Tuesday, 19 May 2015

cocteau twins - garlands


For no obvious reason I played Garlands on the way into work the other day. This is the first Cocteau Twins album from 1982 - I thought, I've not heard that one for ages. But, having played it again, I realised why I've not played it for ages. It's not actually very good.

The drum machine dominates - that in itself isn't a problem, but the drum patterns are annoying, basic and very clunky, and the drum sound is harsh and unwelcoming. 

Elizabeth Fraser isn't really singing either - again, that needn't be a problem, but she's not really developed her own amazing voice as yet. I'm pretty sure she's still singing in English (or rather Scottish…), but beyond the odd word absolutely nothing is intelligible. Once more, in itself this doesn't matter - later Cocteau's records are full of singing in totally made up Fraserish, but here we don't yet have that gorgeous vocalising, that lovely warm, inviting voice that she developed. Instead Garlands is full of shouty blasts of twitchy yelps and gasps and mumbles.

And, finally, the songs themselves are just rather forgettable. A couple of very strong pieces - "Wax And Wane" and "Blind Dumb Deaf" both hint at later (and better) songs but on the whole the album is repetitive and sadly rather dull.

Fortunately the Twins improved enormously, and rapidly - the next album has stunning soundscapes like "From The Flagstones" and "Sugar Hiccup"; then they recorded the magical "Pearly-Dewdrops' Drops" and got really, really good!

legendary gigs - bataclan 1972


There are some gigs that have attained legendary status, and not always for musical reasons. The final Ziggy Stardust gig, the Sex Pistols at the 100 Club etc etc. Shows that are frequently talked about, written about, and are thus given a reputation that perhaps they don't always deserve.
 
In January 1972, Lou Reed, John Cale and Nico gave a joint performance at the Bataclan club in Paris. At the time none of these musicians were terribly well known, especially in Europe, and it's only with hindsight that this partial reunion of the Velvet Underground has gathered almost mythical status.
 
Oddly no-one seems very sure as to why this gig actually happened. It was Lou's first live performance since he left the Velvets at Max's Kansas City in the summer of 1970. And it was John Cale's first performance since he'd left the Velvets two years before that! 
 
With Lou sporting a big afro and playing acoustic guitar, John on viola, piano or 12 string acoustic, and Nico on her trusty harmonium, someone had the sense to film this show (though I've never seen the footage), and the audio has been bootlegged for years before a semi official release about 10 years ago.
 
Trouble is, the semi official CD runs too slow. Way too slow. Some time ago I created my own corrected version by increasing the speed by about 10%. Now it's a decent listen. The slow CD sounded like all three were doped up to the eyeballs - and while that was quite possibly the case, even Nico never normally sounded quite that sllllooowww…
 
The show opens with just Lou and John on a sprightly "Waiting For The Man" with John playing a rather jaunty piano. He stays at the piano for the first ever performance of "Berlin", which Lou would record later that spring for his first solo album. Then we get "The Black Angel's Death Song", not as scary as the original, a bit slower too, but the required scratchy, maddening viola is well to the front. "Wild Child" follows, another premiere, with both Lou and John on guitars.  Then "Heroin" - the viola is back, droning menacingly throughout the song, just as it should be. A really good version. 
 
Then it's John's turn to take centre stage. "Ghost Story" is a cracking song, and this solo performance is excellent. Then two oddities "The Biggest Loudest Hairiest Group Of All" is a funny look at the misfortunes of a rock band, quite possibly the VU… Cale rarely does strum along folky songs but that's basically what this is. The audience even claps along good-naturedly - you never got that happening at VU shows! Then "Empty Bottles" which he wrote for Jennifer Warnes. A nice Paris 1919 style ballad, but not terribly remarkable. 
 
Finally, here's Nico. The boys strum and sing backing vocals on "Femme Fatale" - lovely performance. Then Lou sits himself down on a stool at the side of the stage to watch Nico at the harmonium while John accompanies on the viola - "Frozen Warnings", "No-One Is There" and a stunning, as always, "Janitor Of Lunacy". They wrap up the show with all three on a delightfully sweet "I'll Be Your Mirror" and an oddly ragged encore of "All Tomorrow's Parties". 
 
It's all very interesting, but overall it's not the most satisfying of gigs. At times it's clearly badly under-rehearsed, and occasionally rather lacklustre. This may be a little surprising considering who's playing, but perhaps not so surprising given that this was the first gig for many years for both Lou and John. It may be a legendary show, that wonderful near Velvets reunion, but as is frequently the case with legends, the truth of the matter is sadly rather less exciting. I've not listened to this gig for a good many years, and I doubt it'll get played again for a good many more. 
 
It's a bit daft really, but I'd never get rid of this recording as it's yet another one of those that I'm really glad I've got. Even if I don't play it much.

Friday, 15 May 2015

omd - dazzle ships


Riding a wave of popularity after the huge success of Architecture And Morality and the "Joan Of Arc" singles, OMD went back into the studio with a big ol' budget and plenty of time - but they were somewhat short of ideas. Dazzle Ships was the last blast of experimentalism from OMD for some time but what a blast it is!
I mean, how on earth did they get away with this record? Just what were they thinking? 
 
I remember reading that Andy McCluskey described it as OMD wanting to mix the pop sensibilities of ABBA with the avant garde experiments of Stockhausen. I guess they sort of achieved that with Dazzle Ships, but it begs the question WHY on earth would anyone want to mix ABBA with Stockhausen?
 
Today people seem to love Dazzle Ships. But in 1983 OMD got slated for it. After the increasing success of the first three albums, their label was expecting a smasheroonie poptastic hit of an album. So was the Great British Public. Then we got Dazzle Ships and OMD lost a lot of their audience, and the label lost a lot of money.
 
It's a shame, though understandable, that OMD then retreated from this experimental approach so completely and became a fairly anodyne pop band for the rest of the 80s. I jumped ship at this point - not because I didn't like Dazzle Ships, (I did, but not as much as Architecture… or Organisation) but I got fed up with OMD because the next record wasn't Dazzle Ships or Architecture… it became too poppy and didn't interest me.
 
For a long time I tended to avoid Dazzle Ships as a complete album. I really liked the 'proper' songs a lot, but the time zone announcements and all that seemed too self consciously a copy of the similar interludes on Kraftwerk's Radioactivity and they could get a bit irritating. But in more recent times I enjoy the whole album, partly because it has all these funny little interludes. It's clearly a little bonkers, the sound of a band floundering and struggling with their sense of direction. The ABBA meets Stockhausen tag line smacks slightly of desperation, as if Andy had to somehow justify the weird mish-mash he'd created and so came up with what he thought was a terribly clever description. It's very much of it's time too - the limits of the technology are painfully exposed occasionally, but the whole album has a pleasingly Cold War feel to it, clinical, stark and forbidding at times, but with flashes of sheer joy and silliness too. But despite the schizophrenic nature of the record, there's a clear sense of a band pushing boundaries, perhaps too far sometimes, a band going beyond their limits, but a band having a whale of a time doing it.
 
"This Is Helena" for example, is tremendously good fun, exuberant and uplifting in a way that you wouldn't imagine a synth pop band could be. "Genetic Engineering" is a noisy, shouty pop song about a very emotive subject, but it's astonishingly catchy. The two leftovers from the Architecture sessions, "Romance Of The Telescope" and "Of All The Things We've Made", have a weary grandeur about them which is truly impressive. "Of All The Things..." has an especially final feel to it, and is a fitting closer to this period of OMD.
 

scott walker / sunn o))) - soused


In 2014 Scott Walker joined forces with drone metal noise-mongers Sunn O))). The resulting album Soused actually gathered decent reviews, though Scott's output these days always seems to get good reviews, partly because I think that writers simply don't know what to make of it and are afraid of sounding silly if they criticise some work of art because they don't 'get it'.
 
I've had this album for the best part of a year and I still don't know what to make of it either. I'm not even sure if I like it, actually.
Soused is, well, I'm not sure what it is really. 
 
For one thing it isn't quite as odd as I was expecting. It's still probably the maddest record I've heard in years (since the last Scott Walker album Bisch Bosch), but it's still not quite as utterly bonkers as I thought it might be. 
 
Not knowing anything about Sunn O))) other than what I've read I was expecting a much noisier record. But although the guitars growl malevolently they don't squeal and roar and they're not, generally, being terribly rowdy. Instead we get lots of droning walls of noise, rolling through the 'songs', but mainly these are kept as the backdrop to Scott's vocals.
 
So, frequently these songs don't sound greatly different in approach to those on Scott's recent albums. But where an orchestra might have been used on Bisch Bosch to create an uneasy, unsettling soundscape, here it's a bunch of guitars doing the same. 
 
I've only played the entire album a handful of times, and it's not something I could say I enjoyed. But then I don't 'enjoy' The Drift very much, certainly not in the same way that I enjoy, say, Scary Monsters, or Before And After Science. Scott's recent albums are not a fun experience and Soused is more of the same. Impenetrable words, the bits that you do catch being worrying and disquieting and hinting at all sorts of unpleasantries. "She's hidden her children", he repeats at one point, which sends chills down my spine, and we get phrases like like "bristling through damaged fingers" (I think) with "bristling" all elongated to sound like brist-el-ing… which makes it sound even more worrying.
 
The vocals are awe-inspiring, as expected, and it's clear that, as always, he has absolute total command of his voice. It's hugely impressive. He sings some astonishing things, not least in the last track "Lullaby", (which is a reconfigured version of the song Scott recorded with Ute Lemper) where at one point he deliberately sings all over the place, off key, all around the key, but with total precision. Nothing is left to chance here, everything sounds exactly how Scott wants it to sound. Quite why he wants it to sound like this is something only Scott can answer. He always seems such a mild, reasonable chap when he's interviewed - yet he writes and records music and lyrics that are frequently full of horror and disturbing imagery. What is going on is his head? 
 
Scott's albums need to be played in full. They don't lend themselves to picking out your 'favourites'. At just 50 minutes and only 5 songs this is an easier album to get through than Bisch Bosch (which I think I've only played 3 or 4 times, ever). Bisch Bosch is perhaps too daunting for me. It needs a lot of time to be invested in it - there's no way you can't listen to it if you're doing something else, it's way too demanding a record, and so I need to find 70 minutes to set aside to play the whole thing. And to be honest, if I ever have a spare 70 minutes and nothing else to do I can think of plenty of other albums I would rather devote that time to… 
 
Anyway, I need to try Soused again, another day. I have this nagging feeling that it's actually quite an accessible album, in a decidedly weird and rather off putting sort of way, and that one day it will click and all fall into place. Scott's 1995 album Tilt did this to me; after about 15 years I suddenly found one day that I loved the record, all of it, so I still have hope!
 
 

Wednesday, 13 May 2015

associates - party fears two


Amongst random tunes the other day was the utterly mad “Nude Spoons” from the Associates’ marvellous album Sulk. I'd genuinely forgotten how loopy this song was and I was astonished that not only was this track ever recorded but that it was included on one of the best selling albums of 1982! 
 
Then I got to thinking about the Associates, and principally “Party Fears Two” – one of my all time favourite songs. I've little idea what the song is actually about - and that's fine, as many of my favourite songs baffle me with their lyrics. The mix of the mundane lyrics - "I'll have a shower, then phone my brother up" and the utterly euphoric music is wonderful. Billy Mackenzie's vocals are shockingly good - odd, operatic, tender and mad all at the same time. The jaunty keyboard motif that runs through the song is hustled along by a chunky rhythm track and the whole thing is brilliantly catchy, but seriously strange too.
 
A while back I searched you tube for a Top Of The Pops performance of this song. I first found one where Billy Mackenzie was wearing a fairly sensible suit, but this wasn’t the one I wanted. I was after the first time the Associates appeared on TotP - Billy was wearing a long beige mac, buttoned up to the neck, and a beret. This would probably have the first time I'd heard "Party Fears Two" and that performance had stayed with me since 1982! On rewatching this clip 33 years later, it wasn't perhaps quite as overtly camp as I'd remembered but it's still one hell of a performance. Billy prances around like a flouncy Frank Spencer, pouting at the cameras, giving it everything he's got. But the best thing is his expression – he genuinely looks like he really can’t believe he’s on TotP; he’s grinning like a loon, (and was probably off his face, actually), and you can just see he’s thinking "we’re getting paid to do THIS??"
 
I don’t recall now if it was this clip or the other performance that featured guitarist Alan Rankine miming badly on a banjo (which doesn't feature on the song anyway...) whilst improbably dressed like an extra from Blake’s 7 – he looks marvelously sci-fi but sadly the cameraman barely shows him. Instead the camera lingers on the glamour of keyboard player Martha Ladly (also one of the Martha’s from the Muffins) who has huge hair, loads and loads of makeup, a long slinky dress and elbow length gloves – she’s so 1982 it hurts!
 
 

mick ronson - slaugher on 10the avenue


For no good reason, today I decided to play Mick Ronson’s debut solo album Slaughter On 10th Avenue. I’m not entirely sure why, but it’s been years since I played this one, and it came as a welcome blast of glam pomp. I’d forgotten how variable this album was – there are some great moments, and some truly dreadful ones. Sadly one of the worst comes right at the start – the hideously overwrought cover of “Love Me Tender”. Avoid.
 
But the album picks up immediately with the nicely stompy “Growing Up And I’m Fine” which sounds rather like early Queen, but without Freddie’s histrionics. “Only After Dark” is a weirdly robotic slice of glam rock, and is surely the only song in history to have been covered by both Human League and Def Leppard – but oddly you can see how it suits both bands.
 
The rest of the album is generally solid, well produced 1974 rock. The band is basically Bowie’s Pin Ups band – Ronno, Trevor Bolder, Aynsley Dunbar and Mike Garson, and the overall sound is just like Pin Ups. There’s surprisingly little guitar showofferey, with the emphasis more on the songs and the excellent arrangements rather than pyrotechnics. And Ronno is a very good singer, but perhaps a little unremarkable.
 
There’s a strong parallel to be drawn with Bernard Butler’s first solo album. Both were superb guitarists who were pushed too quickly into solo careers. After Butler left Suede he quickly came up with a solid, excellently produced album, but again there’s something lacking. It’s hard to pinpoint why it doesn’t quite work, but Butler’s album is very much a poor relation to Suede's Dog Man Star, just as Ronno’s album comes off a clear second best to Aladdin Sane or Pin Ups.
 

the stooges - ready to die

A couple of years have passed since the Stooges' last album was issued and I revisited it the other day after ignoring it for some time.
 
The Ron Asheton version of the Stooges died with Ron’s passing a few years ago, but James Williamson took early retirement from his role as a VP at Sony and began to shred once again. Two hard years of touring with the reformed Iggy and the Stooges led to this – Ready To Die, the follow up to Raw Power, 40 years on. 
 
Is it as good as Raw Power. No, of course it isn’t. What could be?
 
But it’s not the mess that The Weirdness was, the 2006 reunion record with Ron and Scott Asheton. It’s a fine, solid, and occasionally spectacular record. The production is excellent, sharp and clear, unlike the muddy thump of The Weirdness. Clocking in at an economical 34 minutes, with two distinct ‘sides’ just like in the ol’ days, we have seven fiery songs plus a couple of ballads and a lament written in honour of Ron. Aside from the slowies, which contain much world weariness, and Iggy’s deeply sonorous voice crawling up from the grave, the upbeat numbers genuinely don’t sound like they were written and played by guys in their sixties. 
 
Iggy clearly spent some time on the lyrics (unlike the Iggy by numbers of The Weirdness) and although a couple of tracks betray a rather juvenile leaning (“DDs” is, of course, about a large female chest) on the whole the lyrics match the blistering pace of the songs. It’s not pretty, it’s not terribly poetic, but it fits the music – for example the chorus of “Job” runs simply ‘I got a job, but it don’t pay shit’.
 
Jams Williamson spits out nasty riffs just like he did 40 years ago, Steve Mackay is still on board to blast some saxophone, and Mike Watt is demonstrably one of the world’s finest bass players. On the drums Scott Asheton is assisted by the Stooges semi-permanent touring drummer Larry Mullins. Scott had been ill for some time and was unable to play as much he wanted on the record, but Larry filled in well. 
 
So, if you want a rocking, angry, furious album of short snappy riffs and snarly vocals, Ready To Die is the one for you. The final track, now called “The Departed”, was originally debuted at Ron’s memorial concert a few years ago. It’s as close as the Stooges have ever come to a truly tender song, and the poignant quotes from “I Wanna Be Your Dog” (James mournfully plucks out the notes at a couple of points) mean that the album ends on a surprisingly emotional note.
 
The title track is one of the best – despite Iggy's advancing years, despite the deaths of some of his compatriots, despite his pronounced limp due to hip problems, Iggy Pop clearly isn't Ready To Die just yet. You know how they say that cockroaches could survive a nuclear war, well I suspect that Iggy, with his indestructible leathery skin, would be standing right next to them, shirt off, punching imaginary foes, leaping and whirling like an insane dervish. Iggy seems to be able to survive anything.

Thursday, 7 May 2015

more random tunes


Lots of random songs on the iPod recently. Some good ones, some... not so good ones... see if you can figure out which is which...
 
“Move On” – from Lodger, and one of Bowie’s most under-rated songs I reckon. Superb control in his vocals, that galloping rhythm track which is very Eno, and the dreamy, hazy chorus which is actually “All The Young Dudes” backwards!  
 
“Midnight Sun” – David Sylvian live in 2001. Much better than the rather ponderous studio version, this has a startlingly loud guitar break and then a bonkers jazzed up piano solo to help it along. DS sounds extremely lugubrious as he groans out the vocal, but it’s actually all rather good. 
 
“Hey Hey” – Neil Young and the Blue Notes from This Note’s For You. Possibly the worst song on the album, this is frankly rubbish. Absurdly ‘jolly’ and irritating. There are some truly excellent tracks on the Blue Notes record, but these are mainly the atmospheric ballads like “Twilight” or “One Thing”. When Neil tries a soul rave up type number like this he comes dreadfully unstuck. 
 
“Sally Can’t Dance” – now this is quite a good Lou Reed song, but on 1984's Live In Italy it’s terrible. Hoarse shouty vocals that only occasionally fit the tune and a very lacklustre performance from the usually reliable Robert Quine era band. A waste. 
 
“Warnography” – this is much better, despite the poor sonic quality. Brian Eno and J Peter Schwalm playing one of the very few live gigs they did in 2001, at the Mt. Fuji Rock Festival. I so wish this had been released properly. It was scheduled at one point, when Eno started putting out those Curiosities discs, but seeing as those faltered after just two, the rest of the cupboard clearing didn’t happen either, which is a terrible shame as Eno's cupboards must contain all manner of goodies. This is funky and quite considerably more fun than Drawn From Life. A cracking band, including the brilliant Leo Abrahams on guitar, and everyone having a great time. 
 
“Stupid Man” – more Lou Reed, but this is one of my all time Lou favourites, from The Bells, an album that no-one else seems to like except me. There’s something oddly appealing about the bouncy melody and Lou’s rather bizarre attempts to really sing. It’s short and fun and immensely catchy. As is… 
 
“Hanging On The Telephone” – what a classic Blondie single this is. Punchy power pop at it's best. Just brilliant. 
 
“Fun Time” – Peter Murphy's very silly ‘Cabaret’ version of Iggy’s classic. Was it really recorded in a late night club? Still makes laugh though. 
 
“Ramada Inn” – Neil Young and Crazy Horse at Red Rocks in 2012. One of the very best of his very long songs – this one runs to 15 minutes – and is wonderful, and oddly moving too. Classic Horse set up - verse, chorus, guitar wig out, verse, chorus, guitar wig out, repeat ad infinitum... Very nearly perfect. Really. 
 
“Here Comes Your Man” which is one of the best Pixies songs I reckon. I quite like this band, but the loud, angry, noisy Pixies tunes can get very tiresome I feel, whereas they can do really strong power pop stuff like “Here Comes Your Man” really really well, and it’s this side of them that appeals to me the most. This is nice and melodic too, like REM in their later IRS days.
 
And then the absolute 5 star classic that is Television's “Marquee Moon”. Various live versions made me forget quite how amazing this studio track actually is. It’s incredibly tight but also surprisingly loose too. Verlaine’s strangled goat vocals, those slashing chords with the answered twiddly bits, the drumming, that superb solo in the middle, the big wind up towards the end, everything just works brilliantly, and yet this was astonishingly issued at the height of punk when anything longer than three minutes was frowned on, and lengthy jazzy guitar solos were right out! Yet Television were still, weirdly, classed as a punk band, despite being streets ahead of most other punk groups in both songwriting and instrumental prowess. An amazing achievement, and a song that has rarely been bettered, by anyone. 
 
“Under The Boardwalk”. Tom Tom Club do a cracking version of this one, with the Weymouth sisters’ naïve vocals over a seriously funky rhythm track. It doesn’t actually sound terribly dated, maybe a consequence of covering a fairly timeless song. TTC never did anything terribly serious, and this one, as with most of their songs, always cheers me up.
 
“Into Tomorrow” – a marvellous track from Paul Weller, from 20+ years ago. This was on his first solo album after he’d ditched the Style Council and reinvented himself as a slightly psychedelic rocker. There’s some dullness on his 90s albums, but the good tracks are tremendous and the live album recorded after Wild Wood (called Live Wood) has some lengthy tracks that remind me of Neil Young and Crazy Horse doing their best guitar work outs. Anyway, “Into Tomorrow” just rocks. Great to hear this again. 
 
“Fade To Grey” – here it is again, Visage with the best New Romantic song ever, and one of my favourite songs of all time. Nothing more to say. 
 
“City Of Dreams” from Talking Heads’ True Stories. What a lovely song this is. Must be years since I’ve last played it and I really enjoyed hearing it again. It's a shame that True Stories (the film) doesn't seem to be available on DVD. I had the video once upon a time and it was a very funny film. 
 
“Silver Machine” – Hawkwind!! Ha ha ha! What a mad and utterly spaced out track. Totally bonkers, and quite brilliant. The very definition of Space Rock. Man. 
 
“Money” - the Flying Lizards’ unique take on Berry Gordy’ Motown classic. Again it’s been a while and I’d forgotten quite how bizarre the Lizards’ version actually was. However was this a hit?? 
 
“Big Love” – Fleetwood Mac. Probably their last decent hit, but what a good one. Remember the video to this? The camera appears to be constantly pulling back from the action as multiple Lindsay Buckinghams keep appearing and singing away as they fade out of shot. Extremely clever, and probably extremely expensive for 1986. Superb song, it builds to a wonderfully breathless climax. 
 
“Europa & The Pirate Twins” – this was the first Thomas Dolby song I was aware of and it still sounds pretty good today. Perhaps a touch too frantic for it’s own good, but, like most Dolby songs, it’s stuffed full of inventive touches and clever production. 
 
And just when I thought I wasn’t going get any more Bowie, up popped perhaps the weirdest track he’s ever committed to tape. “Little Toy Soldier” was recorded with The Riot Squad in the spring of 1967, not long after he’d recorded his first proper album for Deram. The Riot Squad was a London band who were like an unsuccessful mix of the Mothers of Invention and the Bonzos. Bowie apparently loved their anarchic shows and the Riot Squad, thinking that having a good looking young singer / songwriter amongst their weirdo outfit might increase their ‘teen appeal’, asked him to join them. He played a handful of shows with this outfit during the spring and early summer of 1967 before it became apparent that he wasn’t a terribly good fit. However, around March 1967, he did persuade them to record the first ever cover of “Waiting For The Man” and a Bowie original (well nearly) called “Little Toy Soldier”.
In late 1966, Bowie’s manager, Ken Pitt, had been in talks with Andy Warhol to bring the Exploding Plastic Inevitable to the UK and he’d been given a copy of the as yet unreleased VU and Nico album, which he gave to David as a present for Christmas 1966. Bowie must have been the first person in the UK to have a copy of this seminal album. “Little Toy Soldier” is the loopy tale of a girl called Sadie and her wind up little toy soldier - but one day she winds him too much and he explodes in a mad mash up of Goon-like sound effects, raspberry explosions and, er,  the speaking clock… And the chorus is cheekily stolen entirely from the Velvets’ “Venus In Furs”. 
 
And finally, a little sanity is restored by “Forbidden Colours”, the original version not the Brilliant Trees era reworking. Pretty though the remake is, I prefer this original as I just love Sakamoto’s synths on this. It’s a really beautiful song, and I can’t believe it’s now well over 30 years old… Where does the time go…

eno - taking tiger mountain (by strategy)

Eno's 1974 masterpiece Taking By Mountain (By Strategy) got a play the other day. 
 
Every single track, every single weird, loopy, bonkers, track is superb. Nothing is as you expect. None of the songs do what any other songs would ever do. Everything is just a little bit… skewed, off centre, just a little bit odd. 
 
In the middle of it all are Eno's calm, measured vocals. Even on the weirdest songs like "The Great Pretender" his voice is a reassuring presence, despite the frankly bizarre subject matter. Even on "Third Uncle" he only sounds mildly excited, despite the frenetic music all around him. There are a couple of places where Eno sounds a little unhinged - the vocal on "Judy's Jungle" for example is perhaps a little too jaunty and slips into wierdly freaky, but on the whole his voice is the calm centre of the madness. 
 
"Burning Airlines" is just strange. Oddly catchy, cheery almost, but undeniably strange.
 
"Judy's Jungle" is perhaps the most obviously odd, that loopy combination of kazoos, whistling, the pseudo military drums and the lyrics pretty much defies all rational explanation. 
 
"Fat Lady Of Limbourg" is a kind of spy story. I think. Superbly double tracked saxophones in the middle and a fairly sinister mood mixed with the utterly absurd - 'now we checked out this duck, Quack…'
 
"Mother Whale Eyeless" is perhaps my favourite, a sort of mish mash of war film imagery and maybe the story of Jonah, but set to a relatively straightforward tune. Though what all the stuff towards the end of the song is about is anyone's guess - 'take me, my little pastry mother, taiiike meeee'.
 
'The Great Pretender" closes side one with it's scary sci-fi sort of story about a mechanical bride. I think. I love the way the layers upon layers of music gradually build up, before all stopping in the middle leaving only the crickets, and then the relentless layering begins again. Very clever production.
 
"Third Uncle" is sort of punk as imagined by Prog rockers, but before anyone had actually thought of Punk. How Phil Manzanera can play this hard, this fast, and for five solid minutes is genuinely baffling. A tour de force in every sense. 
 
"Put A Straw Under Baby" is a nursery rhyme that would probably give kids nightmares. It cropped up on shuffle the other day while I was dropping the girls off in town - the cheerily out of tune Portsmouth Sinfonia genuinely offended the girls' very musical ears! I'm so used to this song that the out-of-tuneness simply doesn't register with me any more, and I can't imagine what the song would sound like if it was played 'properly'.
 
"True Wheel" - fantastic work from Manzanera, the guitar parts circulate around the song, and the words and vocal melody derive from a dream that Eno had (he also dreamt up Luana's black reptiles in "Driving Me Backwards" - he must have had VERY odd dreams…). I love the snatches of radio tuning that lead into…
 
"China My China" which is both extremely charming and rather disorientating at the same time - and how about that typewriter percussion? Wonderful.
 
And then we end with what is surely one of Eno's most relaxing songs ever. It takes it's time doesn't it? Half the song before the vocal is introduced, the singing as unhurried as the music, and then it seems to take about an hour or so to fade gradually into the distance as a chorus of Enos climb the mountain. 
 
Basically - What a fabulous record! I love it all.

talking heads - building on fire


Shuffling the iPod on the way into work this morning and the best track that popped up was the almost impossible to type properly "Love -> Building On Fire" by Talking Heads.
This was the live version on the wonderful The Name Of The Band Is Talking Heads which stomps all over the studio version. I do actually like the original of this long lost single, but is rather twee and sedate compared with the storming live performances.
Chris Frantz is sharp and crisp beyond belief on this track, Tina's bass is solid as a rock, the guitars are superb with Jerry and David interlocking their lines as if they were Verlaine and Lloyd - not sure who takes the weird solo in the middle, but it's tremendous - and David's singing is impassioned and ever so slightly unhinged. The lyrics are, as with all the best Talking Heads lyrics, somewhat baffling, but somehow they still manage to convey a strong meaning, of something very important, I think, but I don't fully understand why, and anyway it doesn't matter.
Whatever, this is an absolutely killer Heads track. What a band they were!
In fact, of all the bands / artists I wish I'd seen, I think Talking Heads are probably at the top of the list, along with, perhaps, Japan.