Friday 23 September 2011

ultravox!

Today’s music – early Ultravox! That’s the John Foxx stuff and the band’s name with the ! (an idea nicked from Neu!)

The first self titled Ultravox! album is a bit of a muddle, with half a dozen directions indicated, lots of scratchy new wave style guitars, incongruous violin, some punky stuff, some surprisingly sophisticated songs (like the hugely commercial sound of "Dangerous Rhythm"). It doesn’t really hang together terribly well, but it’s interestingly inventive, and although they were lumped together with the emerging punk movement this debut album proves that Foxx and the boys were on an entirely different course. In many ways it reminds me of the first Japan album, in that it has many punk / new wave elements, (plus some not always successful attempts at spiky white boy funk) but these are surface trappings and there is something entirely different, and impressively original, at its heart. There are synths here, but only to contribute occasional additional ‘weirdness’.

And the first album is produced by Steve Lillywhite and Brian Eno. John Foxx recalls taking a phone call which began "Hallo, this is David Bowie, is Brian Eno there please?" Foxx was speechless. DB was actually inviting the Domed One to Paris to help with the Low sessions…!

Second album Ha Ha Ha starts off very punky and frantic for a few tracks, and it’s all a bit patchy and samey (unlike the debut album), then all of a sudden "Distant Smile" begins with some lovely keyboards and atmospherics. Sadly once the vocals begin it’s as if Ultravox are trying to be the Buzzcocks, and failing rather badly.

Then it all perks up with "The Man Who Dies Every Day", strange, moody and unusual. And despite Foxx’s John Lydon snarl on "While I’m Still Alive" it’s better than much of the early PiL stuff that it sounds like.

But the real killer on this album is the Kraftwerkian drum machine led "Hiroshima, Mon Amour" – it clearly points the way towards both Foxx’s later electronic balladry and Ultravox’s most successful period under Midge Ure. The Andy Mackay-esque saxophone adds a lovely mournful air. And it’s totally out of place on this record! (There is a totally different recording of this track which was used as a b side, and is all guitars and real drums, and would have fitted far better on the album. Interestingly they dropped the more conventional sounding track for the more machine-like version).


1978’s System’s Of Romance takes the band even further from scuzzy guitars and punked up beats. Picking up from "Hiroshima"s lead here we see many more synth dominated tracks, and where the guitar is used it’s often for atmosphere rather than the lead instrument. The opening "Slow Motion" is terrific, and although there are still some of the more frantic New Wave type songs, these are clearly the weaker tracks. The drumming is more machine-like too, the songs pulse and throb rather than rocking out. "Quiet Men" exemplifies this – over a martial drum machine and synth bass Foxx sings in a monotone, and although the guitars are still present the overall impression is that this is a synth band now. The following eerie "Dislocation" takes this further and it is clearly Foxx’s preferred direction as it prefigures tracks like "Burning Car" or "No-One Driving" much more than it does "Sleepwalk" or "Passing Strangers". "Cross Fade" is another pointer to Metamatic. Having said that if you substituted Foxx’s unusual vocals for Midge’s on "When You Walk Through Me" then it wouldn’t be a bad fit on Vienna. Robin Simon’s guitar sound is very close to Midge’s too.

Ultravox split during early 1979 with Foxx going off to record the totally mechanised Metamatic. Billy Currie joined Gary Numan’s band for a while. Numan was a huge Ultravox fan so he was delighted – Currie’s involvement really cements the similarities between Systems Of Romance and Numan’s Replicas and Pleasure Principle. In fact you could mix up many of the songs of these albums and you’d be hard pressed to tell which was which! (Ultravox’s "Maximum Acceleration" is a clear blueprint for Numan tracks like "M.E", especially in the rigid drumming, deep bassy throb and fat minimoog). Numan really copies Foxx’s blanked out whiney vocals too


Currie also worked with Visage during 1979 and it was there that he met ex-Rich Kid (and then a member of Thin Lizzy, weirdly) Midge Ure. Midge connected with Billy straight away – both had strong ideas for atmospheric synth dominated, yet still commercial, music. Midge was introduced to the other members of Ultravox and it was decided to give the band another try. This proved to be a good idea, as the exploratory sessions resulted in an album called Vienna…

Friday 16 September 2011

the idiot - iggy pop

The first seeds of what became The Idiot were sown when David Bowie visited the hospital room occupied by Iggy Pop and proposed a collaboration.

Early 1975 found Iggy Pop disillusioned with the whole Los Angeles scene, musically and chemically. His band, the Stooges, had imploded in February 1974 after years of heavy drug abuse, poor record sales, and increasingly violent and unhappy concerts. After spending much of 1974 just hanging around Los Angeles, Iggy took the long overdue decision to clean up his act. His unorthodox and frankly extraordinary method of getting clean was to voluntarily check himself into the UCLA Hospital, where he figured that he would be able to detox, undergo cold turkey, have some square meals provided and get some long overdue rest. But as his behaviour had been so erratic he was actually committed to the Neuropsychiatric Ward. After a week he’d had enough and tried to leave, but Iggy found that the doctors had decided that he was not safe to release – he was too crazy, even for LA! Iggy was forced to remain in the Neuropsychiatric Ward for some weeks and gradually he recovered from being a slobbering pill popping idiot into a more socially acceptable human being. But he did this virtually alone. He received very few visitors. Hunt and Tony Sales, who would form the backbone of his next band, and Stooges keyboard player Scott Thurston came to see him, as did his Stooges songwriting partner James Williamson. Encouraging and supportive though this was however, the most important of his visitors was undoubtedly David Bowie. Iggy had rarely seen David since the Raw Power mixing sessions in November 1972 but the two had kept in occasional contact. According to Iggy, David smuggled in some cocaine for them to share, then suggested yet another revival of Iggy’s career. Bowie had dozens of half written songs - Iggy could help him finish them. Iggy was delighted. Finally someone was showing faith in him.

During the spring of 1975 James Williamson and Scott Thurston, together with Brian Glascock on drums and Steve Tranio on bass recorded most of the backing tracks that would eventually become Kill City. On carefully sanctioned weekend leave from UCLA, Iggy recorded his vocals in short frantic bursts. Shortly after completing work on the new songs Iggy was fully released from hospital and he immediately hawked the tapes around the various LA record companies. James Williamson tried to dissuade Iggy, as he wasn’t convinced that the record was properly finished, but James needn’t have worried as Iggy’s reputation as a waster and a junkie had preceded him and no-one was willing to take a chance on him. Iggy later said, ‘I had a bad reputation in LA, which is a bad place to have a bad reputation.’

As a postscript to the Williamson / Pop sessions it’s worth noting that the tapes would remain locked away for two years and it was only in late 1977 that Williamson, now working at Paramount recording studios as an engineer, decided to make some cash from his time with Iggy. James dug out the 1975 tapes and with some judicious overdubs and careful remixing presented them to Bomp! records as Kill City. By late 1977 the Stooges were being venerated as the progenitors of punk and Kill City finally made sense. (A superbly remixed and remastered version of Kill City was issued in 2010 – the album sounds terrific now, full of fire and passion, and is considered by both Iggy and James to be a triumph.)

Meanwhile back in 1975 – Iggy remained undeterred by the lack of takers for his new recordings and contacted Bowie to see if his offer of studio time still stood. It did, and Rolling Stone’s Cameron Crowe witnessed the few days of recording. Crowe’s article, published in the February 1976 issue of Rolling Stone, spoke admiringly of Iggy’s ability to improvise at the mike – termed ‘verbal jazz’ by Bowie. Bowie himself came across as tired and coked out. Paranoid and hugely weary of LA he would soon flee the city to spend the summer making his first film, The Man Who Fell To Earth, in New Mexico.

These sessions at the small Oz studio in LA were significant as they represented the first time that Bowie and Pop had ever recorded together. Iggy was firing on all cylinders, vocally and lyrically, and David had tons of ideas for songs – too many it appeared, as at one point he moaned to Cameron Crowe ‘another song, that’s the last thing I need!’ Bowie’s old friend Geoff MacCormack, at that time known as Warren Peace, came up with a soulful piano melody over which Iggy improvised a semi-spoken, semi-sung reflection on heavy drug use. The end result, the astonishing “Turn Blue”, was abandoned and only finished off during the January 1977 rehearsals for the Idiot tour, finally being recorded Lust For Life in May 1977. “Drink To Me” was a new piece which Iggy improvised over a dirge-like Bowie instrumental in which David had played all the instruments. Another track, “Moving On”, was also abandoned and left unfinished while a further song, “Sell Your Love”, was an abortive attempt to remake the already Bowie-esque Kill City track.

After a couple of days the unpredictable Iggy went missing. David mooched about the studio muttering ‘I hope he’s not dead, he’s got a good act.’ But with Iggy still AWOL Bowie headed off to New Mexico where he would be kept busy filming for the rest of the summer. Iggy meanwhile had returned to his hedonistic ways and the rest of 1975 was pretty much written off. All thoughts of a Bowie / Pop collaboration appeared to have been forgotten.

Early 1976 found Bowie making some harsh resolutions. Determined to kick his severe cocaine addiction he decided that the only way would be to distance himself from Los Angeles. An American and European tour would keep him on the road from 2nd February until 18th May. Bowie decided to buy a house in Switzerland and his wife Angie set about finding a new home – this was seen by many as a last ditch attempt to patch up their failing marriage.

Bowie left Los Angeles behind and set off on tour. He only returned to LA for three nights at the Inglewood Forum where one of the backstage liggers was Iggy Pop. Enthused by Bowie’s determination to travel the world and leave his drug-ridden lifestyle behind Iggy eagerly accepted David’s offer to travel with him.

During rehearsals Bowie’s guitarist Carlos Alomar had been playing a funky guitar piece. Bowie quickly recognised the tune’s potential and added some sketchy lyrics, which referred in part to his recent film role in The Man Who Fell To Earth. As a work in progress the song, a bass heavy, slow funk track entitled “Calling Sister Midnight” was performed a handful of times on the Station To Station tour. After Iggy Pop joined the entourage, talk turned to a new collaboration between the two, and the unfinished song was suggested as a possible single - to be performed by Pop and produced by Bowie.

As soon as the tour ended in Paris on 18th May David and Iggy took the chance to book some studio time at the Château d’Herouville, about an hour from Paris. Beautiful grounds surrounded the sixteenth century Château, which had opened in 1969 as probably the world’s first residential studio suite. David loved the space and relaxed vibe of the Château, but at night the slightly creepy atmosphere unnerved him – ‘the studio itself was a joy, ramshackle and comfy… (but) it was a spooky place. I did refuse one bedroom, as it felt impossibly cold in certain areas of it.’

With no clear idea as to where they were heading David and Iggy set to work. Whenever Iggy was stuck for a direction or a lyric David would usually come up with some left field suggestion. “Funtime” started life as a very straightforward song entitled “Fun Fun Fun” until Bowie suggested that to get away from the overtly rock style maybe Iggy should adopt the style of Mae West! At other junctures he suggested that Iggy should sing more deeply than ever before - ‘He pushed forward the proposition that my bass registers were more impressive and interesting than my rock registers… I worked to make it as dark and kinky as possible.’ Iggy has hinted that this working relationship was not without conflict – he later commented, ‘how can two friends make music like that?’ Being a background director rather than the star calling the shots was an unusual position for Bowie, but one that he thoroughly enjoyed.

Another innovation was Iggy’s insistence on using the primitive drum machines he found at the Château. Iggy had begun his music career as a drummer and was fascinated by the unwavering machine driven rhythms. Bowie also loved the mechanical drumming of Kraftwerk and Neu!, which although played by real musicians created similar stripped down beats. “Nightclubbing” features a throbbing drum machine throughout and “Funtime” (which shows a remarkable similarity to Neu!’s “Lila Engel”) sees a drum machine underpinning some ‘real’ percussion. By contrast, “Baby” has no drum sounds at all, taking its rhythm track from the darkly descending stabs of synthesizer.

Much of the music was played by David and Iggy themselves, and in the absence of any musician credits it is often assumed that Bowie’s regular band assisted. In fact, French session drummers, Michel Marie and Michel Santageli, augmented the initial Château sessions. In addition to engineering and co-producing the Château sessions, the manager of the Château, Laurent Thibault, contributed some bass. Previously the bassist in experimental French band Magma, Thibault was somewhat put out when he received no credit whatsoever when the album was finally released. Bowie himself played keyboards, sax and much of the guitar. According to Iggy, 'David plays better Angry Young Guitar than any Angry Young Guitar Player I’ve ever heard, apart from James Williamson.' But at some point during the Château sessions it was decided that, despite Iggy’s enthusiasm, Bowie’s limited ability on lead guitar would need to be augmented. Ricky Gardiner, a Scottish guitarist recommended by Bowie’s producer Tony Visconti was initially called up, but before he could journey to Paris, session guitarist (and nephew of Ray Davies) Phil Palmer added some overdubs to “Nightclubbing”, “Dum Dum Boys” and notably the brilliant conclusion to “China Girl”. Gardiner was recalled a couple of months later to play on Bowie’s Low.

A usual day at the Château would consist of Bowie constructing loops of music culled from long exploratory jams. The French musicians were unsure of what was going on as Bowie would rarely issue any instructions and song structures only became apparent much later. Yet despite the lack of focus Bowie would regularly declare that he was delighted with what had been played. He would then fiddle around with the tapes for hours while Iggy spread dozens of sheets of paper across the floor writing lyrics manically on them all. One song that wasn’t finished during The Idiot sessions was a short spiky piece characterised by an urgently twisting guitar line. Never one to waste a good tune Bowie took it with him at the end of the sessions and turned it into “What In the World” on Low - with Iggy on backing vocals.

The Château sessions stretched into July, but had to be curtailed as other artists had booked the studios during August. Although Bowie himself was due back at the Château in September to record what would become Low, he and Iggy were determined not to lose the impetus of their new music. At very short notice they were able to secure a fortnight at Munich’s Musicland Studios at the start of August. There they met and discussed synthesized rhythms with Donna Summer’s producer Giorgio Moroder. Whilst in Munich Iggy and David also found time to travel to Düsseldorf to meet Kraftwerk. Iggy was surprised to find that Ralf Hütter had been a huge fan of the Stooges. This meeting would be immortalised in Kraftwerk’s song “Trans-Europe Express” – ‘from station to station, to Düsseldorf City, meet Iggy Pop and David Bowie’.

When Bowie returned to the Château at the start of September to begin work on the album that would become Low, the Iggy songs were far from complete. The intention was to finish off the Iggy project with Bowie’s band, as well as record the new Bowie album, but after a couple of weeks the Château sessions were abandoned. Bad vibes caused by Bowie’s litigation with former manager Michael Lippman, and bad stomachs caused by food poisoning sent Bowie in search of another studio. Impressed with Musicland, David was keen to return to Germany. The availability of the Hansa studios in Potsdamer Platz, West Berlin coincided with Bowie’s desire to visit the city, so in October 1976 the sessions moved to Hansa. Both Iggy and David immediately fell in love with Berlin. Iggy would later comment, ‘I always wanted to come to Germany, even when I was a kid. I read everything about it. I always knew I wanted to come here, just like some guys always knew they wanted to wear a dress.’

Abandoning all thoughts of returning to Angie and his nominal home in Switzerland David rented a seven-room apartment at 155 Hauptstrasse, Schoeneberg. Iggy took a smaller flat in the same block. The apartments, above a café and a shop selling car spares, were within walking distance of the Hansa Studios and were situated in a relatively poor area, popular with Turkish immigrants. It was a far cry from the sumptuous houses David had rented in Los Angeles, but this was the intention. As West Berlin offered 24 hour bars and clubs, plus way more drugs and drink than Los Angeles, in retrospect it might seem an odd place in which to settle for two men trying to escape excess, but both David and Iggy delighted in the anonymity that West Berlin gave them. A remote city, stuck on it’s own in the middle of East Germany, Berlin’s divided schizophrenic nature appealed enormously to them.

Both men adored the faded glamour and seedy sense of fun associated with the tail end of the cabaret scene. There was a big drag queen crowd that intrigued David and Iggy, with celebrated nightclub host(ess) Romy Haag becoming a close friend. Although David described his life in Berlin as ‘therapeutic’ he would only fully live there for just over a year, until Christmas 1977. Iggy on the other hand, called West Berlin his home until at least late 1979, sharing his life for much of the time with Esther Friedmann. The daughter of a diplomat, Esther was an excellent photographer but had never heard of Iggy before she met him in a bar in late 1976. Their relationship lasted for nearly three years, allowing stability and calm into Iggy’s life for the first time in ages.

Iggy also loved the surprising amount of space that Berlin offered. ‘It's a big thing, the Berlin luft…the air sweeps in off the Ukraine plains. I like to walk around. When I first got here, I just walked and walked. Not thinking about anything. Just talking to myself.’ Later Iggy took up running, spending hours sprinting through Berlin’s many parks, building up his strength and stamina in the process. Though not as committed to a fitness regime as Iggy, Bowie took to cycling around the city.

Although the usual line is that David and Iggy fled to Berlin to escape the drugs and craziness of the States it’s quite clear that neither man was as clean as most stories state. In recent years both have hinted that their chemical intake in Berlin was still quite prodigious. Iggy outlined a typical scene - ‘There’s seven days in a week. Two days for bingeing for old time’s sake. Two more days for recovery, and that left three days to do any other activity’. Nevertheless despite relatively heavy reliance on stimulants both men were generally in a more positive frame of mind than at any time in the previous couple of years. Both had rediscovered their enthusiasm for music, and their work together would find them pushing each other to new heights. The final results were eight astonishing songs.

 “Sister Midnight” had been completed at the Château – harder, denser and more remorseless than the funky song originated by Carlos Alomar. A muddy wash of distorted guitars struggle to rise above the relentless thud of bass and drums. The whole song contains an unsettling mood of foreboding. Iggy’s lyrics incorporate elements of a disquieting Oedipal dream, which concluded with his father hunting him down ‘with his six gun’. ‘What can I do about my dreams?’ calls Iggy. Write them into compelling songs it seems. Bowie later used Carlos Alomar’s tune as the basis for a new song - “Red Money” - on his 1979 album Lodger, although it was “Sister Midnight” itself that was resurrected by David as one of the undoubted highlights of his 2003/2004 Reality tour.

During the recording of The Idiot Iggy was quoted as saying that his new music was a sort of cross between James Brown and Kraftwerk. He must have had “Nightclubbing” firmly in mind - with its powerful blanked out drum machine beats and wobbly bass it’s a fearsome slice of Germanic music, yet still retains an undeniably funky edge. Iggy acknowledged the song’s influences by singing the first verse in German on his autumn 1977 tour. “Nightclubbing” accurately outlines the sort of lifestyle that Iggy and David were living and its machine driven new wave sound ensured that it became a firm favourite with the post-punk bands. Human League incorporated “Nightclubbing” into a cracked medley with Gary Glitter’s “Rock and Roll Part Two.” Grace Jones recorded a seriously moody version as the title track for her 1980 album. And “Nightclubbing” was surely a big influence on Gary Numan.

Just as “Nightclubbing” described Iggy’s life in 1976, so too does “Funtime.” Interestingly the lyrics to both songs are in the plural (‘we like your lips’, ‘we’re nightclubbing’ etc), which emphasizes the importance of David in the action. In keeping with the title “Funtime” has a much more carefree feeling than that evoked on “Nightclubbing” and it’s cheery refrain ‘all aboard for funtime’ has the effect on including the listener too. “Funtime” has been covered by numerous artists, including Peter Murphy, who also recorded a delightfully lazy ‘cabaret’ version.

In contrast to the joyous abandon of “Funtime”, “Baby” is a rather depressing experience. Angular shards of guitar cut through ominous descending synth chords as Iggy produces a numb Sinatra croon.


But side one crashes out on a genuine high with “China Girl.” The song kicks off at full pelt with the album’s most euphoric melody full of robust guitars, gloriously swirling synthetic strings and all topped with a vaguely oriental sounding toy piano that Bowie had found at the Château. Thanks to the worldwide success of Bowie’s cover in 1983, “China Girl” is probably is probably Iggy’s best-known song. Originally called “Borderline” it is a prime example of a classic Bowie tune mixed with Iggy’s outré lyrics and imagery. There are elements of imperialism, and the corrupting influence of the West (‘I’ll give you’ll television, I’ll give you eyes of blue, I’ll give you men who want to rule the world’). But it’s also oddly romantic - the lovely self-referential line towards the end of the lyric as the little china girl says ‘Oh Jimmy, just you shut your mouth…’ ensures a moment of genuine emotion. Iggy would later describe “China Girl” as being about falling in love with someone from another culture. It appears that during the initial Château sessions a frequent visitor was Kuelan Higelin, an oriental friend of Skydog records boss Marc Zermati. Iggy frequented Zermati’s Paris record shop and had something of a crush on Kuelan. 

Side two of The Idiot opens with a low piano picking out a mournful refrain while Iggy mutters about what happened to the Stooges. It makes for somewhat depressing listening, as failure and death seemed to be their fates –
Dave Alexander (original Stooges bass player, died in 1975 from alcohol related illness);
Zeke Zettner (one of Zander’s replacements, died of an overdose in 1975 after volunteering for Vietnam service in order to score cheap heroin);
Rock Action (Scott Asheton - Stooges drummer, back living with his mother, but still playing drums);
‘Strait’ James Williamson (Stooges guitarist 1970 – 1974, “he’s going straight” mutters Iggy punningly, working as a studio engineer in Los Angeles).
Oddly, there’s no mention of Stooges guitarist / bassist Ron Asheton who was beginning a solid if unspectacular career as a guitarist in New Order (not the later UK band formed from the ruins of Joy Division) with other ex-Stooges Jimmy Recca and Scott Thurston.

Roll call over and the song, “Dum Dum Boys” blasts off in a mass of grinding guitars and powerfully thudding drums. Bowie attempted to play the remorselessly twisting guitar lines but his inexperience led to Phil Palmer overdubbing much of the guitar, based on Bowie’s original attempts. The song itself is a surprisingly straightforward and accurate recollection of the career of the Stooges from standing ‘in front of the old drug store’ to when ‘the boys broke down.’ Intriguingly the last verse offers an olive branch to those Stooges that remained alive - ‘Where are you now, when I need your noise?’ Throughout the song the incessant guitar squeals evoke the feeling, if not the actual sound, of the Stooges, and this inspires Iggy to let rip on his vocals for the only time on this album.

The mood then suddenly switches. “Tiny Girls” is a tender and beautiful interlude between the two longest tracks on the album and this little gem is all too frequently overlooked. Opening with a peacefully reflective Bowie saxophone melody, the song meanders along on a bed of warm and fuzzy mechanised drums for nearly a minute before Iggy’s vocals appear. Part snarl, part croon the vocals address the demands of the young groupies who pursued Iggy. All their perceived shortcomings are listed over the sedate pseudo waltz backing. Lyrically the song represents a real departure for Iggy as a truly adult, wisely poetic quality, not previously apparent in his writing, reveals itself. With a weary ‘ah, what did ya think?’ Iggy lets Bowie’s trademark asthmatic sax return to play the tune out for a final minute. “Tiny Girls” is a genuine delight; swamped in welcoming reverb and echo, it’s probably the most human and emotional song on an album all too often characterised as emotionless and numb.

With the recording of “Mass Production” at Hansa in October, the Iggy Pop songs were finally completed. Bowie’s regular bassist George Murray, and drummer Dennis Davis played on this nightmarish song, inspired by the sometimes bleak and frightening industrial landscapes that Iggy remembered from home. Parts of Berlin’s industrial areas reminded him of the massive production line factories of Michigan and he strove to replicate factory sounds and mechanical noises. The song fades in slowly with weird siren-like sounds and concludes with harsh blasts of foghorn-like synths. (Interestingly, a bootleg recording of Kraftwerk live in 1971 opens with strikingly similar electronic sounds.) The music seeks to conjure up harsh and dirty Metropolis visions of men subordinated by machines. The lyrics are despairing, with suicidal thoughts and miserable references to the production line nature of groupies. All in all this powerful chunk of Germanic rock is simply one of the best and most under-rated tracks that both Bowie and Pop have ever been involved in and it makes for a truly epic conclusion to the album. This track, arguably more than any other on The Idiot carved out a new and influential way forward - Joy Division, Gary Numan and the doomy side of the European new wave owe much to The Idiot and especially “Mass Production.” When poor Ian Curtis was discovered hanging, The Idiot was still revolving slowly on his record player.

With the recording over, Tony Visconti assisted David with the final mix of the Iggy songs. Partly due to the haphazard recording process and partly due to the new technology used and not properly understood, Visconti’s work was, in his words, something of ‘a salvage job.’

The title of the album came from Bowie. Not only is it a reference to Dostoyevsky’s novel, the story of which offered strong parallels with Iggy’s life (a Russian prince, who’s honest soul and big-hearted kindness is sometimes taken for simple mindedness, returns from an asylum) but it is also an affectionate jibe at Iggy’s inept social skills. 

The grey cover photo of Iggy in the rain was taken by Andrew Kent, not Bowie as is often claimed. It shows a new Iggy, looking slightly fearfully into the camera whilst holding his arms in an awkwardly twisted stiff manner. The photo invoked feelings of madness and insanity, ideas that are reinforced by the stark title of the album. The pose was directly copied from a 1906 painting that hung in the Brücke Museum in West Berlin - Roquairol by Erich Heckel. (Bowie would later copy another Brücke painting - Walter Gramatte’s self portrait - for the cover of his 1977 album “Heroes”.) The grey back cover contained all the lyrics but very little else – no list of musicians, for example.

David then used his influence at RCA to secure a three-album deal for Iggy. Bowie must have been persuasive as it is somewhat surprising that RCA were willing to bankroll three albums by someone who had spent some months in the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute only a year earlier and who’s previous albums had shown little discernable commercial appeal. RCA did however hold the album back until March 1977 when Iggy had agreed to tour to promote the record. In the meantime Bowie’s Low had been completed and released. Originally submitted to RCA as New Music: Night and Day the Bowie album had been met with a stunned silence at RCA. Lacking any of the strong commercial sense shown by Station To Station or Young Americans RCA seriously considered not issuing the record. Bowie had also rejected their offer to tour in support of his new album suggesting instead that he would tour with Iggy, as a pianist only. RCA reluctantly let the now retitled Low out in January 1977. With minimal promotion it still sold respectably and the delightfully anti-commercial single “Sound And Vision” perversely became one of Bowie’s biggest hits. With Low out of the way RCA finally issued The Idiot on 18th March 1977.

Not surprisingly, due to the Bowie connection, The Idiot had an enormous expectancy to deliver. Billboard somewhat surprisingly praised Bowie for making Iggy more commercial, a comment echoed by many other reviews. Whether this was actually true is a moot point, but the Bowie touch was assumed to have softened Iggy’s nihilistic vision. Certainly The Idiot was nothing like as commercial as any of Bowie’s records (including Low). It’s swampy, muddy sound wasn’t radio friendly and despite RCA’s efforts to extract a couple of singles (“Sister Midnight” ahead of the album in February 1977, and “China Girl” in May) clearly neither were going to set the charts alight. But the critics were impressed and The Idiot had some high profile fans. Brian Eno loved the heavy industrial sound of the album, and he accurately described that listening to The Idiot was like having your head encased in concrete. Eno had been delighted when he first met David and Iggy at the Château – they could both hum, apparently note for note, the (No Pussyfooting) album of guitar abstractions and tape loops that he’d released with Robert Fripp in 1973. According to some sources Eno mixed “Sister Midnight” during the Low sessions at the Château – certainly the drums sounds are very Enoid – but as with virtually everything else on The Idiot, it went uncredited.

The strong Bowie influence led to some accusations throughout the year that Iggy was now somehow Bowie’s puppet. David went to considerable effort to redress this viewpoint, even writing to the British music papers to deny that he was any kind of Svengali figure. The pair conducted a number of interviews together, which significantly raised Iggy’s profile, notably in April on US housewives’ favourite The Dinah Shore Show. Iggy turned on the charm and came across as witty and self-deprecating – nothing like the degenerate lunatic of legend. Iggy and his band also played “Funtime” and “Sister Midnight” with the lyrics changed so that middle America wouldn’t be shocked - Iggy now found potatoes in his bed, rather than his mother…

The Idiot was not a big success in 1977, but it has sold steadily over the years, and remains one of Iggy’s best selling records. The album received a considerable promotional boost when David agreed to tour with Iggy in March 1977. Backed by drummer Hunt Sales and his younger brother Tony on bass, plus Ricky Gardiner on guitar and David Bowie on keyboards, Iggy kicked off his first tour in three years on 1st March 1977 at the Friars Club in Aylesbury. Although rumours of Bowie’s involvement on the tour had begun to spread beforehand it seems that few people genuinely reckoned that David Bowie would be simply the piano player in Iggy’s band. It was a remarkably humble gesture from David – he remained at the side of the stage, unlit, so as not to take the attention away from Iggy. Interestingly David had never seen Iggy perform to a crowd until the Friars show.

Iggy was adopted by the emerging punk movement, and frequently hailed as the Godfather Of Punk, something which he neither encouraged or appreciated. Iggy would take every opportunity to deride the term ‘punk’ telling CBC TV in Canada that it was only used by ‘dilettantes and heartless manipulators.’

The Idiot tour finished in San Diego 16th April 1977, but Iggy was so hyped up from the successful gigs that, with only a couple of weeks break to write some new songs, he headed straight back to Hansa. There he would record one of his most successful albums ever – Lust For Life. But that’s another story.


Monday 12 September 2011

acadie - daniel lanois

“Some of my favourite records take you on a journey,” Daniel Lanois once commented. Acadie takes the listener on more than one – a journey through his homelands in Canada; a journey through the past, as traditional ways of life are half remembered and the folk songs of the past are referenced; and also a deeply moving spiritual journey. 

By 1989 Daniel Lanois’ reputation was second to none - Rolling Stone hailed him as “the most important record producer to emerge in the Eighties” and artists such as Bob Dylan, Robbie Robertson, Peter Gabriel and U2 queued up for his services. His production style became a byword for quietly epic, atmospheric, stirring, delicate yet impassioned music. Above all Lanois captured the essence of the acts he produced. By insisting on relatively ‘live’ recording, with the control board frequently amongst the musicians to absorb the feeling of the music, Lanois was able to imbue his records with a vibrant immediacy and genuine emotion. 

Daniel Lanois was born on 19th September 1951 in Quebec, Canada. Exposure to traditional French Canadian folk music via his parents influenced his passion for strong simple melodies and the immediacy of improvisation, but the production side also intrigued him. In the 1970s Daniel set up a home studio with his brother Bob and by 1980 the brothers were running the Grant Avenue Studio in Hamilton, Ontario. At this point Brian Eno recorded some of his groundbreaking album On Land at Grant Avenue striking up a friendship and partnership with Lanois that continues to this day. In 1984 U2 persuaded Brian Eno to produce their next album. Eno insisted on bringing the more technically proficient Lanois with him as he felt that U2 and Lanois had a lot in common. The duo’s production of The Unforgettable Fire was so successful that they returned for 1987’s The Joshua Tree and various subsequent U2 projects. By the end of the decade Lanois had realised two great ambitions - working with Bob Dylan on Oh Mercy, and with the soulful Neville Brothers on Yellow Moon.

By 1989 Lanois had relocated to a house/studio called Kingsway, in New Orleans. The warmth of this rambling building where musicians could live and work is palpable on much of Acadie. Lanois’ gentle old-fashioned tunes, often with French lyrics, not only reflected life in Canada when he was growing up (Acadie is a area of Canada he knew well) but the songs linked the past to the present by invoking the folklore of the French population in the bayous of Louisiana. Many had a strong religious feel, especially “The Maker”, which has proved to be one of Lanois’ most enduring songs. Prior to recording the album, Lanois played a well-received set at the New Orleans’ Jazz Festival on 6th May 1989 with a scratch band consisting of Malcolm Burn and Mason Ruffner on guitars plus the rhythm section from Yellow Moon, Tony Hall and Willie Green. Satisfied with the response he began work in earnest on Acadie.

The songs took shape gradually, often during other artists’ sessions. “The Maker” was originally an uneasy mix of harmonica and ambient funk that Lanois was initially unhappy with. But the addition of an unwanted drum track from the Neville Brothers’ sessions transformed the song into a powerfully emotional prayer and Aaron Neville’s beautiful harmony vocal was just the icing on the cake. “Amazing Grace” was at one point intended for Yellow Moon but was left unfinished until Lanois visited Eno at his Suffolk Wilderness studio. Eno also added keyboards and treatments to a number of songs, including the cello effects on “St Ann’s Gold” and some haunting backing vocals for the opening song “Still Water”. Eno also recorded a rare lead vocal for “You Don’t Miss Your Water”, a song that was eventually dropped (though it did appear on b sides and the Married To The Mob film soundtrack). Lanois sent tapes to Dublin – there Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jnr added bass and drums to a couple of songs - whilst back in New Orleans Lanois set about finishing the album. Many of the simpler songs were recorded live, including “O Marie”, a delightful story of the traditional French Canadian tobacco pickers, and much of the similarly folksy “Under A Stormy Sky”, but other tracks took longer. Lanois comments that the powerful panoramic sweep of “Where The Hawkwind Kills” (the only song to approach the bombast of U2) ‘took forever to finish’, and the informative sleevenotes detail the number of mixes and overdubs required on tracks such as “Still Water.” 

Despite the disparate sessions and disjointed recordings the end result was a remarkably cohesive record. The homespun nature of “O Marie” contrasts with the effects laden “Ice” but neither seems out of place. Lanois’ warm and smoky voice is expressive and inviting, his occasional diversions into French (sometimes in alternating lines) seem entirely natural and don’t detract from the songs at all. The strong spiritual vibe flowing through the album is balanced by an earthy honesty from superb musicians playing at the top of their game, contributing soulfully and imaginatively to a selection of inventive original songs.

In 2005 Daniel Lanois’ website (www.daniellanois.com) reissued Acadie and with fifteen years of hindsight he remarked, “Having had a chance to separate myself from this work I can now see how naïve and pure it really is. I stand by this work and I’m very proud of it.”