1. Come
Again – Au Pairs
2. Nice –
Kleenex
3. Lie
Dream of a Casino Soul – The Fall
4. Cathedral
– Felt
5. Speaking
Terms – Snail Mail
6. If I
Was an Animal – Chain & the Gang
7. Drained [Single Version] – The Brian Jonestown Massacre
8. Mountain
- Stereolab
9. Rated X
– Miles Davis
10. Inner
City Blues – Reuben Wilson
11. Maria
Tambien – Khruangbin
12. Colorado
– Manassas
13. Wicked
Gil – Band of Horses
14. Total
Football – Parquet Courts
15. Secret
for a Song – Mercury Rev
16. When It
Grows Darkest – Laura Veirs
17. Heat
Wave – Snail Mail
18. If Not
Tomorrow – Comet Gain
19. Postcards
from Italy – Beirut
20. John's Theme (Children Play) – Pino Donaggio
20. John's Theme (Children Play) – Pino Donaggio
The 1960s saw a
large number of female artistes making a credible impact across a wide range of
genres: selected randomly, Nina Simone, Ella Fitzgerald, Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick, Etta James, Fontella Bass, Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell, Janis Joplin, Grace
Slick, Bobbie Gentry, Patsy Kline, Emmylou Harris, Jacqui McShee, Sandy Denny, Julie Felix, Nico, Carole King, Dolly
Parton, Nancy Sinatra, Tammy Wynette, Dusty Springfield, Julie Driscoll, Carol Kaye, Dorothy Ashby, Tina Turner, Tammy Terrell, The Supremes, The Shangri-Las, The Chiffons, The Ronettes. The early 1970s weren’t nearly so inclusive. The nascent heavy metal
scene, the glam rock scene (ironically) and the southern rock scene were movements
orientated towards the male. Patriarchy re-asserted itself by way of the sex, drugs and rock & roll myth,
which encouraged women to prostrate themselves before the icons of the day:
Mick Jagger, Robert Plant, David Bowie, Marc Bolan, Steven Tyler, etc.
It’s no coincidence that punk and new wave carried a strong female
presence. Despite its provocative stance and reputation as anti-social, punk
was actually a fairly conservative movement, rebelling simultaneously against
the perceived decadence of the establishment and the music industry itself. The previous
generation, who had sloganeered and campaigned through the 1960s, had sold out
for a life of material worth and part-time licentiousness, and punk existed to
shine a light on uncomfortable truths. Patti Smith, Debbie Harry, Tina
Weymouth, Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson from the B52’s, Siouxsie Sioux, Au Pairs, The Slits, The Raincoats, Dolly Mixture, Poison Ivy of The Cramps, Gaye Advert of The Adverts… imagine what punk might have mutated into
without them. At the very least, it
wouldn’t have been half as interesting. At worst, ‘Oi!’ may have triumphed as
punk’s prevalent strain, and machismo would once again have held sway.
Having been made redundant at the end of 2017, which I was sanguine
about, the first half of 2018 brought with it weekly walks into Twickenham,
whereupon I discovered Eel Pie Records. Although not financially stretched (it didn't stop me visiting Hamburg in April) my
predicament demanded that I exercise caution and avoid buying records impulsively.
On one such visit they were playing the Au Pairs. It certainly sounded like my
sort of thing, but to be sure I returned home and looked into it. A comparison
with Gang of Four was enough to convince me, and by the end of the week Playing with a Different
Sex was mine.
While conducting my research, YouTube wondered if I might like to listen
to 'Nice' by Swiss all-girl post-punk
band Kleenex, which I did. Kleenex changed their name to LiLiput after the
Kimberly-Clark Corporation threatened to sue them for infringement of copyright.
Eel Pie Records didn’t have a copy of Kleenex/LiLiPUT
(The Complete Recordings), so I downloaded 'Nice' to follow on from 'Come
Again' by the Au Pairs.
Hamburg
People who get
upset over the death of someone famous like they would do a friend or relative
are weird or just pretending. More likely pretending. And yet when I found out that Mark E Smith had passed away I certainly felt sad about it.
I put this down to the unusually high regard in which I held him as a lyricist and the length of time I’ve been
listening to The Fall (over 25 years at the time of writing). Such is the wealth of
material available to Fall fans that I’m still discovering new tunes to
this day, but how the hell did 'Lie Dream
of a Casino Soul' evade me for so long?
The record label Cherry Red are in the process of re-issuing Felt’s back
catalogue on vinyl. I intended on buying Forever
Breathes the Lonely Word, which includes 'A Wave Crashed on Rocks', a song that I included on the compilation
I retrospectively put together to reflect my listening habits in 1997-98.
However, I found footage of Felt performing on Spanish TV and was very affected
by their performance of 'Cathedral',
which comes from their first LP, Crumbling
The Antiseptic Beauty. I am presented with a dilemma, because although I’m
working again I still can’t afford to spend 20-odd pounds willy-nilly, which
is the going rate for vinyl these days.
This is why I purchased the album Lush by Lindsey Jordan – aka ‘Snail Mail’ – on CD (from HMV in Wimbledon). Had I been
set on owning Lush on vinyl then I’d have
returned to Eel Pie Records. Anyway, 'Speaking
Terms' is my favourite track on the album. The record as a whole brings to
mind American indie-rock of the early 1990s, before Lindsey Jordan was even
born.
Early in the
year – late February, a few days before the ‘beast from the east’ announced
itself – Ian Svenonius’s group Chain & The Gang were back in town. I’d
been trying to find a copy of the band’s sixth album, Experimental Music, since its release in September 2017, but to no avail; Rough Trade, Banquet Records, various independent records stores in Brighton – nowhere
stocked it. As expected, copies were available at the Oslo in Hackney, where
Ian and his band were scheduled to perform. The only tune Chain & The Gang deigned
not to play from their latest offering was 'If I Was an Animal', maybe because it doesn’t lend itself so readily to Ian’s
high-energy live performance.
Anton Newcombe was throwing demos around on YouTube. 'Drained' sounded like it was ready to go, but when the track-listing
for The Brian Jonestown Massacre’s new album was announced it was found to be
missing. I purchased Something Else
regardless, and
downloaded 'Drained'. (The song showed up later on the B-side of the single 'Hold That Thought' and also on The
Brian Jonestown Massacre’s eponymously named album the following year, albeit in a slightly altered form.)
Like Felt, Stereolab are in the process of re-releasing a large portion
of their back catalogue on vinyl. They began in 2018 by reissuing their
‘Switched On’ series: three separate compilations that gather together singles,
B-sides, rarities, oddities. I already own Aluminum [sic] Tunes [Switched On Volume 3] and used to have a copy of Refried
Ectoplasm [Switched On Volume 2] taped off of the Former Cohabitant from Brighton back in 1995. I’ve been without a cassette player for
many years now, and so I thought I may as well purchase Volume 2. I wouldn’t normally
include material like this on a contemporary compendium – tunes that date back
to a completely different time and place – but it’s been so long since I’ve
listened to this record that I’ve been able to enjoy it from a relatively fresh
perspective. 'Mountain' was originally one
half of a split-single released in 1993 ('Where
Are All Those Puerto Rican Boys?' by Unrest was the other).
In summer –
after the FIFA World Cup had finished, I’m pleased to note – I began work at The
National Archives. One day there, I caught my supervisor talking music with a
colleague, specifically about this track called 'Rated X' by Miles Davis. He was saying how he’d once heard it played
at a club and that it cleared the dance floor almost at once. Since hearing 'Rated X' for myself, I can appreciate why
this might happen. It starts with a discordant
keyboard, played by Davis, before Al Foster on drums, James Mtume on percussion
and Badal Roy on tablas all jump in on about 14 seconds with a funky, aggressive rhythm. After another 15 seconds Reggie Lucas joins in with a
repetitive wah-wah guitar riff, which he will play relentlessly for the
duration of the record. Michael Henderson’s bass chugs along in the background
and Cedric Lawson and Khalil Balakrishna make weird noises with an electric
piano and an electric sitar. Every so often the rhythm section will pause
abruptly, just for second or so, before carrying on as if nothing ever
happened. It’s one of most wonderful things I’ve ever heard.
Galvanised by this strange groove, I entered into another one of my
hip hop phases. These can typically last for a number of weeks – sometimes even a month –
but don’t usually involve listening to anything I haven’t already got. They
can, however, prompt me to investigate particular samples, especially where
they’ve been borrowed from jazz or funk. I derived 'Inner
City Blues' by Reuben Wilson from 'Youthful
Expression' by A Tribe Called Quest, a lesser known tune taken from their
debut album People's Instinctive Travels
and the Paths of Rhythm. Reuben Wilson is a jazz organist in the tradition
of Jimmy Smith, or even Lonnie Smith. Marvin Gaye fans may have guessed that 'Inner City Blues' is a cover. Ramon
Morris on tenor saxophone, Lloyd Davis on guitar, and so on.
I came by Khruangbin in Banquet Records, Kingston, where they were
playing this group’s latest record, 'Con
Todo El Mundo'. I thought about buying it there and then but was on my way to
meet someone and didn’t fancy carrying it around. Their music is hard to
describe: soul-jazz, psychedelia, world? I detect a sort of Moorish,
middle-eastern vibe emanating from this trio, although they’re actually from
Huston, Texas, and I’m still pondering whether or not I should go back and buy
the album.
Manassas is the name of the group Stephen Still put together in 1971
after he crossed paths with The Flying Burrito Brothers while they were all touring the States. The Burritos were on their last legs, Stills sensed an
opportunity and invited former Byrds man Chris Hillman, pedal-steel guitarist
Al Perkins and fiddle player Byron Berline to join him and his band in the
studio to work on what would become Manassas.
I’ve written before about how Chris Hillman seemed content to play a more
supporting role, be it in The Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, or Manassas. But
that’s an impressive palmarès, as a song like 'Colorado' aptly testifies.
When I returned to Eel Pie Records to buy Playing with a Different Sex by the Au Pairs, they had on Everything All the Time by Band of
Horses, who are from Seattle. Not knowing what it was, I made enquiries and
almost left the shop £40 lighter. 'Wicked
Gil' was the track that nearly persuaded me, since downloaded. I was surprised to find that this album was 15 years old, which goes to show how
little indie-rock changes nowadays.
If you’ve read my liner notes to 2014’s The Big Nod then you’ll know I’m partial to Parquet Courts. The
first song I heard from their new album – 'Mardi
Gras Beads' – didn’t do it for me. The second – 'Total Football' – did. Previous works by Parquet Courts (as well as Parkay
Quarts) brought to mind the Velvet Underground. 'Total Football' sounds like 'Harmony
in My Head' by Buzzcocks with Devo doing the chorus. I should probably buy
the album, Wide Awake!, on the strength of this.
It’s about here
that I start to build towards some sort of resolution. I had 'Secret for a Song' by Mercury Rev
knocking around on my laptop, completely neglected, so in it went. This
inadvertently provided a convenient platform from which to launch 'When It Grows Darkest' by Laura Veirs,
yet another new release chanced upon in Eel Pie Records. Her music reminds me of
Kristen Hirsh from Throwing Muses, although I don’t know how helpful it really
is to say that.
'Heat Wave' was the song by Snail
Mail that I could remember playing in Eel Pie Records. It's more vigorous than 'Speaking Terms' and serves as the compilation’s apex, because 'If Not Tomorrow' by Comet Gain, which follows, has something doleful about it. For those less
familiar with my anthologies, they rarely pander to the year in which they’ve
been compiled, but 'If Not Tomorrow' is
one of six tunes actually released in 2018 – seven if you
include the re-release of the Stereolab track, eight if you allow for the
fact that the Chain & the Gang album wasn’t available to buy in the UK until
the group brought it with them on this year's tour.
Italy was the
first foreign country I ever visited. My parents took me there in 1993 as a sort of
last hurrah before I went away to university. We stayed in Pallanza overlooking
Lake Maggiore but made excursions to Como and Milan, as well as Lugano across the border in
Switzerland. Since then I’ve been to Volterra, Siena, Florence and Genoa, and in 2018 I
made it to Venice. Next year I intend to visit Paler mo, maybe Turin.
I never got around to buying The
Flying Club Cup by Beirut in 2017, but it’s on that ever expanding list of
records to potentially purchase. In the meantime I’ve downloaded 'Postcards from Italy', which is joyous,
celebratory. The fact that I have recently been in the habit of sending memos
from the same place is mere coincidence. The addition of 'John's Theme' from Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now, set in Venice, is on the other hand contrived.
[Listen to here.]