Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Sunday, 23 October 2022

Fingers Crossed: How Music Saved Me From Success by Miki Berenyi

Founded in 1987, the British band Lush were (and remain) an interesting study in contradictions. They formed as a self-described shambolic amateur unit with a terrible live performance but quickly improved and gained the ambition to make complex songs with unusual time signatures and atmospherics, becoming part of the movement which the Americans dubbed "dreampop" but the British called "shoegaze."

Lush also had a rockier side which put them in a good position when they were unexpectedly recruited by Perry Farrell to open the second-ever Lollapalooza tour in 1992, giving them a small but intense following in the United States, not to mention a hair-raising series of anecdotes about playing alongside Ministry, Pearl Jam and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers.

Lush's relentless touring schedule and ability to switch between long, atmospheric songs and punkier, hook-laden guitar numbers should have stood them in good stead for the Britpop explosion, and they achieved the height of their commercial success at that time (with two Top 10 albums and four Top 40 singles), but they also found themselves creatively burned out and annoyed by label pressure to compromise to fit in with the music of the time. When drummer Chris Acland tragically committed suicide at the end of 1996, the band dissolved, returning only for a short-lived reunion in 2015-16 which ended acrimoniously.

Miki Berenyi was Lush's lead singer and frontwoman, sharing guitarist and songwriting duties with former schoolfriend (and music fanzine co-editor) Emma Anderson. Lush were somewhat unusual in the late 1980s and early 1990s as a British guitar band whose lead creative forces were women, leading to some positive attention but also highly negative and, at times, irrational criticism, including bizarre claims their songs were written by their label. They also had to suffer attempts to make them appear in revealing clothes for magazine articles and videos, and their male colleagues (Acland and bassists Steve Rippon and, later, Phil King) were largely ignored unless the band put their foot down to be depicted equally. The fact they were also moderately successful in the United States when many of their contemporary British colleagues struck up much higher profiles in the UK but couldn't crack America at all seemed even more galling to certain people, and, as gruelling as the American tours could be, they were a relief from the sometimes indifferent British ones. Berenyi, especially, found herself the frequent star of music periodical gossip columns, thanks to frequently attending gigs in London and not holding back her opinions on anything (her eye-catching red hair also made her easy to spot in such venues).

Fingers Crossed is Berenyi's autobiography and a startling look into one of the most interesting, musically creative periods in British history. It takes until almost halfway through the book before we even get to that point. The first half of the book is taken up by Berenyi's family history and childhood. This could be indulgent - rock bios are generally aimed at people who want to learn more about the inside story of who hated who in the band, not necessarily where they went to infant school - but Berenyi is astute enough to realise that much of her personality, personal history, songwriting acumen and the need for a found family of friends and bandmates is informed by her rather unusual upbringing. Also, it's fascinating stuff. The daughter of a Hungarian sports reporter and a Japanese actress (Yasuko Nagazumi, who had regular roles in The Protectors and Space: 1999) who split just a few years after her birth, Berenyi grew up in two very different worlds. Her mother's world was one of glamour, famous actors and parties. Her mother moved to Los Angeles, giving Berenyi an early experience of transatlantic travel and adventures in the Hollywood Hills and visits to the family home in Japan. Berenyi's father's world was somewhat more austere, with frequent trips to Hungary to clandestinely sell western goods beyond the Iron Curtain and being partially raised by her Nazi-sympathising grandmother, who abused her both emotionally and physically.

These aren't all pleasant stories, but there is also a lot of love and nostalgia around, and an evocation of life in 1970s Britain which could both be rough (Berenyi suffered a lot of bullying and attempted bullying at various schools) but also a lot of fun, especially given the privilege of her mother's wealth and introductions to various celebrities. Once the story moves into the 1980s and teenage Berenyi and new-found friend Anderson become music fans, things really kick off: a chance encounter with one of the Thompson Twins sees them being introduced to the world of record production and then starting their own music fanzine, Alphabet Soup. A combination of student grants, studying in London and a ridiculously low cost of living (unachievable now in London) gives them weekly access to gigs, and their contacts lead to a job in the industry for Anderson. Eventually and perhaps inevitably they form a band. Unfortunately, their industry and media contacts give them too much hype before they are ready for it, leading to a flurry of "the next big thing!" articles years before they were even ready to record their first full album, leading to a resulting inevitable backlash from the UK's notoriously tabloidy music press.

The book is searingly honest, perhaps overly so, with Berenyi's keenness to admit to her own faults being refreshing (a few bad episodes and dubious relationship choices appear to be Berenyi's own fault, so it's a relief which she readily admits as much) but also going a bit overboard. Berenyi constantly downplays her own musical skills throughout the book, when even a brief perusal of Lush's back catalogue immediately contradicts that idea.

The relationship between Berenyi and Anderson is the most interesting in the book, as the two women have somewhat different personalities which sometimes clash but also a unified interest in making the best and most interesting music possible, sometimes joining forces to overrule producers, managers and promo people who believe otherwise. There are frustrations apparent in the relationship, mainly stemming from communication issues - at one point Anderson decides to quit the band because she has taken up a position she assumes is completely at odds with everyone else and is shocked to find Berenyi already in 100% agreement with her - and their different views on the musical process. Anderson is happiest in the studio with a compliant producer, finding the best ways of assembling the songs, and finds the tours (especially of the USA) draining, whilst Berenyi much prefers getting out and playing live to crowds. The tension between the two perspectives leads to some great music, but also stressful situations within the band.

The book also features an interesting fresh perspective on being a woman on the guitar band circuit at this particular point in time. Berenyi wryly notes that she thoroughly enjoyed the life of rock and roll, drinking too much and engaging in casual hook-ups, which male artists at the time were congratulated for but women were criticised about (often by the exact same commentators). Berenyi saves much of her ire for the Britpop era, which saw an explosion of pent-up misogyny and attempts to exploit young women under the guise of empowerment, and women in the business were taken advantage of. The seedier side of Britpop proves an unedifying experience (although it's good to see various groups, like Pulp, come out of it very well), despite the avalanche of good music that comes alongside it.

One possible criticism is that the story feels incomplete. It effectively ends after Lush formally dissolves in early 1998 and we only get few a few paragraphs describing Berenyi's subsequent life: her move into being a sub-editor in the publishing industry, an ill-fated Lush reunion in 2015-16, the births of her two children and her more recent forming of the excellent band Piroshka (who have produced two very good albums to date). If the book forms the story of Miki Berenyi's life, there's a very large, 25-year chunk of it missing.

Overall the book is fascinating, eruditely-written, constantly amusing and jam-packed with interesting trivia: Emma Anderson dated My Bloody Valentine's Kevin Shields before Lush formed; Lush and Ministry formed a strong-if-unlikely alliance during the Lollapalooza tour and got up to mutually-supported mayhem; Berenyi once got back from tour to find an uncommunicative Richard Ashcroft pouring over music demos for A Northern Soul with her then-boyfriend; Blur and Pulp were both Lush support bands before becoming Britpop giga-stars.

It's also an at-times bruising, personal story of abuse and neglect, with periods of over-drinking and dubious relationship decisions (drug addiction, fortunately, seems to have been avoided), honestly owned up to. There's also an interesting thread, which perhaps could have been expanded on further, where Berenyi identifies episodes and events that bleed directly into her songs. The obvious example is from Lush's best-known hit, "Ladykillers," which was directly based on lengthy "hey, I'm actually a nice guy who respects women," conversations with male musicians whose actions didn't quite live up to their words. The creative process of how the songs were made is occasionally hinted at, but maybe could have been elaborated on.

Then again, this isn't necessarily your standard rock bio. There's no lengthy appendix featuring every gig the band played or a list of their equipment. It's a from-the-heart-by-way-of-the-soul story of life, music, love and loss, and is compelling reading.

Fingers Crossed: How Music Saved Me From Success (****½) is available now in the UK and USA.

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Thursday, 6 October 2022

REM's Automatic for the People turns 30

As I noted last year, when we reached the 30th anniversary of REM's Out of Time, the relentless onward march of linear time continues to remind us of its inevitability with Automatic for the People now hitting the same milestone.

This time around, the lengthy thinkpieces and flashbacks to the album's release are considerably less surprising: Automatic for the People is REM's most commercially successful album, their best-known record, contains most of their famous singles that aren't "Losing My Religion," and probably their most critically acclaimed, although with a back catalogue as storied as theirs, that's debatable.

As noted previously, REM spent the 1980s gradually elevating themselves from a cult local band from Athens, Georgia into a relatively well-known alt-rock unit. Through six albums they grew their craft and their success fairly modestly. They then went ballistic with Out of Time, released in early 1991 and propelled by the mega-hit "Losing My Religion," which they followed up on (not entirely without later regret) with the cheesy children's anthem "Shiny Happy People." Out of Time also generated a further two hit singles ("Near Wild Heaven" and "Radio Song").

The album's sales were stratospheric, but the band had already decided not to tour it, having spent almost the entirety of the 1980s either touring or in the studio. With the record in the bag, the band could have taken a break. Drummer Bill Berry in particular had been developing early ideas for the next album and said he wanted the next album to "rock out," and there seemed to be a general agreement that the next album would be heavier, or at least more like their earlier, rockier material.

Despite completing Out of the Time, the band continued on their creative streak, bringing instruments to the mixing sessions and filling in time between songs by jamming or playing one another ideas. Early demos for "Drive," "Try Not to Breathe" and "Nightswimming" were recorded. Work on the album started in earnest only three months after Out of Time went on sale, with Berry, guitarist Peter Buck and bassist Mike Mills swapping instruments and playing without drums to try to stimulate fresh ideas. Eventually they recorded around thirty songs, including several faster-paced ones they thought might form the core of the album. Instead, they agreed they didn't really fit in with the rest of the material and Berry agreed to suspend his objections since some of the other tracks seemed to have much more potential.

To avoid the writing problems on Out of Time, where vocalist Michael Stipe hit the wall of writer's block and gave two tracks to Mills to write lyrics for and even just winged another song on the spot ("Country Feedback"), the band completed the demos to a high standard and gave them to Stipe to create lyrics for without the harsh deadline of having to be in the studio so soon afterwards. Stipe had several months to craft lyrics for most of the tracks. The final recording of the album took place from March to July 1992 in fairly relaxed circumstances. The band were excited when Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones joined the sessions to create string arrangements, as opposed to the previous record where the strings were arranged more ad-hoc in the studio.

Warner Brothers were apparently surprised when the band presented them with the record, feeling it was somewhat downbeat and not as poppy as Out of Time. However, aware that they'd completely misjudged the commercial potential of "Losing My Religion," they went with the band's judgement again, even the odd choice of "Drive" as the lead single. They were rewarded with excellent reviews and soaring sales. REM's strategy of releasing increasingly great singles from the record kept the album selling and selling continuously: "Man on the Moon," and "The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite" brought in the pop crowd, whilst arguable album signature song "Everybody Hurts," was an acoustic masterpiece, helped by a memorable video. "Nightswimming" and "Find the River" founded off the releases, the last of which coming out almost 14 months after the album itself.

However, the album's lineup was so strong that every track (bar a mid-record instrumental) could have been a single: "Ignoreland" somehow charted despite being only independently available as a promo track sent to radio stations, and in another other world, "Try Not to Breathe," "Sweetness Follows," and "Monty Got a Raw Deal" could have been hit singles, and "Star Me Kitten" was apparently briefly considered for release until it was pointed out the chorus had a swear word (the band had actually retitled the song " * Me Kitten," in return to concerns over publishing the word could have stopped the album being sold in some shops).

The record's title, famously, comes from the motto of Athens restaurant Weaver D's Delicious Fine Foods (who had just been robbed when Stipe asked them for permission to use the sign in return for a licencing fee), whilst the cover art shows the logo of the Sinbad Motel in Miami.

The album enjoyed staggering success, exceeding that of even Out of Time. The record sold almost 2 million copies in the US in 1992 alone and the album has sold far more than 20 million copies in the thirty years it's been available. The band again declined to tour for the album, instead moving in early 1993 to the recording of its follow-up, Monster, the much-promised "rock album." However, the resulting monster (ahem) tour was a celebration of all three albums, since the band had not toured for almost five years by that point.

Automatic for the People is an at-times maudlin reflection on relationships, death and politics, but it's also a melancholy, tuneful masterpiece of nostalgia and reflection.

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Saturday, 13 March 2021

REM's Out of Time turns 30

In another reminder of the relentless onward march of linear time, the REM album Out of Time has somehow turned thirty years old, sparking lots of nostalgic reminiscence.


The lengthy thinkpieces and flashbacks to the album are perhaps surprising: Out of Time is neither REM's best album, nor their most successful, nor their most critically acclaimed. It is, however, often cited as Ground Zero for REM's ascent into absolute mega-stardom and features arguably their two best-known singles (one a candidate for their best, one a candidate for their most whimsical).

REM was founded in Athens, Georgia in 1980 and comprised vocalist Michael Stipe, bassist Mike Mills, guitarist Peter Buck and drummer Bill Berry. Between 1983 and 1988 they released six albums, almost all critically acclaimed and each being rewarded with growing sales: Murmur, Reckoning, Fables of the ReconstructionLifes Rich Pageant, Document and Green. The band spent almost that entire time on the road, extensively touring each album (internationally from the third onwards) before hurling themselves back into the studio for a condensed session and then a new tour in support of the next record. One of the hardest-working bands of the 1980s, they finally called a time out after the Green tour concluded.

The three-year gap between records concerned their new label, Warner Brothers, who'd signed the band for a reported $12 million in 1988 for a five-album deal. However, the gap was somewhat shorter than it first appeared. The Green tour didn't end until well into 1989 and the band began work on the follow-up in September 1990, leaving only a single year of rest and relaxation between.

The gap year turned into more of a busman's holiday for Peter Buck, though, who decided to expand his musical repertoire by experimenting with more acoustic string instruments. He bought a mandolin, played a few basic chords, spontaneously wrote the opening riff to one of the biggest rock songs of all time, and then immediately forgot about it. The course of REM's history might have been rather different if he hadn't fortuitously recorded his strumming and played it back the next day.

Out of Time is a record that is aptly-named, for it's possibly REM's most diverse album in terms of style and influence whilst also retaining a core dedication to being a pop record. The basic theme going into the session was that the band wanted a "less political" cut than Document and Green, which had both been informed by concerns over American politics, the Cold War and environmentalism. Stipe promised a record of "love songs, nothing but love songs," although in truth he'd barely written any lyrics at all and had a rare bout of writer's block which completely stopped him working on three of the tracks. The band also decided to embrace humour, after the success of the somewhat silly and comedic single "Stand" on Green, and also collaboration, asking friends and professional contacts to help out on the record.

The record opens with the decidedly goofy "Radio Song," echoing its predecessor Green which opened with "Pop Song '89." A comical song about selling out and the mass commercialisation of music, the band brought in rapper KRS-One (best known for his monster track "Sound of da Police") to provide wry commentary over the track. REM's hardcore OG fanbase, who'd been increasingly sceptical over the band's growing popularity, were left bemused. Their hopes this might be the album's goofiest moment were decidedly disappointed a few tracks later.

The second track, of course, is "Losing My Religion," the greatest rock anthem in human history propelled by a mandolin. The record company furiously tried to get the band to change their mind about releasing it as the lead single but eventually admitted defeat, and were completely unprepared for the reaction. The Gabriel Garcia Marquez-influenced video (directed by Tarsem Singh, the first person to ever get Michael Stipe to agree to lip-synch) lodged into permanent rotation on MTV and the song exploded everywhere, scoring them their first US Top Ten single and hitting the #1 spot in countries like Belgium, the Netherlands and Poland. Weirdly, it didn't do very well in the UK, only peaking at #19.

The record settles down a bit with "Low," fittingly the album's darkest moment, a sombre minimalist anthem with a powerful chorus, before perking up again with "Near Wild Heaven," a refreshingly breezy pop song. Stipe hit a brick wall with the lyrics, giving up entirely, so Mike Mills crafted a lyric which worked. Stipe insisted that Mills sing lead with him supporting, their normal roles inverted, and the results so pleased the record company that they released the track as the third single from the album, marking the only original song ever released by the band with Stipe not singing lead (Mills had previously led the "Superman" cover from Lifes Rich Pageant, surprise-released as a single over Stipe's objections).

After an instrumental break for "Endgame", the album picks back up with an avalanche of dramatic strings that promptly explodes into "Shiny Happy People." Stipe had written the song specifically for eight-year-old children and as a fun collaboration with his friend Kate Pierson from fellow Athens band the B-52s. The band enjoyed recording the song, but when the song was picked as the second single from the album and a "quirky" comedy video was shot for it, they quickly found themselves getting sick of the song. Stipe later said he didn't like the song - refusing to sing it during a guest spot on an animated kids' show - and the band infamously never performed it live aside from a single talk show appearance and a guest spot on Sesame Street, and even then changed the lyrics to make it technically a different song. But it's hard to resist the song's infectious energy. REM had a bit of a reputation as a moody art band without a sense of humour on earlier records and Out of Time did a good job of demolishing that by showing their funnier side...even if maybe the song did teeter on the edge of being a corn supernova.

The back half of the record is less contentious, with "Belong" featuring a surprising semi-spoken-word lyric by Stipe and "Half a World Away" and "Me in Honey" (again featuring Pierson) being the kind of excellent, semi-acoustic pop songs that REM could turn out in their sleep by this point. But the back end of the album does feature two of REM's best and most underrated tracks: "Texarkana" is the album's rockiest number, propelled by an explosive bass riff and pounding drums. Surprisingly, it's the second track on the album written by the normally laidback Mike Mills, again with Stipe having bailed on the lyric due to writer's block.

"Country Feedback" is maybe the album's absolute masterpiece of a song. Stipe again rolled into the studio without any lyrics to hand but, perhaps a bit embarrassed by how many times he'd done this, he decided to wing it and sang lyrics he'd made up on the spot. The band decided they'd nailed it in one take and never revisited the song, or apparently even wrote the lyrics down, perhaps explaining why Stipe's live performances of the track tend to feature lyrics that are all over the place. John Keane's pedal steel guitar adds a decidedly different air to the song quite unlike any other REM track (BJ Cole replicated and improved on the sound for European tours in the late 1990s). More than once, Stipe has said it's his favourite REM song, and it was used as the centrepiece of a BBC live special about the band in 1998.

In the REM canon, you can really judge their career as Before Out of Time and After Out of Time, and perhaps more specifically Before "Losing My Religion" and After. Before this album and that song, they were a moderately successful, cult indie guitar band from Georgia who'd scored a number of minor radio songs and British music fans name-dropped to prove they were "with it." Afterwards, they were the Voice of a Generation, the American national flag-bearers of alternative rock (whatever the hell that is; we in the UK never quite figured it out) and MTV-dominating acoustic demigods who rubbed shoulders with world leaders, led by an enigmatic, ambiguous and charismatic frontman. A lot of their old fans who'd been with them since debut single "Radio Free Europe" and their first album, Murmur, felt left behind; others rejoiced that the whole world now seemed to be in on the best-kept secret in rock.

To the utter horror of Warner Brothers, REM decided they would not tour Out of Time. Fortunately, this being 1991, it was possible to make money from actual record sales and as the sales went stratospheric - Out of Time sold 10 million copies in its first year on sale, completely eclipsing their combined back catalogue sales to that point (which also started shooting up as more people discovered them) - Warner Brothers found the dollars pouring in faster than they could count. REM also decided that rather than have a break, they'd head back into the studio to make another record, one that would be rockier and more stadium-filling than their previous one. Instead, they made an album that was much more introspective, more claustrophobic and even darker than Out of Time, which again made the record company apprehensive. Fortunately, that record was called Automatic for the People and it ended up being twice as successful even as Out of Time, so that worked out for everyone involved.

Out of Time is a record of breezy pop songs, heartfelt emotion and perhaps a bit more cheese than the band would have wished to invoke. It's one of the band's two "summery" albums (the other being 2001's underrated Reveal) which is just great fun to whack on a sunny afternoon. It also marks the start of the band's "imperial period," when everything they touched turned to gold and would last for at least four albums afterwards. It was Out of Time but very much of its place.

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Monday, 18 May 2020

The Music of the Book

It has been standard for decades for films and TV shows to have soundtrack albums released. In the last twenty years or so this has extended to video games as well.

A less-tapped market is book soundtracks, although this seems self-evident: films, TV shows and video games have soundtracks as a matter of course, books do not. That makes the official (or semi-official, or even copyright-infringing) book soundtrack something a rarity in the field. But not completely unknown. Here's a few examples.


I Robot by The Alan Parsons Project (1977)

British rock band The Alan Parsons Project conceived of a soundtrack album based on Isaac Asimov's Robots series of science fiction novels and short story collections, particularly the first book, I, Robot, in the mid-1970s. Bandmember Eric Woolfson was particularly enthusiastic for the project and contacted Asimov himself, hoping to make it an official record. Asimov was keen on the idea, but noted that he had sold the media rights to a studio who was planning a big-budget feature film (which ultimately would not be released until 2004, with the most tenuous of connections to Asimov's book), so it could not be an official project but he gave his blessings for a "spiritual tribute" to the book.

For these reasons, the title was adjusted to I Robot (what a copyright difference a comma makes) and specific references to Asimov's universe and characters were omitted, with more general themes related to robots and artificial intelligence instead referenced.

The record did extremely well on release, perhaps helped by being released just days after the film Star Wars, which had re-awoken a hunger for science fiction material in the United States (and, later, in the UK).

Spotify link.

Apple Music link.


The King of Elfland's Daughter by Bob Johnson and Peter Knight (1977)

Founded in 1969, Steeleye Span are one of Britain's most successful folk rock bands, still touring today. In the 1970s, bandmembers Bob Johnson and Peter Knight hit on the idea of adapting the classic fantasy novel The King of Elfland's Daughter for music.

Released in 1924, Lord Dunsany's novel has been cited as one of the taproot texts of modern fantasy, featuring political intrigue, war and adventuring in a well-realised secondary world, all more than a decade before J.R.R. Tolkien released The Hobbit. More obscure today, it was much better-known in the 1970s.

Johnson and Knight worked on the album after leaving Steeleye Span, and combined original music with spoken word excerpts from the novel with a full voice cast. Sir Christopher Lee - inevitably a strong fan of the book - was cast as the King of Elfland and also the narrator.

The album was released in 1978 but did not attract a strong critical reception.

Spotify link.


Jeff Wayne's The War of the Worlds by Jeff Wayne (1978)

In the early 1970s, Jeff Wayne was best-known as David Essex's producer and arranger, but he felt his composing output had declined and he was no longer as creatively satisfied as he had been earlier in his career. His first project had been composing a score for his father Jerry Wayne's West End musical version of Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities (1966), which had gotten him the gig working with Essex. He had also written advertising jingles and soundtracks.

Wayne disclosed his creative frustration to his father and they decided on a more elaborate version of the success they'd already had with A Tale of Two Cities. They read a number of well-known novels to find an appropriate story and they both felt that H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds (1897) was suitable. Wayne was inspired to expand the project into a full-on rock opera, and commissioned his stepmother Doreen to write a script whilst he worked on the score. Both were completed in early 1976, with recording sessions beginning that May. Wayne asked Essex to help and he readily agreed.

Wayne composed a completely original score with one exception: the "Forever Autumn" section kept reminding him of a Lego commercial he'd scored, which had turned into a very unexpected hit single in Japan. He re-contextualised the song for the opera. Otherwise all of the music was new. Wayne also realised he needed a strong voice for the narrator. He wrote a letter to Richard Burton, care of the theatre in New York where he was working, and was shocked to get a phone call from Burton's manager heartily approving of the idea and inviting him to fly to the States to record the narration. Burton, not always known to be the most diplomatic actor about the material he worked with, enjoyed the process and complimented Wayne on his dialogue. One possible problem was that Burton refused to have the music playing as he spoke, as he felt it was a distraction, so had to work with Wayne and David Essex on fitting the dialogue into the right spaces by instinct, which he nailed on repeated takes.

With the record complete, Wayne's publishers were baffled and nearly refused to release it, only relenting when Wayne produced a special cut of the album with the songs cut down to traditional single lengths. This allowed them to release two singles - "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War" - to promote the record. CBS UK then got behind the project in a big way.

Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds was released in June 1978 and was a surprise hit. To date it has sold more than 15 million copies, making it easily the biggest-selling record on this list, and has generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue in live tours and media sales.

Spotify link.

Apple Music link.



"The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins" by Leonard Nimoy (1968)

No.


The Songs of Distant Earth by Mike Oldfield (1994)

Mike Oldfield had shot to fame in the early 1970s with his classic Tubular Bells, but had struggled to produce a direct follow-up due to an increasingly sour relationship with Virgin Records. In 1991 he signed with Warner Music, who gave him complete creative freedom and he felt able to rework his original album into Tubular Bells II.

Oldfield discussed his next project with the record label chairman, Rob Dickins, a science fiction fan who was arguably one of the most influential and important figures in British music at the time. Dickins threw up some ideas, including for an album based on Arthur C. Clarke's 1984 novel The Songs of Distant Earth. Oldfield was familiar with Clarke's work but responded more to the title, which he considered evocative, than the novel itself, which he felt was "not one of his best."

Nevertheless, Oldfield flew to Sri Lanka to discuss the project with Clarke and found that Clarke was a fan of his work on the soundtrack to The Killing Fields. Clarke responded well to Oldfield's suggestions and gave Oldfield the creative freedom to open up the book and do some things differently. Oldfield found the recording process taxing, as he felt that his familiar instruments weren't "science fictiony" enough, so he relied more on keyboards and electronic music. At one point, he was so frustrated that he sat down and based out a theme in a few minutes in an absolute rage, and was later astonished that this worked as a process.

Also during recording, Oldfield played the adventure game Myst and was so impressed by it that he included a Myst-like series of puzzles on an enhanced CD-ROM version of the album.

The album was released in 1994 to a middling critical reception, although Clarke gave it his seal of approval.

Spotify link.

Apple Music link.


From the Discworld by Dave Greenslade (1994)

From the Discworld - slightly oddly officially called Terry Pratchett's From the Discworld, which may be creatively accurate but not physically - is a soundtrack album assembled by prog rocker Dave Greenslade and released in 1994. It was an official release created with the full approval of Sir Terry Pratchett.

Greenslade was a member for twenty years of British prog rock band Colosseum before embarking on an eclectic solo career that incorporated transmedia art projects (such as the epicly-titled Pentateuch of the Cosmogony). In the 1980s he switched to soundtracks, producing the music for BBC series including A Very Peculiar Practice, Kinsey, Tales of the Unexpected, Wipe Out, Bird of Prey and Gangsters.

Pratchett was a fan of Greenslade's music and Greenslade was a fan of Pratchett's books, and when they met in 1984 they became fast friends. Eight years later, Greenslade was moved to ask to produce music based on Pratchett's Discworld books and Pratchett agreed. Despite not having a huge amount of musical knowledge, Pratchett also made helpful suggestions, such as "This bit should sound like the opening of the Tory Party Conference," and "Can this bit sound grander? Can we add three more full organs?" Greenslade was also committed to making a soundtrack album, not an album of the songs from the books, so alas "The Hedgehog Can Never Be Buggered At All" did not make the cut. "A Wizard's Staff Has a Knob on the End" did make it in, because it had to, but Pratchett and Greenslade did reluctantly take a knife to an extended reprise that sadly made the subtle and delicate subtext a bit too obvious (or possibly it was a bit too long, but whatever).

The most ambitious track on the album was "Small Gods," which attempted to distil the entire novel (arguably Pratcett's finest and thematically richest) into five minutes. The song is especially notable for guest keyboards from a young Rhianna Pratchett.

The soundtrack was released in 1994 and did not set the charts on fire, although it did have a very long tail. A sequel soundtrack was discussed but never made it into the studio.

Additional Discworld music was produced by Mark Bandola and Rob Lord for the first two Discworld video games - Discworld (1995) and Discworld II: Missing, Presumed...? (1996) - whilst Paul Weir took over composing duties for Discworld Noir (1999). Paul Francis and David Hughes composed the music for Sky One's three Discworld TV serials: Hogfather (2007), The Colour of Magic (2008) and Going Postal (2010).

Spotify link.


A Soundtrack for The Wheel of Time by Robert Berry (2001)

The Wheel of Time got its own custom soundtrack album in 2001, although this was an outgrowth of an earlier project. In 1999 Legend Entertainment released the Wheel of Time video game, a well-made but somewhat incongruous first-person shooter based on Robert Jordan's fantasy series. Robert Berry and Leif Sorbye collaborated on music for the game and considered releasing it as a stand-alone album, but did not have enough material.

Robert Berry reconceived the project as a soundtrack based directly on the books and repurposed themes from the games and created new music for the project.

Berry had an impressive pedigree. As a guitarist, bassist, vocalist and producer he'd been active on the music scene since the 1970s, working with Hush, Keith Emerson and Carl Palmer and several other bands. He'd also worked on soundtracks and as a session player.

Unlike Pratchett, Jordan did not get involved in the creation of the Wheel of Time soundtrack album and had no contact with the composer.

Spotify link.

Apple Music link.


Geidi Primes by Grimes (2010)

Canadian singer-songwriter Claire Boucher - better known as Grimes - released her debut album in 2010. It was a concept album based on Frank Herbert's novel Dune, with the title being a (misspelt) reference to the Harkonnen homeworld of Giedi Prime. Track titles drew inspiration from the book: "Caladan," "Sardaukar Levenbrech," "Zoal, Face Dancer," "Feyd Rautha Dark Heart," and "Shadout Mapes."

Grimes, at the time unknown, released the record in a low key manner, assuming it would disappear without a trace. Instead, it helped propel her towards superstardom, making her later regret some of the most obscure song title choices.

In 2019 Grimes' career came full circle with a return to SF ideas in her fifth studio album, Miss Anthropocene, including songs that will feature in the forthcoming video game Cyberpunk 2077 (due for release in September this year).


Kaladin by The Black Piper (2017)

Kaladin is a soundtrack album based on Brandon Sanderson's novel The Way of Kings (2010), the first in his Stormlight Archive series. The album was created by The Black Piper, a soundtrack collective led by Michael Banhmiller, a veteran of the movie soundtrack industry where he worked on films such as The Jungle Book, Independence Day: Resurgence, The BFG, La La Land and Jason Bourne. Eleven composers eventually ended up working on the project.

Spotify link.

Apple Music link.

There are quite a few others out there, from individual songs to full albums to entire subgenres (the Tolkien-inspired music scene could certainly fill an entire article by itself).



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Thursday, 11 July 2019

Happy 50th Anniversary to Space Oddity

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the release of "Space Oddity", the breakthrough single for David Bowie.


Inspired by the Apollo space programme and the film 2001: A Space Odyssey (released a year earlier), "Space Oddity" was the first single released from Bowie's second album, David Bowie (rather confusingly, the same name as his first album; the second was later renamed Space Oddity to reduce confusion). David Robert Jones had started making music at school, where he played recorder and saxophone. He formed his first band, the Konrads, in 1962 when he was 15. He went through a succession of other bands - the King Bees, the Manish Boys, the Lower Third, the Buzz and the Riot Squad - before going solo. Adopting the stage name David Bowie after being confused with Davy Jones of the Monkees, he released his self-titled debut album in 1967 but it didn't do very well.

Bowie regrouped after meeting choreographer Lindsay Kemp, who instilled in him a keen appreciation for image and artistry. He also began a relationship with dancer Hermione Farthingale. This burst of inspiration resulted in his second album and the title song, which was recorded in February 1969. Released on 11 July, just five days ahead of Apollo 11's landing on the Moon, the song was an immediate hit and a breakthrough for Bowie, who was largely unknown at the time.

The song didn't make Bowie an overnight superstar, but it did raise his profile and his next two albums - The Man Who Sold the World (1970) and Hunky Dory (1971) - did a lot better before Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972) blew him through the stratosphere.


In 2016 the song took on a new resonance when Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield recorded an acoustic version of the song on the International Space Station, making it the first music video to be actually, specifically filmed in space (as opposed to singles using footage from NASA missions, which had happened previously). In 2018 the song was played on the sound system of the Tesla Roadster fired into space as a publicity stunt by Elon Musk's SpaceX company.

Friday, 14 June 2019

Unknown Pleasures at 40

Joy Division's debut album, Unknown Pleasures, turns 40 tomorrow. One of the most critically-acclaimed albums of all time, the record has withstood the test of time like few others.


The band began life in 1976 when former school friends Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook attended a Sex Pistols gig in Manchester. The band only played for half an hour, but Sumner and Hook left and promptly bought instruments (Sumner an electric guitar and Hooky a cheap bass) and taught themselves to play. Within weeks they were putting together their first, halting compositions. They advertised for a singer and drummer and recruited charismatic, enigmatic frontman Ian Curtis and the relentless, machine-like Stephen Morris, completing their lineup. They started performing under the moniker Stiff Kittens, but soon came to dislike the name, so switched their name to Warsaw, under which they made their live debut in May 1977.

The band had befriended local superstars the Buzzcocks early on, which proved a boon when the Buzzcocks invited them to support them in local gigs and on tour. It wasn't long before music journalists started paying attention to Warsaw and gave them favourable write-ups in the press. This attracted the attention of London-based group Warsaw Pakt, who angrily demanded that they change their name. Exasperated, the band started looking for a new name and seized gratefully on a suggestion of Ian's: Joy Division. Ian, a history buff, had fished it out of a book on the Third Reich, with the name coming from the nickname from a group of Jewish women sold into prostitution for the edification of Nazi officers; needless to say, this connection soon became controversial, with the band being accused of fascism and attracting a neo-Nazi element (the latter was true, resulting in several violent clashes at gigs).

The band recorded their debut EP in late 1977, An Ideal for Living, which attracted rave reviews but also brought renewed criticism as the cover art depicted a member of the Hitler Youth. Stephen Morris, who vehemently hated the coverage, said that the band had a contrarian streak where they got annoyed with the Nazi criticism, so kept doing it to annoy people even more (later on the band recanted, although not before naming their next incarnation "New Order").

Throughout 1978 the band write and toured incessantly, building up a collection of songs for their live performances and constantly adjusting them based on audience feedback. This year was crucial for their development, as it saw them take on an experienced manager (Rob Gretton) and sign to the nascent Factory Records, TV presenter Anthony Wilson's publishing company. Wilson also featured Joy Division on his TV programmes. Music press coverage grew and became outright laudatory, with John Peel pushing the band hard on his BBC radio programmes.

The result was a frenzy of anticipation for the band's debut album. Recording it proved slightly stressful: Wilson assigned maverick, visionary producer Martin Hannett to produce the album. He'd already worked with the band on some songs for A Factory Sample (a collection of songs from Factory's line-up), but for the album he went Full Hannett on them. According to legend, he once had Stephen Morris take apart his drum kit and reassemble it with parts from a toilet; during another recording session he told him to take the drums up to the roof and record them in the open air. Hannett had a massive array of digital delay devices, drum machines and synthesisers which he insisted on using, which the band initially felt was slightly weird. Bernard Sumner was particularly impressed with the technical wizardry Hannett was displaying and became intrigued by the use of synthesisers (Sumner built his own synthesiser from scratch a few months later).

Hannett's peculiarities aside, the band were also pushed for time, as Factory had only paid enough money for the studio for three weekend sessions. As a result the entire album had to be recorded in just six days. To make matters worse, the band's time estimate for their songs proved overly generous, forcing Hooky and Morris to lock themselves in a room and bash out "Candidate" and "From Safety to Where" in short order ("Candidate" ended up being longer than planned, so "From Safety to Where" was booted from the album).

Eventually, after a great deal of stress, the record was completed. The band initially were bewildered by it. Live, they played the songs loud and aggressively, but Hannett had stripped the songs down and added a strange sparseness, as well as overdubbing parts with keyboards (on a couple of occasions, without telling the band first). Curtis was unsure about how his voice sounded, declaring that he sounded like Bowie, whom he hated (Curtis had actually been a Bowie fan, but Bowie wasn't particularly trendy at that moment in time). The band were somewhat unhappy with the record, but Wilson and the rest of the Factory team loved it. Designer Peter Saville created a cover which is arguably more iconic than the record: a visual depiction of the x-ray pulses from pulsar CP1919 (spotted by Sumner in a book on radio astronomy). When the album was released on 15 June 1979, it was an immediate critical success, acclaim which only continued to grow over the following months.

The band didn't release any singles from the record, at all, which severely damaged its commercial chances. Instead, they let the entire album stand by itself. This bolstered their critical integrity, but did mean for lean sales; the album sold roughly 15,000 copies in its first few months on sale and didn't trouble the UK Album Chart. However, the release of non-album single "Transmission" in September saw the album start selling in greater quantities. Word of mouth about the band, who were continuing to tour full-tilt in the meantime and begin working on songs for a follow-up, spread like wildfire. They recorded their second album Closer in London in March 1980, along with the single-only releases "Atmosphere" and "Love Will Tear Us Apart," which was already starting to tear up their gigs and remains their best-known and best-loved song.

The band seemed poised for greatness, but Ian Curtis's life was falling apart at the same time. His marriage was collapsing at the same time he was trying to start a new relationship and he had been diagnosed with epilepsy. The frequency and intensity of his epileptic fits had worsened to the point where it made his future in the band doubtful. On 18 May 1980 he committed suicide at his home in Macclesfield. His shocked bandmates eventually rallied as New Order and began a new career that was every bit as remarkable as their incarnation as Joy Division. Unknown Pleasures finally got its first single in late 1980 when "She's Lost Control" was paired with "Atmosphere" as a double A-side release. The album also finally cracked the UK Album Chart when publicity in the wake of Curtis's suicide pushed the band into higher levels of public awareness.

At 40, Unknown Pleasures still sounds alien, odd and slightly ethereal, a result of Hannett's far-ahead-of-its-time production making the record sound much more recent. Its sparseness, initially derided by the band (until Hooky, grudgingly, admitted twenty years later that it was genius), gives the record a feeling of alienation at odds with its punk contemporaries, and makes it more timeless. But the production can only do so much. It's the four songwriters who take centre stage, with Hooky's pounding, melodic bass lines not only supporting punchy lead guitar riffs from Sumner but taking the lead on several songs (such as "Disorder," where the bass is often mistaken for the guitar, and the high-fret playing of "She's Lost Control"). Ian Curtis's deep, slightly off-kilter vocals go through a battery of strange treatments, a lot of them Curtis's own ideas; on stage he'd plug his microphone into a synthesiser to create odd effects for his vocals, like the multiple layering on "She's Lost Control." Morris's rhythmic, pounding drums, executed with beyond-robot efficiency, make it impossible to tell when he's playing and when a drum machine kicks in. It's a remarkable achievement, bearing in mind three years later these guys didn't know how to play any instrument, and a year earlier they were still blasting out fast-moving 2-minute punk songs.

To this day the argument will rage whether Unknown Pleasures or Closer is the stronger album, but it is clear that the two-punch release of the two records barely a year apart represents a musical achievement to rival any other, and Joy Division will endure for many decades to come.

At the moment the Joy Division YouTube page is releasing brand new music videos for each of the ten tracks on the record. The rest should be released over the coming days.

Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Gratuitous Lists: Seven Great Albums

There's a thing going round asking people to list their seven favourite/most important albums of all time (to them). So here's mine:


R.E.M.
Automatic for the People
1992

Tracklisting: Drive • Try Not to Breathe • The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite • Everybody Hurts • New Orleans Instrumental No. 1 • Sweetness Follows • Monty Got a Raw Deal • Ignoreland • Star Me Kitten • Man on the Moon • Nightswimming • Find the River

Although they'd been knocking around since 1981, ceaselessly touring and releasing multiple critically-acclaimed albums, it was REM's seventh LP, Out of Time, that finally catapulted them to superstardom. Fronted by the monster hits "Losing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People", the record propelled the band to ubiquitous status, to both the band's pleasure but discomfort. Although grateful for the financial security afforded by their success, the band were wary of becoming "radio-friendly unit-shifters" and low-key rebelled. They refused to tour Out of Time and went straight back into the studio to rush-record a follow up.


Drummer Bill Berry insisted that the record had to rock hard and the rest of the band initially agreed, but both music and lyrics instead went very stripped-back, bare and acoustic. After the expansive Out of Time, Automatic for the People (named after the motto of a local restaurant, Weaver D's Delicious Fine Foods: "It's automatic, people!") was introverted, moody and - mostly - quiet. The band were confident that they'd made an album that would not repeat the monster success of its forebear, especially in a music industry now dominated by grunge (Michael Stipe gladly handing over the "spokesman of a generation" mantle to his friend Kurt Cobain).

Instead, the record utterly eclipsed it (to the tune of just under 20 million copies sold by itself). "Everybody Hurts" became the melancholic anthem of the year and the album generated a further five singles, although frankly every song on the album could be a single bar the instrumental. It's kind of cool now to disdain Automatic a little and instead opt for Murmur, Document or New Adventures in Hi-Fi as REM's top album, but that ignores the album's irrepressible atmosphere which mixes hope and melancholy, love and hate, and politics and emotion.

MORE AFTER THE BREAK

Sunday, 2 April 2017

Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division by Peter Hook

On 25 January 1978 four lads from Manchester performed their first gig under the name Joy Division. On 18 May 1980 their lead singer, Ian Curtis, committed suicide, bringing their career screeching to a halt. They later regrouped as New Order, wrote the biggest-selling 12" single of all time, founded the first superclub in the UK, wrote the only decent England World Cup football song, created The Killers (sort of) and broke up acrimoniously. Several times, although their latest split (in 2007) seems to be permanent. But it all began back in the late 1970s with four guys and their instruments playing in dingy, dark pubs in the north of England.


Joy Division are one of the bands that shook the music world. Formed after seeing a Sex Pistols gig and given early encouragement by the Buzzcocks, Joy Division rapidly eclipsed both bands in musical craftsmanship and critical acclaim, although commercial success eluded them for a long time. They only briefly tasted the fruits of success thanks to the success of the single "Love Will Tear Us Apart" and their second album Closer, both released after Ian Curtis's suicide. The band's influence was huge and long-lasting: Radiohead, Manic Street Preachers, Smashing Pumpkins, Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Moby (amongst many others) were inspired by Joy Division and would cover their songs or perform alongside them in their later guise as New Order. Other bands, such as Interpol and Editors, would base their sound more directly on Joy Division, to great success.

The story of Joy Division is bound up in the story of Ian Curtis and the story of Factory Records, that great Madchester outfit which brought so many great musicians to public notice. It's a story that has, over the course of forty years, been mythologised to a great extent, with Ian Curtis held up as a tormented soul, a wounded poet and artist-genius too good for this world etc etc. This mythologising would be fine except for the fact that most of it was done by people looking on from the outside or long after the fact. It wasn't until 1995's Touching from a Distance, written by Curtis's widow Deborah, that a more thorough and human perspective was brought to events. Two feature films have also explored the period: Michael Winterbottom's Twenty-Four Hour Party People (2002) is good but its comedic elements and the fact it tried to cover the entire history of Factory in a limited timespan meant the Joy Division era was given relatively little coverage; Control (2007) is far more in-depth and intricate, but it focuses more on Curtis's marital problems than his life in the band.

Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division provides another viewpoint of the band. Bassist Peter Hook, always the band's most garrulous and painfully honest member, delivers a 300-page account of the band's history and does so in a readable and fascinating manner. Having been a Joy Division fan for over twenty years, I was pretty familiar with the story and thought that there was little else to learn. However, Hook's book is packed full of incidents and details that will be new to many readers. This is, after all, the first time we've had a book written by someone who was actually in the room when they decided to pick a new name, when they decided to recruit machine-like drummer Stephen Morris and when they played "Transmission" live for the first time at a sound check and stopped all of the other roadies and technicians dead in their tracks.

It's this inside perspective which makes the book a compelling read. Hook is a great story-teller but also a bit of a geek, having collected various Joy Division bootlegs and unauthorised recordings of gigs over the years. He provides a timeline mentioning every single gig the band played (where possible with setlists) and spends some time mentioning the gear he played with, such as the awful speaker which led to him switching to playing high notes so he could hear himself (and inadvertently giving the band their trademark sound). However, the majority of the focus is on the human story of the band and its curious internal relationships.

From left: Peter Hook, Ian Curtis, Stephen Morris and Bernard Sumner.

Hook and Bernard Sumner founded the band, initially as Stiff Kittens and then Warsaw, in 1976 after seeing the Sex Pistols. They went through an early rotation of singers and drummers before recruiting Curtis and Morris. In early chapters it's very much Hooky and Barney versus the world, old school friends who taught themselves to play guitar and bass and achieved something special. But the long-simmering musical tensions between the two set in surprisingly early on. Hook admits that it was Curtis, initially solely and later in collaboration with visionary (but stark raving bonkers) producer Martin Hannett, who held the band together through these periods of tension and helped mould their sound into what made them so distinctive. The book's focus shifts gradually from the Hooky & Barney Show to being more about Curtis, whose maturing lyrical prowess and his growing ear for a memorable song led to him becoming a more and more important figure in the band.

A lot of the book is taken up by thoughts on the band and their musical direction, but also about their laddish tendencies: the juvenile pranks they'd pull on support acts or their willingness to chat up girls despite having wives or girlfriends at home. Joy Division have a reputation for being an artsy and doom-laden band, but on the road they worked hard and partied harder.

The book achieves a surprising emotional charge once Curtis is diagnosed with epilepsy. The flashing lights at their shows would often trigger fits right there on stage, but Curtis was adamant he didn't want to leave the band and demanded they keep playing. His bandmates would oblige. In the book Hook admits this was a titanic mistake, but their own urgent desire to escape their crappy jobs in Manchester and enjoy life on the road made them turn a blind eye to common medical sense. It's at this point you remember these guys were only in their early twenties when all of this went down, as was their manager. Hook admits to feeling guilty that they didn't do more to help Curtis, but it's also clear (from both this book and Touching from a Distance) that Curtis believed absolutely and utterly in the band and would not countenance leaving it under any circumstances. Ultimately the pressure of wanting to stay in the band, being stricken with a debilitating medical condition requiring a huge amount of medication and being in a failing marriage all took their toll.

The end of the book is abrupt, but then the end of the band was abrupt. In the opening months of 1980 the band recorded the album Closer and the singles "Atmosphere" and "Love Will Tear Us Apart". They'd recorded their first-ever music video and several appearances on TV. They hit a new level of critical acclaim and were booked to play a tour of the United States. They had a series of impressive new demos in hand (which would later become New Order's first few singles, including the magnificent "Ceremony") and they seemed poised to explode into megastardom. Instead, their lead singer hung himself at home whilst listening to an Iggy Pop record. The long-lasting appeal of Joy Division, beyond the fantastic songs, has always been that idea of a band forever trapped in that moment, with no bad songs or phoned-in albums to their name, poised forever on the cusp of greatness but having it denied by tragedy. It's a mythic image that even Hook cannot dispel with his down-to-earth stories of four mates having a laugh on the road.

But Unknown Pleasures (****½) is also a very human book, very funny at times, touching at others and mainly free of rancour (Hook saves that up - with interest - for its follow-up Substance, about New Order). It'll certainly make fans want to reconnect with Joy Division's back catalogue and check out Hook's thunderous live shows where he plays the albums by the band in full. The book is available now in the UK and USA.

Friday, 15 April 2016

A Design for Life at 20

On 15 April 1996, Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers released their nineteenth single, the first from their fourth album. They were a low-to-mid ranking British band, having achieved modest success with their first three records but by no means were a household name. Compared to the biggest bands in Britain at the time - Oasis, Blur and Pulp - they were minnows. Their record company had decided to keep them on by just one vote a few months earlier, and big things were not expected of them. Their previous album, The Holy Bible, had been dark, complex, "difficult" but highly rewarding in critical and artistic terms. However, it had sold like a damp squib.



The Manics were recovering from the biggest catastrophe of their careers and maybe their lives. A year earlier their rhythm guitarist, lead writer and "propagandist-in-chief" Richey Edwards had disappeared without a trace. His car had been found abandoned at the Severn Bridge, a notorious suicide spot, after Richey had been suffering from a prolonged period of despair, depression and frustration. Although suicide was suspected, a number of eyewitness reports (including a detailed one of him taking a taxi around Cardiff) suggested that he might still be alive. But he was never seen again. The remaining members of the band - guitarist and singer James Dean Bradfield, drummer Sean Moore and bassist and co-writer Nicky Wire - spent three months waiting for news and then reconvened to discuss their future.

The band had already been preparing their fourth album, with Richey having contributed several lyrics. James had played demos of a few of these for him the day before he disappeared. One, "The Small Black Flowers That Grow in the Sky", based on a Richey lyric about animal cruelty, had reduced him to tears. With work in full flow, the band were reluctant to abandon the promising record but also did not want to disrespect Richey's memory. However, the band were encouraged to proceed by Richey's family, who hoped that hearing his songs on the radio might encourage him to get in contact. Work resumed but the band initially found getting into the swing of things difficult. Nicky Wire, who had to write more lyrics than normal, found himself suffering badly, producing lyrics he could only describe as terrible.

Out of this period he did produce two songs that seemed to hold some promise. "The Pure Motive" and a short, atypically (for the Manics) lyric-light song called "A Design for Life". Wire had come up with the title by taking Joy Division's "An Ideal for Living" and just substituting different words. The song wasn't even really a song, more of a short poem about the Welsh working class. James Dean Breadfield liked the title and some of the lyrics, but felt others were a little too dark and a bit too "Holy Bible-ish" for an album that was already more positive in its outlook. They combined the two songs, moved some lyrics around and then Wire produced the new - and now iconic - opening two lines: "Libraries give us power" (taken from the inscription outside Pillgwennly Library, Newport: "Knowledge is Power") and "Then work came and made us free" (possibly darkly inspired by "Arbeit macht frei", a Nazi slogan most famously found over the gates to Auschwitz). The rest of the song fell into place quickly. Bradfield declared he had to write "the best tune ever" to fit the lyrics. He played the finished demo down the phone to Nicky who was dumbstruck. Drummer Sean Moore, who also plays a major role in the composition and fine-tuning of the songs, then came on board and provided the song's time signature, as well as its drum solo outro.

The song was played for the first time at support gig for the Stone Roses (who were in the middle of self-destructing) in late 1995 and proved popular with the fans. Radio stations began playing it in March 1996 and it picked up an enthusiastic response, rapidly being A-listed by most stations. When it was finally released, it sold 100,000 copies in a week, a figure that dwarfs modern single sales (well, any not by Adele, anyway). The band prepared for their first #1 single but missed the top sport by only about a thousand copies, with the smooth swingbeat track "Return of the Mack" by Mark Morrison pipping them to the post.

The song received enormous sales, acclaim and airplay, paving the way for Everything Must Go, the album, on 20 May. At the Brit Awards in February 1997, the band won two Brit Awards. The band also received two NME Awards and were shortlisted for the Mercury Music Prize. In the summer of 1998 they repeated the award trick with their fifth album, This Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours, but that outsold Everything Must Go by two-to-one and gave them their first #1 single with "If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next". But it was "A Design for Life" that became their signature song, the closer at almost every single set they'd play for the next two decades and their most euphoric and life-affirming moment: a song about the working class being set free by education.

Friday, 13 February 2015

SPACE HULK: DEATHWING and JUST CAUSE 3 trailers feature unusual music choices

Video game trailer music is heavy on either rock or graceful orchestral movements, so it's nice to see a pair of new trailers that are changing things up.


First up is Just Cause 3, set to a chilled-out, ice-cool rendition of Prodigy's 1996 hit single "Firestarter". SPOILER: this trailer confirms that the game will feature explosions.



Next is Space Hulk: Deathwing, set in the Warhammer 40,000 universe. In the grim darkness of the far future, there is only Swiss mariach-influenced rap.



Both games will be out later this year. Next up: a trailer for the new Call of Duty game set to jazz fusion.

Sunday, 31 August 2014

The 20th anniversay of THE HOLY BIBLE

Yesterday marked the twentieth anniversary of the release of The Holy Bible. No, not that one. This one:

The striking cover art is a painting by Jenny Saville called Strategy (South Face/Front Face/North Face). Saville's representatives demanded an exorbitant fee for its usage. After Richey Edwards rang Saville and explained the meaning of each track in detail, she let the band use it for free. The typeface and reversed Rs are a nod to Empires and Dance by Simple Minds.


The Holy Bible is the third album (of twelve to date) released by Manic Street Preachers, a rock band from Blackwood, Wales. The band was founded in 1987 by four close childhood friends: James Dean Bradfield (lead vocals, guitars), Sean Moore (drums), Nicky Wire (bass, lyrics) and Richey Edwards (lyrics, rhythm guitar). The foursome came from a working-class background, their community one of many badly affected by the 1984-85 Miners' Strike and the subsequent pit closures that had left the area awash in poverty and unemployment. The group came together with a mission statement to inject intelligence into rock, refusing to write love songs and making sure each track they wrote was about something.

The band released several indie singles (starting with "Suicide Alley" in 1989) but came to more widespread attention in 1990-91 when they released several singles through Heavenly Records, most notably "Motown Junk" and "You Love Us." "Motown Junk" was played on heavy rotation by BBC Radio 1 DJ Steve Lamacq and he championed the band in its early days. However, later that year Lamacq felt that the band had failed to deliver on its initial promise and carried out a challenging interview with Richey Edwards in which he asked if the band were genuine in their artistic intent. An annoyed Edwards pulled out a razor blade and carved the words "4 REAL" into his forearm in front of the horrified journalist.

Incidents like this and the inability of either Edwards or Wire to self-edit in interviews, to the delight of the British music press, soon gave the band a media presence at odds with their ludicrously tiny sales figures. It also helped them win a major record deal, with Rob Stringer of Columbia Records (a subsidiary of Sony) signing up the band. The Manics declared they would sell 16 million copies of their debut album, play Wembley and split up. In the event, they sold about half a million copies of Generation Terrorists (their debut), didn't play Wembley and didn't split up.

By the latter part of 1993, the band seemed to have come to the conclusion that maybe they had surrendered their ideals in the pursuit of commercial success. Wire and Edwards didn't want to be a in a cult band, playing well-received arty tracks to a hardcore few fans. They wanted "mass communication", as Wire said many years later, and to do that they coupled their sometimes challenging lyrics to some fairly standard rock song structures. James Dean Bradfield's astonishing way with a guitar riff (particularly on tracks like "Motorcycle Emptiness" and "La Tristesse Durera") helped the band win over some doubters about their musicianship, but the band also felt a step out of time. Generation Terrorists evoked the feel of Guns N' Roses and late 1980s American rock, a few years past its sell-by date. Its follow-up, Gold Against the Soul, mixed influences from grunge and Madchester - Seattle by way of Salford - to often terrific effect, but again it felt a bit dated by the time it came out.

For their third record, the Manics stopped chasing musical fads, dropped the American influences (instead binging on British acts like Wire, Joy Division and PiL) and decided to record the album close to home in a tiny, cheap studio in Cardiff. The band-members could commute into work and recorded the album in less than two months of tight, disciplined work. They were helped by Richey's incredibly prolific output, as he poured out lyrics (also poems and stream-of-conscious rants) by the dozen. Previously the band had ruthlessly edited the lyrics to fit the songs but Bradfield was so moved by Richey's words that he reversed the process, tailoring the songs around the often dense and complex lyrics. Co-writer Nicky Wire contributed about a quarter of the album's output, helping Richey name some songs and performing rewrites where necessary, but for the most part the album was the work of Richey Edwards by himself.

Manic Street Preachers in 1994: James Dean Bradfield, Richey Edwards, Nicky Wire, Sean Moore.

Almost insanely, the band did not initially pick up that anything was wrong. Ever since the "4 REAL" incident the band had almost perversely played up on Richey's "tortured poet" image (a Welsh Kurt Cobain, an Ian Curtis of the valleys) suggesting they'd top off his previous act by decapitating Richey live on stage. Drummer Sean Moore, known for his laconic sense of humour, told a journalist that Richey did not go to bed to sleep, only "the abyss". Richey spent his time off from writing playing video games (he was a huge Sega fan), reading 2000AD comics - and being delighted when the music-fan writers briefly included a character in the Judge Dredd strip based on him - and brushing up on his reading. During the recording of The Holy Bible he also bought a flat, allowing him the space needed to focus on his writing.

That said, the image was also not without its truth. Richey was a heavy drinker and was often depressed. He also experienced bouts of anorexia and self-harming. The Holy Bible provided an outlet for all of his darker thoughts and interests, with the lyrics reflecting on subjects like the Holocaust, starvation, political correctness, capital punishment, totalitarianism and prostitution. His band-mates didn't notice anything too unusual in this during the recording, when Edwards often came into the studio when he wasn't needed just to provide encouragement. However, during a post-recording tour of Thailand and Portugal Edwards's behaviour deteriorated. He often cried and during one gig cut himself with a knife live on stage. His drinking got out of control and, at the urging of his bandmates and their management, he checked himself into the Priory, London's most famous rehab clinic. This didn't seem to help very much. To pay for the clinic's extravagant bills the band did a string of festival gigs as a three-piece, which left them feeling angry and frustrated. The death of their manager from cancer and the fact that the album was released whilst Richey was still in rehab reduced the band to one of its lowest points.

They weren't helped by the shifting musical climate. Guitar music was increasing in popularity in Britain, propelled by bands like Blur, Suede and Pulp, and in the summer of 1994 suddenly exploded thanks to the arrival of noted Manchester rockers Oasis. Oasis's eagerly-awaited debut album Definitely Maybe was released on the same day as The Holy Bible and ensured that the Manics' album was comprehensively overshadowed, despite a strong critical reception from the music press.

The planned sleeve for the single release of "Yes". It was pulled after Richey's disappearance.

The Holy Bible may have been overlooked by the mass audiences, but nothing could dim its power. It retains a critical reputation amongst British albums of the time few others can match, and has now sold over half a million copies (which is small change to some, but for a record this "difficult", it's impressive). It's a tough album - "We knew people wouldn't play it at parties," as Moore said at the time - and one that s often given the dreaded description of "dark", although it's also not entirely shorn of hope.

The record kicks off with "Yes", the great lost Manics single. It was supposed to be released in early 1995 but other events saw it being cancelled. Instead it gets to lead out the record and does so in a manner that can be best described as "commercial suicide". It opens with a sample from the 1993 documentary film, Hookers, Hustlers, Pimps and Their Johns, which had blown open the lid on the modern prostitution trade. Five words in, Richey drops a c-bomb. The perversely upbeat chorus ponders the merits of castration. Richey's lyrics are so dense that Bradfield has to blast them out like a machine gun of bile to fit them in.

It's an exhausting song and sets the tone for what is to follow: tracks on the merits of American culture ("Ifwhiteamericatoldthetrueforonedayitsworldwouldfallapart"), totalitarianism and feminism ("Of Walking Abortion"), feminism again ("She is Suffering", later disavowed by the band for its apparent advocating of white knighting), capital punishment ("Archives of Pain"), failed relationships ("Revol", kind of), anorexia ("4st 7lb"), the Holocaust ("Mausoleum"), discipline and intelligence ("Faster"), dying of old age ("Die in the Summertime"), the Holocaust again ("The Intense Humming of Evil") and the odd bedfellows of drugs, communism and political correctness ("P.C.P."). It's a ferociously smart and hard-to-parse album, really requiring several listens to take in. And yes, it is a dark album, but one that is also streaked through with rays of hope. "This is Yesterday", a Nicky Wire track, is the album's most positive and uplifting moment, a simple but effective track with a little bit of the feel of the Beatles track it shares a near-name with. Other songs like "Of Walking Abortion" and "Faster" are angry but also defiantly life-affirming in their rage.

Its critical reception was mostly positive, but several writers were concerned about what the record said about its principle creator: Melody Maker declared it as "The sound of a group...hurtling towards a private armageddon." Select fitted the songs to what Richey Edwards was going through and was concerned that "No further gestures are required." The Holy Bible's music stock would also only increase with time, the record continuing to appear in Top 100 lists even when almost all of its near-contemporaries had fallen off the radar. This week, the 20th anniversary of the release of both the record and Oasis's vastly higher-selling debut, has been dominated in the British musical press by coverage of The Holy Bible, not Oasis's gamechanger.


What Happened Next

In the wake of The Holy Bible's release, the band were rejoined by Richey for a final string of shows culminating in an explosive gig at the London Astoria which ended with the band destroying most of their instruments. Walking offstage, the band felt a sense of cathartic release that a very difficult time in their lives was over.


The band had already decided that the band's fourth album would be lighter - or at least more approachable - in tone. Richey's prolific streak had continued and Bradfield had enough material to work out rough demos of several new tracks: "The Small Black Flowers That Grow in the Sky", "No Surface All Feeling" and the lyrically obtuse "Kevin Carter", a song about the South African photojournalist who had become immensely famous for a photograph he'd taken of a vulture and a young starving child in Sudan, which had won him the Pulitzer Prize. Feeling guilty of how he'd won fame, Carter had committed suicide in early 1994, a story that fascinated Edwards. Early work on the new album was interrupted by the band's management making a breakthrough in their attempts to raise American interest: the US wing of Sony Music had finally taken notice of the band's media profile and had agreed to fund a remix of The Holy Bible for American audiences, not to mention a fairly high-profile tour. Given that the band's only real previous exposure in the States had come from an LA TV station using their track "Slash and Burn" as a backdrop to their coverage of the Rodney King riots (to the band's utter horror), this positive development was a surprise.

The American tour never happened, and the remix would not surface for ten years when it was finally made available as part of a 10th anniversary box set. On 1 February 1995, the date Richey and James were supposed to fly to the States for promotional work, Richey checked out of his London hotel and was never seen again. Two weeks later his car was found abandoned near the Severn Bridge, leading to rushed claims that he'd jumped from the bridge, a known suicide spot. However, nothing was conclusively proven. In 2008 his family finally declared him legally dead, but the truth of the matter remains unknown. He was 27 years old, the so-called "cursed age" at which musicians like Cobain, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison and Brian Jones had all died, further adding to the rock star mythology.

The band immediately went on hiatus whilst they waited for news. After six months, they spoke to the Edwards family, who suggested that releasing the songs Richey had been working on might encourage him to make contact. The band reformed and struggled to resume work. It was only when Nicky Wire handed James Dean Bradfield a poem about how the working class had been empowered by education that the creative juices started flowing again. The resulting song, "A Design for Life," was released in April 1996 and was an instant smash hit, hitting #2 on the charts (only missing out on the top spot by a couple of hundred sales). The album that followed, Everything Must Go, sold two million copies in its first three years on sale and won the band two Brit Awards. With the near-total collapse of popular acclaim for Oasis following their successful-but-derided third album, Be Here Now, the Manics inherited the position of Britain's premier rock group, a position they would hold until the rise of Coldplay in 2000-01. Most notably, the Manics scored two #1 singles ("If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next" in 1998 and "The Masses Against the Classes", the first British #1 song of the 21st Century) and a #1 album with 1998's This is My Truth, Tell Me Yours. The Manics peaked with their sell-out show at the Cardiff Millennium Stadium on New Year's Eve 1999 (culminating in a live broadcast of "A Design for Life" on TV).

Subsequently the band underwent a period of unfocused direction. Their next two albums, Know Your Enemy (2001) and Lifeblood (2004) were messy and confused, although between them they produced several decent tracks. The band were also criticised - most stringently by themselves later on - for playing a show in Havana in 2001 meant to express solidarity with the people of Cuba but was spun by Fidel Castro for his own PR purposes. However, in 2007 they released Send Away the Tigers, an album brimming with hummable tunes and pop choruses. Whilst a little cheesy, it won back a lot of public goodwill and allowed them to take on a daunting task they'd been avoiding since Richey's disappearance: using up what was left of Richey's lyrics and poems to fuel a new album. They feared a backlash, but 2009's Journal for Plague Lovers was critically acclaimed and a huge hit with their fans (not so much commercially, as they refused to release any singles from it and did minimal PR for it). 2010's Postcards from a Young Man was described by Nicky Wire as "One last shot at mass communication", again focusing on catchy hooks and big choruses. However, the record did not find as much favour as their previous two records.

More recently, the Manics have enjoyed both their most critically and commercially successful period in many years. In 2013 they released Rewind the Film, a mostly acoustic record that featured several collaborations with other artists. The album was an unexpected hit. Earlier this year they released Futurology, an album recorded in Berlin and driven by European influences and ideas. The critical reception was nothing short of rapturous, making it their most well-received album since Everything Must Go (if not The Holy Bible itself).

But when the Manics do eventually split, it is The Holy Bible that will be namechecked the most, their most defining record and the one that nearly destroyed them. Twenty years on, it remains a remarkable record, the product of a singular and distressing vision.