanted to be. Working as a researcher earning barely enough
money to keep me in packets of cheap noodles, encona chilli sauce and the odd
pint or three.
I remember a conversation
was taking place in the office on the brilliance of this new band The Strokes.
Back then, the bits I heard did nothing for me. I wasn’t going out to gigs in
Camden, I was much happier in clubs in East London. I had such a wide range of
taste but I couldn’t hear what everyone else could hear in The Strokes, or
maybe I didn’t want to.
Inverted snobbery. If the crowd was telling me it was
the best band ever or the NME had heralded them the saviours of rock n roll, I’d
dismiss them off hand and decide to listen in my own sweet time.
In this case 15 years later.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
May 2016 I’m off
to NYC baby, to film a new project for the BBC. I figure the best place to
introduce myself to this record is its birthplace. So on my first day I take a
long walk from midtown to Chinatown with Is
This It plugged into my ears.
It’s strangely
familiar for an album I’ve never listened to before. The dring dring dring
dring dring dring of the guitar and Julian Casablancas’ lazy vocals trigger a
nostalgia that must have been formed via osmosis back in 2001.The album sounds
timeless. It could it be a New York band from the 70s or an album just
released.
It does feel as
though each song morphs into the other but what I may have seen as a sign of
sameness back in my 20s now feels like a perfect continuous mix.
And then SOMEDAY kicks in. 2001 comes flooding
back. I have a flashback of jumping around to this record in some sweaty pub in
Camden or maybe it was Kings College Union overlooking London. Suddenly I’m homesick.
This maybe a band
from New York but everything about their music says London to me and that’s
where I need to hear it. So I select Kendrick Lamarr for the rest of my time in
NYC and press play when I’m back across the pond.
It’s an overcast,
generic Monday morning back in London. I’m riding the tube at rush hour. It’s
grim but I’m in an alternate universe, fashioned by a bunch of greasy New
Yorkers in leather jackets.
Hard To Explain seems to be carrying me through the crowds. I don’t
think my feet are even on the floor. The manic, repetitive guitar and Julian’s
casual vocals. I like that contrast: it’s like my own relaxed inner-world
against the back drop of rush hour insanity.
Trying Their Luck switches down the pace as Julian’s voice becomes more
lyrical. Now this I like a lot. That lovely twiddly guitar solo. I’m absorbed
in this now.
I must have mellowed a lot since 2001. Perhaps I’m
less discerning. Or free from the restraints of youthful cultural tribalism.
I’m more open-minded and listening to this band now feels different. I get it
now. It’s a recording that bottled the essence and vigour of youth.
I might not have cared for The Strokes so much back then but it turns out that
they were doing a good job of bottling my twenties all along.
I’m delighted I took the time to experience Is This It. It may have passed me by
forever but it’s taken me back to early carefree days in London when music
defined me more than anything else. I’m so pleased I’ve ditched the stubborn
teens and now have the ability to listen with open ears.
Would
you listen to it again?
The task was to listen to this album 3 times. This
morning was the fifth play.
A
mark out of 10?
8
RAM Rating
– 9
Guest
Rating – 8
Overall –
8.5
So that was Week 71 and that was Anita Rani. Turns out she’d never
listened to Is This It before because, understandably, the NME had put her off.
So we made her listen to it and she enjoyed it in New York but especially in
London, on a tube crammed full of commuters. To be honest, if it works there,
it will work anywhere.
Next week, The Guyliner listens to something from 1973 for the
first time.
Until then, here’s the demo version of The Modern Age by The Strokes.
I’m a freelance writer who writes about dating and I’m also an advice columnist in Gay Times magazine. I write a weekly review of the Guardian’s Blind Date column too, for reasons even I don’t quite unferstand.
The Guyliner’s Top 3 albums ever?
I sense a trap. I’ve no idea.
Um.
Amy Winehouse – Back to Black
Madonna – Confessions on a Dance Floor (I am gay, and while Ray of Light and Like A Prayer are ‘the big ones’, this is wall-to-wall bangers and I like a banger)
I assume I can’t have a greatest hits (it would be the Blondie one with the blue cover from the ‘80s), so I’ll say Mary J Blige – What’s the 411.
What great album has he never heard before?
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road by Elton John
Released in 1973
Before we get to The Guyliner, here’s what Martin thinks of Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
All right, everyone.
I’ll be honest, I’ve been looking forward to this Elton
edition for AGES!
So, let’s get stuck in.
1) Want some?
The picture painted of the young Reg Dwight is of a shy
schoolboy, sitting at the back of the class and doing his best to avoid
attention and other boy’s fists*.
*Awaits injunction.
Outside of the classroom, though, Dwight threw himself into
sports and was a keen footballer. His contemporaries have since remarked that
what he lacked in flair and skill he more than made up for in grit and
determination - a short, focussed kid, feverishly running around the field
giving every thing he had (apart from balletic turns and eye catching back
heels).
At weekends he would devoutly follow his local team,
Wealdstone FC, and like any child who could kick a ball, he would watch and
daydream about a future career of last minute winners and adoration from the
crowds.
So there you have it.
In the Wizard of Oz, Dorothy has a choice of roads to
travel at the start of the film. Eventually, she gives in to Munchkin peer
pressure (the worst peer pressure there is) and chooses the Yellow Brick one. With that, the die was cast. There may have been other films along
the other roads but we only get to see the choice she made.
The same applies here.
Reg Dwight could have gone on to become a footballer,
probably a slightly more entertaining version of James Milner. Failing that, he
could have gone on to achieve even greater notoriety as The Wealdstone Raider and
taunted opposing teams with an orchestrated rendition of “Got No
Fans”
But he didn’t. He became a pianist and that’s the
biography you’re going to see.
2) Piano Boy
Whilst other 3 year olds we’re learning how to use the
toilet and get as much ice cream as possible over their face, Dwight decided to
learn piano instead.
He practiced diligently and, at the age of 11, was
invited to audition for a junior scholarship at the Royal Academy of Music.
Although he couldn’t read music at all, he passed the audition due to an exceptionally good ear that marked
him out as an instinctive, rather than educated, talent.
One of his teachers at the Academy remembers playing him
a piece by Handel which was four pages long whilst Dwight patiently sat next to
her, taking it all in.
When she was finished, he played the whole piece back and
echoed her perfectly.
Despite his prodigious talent, though, he remained a shy
and quiet pupil. At odds with the character we know now, he would be rooted to
the back of the class, doing his best to fade into the background.
3) Early signs.
After Dwight left the Royal Academy, he started looking
for a band and was introduced to a bunch of local kids who needed a pianist -
The Corvettes.
There was only one problem though - his image. The band
had given themselves a sleek ‘60s name, wanting to conjure up an image of
teenage cool, of a gang in pursuit of Rock and Roll thrills, and along came
Dwight with his short hair, rounds glasses, and sensible trousers.
He looked like one of those fellas who sit huddled
together on the chairs at Marks and Spencer’s whilst their wives do some
shopping. Hardly the requisite look for a band called The Corvettes and the
other alternative, changing their name to “M&S Husbands On A Low
Heat”, wasn’t really an option either.
Fear not though, reader, because Dwight sorted it.
He
came to the audition and terrorised them with a rendition of Great Balls of
Fire, transforming himself in the process. Suddenly he was animated - eyes wide
open, mouth ajar, boiling over on the piano.
The Corvettes stopped being idiots and decided he was
very much the man for them.
4) Down the Pub.
Ok, The Corvettes broke up shortly afterwards. Serves
them right for naming their band after a car.
For Dwight’s next move he looked to his local - The
Northwood Hills Pub. For years they had engaged the services of a blind pianist
called Albino Bob who entertained the regulars at weekends with his name and
his piano playing. However, for reasons that have escaped me, Albino Bob
decided to knock it on the head one day and vacate the piano.
Dwight seized his chance.
He auditioned for the landlord who, on first hearing, was
less than impressed and dubious as to whether this resolutely normal teenager
could fill the void that the flamboyant Bob had left behind. But Dwight had an
ally - the landlord’s wife thought he had something and convinced her husband to
give him a chance.
Before long, amidst the scepticism of regulars, Dwight had
established himself with a repertoire of early Rock and Roll, Winifred Attwell,
and whatever the drunken audience menacingly requested. He was even befriended
by a group of travellers who accepted him as one of their own and protected him
when trouble broke out in the pub. On one occasion, they shielded him and
carried him through the window whilst a huge brawl broke out that saw glasses
and furniture flying through the air.
In summary then, due to a benevolent Landlord’s wife, a
group of protective travellers, and the demise of Albino Bob’s career, Reg
Dwight had finally found an audience to play for.
Top marks to all involved.
5) This again
Every time I do a giant from the early '70s (Bowie,
Bolan, Jimmy Page) there’s always this period
I have to try and make sense of - The Denmark Street bit.
It seems that all these stars spent the vast majority of
their time in the '60s hanging out in England’s Tin Pan Alley trying to hawk
their songs amongst a variety of music publishers that were looking for “the
next big thing”.
Have you been to Denmark Street?
I ask because it amazes me how tiny it is - no more than
about 30 buildings in a road that takes less than a minute to walk down. Yet,
it was here that you would find the anonymous and embryonic careers of Bowie,
Bolan, and Jimmy Page start to take shape.
As for Dwight? He got his first job on Denmark Street
because Eric “Monster Monster” Hall was sacked over a misdemeanour
with a bowler hat.
Course he did.
Meanwhile, some kid called Bernie Taupin was spending so
much time wandering around the Lincolnshire countryside that he started to
think he was a poet.
Course he did.
6) The Ad.
In June 1967, Liberty Records placed an ad in the NME for
new talent.
Dwight auditioned and played a Jim Reeves song that
received a mixed response over his talent and a unanimous one about his image.
It was the middle of the Summer of Love, there were lava lamps everywhere, and
Dwight was still in his Autumn of Beige phase.
Playing a Jim Reeves song whilst everyone was on LSD
probably didn’t help either.
It wasn’t looking good for our hero.
Shortly after, though, the record company opened another
letter from the thousands of responses. It was one that had been sat on the
author’s mantelpiece for days before,
unbeknown to him, his mother spotted it and popped it in the post.
“Dear Mr Williams.
I am basically a poet, but I think my words can be set to
music
Bernie Taupin”
I know.
Considering he’s trying to sell himself as a poet
that is literally the least poetic thing I’ve ever read in my life. I’m
basically a poet? I think my words can be set to music? Fucking
hell mate, if this was the final version, I’d hate to see the drafts.
It also probably explains why they palmed him off on
Dwight and said “See if you two can work something out”
7) Becoming Elton
Finally, the penny dropped.
First to go was his dreadful name because, let’s be
honest, “Reg Dwight Pop Star” was never going to happen. So, using an
amalgamation of two friends (Elton Dean and John Baldry) he became ELTON JOHN!
All his mates laughed at him and told him he was
ridiculous.
He didn’t care though and the next day he turned up in
Denmark Street wearing a Noddy t-shirt.
What a great bloke.
Along with the name and wardrobe change, he was also
starting to get somewhere with Taupin.
Taupin would send him loads of poems in the post which
Elton would stack up against the piano and try to write music to. If he
couldn’t get the poem to work straight away he’d just bin it and move on the
the next one, editing as he went along and skipping large sections that were
getting in the way of his melody. It worked though, this isolated
collaboration, and they started to produce material that they thought could be
sold to other artists.
Their big break came when one of their songs made it to
the final six of the UK’s entry to the 1968 Eurovision Song Contest. Lulu sang
it, along with the five others, on her TV show.
It came last.
Stung by the criticism, Elton John decided to do two
things - he bought a Minnie Mouse t-shirt and stopped writing songs for other
people.
8) The career up to Don’t Go Breaking My Heart.
You know that bit when you’re growing up and you think
Robert De Niro and Al Pacino were the best actors in the '70s? Like Bowie, or
Bolan, they have an appeal which is completely accessible and requires little
thought to devote yourself to it.
Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Dog Day Afternoon, Serpico -
Hunky Dory, Ziggy Stardust, Electric Warrior, Get it On on Top of the Pops.
It’s so easy.
Well, all I’m saying is there comes a point when you
realise that Dustin Hoffman in his prime was better than all of them.
The Graduate, Midnight Cowboy, All The President’s Men,
Straight Time, Papillon, Marathon Man - The repeat chorus in Rocket Man, the
fact that about 20 seconds of Bennie and The Jets is one note, Tiny Dancer,
that intro to Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, that costume in Tommy, that time he
played the Hollywood Bowl and five pianos opened their lids to spell out
E.L.T.O.N and released a load of terrified doves that saw Reg Dwight dressed like this.
In 1973, Elton John and Bernie Taupin started work on
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. Taupin wrote all the lyrics in two and a half
weeks and Elton composed most of the music in 3 days whilst staying in The Pink
Flamingo Hotel in Jamaica.
Course they fucking did.
9) Funeral for a Friend
That funeral did my head in.
Why would you re-write that song? Taupin didn’t even like
Monroe that much and to recycle it, badly, seems so weird. Dare I say, even a little
dishonest. Then there’s the setting, the black suit costume, and the sense that
the whole day has nothing going for it at all. The last person I’d want to see there is Elton John having no fun
whatsoever.
Duty though isn’t it, giving yourself to others and
performing a role that’s expected. It’s the sort of thing Reg Dwight would have
done and, ultimately, I admire Reg Dwight for doing it.
Someone had to.
Oh, but Elton. Where was Elton? How different
would it have been if HE had turned up.
If only, at the last minute, he had discarded Dwight,
throwing off the suit, and baring the costume underneath. Of course there’d be
silence. And rightly so. You’re expecting Candle in the Wind, not a fella
dressed in green.
And then he bends down and picks up a head dress. It’s
got teeth, more teeth than you’ve ever seen, and huge hunting eyes.
Of course there’s still silence.
But then he starts to play.
“I remember when rock was young, me and Susie had so
much fun”
Baring his teeth, eyes wide open, boiling over.
“Holding hands and skimming stones, had an old gold
Chevy and a place of my own”
It starts outside the Abbey, the assembled crowd have
cottoned on first and start to sing along
“But the biggest kick I ever got, was doing a thing
called the Crocodile Rock”
It now starts inside the Abbey. A queen taps her foot on
the floor of Westminster Abbey, a dignitary from the Commonwealth clicks his
fingers. Suddenly someone gets up and gestures to everyone else to do the
same.
“La! La la la la la”
The place goes wild, an explosion of pure unbridled fun.
In my daydream, and it is only a daydream, it’s what everyone would have wanted.
*Prepares for injunction bukkake*
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
The Critics on Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Rolling Stone Magazine ranked it the 91st best album of all time.
Channel 4 ranked it the 59th best album of all time
So, over to you Guyliner. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
Darling, we were never introduced. My parents never played any Elton in the house, so my first brush with him was the chart-bothering incarnation a whole decade after Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. By the time Elt was front-and-centre in my living room, in the early 1980s, he was not-quite-gay-yet, fighting a losing battle with his follicles and marrying his female assistant.
Thanks to Nikita and I’m Still Standing, I knew him as the guy looking mawkishly through great big Deirdre Barlow-specs and driving Corvettes while ice-maiden border control agents checked his passport, or dancing frenetically on the beach with oiled-up hunks.
Later on, Elton came to mean dreary ballads and a ruiner of summers when that live version of Candle In The Wind in the late ‘80s clogged up the Top 40 rundown. His no. 1 Sacrifice, followed by the ropey scoutmaster’s hairdo, finished me off and I consigned him to history – until Candle In The Wind was inexplicably revived to send Princess Diana off to that great publicity stunt in the sky.
In addition, when you’re a proto-gay growing up in Yorkshire in the 1980s, you’re very conscious of associating yourself with anything ‘flamboyant’. You distance yourself from anything that might be a ‘tell’. You wouldn’t believe how many childhood photos show me posing with a football – I think I’ve kicked one precisely three times in my life.
Elton John was probably one of the first openly gay popstars (eventually) and as I grew up I associated him with being gay, so I largely avoided his music. That’s quite sad, isn’t it? Allow me to pause here and dry my eyes. Maybe I feel a trace of that still, all these years later – I never even think to listen to him. He has almost become too big a persona for me; his predilection for moodswings and gemstones and the great spectacle of being Elton makes you forget he was ever a popstar, that he had hits.
My only inkling of the kind of artist he might have been back in the day was from an aunt who used to listen to The Bitch Is Back while smoking a succession of Superkings down to the nub. I was mildly interested for the briefest of seconds, but by then, my head had been turned by house music, I was wearing baseball caps back to front, jeans wider than bedsheets and listening to faceless tracks created by people who took ecstasy for breakfast, and loads of Kylie or Madonna (in secret). That common teenage phase of hunting through old records and trying to grow a music taste of your own had almost eluded me, save for half-hearted riffling through my mum’s Motown 45s in the bottom of the wardrobe and irrevocably scratching the house copy of Rumours. Beyond that, I was as contemporary as a loud shirt on the sales rack of Clock House at C&A.
I like I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues, the ‘80s ones I mention above and I once danced to Are You Ready For Love at a wedding. Elton’s a puzzle I’ve never been remotely interested in solving.
So I’ve never listened to it simply because I’m not particularly curious where Reg is concerned. Not musically, anyway. His hair fascinates me, as does his impressive refusal to conform and appear in any way likeable or approachable, unless you’re Elizabeth Hurley or Lady Gaga floating toward him, a vision in tulle.
I am ready to have my mind changed for ever.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
As this isn’t an album I’d ever have listened to by choice, I agonised over how best to listen to it. As a teenager, whenever I bought a new album I didn’t know, I’d press play and lie down on the floor to listen to it, my head right between the speakers, close my eyes and smoke a fag, balancing the ashtray on my chest – sometimes burning myself in the process. I would get lost in the sound. I’m not a teenager anymore, though; any mirror can tell you that.
The first listen was the most sacrilegious of all, on my laptop, where it piped out of my speakers like lift muzak. On the second I graduated to earphones and for the third and final hearing – and SPOILER it is definitely the final one – I let it boom out of the stereo. Well, I say boom; I grew up on woofers and climbing in and out of bass bins with my pupils swirling like ice cream sundaes on a lazy Susan. My stereo system did its best, but Goodbye Yellow Brick Road didn’t grab me by the throat and demand my attention, as overblown as that great big intro is.
As I listened, I felt I was hearing music that was meant to be significant, like a record my dad would probably play me and commentate all the way through. I realised I did know most of the singles from it, and they do stand out here as the kind of tracks you would pick to be a single. Candle In The Wind, though, so early on: already the dregs before the wine was halfway through. Imagine that being the bestselling single of all time – why aren’t we marching the streets protesting at this injustice?
As much of an innocent autobiographical ramble as this collection appears, it’s much more calculating than that. On first listen, Elton felt like an excitable friend telling you about his gap year set to music, having us click through and like all his pics and laugh at his pithy comments. I realised, though, it was much more purposeful and – dare I say – pretentious. This was created with masterpiece status in mind.
“This is the one,” Elton and Bernie Taupin may have said, clinking avocado-green Tupperware tumblers. “This is our opus.” This isn’t a guy talking you through his grungy gap year at all; it’s a fully paid-up round-the-world ticket. Your mate travelled in business class, he stayed in nice hotels, he slipped the locals $10 to pose with him. This is Instagram-ready, an album on a selfie stick. It knows the world is watching, and it is thirsty.
I wanted to be into this, album I really did. I wanted to show that I can appreciate artistry, that there’s more to me than snark but… I cannot deliver. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road has exposed me as the shallow, disdainful robot I always knew I was, for while I don’t hate it, I cannot love this. I shall not.
There’s certainly artistry, of course, you don’t get Elton and Bernie Taupin in the same room and come out with a load of old toot – well, not for a few years, anyway – but the songs soon became indistinguishable to me. I had to keep checking the tracklisting to see where we were. I know piano is Elton’s thing but there was so much tinkling of ivories, I was dying for the lid to slam shut on his fingers.
A lot of Taupin’s lyrics seemed quite personal, like scores to settle. Some of them ruffled my special snowflake sensibilities and made me uncomfortable. The issue with lyrics with ‘meaning’ is eventually you crave a break from them; you want to dip your wick in mediocrity. I became hungry for hollow declarations of love or eulogies to anonymous dancefloors.
One contender was the weird Jamaican Jerk-off, plonked early on in the set to serve no other purpose than to own a title infinitely more exciting than its actual content. Would a song like that be made now? Madonna was still problematically screeching in Sanskrit years later on Ray of Light in 1998 – do vanity interludes like this still exist?
Elton’s voice is on what I suppose you would call fine form if you couldn’t think of anything else to say and were being pressed for a compliment at a wake, but I have always found his vocal talents skilled yet awfully affected. Enunciate! I do love a crisp, clear vocal and Elton’s rambling left me wanting. That said, you can definitely pick Elt’s voice out of a lineup, and he does sound like he really means it. Whatever he’s saying.
A kind of euphoria – or perhaps hysteria – hit me around Social Disease. I realised I was nearing the end of the album, and Elton sounded lighter, perkier. This is the first track I really liked – but we were way too far into the album for this to be happening now. To teach me a lesson, Elton closed off the album with another “wave your Watford scarf in the air and turn to the person next to you and tell them you love them even though you couldn’t squeeze out a tear at your grandma’s funeral” dirge. Years hence, this track would read a self-help book, get its nails done and try anti-depressants, becoming John Lennon’s equally execrable Imagine.
I felt like I wasn’t being stimulated. What would I do while I listened to this album? The dusting? Aerobics? An entire blister pack of Xanax? It is a journey, it demands you do nothing but listen. Admirable for 1973 when there was nothing on TV and your taste for the exotic never got past Vesta curries, but over here in 2016, I’ve no time for journeys, only short commutes. Here in the now, I can’t transfer myself, physically or mentally, to the type of stratospheric boredom that would make me lie back down between my speakers and spark up a Marlboro today, not for Elton.
But I will find positives. What it did do was redeem Elton John for me. Briefly, tiaras, tantrums and 40 years of “Do you know who I am?” fell away, and I saw Elton as he was back then, trying to do something different, make himself immortal, with all mistakes in front of him yet to make. His ego still bubbling under, the music speaking for itself.
But while I can appreciate what it was, and what it means to a generation, I can’t like it. I doff my cap to it, I would give it my seat on the bus, but Goodbye Yellow Brick Road will never have my heart.
Would you listen to it again?
Perhaps if my life depended on it.
A mark out of 10?
5
RAM Rating - 10
Guest Rating - 5
Overall - 7.5
So that was week 72 and that was The Guyliner. Turns out he’d never listened to Goodybye Yellow Brick Road before because his ‘80s output was appalling and Yorkshire. So we made him listen to it 3 times and he hated most of it, disliked some of it, and liked a bit of it.
Next week, Richard Osman listens to something from 1973 for the first time. Until then, here’s Bennie and the Jets on Soul Train
(The more I’ve thought about this the more I realise I have
really bad taste in music. At one point ‘my Manics playlist on Spotify’ was in
my top 3)
What
great album has he never heard before?
For Your Pleasure by Roxy Music
Released in 1973
Before
we get to Richard, here’s what Martin thinks of For Your Pleasure
All right, everyone.
Ever since Thursday’s result, Richard and I have been
inundated with requests for an edition to cheer people up. So, it’s with some
relief that we’re not doing Berlin by Lou Reed but an album where a Geordie
falls in love with a blow up doll.
Let’s go.
1)
Actual Best Dad Ever
Regular readers will know that I barely mention the
parents of the artists we feature. Typically they’re either abusive or
controlling dads who I have no interest in or they’re so inoffensive, invisible
to the story, that they barely warrant a mention.
Then along came Bryan Ferry’s dad, straight out of a
Thomas Hardy novel.
Ferry Snr worked in the mines of Newcastle, looking after
pit ponies, and hardly had a penny to his name. Despite this, he courted the love
of his life in the most amazing manner - by riding to her on a carthorse,
wearing a bowler hat, spats, and a sprig of Lavender in his buttonhole.
And he did this for 10 years!
Eventually he saved up enough money to get married and
the couple decided to mark their union by giving birth to Bryan Ferry.
A fitting end to the courtship I’m sure you’ll agree.
Ferry adored his dad so much that when he became a star
he asked him to move in to his Surrey Estate. Rather than winding down in
splendour, or trying to control his son’s career, Ferry Snr opted for a much
more sensible option - he mostly rode around the grounds on a lawnmower wearing a mad hat.
What a lovely image.
Oh, and I’ve saved the best bit till last.
His name was Fred. Fred Ferry.
Cheered up? I know I am
2) The Childhood Bit
Contrary to the St Moritz playboy image we now have of
Ferry, he started life in his own version of Monty Python’s Four Yorkshiremen
Sketch. The family had no phone, no car, no TV and, in the backyard, a tin bath
hung on the wall.
“We were so
poor I couldn’t even afford air for my blow up doll”
Still, the early signs of a desire for decadence were
there and Ferry has since spoken of feeling “out of place” as a
child. On Saturdays, he worked at a local tailors and poured through magazines
showing impeccably dressed men stepping out of sports cars. He dreamt of being
an actor, a mountaineer, and even a cyclist winning the Tour de France.
Yet the defining moment came in 1968. The young Ferry
hitchhiked to London and saw the Stax Revue - Otis Redding and Sam and Dave
taking the stage in some of the best suits he’d ever seen.
“It was just what I wanted to see and hear”, he
said.
3) The First Attempts at Stardom bit.
Fresh from his experience in London, Ferry returned to
Newcastle and formed a band with a terrible name - The Gas Board. Mike Figgis,
future director of Leaving Las Vegas, was also a member and claimed that Ferry
couldn’t really sing. Others also questioned his commitment, saying he never
rehearsed and just had a habit of turning up at gigs with a couple of girls on
each arm.
Not really sure what sort of lead singer The Gas Board
were after to be honest.
Anyway, Ferry was subsequently sacked and moved to London
to further his career, initially making do in a series of day jobs including
van driver, antiques restorer, and, best of all, ceramics teacher at an all -girls
school in Hammersmith. His approach to education was as follows -
“If they wanted to talk about their boyfriends, I’d
talk about their boyfriends. If they brought records in, I’d play them.”
Obviously they sacked him.
With The Gas Board and The School Board now in the past,
he then attempted to infiltrate an even more frightening organisation - King
Crimson.
Fortunately, he failed at that too and couldn’t get past
the audition. So, tired of everything, and everyone, he acquired a piano,
started to write his own songs, and went looking for the rest of Roxy Music.
4) Sliding Doors
First up, Ferry places an ad in The Melody Maker and
recruits a fella called Andy Mackay - a trained saxophonist and oboe player.
Good start Bryan, every band needs one of them.
A short while later, Mackay was on the tube on the
Northern Line and, unbeknown to him, a friend was waiting on the platform at
the next stop. As the doors opened, the friend had the choice of the two
carriages - an empty one and the one that Mackay was in. He opted for the
latter, saw his friend, and was quickly recruited into the band.
His name was, wait for it, Brian Peter George St John Le
Baptiste De La Salle Eno.
Whereas Mackay played terrible instruments, Eno couldn’t
play any at all. Instead, he owned 32 tape recorders, a little black book of
“ideas”, and performed experiments like recording a pen hitting a tin
lampshade and then slowing it down to see what it sounded like.
It sounded like someone slowly hitting a tin lampshade
with a pen.
Remarkably, though, these were the credentials that led him
to become the band’s “sound doctor” and, subsequently, hero to many -
a non-musician who was small on technique but big on ideas. In fact, many other
people doing this intro would probably dedicate the whole thing to his
“genius” and his “influence”. I get that, but I still think
that Ferry sums him up the best -
“With Eno, there were always wires everywhere.”
Ferry finds the rest of the band but, unfortunately, the
recruitment process is relatively boring so I won’t go into it here. The only
thing of note, and remember I’m trying to cheer people up, is that they had a
bass player who used to be in a band called Mouseproof.
5) 1971
The band needed a name and exclusively narrowed it down
to a list of old cinemas, places of classical grandeur and ornate interiors
where the public would go to forget about everything outside - Odeon, Gaumont,
Essoldo.
They settled for Roxy, a name both mundane and evocative,
and then expanded it to Roxy Music after finding out an American band,
undoubtedly awful, had got there first.
With a cool sounding name and a collection of mostly
amateur musicians, Roxy Music spent most of 1971 as a “behind closed
doors” project that eschewed the traditional route of gigging their way
into form. There were too many disparate parts that no one quite knew what
direction they were taking - a revolving door of bass players and guitarists,
that fella on the oboe, a Geordie that people thought couldn’t sing, and Eno
being Eno.
The assumption, probably correct, was that no one wanted
to see that supporting Badfinger in 1971.
So instead, Ferry tried something else.
He put together a tape of the band’s songs, added loads
of stickers of little aeroplanes flying over tall buildings skywriting the name
“Roxy”, and sent it to a journalist at the Melody Maker. The
journalist loved it and phoned up the number written on the back on the box.
In the subsequent interview, Ferry was quoted as saying -
“We’ve got a lot of confidence in what we’re doing
and we’re determined to make it in as civilised way as possible. The average
age of the band is about 27, and we’re not interested in scuffling. If someone
will invest some time and money in us, we’ll be very good indeed”
What a Gent.
6) 1972
There are a couple of quotes about Roxy Music in 1972
from two of my heroes that have always intrigued me.
Michael Stipe of R.E.M once affectionately referred to
the band as “the car wreck that was Roxy Music in 1972”
Stuart Murdoch of Belle and Sebastian wrote the following
line in their song Me and the Major -
“He remembers all the punks and the hippies too
And he remembers Roxy Music in ‘72″
1972 is the key year then. So what happened?
Well, firstly they released their debut album which
contains a brilliant song with a car number plate for a chorus.
Secondly, they finally left the house and started playing
these chaotic gigs where Ferry would be acting weird at one end of the stage
and Eno would be doing his best to match him at the other. Already a palpable
tension between them, they divided the fan’s affections and created a
"Bryan camp” pitted against a “Brian camp” - one half of
the audience migrating to Ferry and the other half to Eno. By all accounts, the
gigs were haphazard and raw but, refreshingly different. Whilst Bowie and Bolan
were glam versions of a musical heritage, Roxy Music, for better or worse, were
making it up as they went along.
Thirdly, they released Virginia Plain and appeared on Top of The Pops looking like a band
that had been shipped in from another planet to play in front of an audience of
tank tops and Keith Chegwin haircuts.
But more than all this, their attitude and image was
different - a combination of excess and refinement that set them apart from
their glitter contemporaries, the status quo, and Status Quo.
Ferry said in an interview at the time that “whilst
other bands wanted to wreck hotel rooms, Roxy Music wanted to redecorate
them.”
As usual, he’s put it far better than I ever could.
7) For Your Pleasure
The crowning moment of all of THIS - a genuinely
brilliant album that often gets overlooked and ignored by a modern audience
that has convinced itself Roxy Music were never THIS good.
But they were.
In Every Dream Home a
Heartache is simultaneously unnerving, funny, gothic, post-modern, and
spectacular. Not just because of how it must have sounded then but because of
how it sounds now.
Nothing quite prepares you for the introduction of the doll.
Beauty Queen
proved that Ferry WAS a singer and Editions
of You is obviously the best punk song ever written.
For an album that was released over 40 years ago it
somehow feels preserved, rather than dated. It creates its own images and
doesn’t let early ‘70s nostalgia get in the way. Morrissey said it was the only
truly great British album he could think of.
In response to Morrissey’s kind words, Ferry said -
“I believe that sort of sad chap, Morrissey, is a
progeny of mine. Though I don’t think he is nearly as virile”
I know. He’s done it again.
8) A final word on
Ferry.
The future has been a little unkind to our hero.
Whilst Eno’s brilliance has drained a lot of the critical
acclaim away from Roxy Music, and on to him, you can’t help but feel Ferry has
been slightly overlooked. It now seems forgotten that they were HIS band and
HIS songs. Instead, he’s been thrown under the bus and lumped in with a load of
80s groups like Johnny Hates Jazz - a soundtrack to some terrible wine bar that
has since closed down.
And when you’re down on your luck, making comments about
how cool the Nazis looked and having a son that campaigns for fox hunting
probably doesn’t help the situation. It adds to an overall suspicion of Ferry,
a sense that he’s anything but a working class hero and he’s betrayed his
roots. You can get away with being earnest and dressing down, apparently, but
being aloof in a great suit is a hard act to pull off.
But that’s the problem with it not being 1972 anymore.
You look at him now through the prism of everything that’s happened since and
you scratch your head a bit.
Whereas in 1972, it was a different story - a classic
about a kid who took the best from his dad and went to the big city for an
adventure.
Aren’t they the stories we all love?
Martin Fitzgerald
(@RamAlbumClub)
The
Critics on For Your Pleasure
In one of those Pitchfork retrospective reviews that
I like so much they gave it 10/10
Q magazine ranked it the 33rd best
British album ever.
So, over to you Richard. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
Roxy Music utterly passed me by, and if I thought about them
at all I just had an image of a guy in a suit singing in a weird voice about
things I wasn’t interested in, so I never felt the need to get involved. I
think in my brain the words ‘Roxy Music’ were entirely represented by Kevin
Eldon singing ‘Virginia Plain’ on ‘Big Train’.
I was interested to know if I was missing out on something,
so I texted my brother ‘Mat out of Suede’ – who has utterly unimpeachable taste
in music – to tell him I was doing the RAM Album Club.
“I’m listening to some
iconic Roxy Music album. I chose it because I’ve always instinctively hated
Roxy Music and I don’t know why. But I think you’re a fan?”
He replied instantly.
“Wait, you don’t like
Roxy Music?”
I know my brother well enough to know how to wind him up
next.
“I liked ‘Jealous Guy”
His measured reply.
“You’re dead to me”
And so, headphones on, let’s Roxy.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
On my first listen I have to say I was feeling vindicated. I
liked some of the songs, but I just couldn’t get past Ferry’s mannered voice,
with its quivers and quavers. I hope I speak for many of us when I say that
often when I listen to music I like to pretend that it’s really me singing and
all of my friends and exes are watching me on stage and saying “Wow, I didn’t
know Richard was such an amazing singer! And apparently he wrote this amazing
song himself too!” Even if I’m doing Gin
& Juice by Snoop.
If I imagined them watching me singing ‘Do The Strand’ I
knew they’d be saying “Why is Richard
singing in that weird voice? I’m glad we split up”
Again I texted to enlist the sage advice of Mat out of
Suede.
“Why does he sing like
that?”
“Partly a pop-art
affectation, spoofing 50s crooners. Partly adenoids”.
“Why don’t the rest of the band say ‘we’ve written some really great
songs, why are you spoiling them by not singing properly?”
“Because he’s one of THE great British voices, and because they come
from art-school backgrounds and an ultra-styled surface is important”
My brother is cleverer than me, as evidenced by my reply.
“I honestly get
embarrassed listening to his voice. I’d rather listen to The Fratellis”
Mat doesn’t take the bait and instead sends me an essay
about why Brian Eno is a genius.
Okay, round 2
On second listen I start to be reeled in, firstly by Beauty Queen, which I don’t think is
supposed to be the best song on the album, but seems like a fabulous tune to me,
and then by Editions Of You which Mat
had told me was the prototype for most of British punk.
I had secretly hoped that I was going to end up loving this
album, but then stumbled over the final three songs on the album, The Bogus Man, Grey Lagoons and For Your
Pleasure. Each has the odd little bit that would be a good middle-eight in
a Killers song, but these three songs go on for 20 minutes. The Bogus Man is 9 minutes long, which I
felt inexcusable. I started noticing Bryan Ferry’s voice again.
Ok, stop getting angry about that Killers reference. Third
listen.
Well wouldn’t you know, I love this stuff. Do The Strand which I’d sort of
dismissed as a novelty song for some reason, is clearly a pop gem and Beauty Queen has now taken residence in
my head. Strictly Confidential is a
bit ‘Anthony & The Johnsons b-side’ for me, but Editions Of You and In Every
Dream Home A Heartache get us back on track.
I’m not ever going to get on with the last three songs on
this album, but it was the 1970s, I understand that. Perhaps I would have
written a 9-minute long song if Viennetta hadn’t even been invented yet.
I texted my brother.
“I really like this
album”
He took a while to reply, but I thought he’d be impressed by
my new-found taste. He finally answered.
“What? Even ‘The Bogus
Man’?”
This is a guy who knows his music.
Would
you listen to it again?
I don’t think I would ever choose to listen to the whole
album again, but I am very grateful to have been introduced to the 4 songs I
particularly love, and I think I have been cured of my fear of Roxy Music. I am
delighted to have found another great band, and ashamed it has taken me so
long.
I still think I might prefer Roxy Music without Bryan Ferry
though. Please supply your own ‘Brexit’ joke here.
A
mark out of 10?
8
RAM Rating – 10
Guest Rating – 8
Overall – 9
So that was week 73
and that was Richard Osman. Turns out he’d never listened to For Your Pleasure before even though he
has a brother who’s in Suede. At first I thought that was weird but then I remembered
my brother works in Sainsburys and I haven’t got a nectar card. So we made him
listen to it 3 times and, eventually, he grew to love most of it – with a
little help from his brother.
Next week, Peter
Hitchens listens to Village Green Preservation Society by The Kinks for the
first time. Until then, here’s Editions
of You.
Author and journalist, currently columnist for ‘The Mail on Sunday’, born 1951.
Peter’s Top 3 albums ever?
Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony
Arcangelo Corelli, Concerti Grossi
G.F. Handel ‘Messiah’
What great album has he never heard before?
The Village Green Preservation Society by The Kinks
Released in 1968
Before we get to Peter, here’s what Martin of Ruth and Martin’s Album Club thinks of The Village Green Preservation Society
All right, everyone.
So here we are, the final edition and I’m over the moon it’s The Kinks.
Let’s go.
1) Ray and Dave.
Everything started so well for Ray.
Born in 1944, he was the youngest member of the family and star of the house. Six older sisters would take turns in mothering him, reading him stories, and playing records to send him off to sleep.
Sounds like the perfect life. But then Dave was born.
“I fucked it up for him,” Dave said. “He was the baby of the family, the centre of attention for three years. Then I came along and stole his thunder.”
Great start then - a baby is born and, with that act alone, he’s already ruined his brother’s life and set in motion a rivalry that lasts to this day.
2) Opposites.
The brothers would grow up as very different children.
Ray was insular, thoughtful, and would often go for long periods without speaking to anyone. He also suffered from insomnia and, when he did finally get some sleep, he was prone to bouts of sleepwalking. His parents became so concerned with Ray’s subdued behaviour they sent him to a child psychiatrist for counselling.
Dave, on the other hand, was hotheaded and enthusiastic - determined to get as much fun out of life as possible. He threw mud at his neighbour’s washing lines and, on his third day at school, he threw some plasticine at his teacher because she shouted too much.
Basically, he was good at throwing things.
Despite these personality differences, though, there’s an interesting story that explains the strong connection between them.
When Ray was 10 years old he was admitted to hospital for an operation and, at one point, it looked as if he might die - only an emergency tracheotomy saved him. Meanwhile, back at home, Dave suddenly awoke in the middle of the night - covered in sweat and gasping for breath. He hurried into his parents room, gesturing to his throat and, in between his erratic breathing, pleaded for help. His mum calmed him down, wiping away his sweat and giving him glasses of water until his breathing was under control again.
She would later discover that Dave woke up from his sleep at exactly the same time the hospital was performing the tracheotomy on Ray.
Spooky.
3) Thwarted Ambition.
Ray had looked into the future and decided he didn’t want the mundane life that his parents lived in Muswell Hill. He wanted to be a leader, a star.
He threw all his efforts into sport and became a talented footballer, athlete, and local boxing champion. A star of track and field, until he injured his back by falling awkwardly on a goalpost.
Next up, a girl passed him a note during class and said he’d been voted “Best Bum in School”. A nice compliment, one of the best, but in 1960 that wasn’t the career move it probably is today.
And Dave? What was he up to?
When he wasn’t throwing things, he spent a large portion of his childhood building a papier-mache mountain in his room that got so big he couldn’t get it out of the door.
Now put yourself in the position of their parents for a moment.
They’ve spawned a nice bum with a bad back and an early version of Richard Dreyfuss in Close Encounters of The Third Kind. What would you do? Probably the same as them - buy them both guitars and hope they stop mucking about and become one of the best bands of the ‘60s.
Ray of course played his guitar thoughtfully and artistically, leaning over the instrument and picking out Spanish style arpeggios and complex chord arrangements. Dave, on the other hand, just cranked up the volume and played a load of power chords as powerfully as he could.
Course he did.
4) The Kinks.
I’m going to rush through the whole “forming the band and getting signed thing”.
All you really need to know is they recruited Peter Quaife on bass and a succession of drummers until they settled on Mick Avory. That just left a vacancy for a singer which was temporarily filled by a young Rod Stewart, and a variety of others, until one of them smashed his mouth on a microphone during a gig and exited the stage to tend his wounds.
Without a ready made replacement, Ray stepped up and that was that.
They were subsequently signed to Pye and given the opportunity to record three singles to prove themselves.
No pressure.
5) The Third Single.
The first single was a mediocre cover of Little Richard’s Long Tall Sally. It reached number 42 in the charts.
The second single was a Ray Davies original called You Still Want Me? It fared even worse - failing to chart at all.
With one single left to save their career, Pye were already considering dropping them.
Ray then comes into the studio and plays the opening bars of You Really Got Me on a piano, originally thinking it would be a nice, relaxed tune that might give them a chance in the charts.
Whether he was right we’ll never know, because as soon as Dave heard it he realised it would sound better speeded up, through an electric guitar. Not only that, he also thought it would be a good idea to take a razor blade to his amp so it sounded “different” and then added one of the great solos to top it off.
You Really Got Me went to number one.
It was Ray’s song, but Dave, by being Dave, had saved The Kinks.
6) Meet The Beatles.
The Kinks and The Beatles came face to face on the 2nd of August at The Gaumont Cinema in Bournemouth.
As the Kinks’ support slot drew closer and closer, Lennon was hanging about on stage basking in the adoration of an audience that were there for him. Ray Davies watched him mark his ground and felt anxiety at the prospect ahead - supporting The Beatles, the biggest band in the world.
Still, he walked up to Lennon and said,
“It’s our turn. You’re on after us”
Lennon, the absolute Scouser, immediately put him in his place.
“With The Beatles, laddie, nobody gets a turn. You’re just there to keep the crowd occupied until we go on.”
Laddie? I’m surprised Dave Davies didn’t throw something at him from the wings.
Chastened by the experience, The Kinks meandered through their set whilst a Beatlemania audience chanted for their band. They then finished with You Really Got Me and the place went nuts.
“Later I watched The Beatles play and actually heard some fans screaming "We Want The Kinks”“, said Ray.
London 1 Liverpool 0.
7) Singles 3 - 8.
I have a theory about these early Kinks’ singles - they all tell one story.
In You Really Got Me, Ray is madly in love. He doesn’t know what he’s doing, he can’t even sleep at night (he never could to be honest) and says "See, don’t ever set me free. I always wanna be your side.”
He continues in All Day and All Of The Night. Still desperately in love, he now wants a 24 hour companion and the only time he feels alright is by her side - “I believe that you and me last forever.”
He then goes through the ups and down of a fragile romance. Impatient and fed up in Tired of Waiting of You, followed by one last optimistic plea to her in Everybody’s Gonna be Happy - including you and me my love.
But then he throws the towel in for good.
In Set Me Free he literally tells her to do just that and, in See My Friends, he declares that “She is gone, she is gone and now there’s no one there.” He ends by telling her he’ll probably be ok because he’s got loads of great mates that lie around in rivers.
Finally, in Till The End of The Day he validates everything by saying “Baby I feel good, from the moment I rise, till the end of the day”. He’s back on that 24 hour thing again and tells her that they’re both free and their life can now begin.
There you go, over the course of a few singles, through a continuing narrative, Ray writes himself out of the Boy/Girl love song.
8) The Ray Davies Wedding Story.
Really short this, but worth including.
Ray got married and Dave was the Best Man. Ah, that’s nice. They’ve finally realised that blood IS thicker than water and put all their differences aside for Ray’s big day.
However, when the time came for Dave to do his duty, and give a speech, no one could find him. The sisters organised a search party and eventually discovered him upstairs having sex with one of the guests.
I told you it was short but, I think you’ll agree, definitely worth including.
9) The Best Band Fight Story Ever.
A lot’s been said about the rivalry and explosive relationship between the two brothers but, arguably, the biggest fight was the one between Dave Davies and the drummer, Mick Avory.
It all started in the hotel, the night before a gig. Dave and Mick had got into an argument and Mick, the tallest drummer ever, had punched Dave in the face - giving him two black eyes. The next night, Dave went on stage wearing sunglasses to hide his defeat and stood there smarting the whole night.
Suddenly, in between songs, he turns to Mick and says something.
Mick immediately leaps from his drum kit and hits Dave over the head with his drum pedal, leaving him unconscious on the floor.
He actually thought he’d killed him and, with his own preservation in mind, he ran out of the venue and tried to lie low - a difficult task for someone wearing an Edwardian hunting jacket and a pink frilly shirt. Still, he managed to find sanctuary at a friend’s house and nervously passed the time away with all the anxiety of someone who thinks he’s just murdered the lead guitarist of The Kinks.
Of course, he hadn’t. Dave awoke in hospital covered in blood but lived to fight another day.
So what had Dave said to him during the gig? What could be so bad that it would lead to such an altercation?
During a break in songs, Dave had turned to the drummer and said “Hey Mick, you’d be better off playing the drums with your cock mate.”
As last words go, they’re up there with Nelson’s if you ask me.
The band would continue to fight at nearly every opportunity and were eventually banned from playing America after a chaotic tour where they beat everyone up.
10) Singles 9 - 13.
Having freed himself from the love song, and an American audience, Ray then wrote a series of English character studies - Dedicated Follower of Fashion, Sunny Afternoon, Dead End Street, Waterloo Sunset, and Autumn Almanac.
What sets these songs apart is the lack of broad brush in the storytelling. The attention to detail, to the minutiae, holds sway and Ray produces little vignettes of living with cracks in the ceiling, men in frilly nylons, and a couple that are so in love they imagine Waterloo NOT to be the grimy train station that it undoubtedly was, but a sun drenched vista that solves everything.
My particular favourite is Autumn Almanac - the best song Blur never wrote and a pre-emptive strike against the chaos of Sky Sports’ kick off times.
“I like my football on a Saturday, Roast Beef on Sundays, alright.”
Dave Davies may have saved The Kinks but it was now Ray’s eye, and his imagination, that took them in another direction.
11) The Village Green Preservation Society.
And this is where it took him. This is where we end.
Like all nostalgia, it’s a con, an outright lie - a symptom of someone with an active imagination who wasn’t happy with the present day.
Yet, like all nostalgia, it’s seductive in what it promises and careful in what it avoids.
Was there ever a Merrie England? Of village greens and cheerful cricketers? Was it ever this bright? This clear?
I’m not sure it was and I’m equally sure that throwing our lot into “preserving the old ways” is a recipe for disaster. We all have our own imagined past but those that shout the loudest about theirs are often those that are the most unhappy today.
That, more than anything, worries me - an Unmerrie England that takes refuge in its past.
So I take two things.
The songs are great, the songs are really great, but it won’t be God, or even The Kinks, that save the little shops.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
So, over to you Peter. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
What’s wrong with me is a puritanical desire to be serious, and an actual inability to take popular music seriously. I pretty much gave up listening to pop music round about the time Radio London (Big L, 266 on the medium wave band, not the BBC one) went off the air in 1967, and absolutely gave up soon after I crashed my motorbike in the late summer of 1969, an event that strengthened my wish to be serious.
I’d been listening to tin pan alley , I can now work out, since about 1963 (’Pick of the Pops’ on Sunday afternoons was eventually permitted by my boarding-school headmaster who until then had insisted nobody could listen to the radio unless he could make his own set, which a couple of my schoolfellows did, so subverting the ban). So I was in on the beginning of it, and it was all catchy, memorable singles which quickly came and quickly went, and the waters closed over them. I don’t think anyone ever expected to hear them again once they’d dropped off the charts, and it was amazing how quickly singles vanished from the shops once they had stopped selling.
As a result, they’re great memory-joggers, instantly taking me back to certain long-ago moments. But most of them are pretty artless. I never thought it was anything more than an ephemeral pleasure, and I still don’t, though one or two singles e.g. ‘We’ve Gotta Get out of this Place’ and ‘Meet on the Ledge’, appealed to my gloomy instincts more than the rest.
It seemed to have run out of energy and originality, and after Big L, BBC Radio 1 was impossible to listen to, for some reason. I saw the whole thing as entertainment, ice-cream for the mind, except for Bob Dylan, which was something separate anyway, and I kept up an interest in him until ‘Blood on the Tracks’ in 1975 (I’m surprised, on looking this up, to find out that this was so late. My lying memory would have put it four or five years earlier) . Even then, I suspected (and still suspect) that Dylan was having us on, most of the time. Who was going to dare to laugh, however pretentious and obscure he got? Mind you, I get the same feeling about ‘The Waste Land’ .
A schoolfriend urged early Pink Floyd on to me, but I just got bored. And then, though utterly musically uneducated, I found out about Beethoven, whose music is like a Cathedral, whereas this stuff is like an asbestos youth club hut.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
Bored. Bored. And Bored again. Did you think I was a nostalgist? Common mistake. The past is dead, that’s the point about it. I quite liked ‘Days’, which has a faintly elegiac, plangent tinge to it, especially if you can’t make out the words properly. I have heard it somewhere else, long ago, without having any idea who was singing it (this is quite common for me – once you stop listening systematically you have quite a lot of these half-memories and then discover that everybody else knows what they are called and who sang them. This can be quite funny sometimes. Mostly, the album (as we must now call it) reminds me of that early Pink Floyd, especially something which began ‘I’ve got a bike, you can ride it if you like…’ - and these were grown men, singing this nursery stuff. And then more boredom. And then even more boredom. I looked up the lyrics, to see if there was anything there either. Banality, and a feeling of someone trying to fill up an LP (as this must have been when it started life). It’s a search for meaning, but it doesn’t find anything. But by then I’d found revolutionary socialism, which had plenty of meaning, even if it was all a mistake.
HANG ON A MINUTE! SHOUTS MARTIN
So, I received Peter’s piece sometime in May and whilst I liked it, I wanted more. I hadn’t really got to know him through his writing and felt a little brushed aside - like one of those fellas in the Question Time audience who has made a cheap point just for the applause. But no one applauded.
An over sensitivity on my part? Always.
Still, I did want more. It’s the final edition and I wasn’t happy with it being left there.
With that in mind I contacted Peter and what follows is the correspondence that took place on a bank holiday some time ago. It wasn’t intended for publication, it was just two fellas emailing each other, but once I realised it gave me everything I was after, I approached Peter and he kindly agreed for me to use it here.
Here it is.
Martin: Hi Peter. Thanks for your piece and apologies for not getting back to you sooner. Had a crazy weekend with Tim Farron listening to NWA for the first time - you know how it is.
Anyway, I love it.
If, between now and mid-June, you have anything to add then please do as, if anything, it’s a little short.
The second part may be hard to expand on as you have nothing really to say about the album other than what you’ve said. Except maybe, did you have a memory of The Kinks from the '60s?
The first part is fascinating though. I could have read so much more. You were the right age in what people often say is the right decade to be the RIGHT age (I wouldn’t know, I was born in 1971). Yet there seemed to be a clash and you didn’t want ice cream. In fact, you hated ice cream so much that you haven’t ever tasted it since.
Don’t you miss ice cream? On a hot day?
Appreciate I’m imposing on you to do more and you’re already done enough by giving your time for free. But it’s only because I know me, the readers, and the ice cream makers - we all want more.
I probably overplayed the ice cream analogy there - forgive me.
Peter: I’ll take another look in a week or two, and if I feel the urge, I’ll add. But not for the moment. Ice-cream’s a thing for the young. I didn’t hate it. I just reckoned I was too old for it. I used to like corned beef sandwiches and Corona fizzy drinks, too, but I don’t now. These days ice cream hurts and rots my teeth and makes me fatter.
If I remember anything about the Kinks from the 1960s it is the words ‘…to the end of the day’. I can’t recall what came before or afterwards.
To be ‘the right age’ you had to have experienced the world before pop culture. I wasn’t sure it was a good thing, and now I’m sure it wasn’t.
Martin: Firstly, delighted you’re carrying on the ice cream analogy. I feel much better about the whole thing now.
Secondly, I’ve always been more than a little annoyed that the '60s is now told through it’s stock footage – mini-skirts in Carnaby Street and everything’s swinging all over the place. I’m sure it wasn’t like that, it must be a lie. Mustn’t it?
Our club is about trying to tell different truths, to come at things from other angles. The '60s as a concept now seems overplayed to me, but it’s still incredibly pervasive. So I guess I’m just interested in hearing a different take for a change.
It can’t have been fab and groovy in Darlington, and it sounds like it wasn’t for Peter Hitchens. Not that I’m comparing you to Darlington - I’ve never actually been.
But, yes, only if you feel the urge and have the time.
Peter: I was mostly in non-university Oxford (and non-university Cambridge, oddly enough). There was definitely something going on, a kind of shiver through the landscape, a feeling of weakened authority and infinite possibility. Take a look at the original film of ‘Far from the Madding Crowd’ with Julie Christie and Terence Stamp, (so much better than the recent remake, and now available on DVD) or Antonioni’s ‘Blow-Up’, and you’ll get a hint of how thrilling it was. Those girls! The feeling of a summer morning and an endless blue day coming (like almost all English days, it clouded over quite quickly, of course).
But the ordinary world carried on often quite obliviously, while all this gestated in the middle of it.
Peter Hitchens in the ‘60s
There’s a lovely Youtube film (a tiny bit of Carnaby street but lots of more normal London) in which B. Dylan singing ‘Don’t think twice, it’s all right’ (that’s how to find it) is played as background to a series of scenes from London as it was in about 1965.
It was *exactly* like that.
Martin: Did you ever see Bob Dylan in the '60s? My imagination tells me it must have been brilliant but that’s the problem with my imagination - it’s endlessly cheerful. In reality, I suspect I would have had to sit next to a beatnik who wore a beret and smoked Gauloises all evening.
It’s interesting that use colour to describe what was happening.
As someone who wasn’t there and has only seen it on the TV it always strikes me that the '60s is about a transition from a supposedly black and white world to full technicolour. Then I remind myself that I’m being misled again - I.e. People actually live in colour. There were no black and white lives, just televisions.
Yet, there was a promise, or at the very least a suggestion, of an endless blue for you?
Just to touch on a previous email. I had some corned beef recently and was reminded of how nice it was. It’s the beef that works best with vinegar I think.
Peter: No, never saw Dylan. Too young and too broke to do the necessary travel, I think. In any case, I think you’d have had to be around in the early sixties, and in the USA, to see the real thing, before he went electric .There’s a wonderful Youtube of him singing Tambourine Man (one verse missing) at Newport, before he was a megastar. You can see the wind blowing in the trees.
My wife (a Londoner) did see Mick Jagger in his dress at the Hyde Park Brian Jones benefit. Of course that time was lived in colour, though in fact the colours of clothes, cars, buses, advertising billboards etc were different (and cruder) in that largely pre-synthetic age. And it was a lot shabbier and more run-down, even in the parts that were supposed to be OK. But now it somehow seems more real in black and white, which underlines that these events are impossibly unreachable, and the people you can see in them are irrecoverably altered or dead.
Here’s an odd thing, coincidental for me but for nobody else.
I think you noticed my recent interest in Sandy Denny . This isn’t especially musical, though I think her voice in ‘Meet on the Ledge’ and ‘Farewell, Farewell’ is fit to break your heart if you were alive then, and know what happened to her later. Notice how Irish, or at least gaelic, she gets, in ‘Farewell, Farewell’ and that strange skirling yell she lets out in ‘Ledge’ . Ancestry coming out, I think.
Well, I’d never heard ‘Farewell, Farewell’ until about a year ago. And now I have, I cannot get it out of my head and I am quite sure it was about that terrible crash they had in early 1969, and I know why Richard Thompson never sings it any more. I didn’t know about that then.
But I had my own crash later that same year in which, by the grace of God, I hurt nobody but myself. And, my goodness, that was the end of the blue day. From then till now, I’m set apart from everyone who’s never been in such a thing. The veil comes right off, you feel real fear, and real pain, and then real remorse, and the old naked skull is there grinning at you, as he does on all those old tombstones. I’ve never been the same since, though I have to walk about ten miles before the old broken bone begins to ache, and the scars aren’t where anyone can see them.
Poor old Sandy wasn’t in the Fairport crash, of course. She had a different kind of crash later. But look at her little happy face, with the big red scarf, in that picture of them all in the midst of a load of hay, and you’ll see what the sixties were like at the beginning. Then look at the later pictures of her (not the posed, glamorised ones, the ordinary ones, a bit bloated and sagging) and you’ll see what happened later. We all thought we were playing harmless games in a safe suburban garden. And we were in a jungle.
Martin: That’s incredible Peter. I hope the after effects of the crash continue to lessen. I’ve never really had my Fairport Convention phase yet, although I know I will. All these things are about timing don’t you think?
I mean, if you weren’t there, absorbing it at the time, then you have to choose wisely when approaching “the great works”.
Catcher in the Rye, Portnoys’ Complaint - best appreciated when adolescent I suspect.
Blood on the Tracks - well that’s probably a different thing. For me anyway.
And Village Green? Well probably anytime other than when it came out, in 1968.
So, I think so much of what’s in the past is probably ahead of me. Sandy Denny, Beethoven, and Lawrence of Arabia - a film I try every 10 years and still can’t grasp.
Yet people say you had to be there. So much of any generation teases future travellers as if their time and their works of art can only be enjoyed in that context. But I’m never sure that’s as vital as the personal - the place YOU exist in when the approach the past.
Throughout the last year and a half of running this club it’s the thing that’s struck me the most - there is no objective good or bad, of course there isn’t, there’s just people colliding with things at different times, with different sentiments.
Peter: Oh, I’m very grateful for the crash. It did me very little harm, killed or seriously injured nobody else, and did me a great deal of lasting good, though it could explain why so many things seem obvious to me that are baffling to others, and why I am such a physical coward.
I had no Fairport phase or moment. I was just thrilled by ‘Meet on the Ledge’ at the time, and amazed long years afterwards to find it had become a sort of classic. I also intuitively understood it at the time, in a way I now recognise was more or less accurate. The poor things ( well, some of them) were already doomed when they sang it, in their various ways.
Films are very personal. And when ‘Lawrence’ first came out, in an era of 405-line black and white TVs with ten-inch screens, there probably was no more powerful aesthetic experience available. Though I’m surprised it doesn’t resonate at all, as David Lean was a genius (‘Great Expectations’ was far better, but never mind) and I can instantly recall several scenes, from ‘no prisoners!’ to Lawrence bringing the Arab boy into the officers’ mess in Cairo after Aqaba, and the filthy hospital in Damascus.
Beethoven, well, just listen to the slow (second) movement of the Seventh symphony, with no distractions to hand, through headphones, preferably at twilight. Do it three times. You won’t regret it. Then you can move outwards from there.
And there is an objective measure, though few of us know how to use it.
‘Thou, silent form! dost tease us out of thought As doth eternity: Cold Pastoral! When old age shall this generation waste, Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say'st, 'Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.’
RAM Rating - 9
Guest Rating - he didn’t give one and I felt i’d imposed too much on him at that stage.
Overall - 9 plus “he didn’t give one and I felt i’d imposed too much on him at that stage” divided by two
So that was The Final Edition and that was Peter Hitchens. Turns out that he’d never listened to The Kinks before and, once he did, he decided that he hated them. But then we had a lovely chat and that’s really all that matters.
Before we leave you for an extended break, I just want to thank two groups of people.
Firstly - The Guests.
This blog was only possible because of the participation and enthusiasm of over 80 guests. Whether famous or anonymous, each one has delivered personal pieces and provided unique insights into their lives and the albums they’ve reviewed. I can’t thank them enough for the time and effort they have given but, more than that, for the enjoyment they’ve provided.
Secondly - The Readers.
When I started an online blog, largely promoted via social media, I was conscious, and fearful, of the fact that so many of these things can descend into a cat fight of abuse from people who are “right” about everything. Thankfully, though, our experience has been the opposite and the feedback, on the whole, has been tolerant, enthusiastic, and positive. My biggest thanks go to everyone who has read these pieces, shared them, and commented on them. It’s YOU that has made this such an enjoyable experience for me.
Finally, we’ll be releasing a book of some of our editions (and some new ones) at the end of this year. You can pledge for that here and, again, I want to say a huge thanks to everyone who has pledged so far -
I write novels and screenplays. For light relief, I get into rows about politics on Twitter.
Jo’s Top 3 albums ever?
1. Revolver, The Beatles.
2. Broken English, Marianne Faithful.
3. Changes daily. Yesterday it was White Light, White Heat by the Velvet Underground. Today it’s Hozier by Hozier
What great album has she never heard before?
Violent Femmes by Violent Femmes
Released in 1983
Before we get to Jo, here’s what Martin thinks of Violent Femmes
I was talking to my friend Ben about this album the other day.
“Did you know most of these songs were written by a kid in school?”, I asked.
He didn’t.
Like most normal people, he probably assumed that one of the best debut albums ever was written by an adult - someone who had matured and deleted all his teenage drafts. When Kurt Cobain was in high school, for example, the best he could come up with was a song about Spam.
Yet Gordon Gano, future lead singer and songwriter for The Violent Femmes, somehow managed to do something incredibly rare - he created the definitive account of being a teenager, by a teenager.
Ben and I talk about this. The sheer madness of writing songs in school, sat at the back of class, or in between homework and football practice. What are the chances of that being any good? If Gano can write Blister in The Sun at school, then how good were his English essays?
“Surely he was the most popular kid in class?” Ben says. “It’s like Ferris Bueller The Album!”
I see where he’s coming from, except he’s wrong - because everyone loves Ferris and the whole school rallies around him just because he has one bloody day off sick. They even make a film about it.
“No, this isn’t Ferris Bueller The Album”, I reply.
Ben tries again.
“You’re right, it’s more like an album made by his mate Cameron - the weird one”
I don’t tell Ben he’s wrong again because, frankly, he’ll just keep going with the Ferris Bueller comparisons before probably moving onto Diary Of A Wimpy Kid. So I laugh and just agree.
“Yeah, it’s as if Cameron made an album.”
But it isn’t. Because at least Cameron had Ferris and Ferris is the most popular kid in the world.
Gano, on the other hand, doesn’t have anyone so ends up writing stuff like -
“And I’m so lonely I just don’t think I can take it anymore And I’m so lonely I just don’t know what to do And I’m so lonely Feel like I’m gonna crawl away and die And I’m so lonely Feel like I’m gonna Hack hack hack hack it apart”
Fast forward a couple of years in the life of Gordon Gano.
It’s 1981, he’s found a couple of mates, and they’re now busking outside a Pretenders’ gig in Milwaukee - singing those same songs he wrote in school. It doesn’t feel like a launch pad for success but, of course, in this story, it becomes exactly that.
James Honeyman-Scott and Chrissie Hynde from The Pretenders walk past the bedraggled trio and are so impressed that, rather than throwing them a couple of dollars, they offer them a slot on their show that night. Within an hour they go from the street corner to playing in front of 2000 people.
It is, without question, the most successful piece of busking ever.
From there, they secure a record deal and in the summer of 1982 go into the studio to record their first album - Violent Femmes. And the best part is they change NOTHING. It’s the same old songs, the same sound they made on the street, and the whole album is largely played out using just an acoustic guitar, an acoustic bass, and a snare drum.
Only on the 9th song, Gone Daddy Gone, do they make a concession to the fact they’re now in a studio and they’re not busking anymore - they use a Xylophone.
All they needed now was an album cover.
Enter Billie Jo Campbell, a three year old who was walking down the street with her mother in California.
A stranger approaches and asks the mother whether he can photograph the girl for an album cover he’s working on and pays her $100 for the privilege. He then tells the girl to look into a derelict building where he assures her they’ll be loads of animals roaming inside. So, without posing or even really knowing what was going on, she gets on her tip toes and peeks through the window - trying to see what she’s been promised.
After a while, she pulls back from the window -
“There are no animals in there”, she says.
And she’s right, there weren’t. But by that point the photographer had already got what he wanted and he moved on.
Violent Femmes was released in the summer of 1983 to minimal fanfare and poor initial sales. When it was recorded, Gordon Gano was just 18-years-old.
Fast forward to 1989, to my own life.
I’m 18 years old and mooching about The Venue in New Cross, an indie club from a golden age before The Red Hot Chilli Peppers released Give It Away and ruined everything.
During this particular evening, a song comes on I’ve never heard before - a thin, whiny voice asking why he can’t get JUST ONE FUCK! Immediately, it cut through the twee and gothic melodrama that I’d been used to and grabbed my attention.
That voice again - “THERE’’S NOTHING I CAN SAY WHEN I’M IN YOUR THIGHS.”
It was exactly what I wanted - a song about someone who couldn’t get laid and then, when it finally happens, they’re unable to talk. What 18 year old wearing a second hand cardigan can’t relate to that?
After it finished, I approached the DJ.
“What was that song you just played mate?”
“Add it Up by The Violent Femmes”.
Obviously, should a situation like this happen today I could have mainlined Spotify on the way home and listened to it on repeat. But this was 1989, you couldn’t just listen to a song whenever you wanted to. So, faced with the prospect of waiting a whole week for the possibility of hearing it again, I decided to take the only sensible course of action open to me - I went into a record shop the next day and handed over £10.99 for an album on the strength of one song.
It looked amazing, but it sounded even better. The whole thing, from start to finish, blew my head off. That voice, the simplicity of the lyrics and the way it seemed, in places, like a rough draft scattered with annotations and unfinished thoughts.
“Third verse, same as the first.”
“8, I forget what 8 was for.”
Who cares what 8 is for? I didn’t.
Yet for all its angst and triviality, there was something else which I admired. It seems weird to focus on it now, but Violent Femmes was released at a time when albums had sides that couldn’t be shuffled or disorganised. You had to get that order right and I’ve always thought, well since 1989, that no one has done it better than them - 2 sides of 5 songs where the first two are fast, the third slows you down, the fourth picks you up, and the fifth provides a finale.
Put simply - you can’t put these 10 songs in any other order and make them better than THIS.
It became a staple, an album I haven’t gone six months without listening to since I found it in 1989. And, during our break this summer, I was horrified to realise that WE hadn’t even done it!
If it wasn’t for JK Rowling I’d probably still be repeatedly punching myself in the face.
Fast forward, one last time, to 1997.
Billie Jo Campbell, the girl on the cover, is now 18 and The Violent Femmes have slowly made it. In various times, in different places, people have found this album that was quietly released in 1983 and it’s now sold millions of copies. Grosse Point Blank, a romantic comedy, rolls it’s credits to Blister in the Sun whilst Minnie Driver and John Cusack drive off into the distance.
The songs have seeped through to a new audience, they’re being played at college parties and Billie Jo Campbell is hearing them for the first time.
How does she feel to be reminded of her 3 year old self and the photograph that she was tricked into? How did she feel when it came back to her as an 18 year old?
It’s tempting to think that she would have been like any other teenager - simultaneously energetic and anxious about what the future holds. If that was true, then maybe she found the same qualities in the album that I did when I was 18, the same account that Gordon Gano wrote when he was in high school.
Who knows? What I do know is that Billie Jo Campbell decided to pursue the best option open to her.
She became a massive fan of The Violent Femmes.
She framed the album cover and put it on her wall.
She used the fact that SHE was the girl on the cover to help boost her confidence and meet boys.
And in 2008, she married one of them.
Roll credits.
Martin Fitzgerald (@RamAlbumClub)
So, over to you Jo. Why haven’t you listened to it? WHAT’S WRONG WITH YOU?????
I’m not quite sure how the Violent Femmes passed me by. I turned 18 the year this album came out, but I was obsessed with The Beatles at the time. Of contemporary bands I really loved, the standouts were the Smiths and the Psychedelic Furs. I loved any band with a great guitarist. I played guitar myself, mostly alone in my bedroom.
It’s possible that I heard the Violent Femmes but I’ve forgotten. They could easily have been part of the informal seminars on alternative music I received from the muso I dated in my late teens. His parents were Dutch and we hung out mostly at his house, because we were allowed to smoke in his attic bedroom. I’ve got happy memories of sunlit wooden rafters and smoke rings and walls covered in black and white pictures he’d clipped out of NME, while the Dead Kennedys, Jah Wobble or the Birthday Party blasted out of the speakers. Setting aside the fact that I had a pair of very long-lived goldfish named after Guggi and Gavin of the Virgin Prunes, I never became a whole-hearted convert of his favourite bands. Much as I adored him, I didn’t share Muso Boyfriend’s attitude to music: his scorn for the accessible and tuneful, the baffling mixture of irony and obsession with which he regarded his favourites, and his conviction that if the herd hates something, it’s almost certainly brilliant.
The NME was Muso Boyfriend’s bible and it took a hard line on nearly anything commercial or popular, talking about bands in the top ten with the kind of contempt most people reserve for child abusers. A few real Gods could be forgiven commercial success, obviously: people like Bowie or the Stones, but the likes of Nik Kershaw might as well have been Thatcher herself as far as NME were concerned
When the Stranglers released ‘Feline’ and it went to number 4 in the album charts, an NME journo went into meltdown, ranting about the fact that people who’d never heard ‘Rattus Norvegicus’ were now calling themselves Stranglers fans. You could almost see the flecks of spittle on the page. (I’d bought ‘Feline.’ I didn’t own ‘Rattus Norvegicus.’) And I still vividly remember an NME interview with Gary Kemp from Spandau Ballet, a band I never liked, though I admired Gary’s chutzpah in agreeing to talk to them. The interviewer’s disapproval of Gary and everything he stood for reached a glorious peak with the phrase ‘this whorehouse called success.’ I never made much headway arguing about this sort of thing with Muso Boyfriend, though, so after a bit of snogging I’d cycle home and listen to ‘Rubber Soul.’
My first live gig and my first music festival were both with Muso Boyfriend: Big Country at Dingwalls in Bristol, supporting act: John Cooper Clarke, the punk poet. We spent my 18th birthday at the Elephant Fayre in Cornwall, hitching there from South Wales. I’d told my parents some whopping lie about how we were getting there, probably that Muso Boyfriend’s older brother was driving us. Half an hour of unsuccessful hitching later, it suddenly occurred to me that my parents had said they were going shopping later. This meant they might soon be driving past us, so I kept diving for cover every time a Honda Civic came into view.
We finally got a lift, thank God, so I survived to enjoy my birthday at the Elephant Fayre. We pitched the two-person tent by a marquee full of Rastas selling tea and hot knives and saw the Cure, whom Muso Boyfriend was weirdly keen to hear, in spite of the fact that they’d actually been on Top of the Pops. The only other act I remember well from the Elephant Fayre is Benjamin Zephaniah. He did a poem about having the shit kicked out of him by a policeman. Twenty odd years later, I was on a team with him at a kids’ book quiz at the Edinburgh Book Festival.
You’ve now listened to it, at least 3 times, what do you think?
I didn’t Google the band or the album before listening, because that felt like cheating, so I knew virtually nothing about them except that this came out in 1983. When I told my friend Euan which album I was going to review he assured me I’d like it, but his favourite album’s by The Cramps, so that wasn’t entirely reassuring.
Wanting to concentrate, I go outside to my writing room in the garden, which has a wooden ceiling. This, unlikely as it may seem, is relevant information.
So I put on the Violent Femmes and hear a catchy acoustic guitar riff and I think, this is great! I’m going to love them! I’ll get a Violent Femmes T-shirt, buy the entire back catalogue and bore everyone rigid with my new obsession!
But then the vocalist kicks in and I have an immediate, visceral response of ‘no, scratch everything, I hate this.’ The change of mood is so abrupt my mind goes blank. I try to analyse why I moved from appreciation to intense dislike in a matter of seconds, but the best I can do is ‘I’ve heard voices like that before.’
By the time I reach track seven, all I can think about is the Toy Dolls’ cover of Nelly the Elephant. I’m not proud. I know this says more about me than the Violent Femmes.
After I’ve listened to the whole album once, I look down at the place where I was supposed to be making notes and all I’ve written is: ‘his upper register sounds like a bee in a plastic cup,’ which the professional writer in me recognizes as ‘not 500 words’. Feeling glum, I postpone a second listen to the following day.
It’s raining next morning and I can’t be bothered to go and find shoes, so I don’t take the album into the writing room, but stay in the kitchen. With minimal enthusiasm, I put on the album again.
This is weird. The vocalist is actually, um… good. Where did the bloke I heard yesterday go? Now I’m not busy hating him, I notice all the great hooks and how they sometimes sound like a manic skiffle band. There’s a nice bit of bluesy slide guitar and an actual xylophone on ‘Gone Daddy Gone’. Plus, when he half talks, half sings, Gordon Gano (I checked the album credits) sounds a bit Lou Reed, and I love Lou Reed. Apart from being the vocalist, Gano also happens to be the guitarist I fell for yesterday.
I can’t understand why he grated on me so much first time round. Beneath my wooden ceiling, he was the Ur-voice of all those NME-approved punky bands I never liked: nasal, whiny and brash. Today, sitting beside my kettle, he’s raw, catchy and soulful.
Only then, staring into a mug of tea, do I have the little epiphany that you, clever reader, saw coming a mile off. Listening to an album that reeks of 1983, in a room that bears a passing resemblance to that attic of long ago, was a mistake. It wasn’t Gordon Gano who was the problem: it was me. I was listening with a ghostly eighteen year old ex-boyfriend at my shoulder, and behind him, a chorus of snarling early eighties NME journalists, all ready to jeer, because even if I like the Violent Femmes, I’ll like them in the wrong way.
So the sun came out and I took the Violent Femmes back across the wet lawn into the writing room, telling myself that it’s not 1983 any more, and this is between me and the Violent Femmes, nobody else. On the third listen, I realized that I loved the album. Before I knew it, I was listening to it over and over again. Only then did I let myself look at their Wikipedia page.
The Violent Femmes, I read, were ‘one of the most successful alternative rock bands of the 1980s, selling over 9 million albums by 2005.’ Yes, the Violent Femmes ended up in that whorehouse called success, and you know what? It only makes me love them more.