Archive | February, 1997

February 1997 – album reviews – James’ ‘Whiplash’ (“dabbles in new styles, mostly unsatisfactorily”)

25 Feb
James: 'Whiplash'

James: ‘Whiplash’

When a band have made it, are popular, and their songs are heard in every commercial outlet, a person is simply playing a game of pathetic one‑upmanship if they smugly proclaim: “Oh, I liked them when they were a cult band. They’ve gone all pop now!” These are very sad people.

Ahem. Now…

I liked James when they were a cult band. They’ve gone all pop now. Yes, I admit it. I am a sad person and I claim my five pounds.

In truth, I lost touch with James after ‘Gold Mother’, when they entered the pop stratosphere and those T‑shirts became ubiquitous. My attitude to Sit Down exemplifies my attitude to ‘Whiplash’. Sit Down started life as a strumalong of identification with those who felt alone or slightly dispossessed, insecure. It was re‑released as an epic soundtrack which seemed to command “You WILL Sit Down!!”. And whilst every baggy‑shirted indie kid and raver performed the increasingly meaningless charade of plonking their arses on the stage, that song (and James themselves) sounded, to these ears, like a New Age, slightly more subtle Simple Minds. When my mother chose Sit Down as her favourite song, opined that Tim Booth was “a nice young man” and started asking me which one in the band was “James”, my interest in the band as a pop entity virtually evaporated. (You none‑more‑punk, you! ‑ ED.)

 
‘Whiplash’ promises much. It is heralded as “a return to form”. For old James fans, this is a pronouncement we’ve heard before. But the opening track, Tomorrow, has the pulsing rhythm, the simplicity and directness, the expanding layers of sound that I so remember were classic James; and so it is better to forget, perhaps, that this song is about three years old and first appeared in embryonic form on ’94’s experimental excursion ‘Wah Wah’. Elsewhere, Lost A Friend features verses with a skeletal musical backing and Booth returning to hitting all those strange half‑note harmonies of old, before breaking into the obligatory big chorus. It’s still James’ version of their Big Music, but it no longer lumbers like an over‑produced fabrication as in recent years. Sadly, trite lyrics like “my TV’s telling me / that all of our money goes into the military” and “I see some soldiers with guns / they are killing for fun / they are killing to entertain me” do not raise my political consciousness one iota. May I call you Bono, Tim?

 
This album’s biggest problems come where the much‑vaunted contemporary feel exerts itself. There is always an awful doubt when a band returns from a long break saying that they’ve been listening to techno/trip‑hop/drum’n’bass/ambient (or whatever; delete as applicable), and the new masterpiece is produced under these influences. Eighty per cent of ‘Whiplash’ features these dabbles in new styles, mostly unsatisfactorily.

The album’s first single, She’s A Star, is the most startling and perhaps most successful, sounding like Suede-lite. But it lacks Brett Anderson’s detailing of urban degeneration, suburbia and glamorous smack habits. With Suede, She’s A Star would be blackly ironic ‑ she would be a lonely girl in a dead commuter belt, or a wasted junkie. But Tim means it ‑ she really is a “star”. That’s lovely for him and her (whoever she may be), but ultimately rather naive for us.

 
Go To The Bank is roughly the third song on the album that mentions TVs, so James have obviously spent their time away wisely. Seemingly a diatribe against the evils of money, the lyrics leave a bad taste in the mouth with the repeated line “it all belongs to Caesar…” Is someone rather peeved about recently having to settle a large bill for unpaid taxes, eh? This track and the next, Play Dead, are full of techno effects that ultimately do not go far enough. They dabble in electronica, but still align themselves to typical James nervy strumalongs. But the two styles don’t gel, and they’d be more satisfying as one or the other. Play Dead, in particular, could be one of James’ truly haunting acoustic numbers if it dropped the excess techno zeitgeist baggage: it is one of the few obviously beautiful melodies here.

 
Greenpeace (oh Tim, do you have to be so fucking obvious? What next? Veggie? ’90s Hippie? Beanbag?) is a dark, slightly rockier take on trip‑hop, alternating between distorted vocals and ambience in the verses and a chorus that feels like it’s built on the bassline of Massive Attack’s Safe From Harm. It is leaden, and rather desperate to show how contemporary it is. Where James once had that aura of being a band of weird but pleasant loners down the end of the corridor, they now come across more like insufferably tedious born‑again Christians; but, as Greenpeace shows, ones who are desperate to prove to the church elders that they are hip and rebellious, and that “this is what the kids are into.”

 
It’s all so frustrating when elsewhere there’s such a blatant demonstration of the simple, peculiar emotional alchemy that James can muster so well. I’m talking about Blue Pastures, a quiet, near‑acoustic whisper of a coda to ‘Whiplash’s technophilic sprawl. Jim Glennie’s bass rings like a sleepy bell, guitars fill out dark clouds in the sky, and James’ old Patti Smith influences are evoked once more as Booth unwinds the story: someone quietly putting things to rights, then walking out into the snow to die. Their thoughts slow, the ground gets closer. Snow covering. Peace arriving. Fade‑out. Perfection ‑ for once, we respond with tears of compassion and recognition rather than of frustration.

 
But in the reckoning, this album is a disappointment after the marvellous and underrated ‘Wah Wah’. Which proved that, in the right laid‑back conditions and with the right production influence from Brian Eno (who part‑produced and “interfered” with this one, but evidently not enough), James could come up with the post‑modern experimental pop they so desperately seek on ‘Whiplash’. Chained, often rather clumsily, to the typical James of old, the two styles pull against each other. U2 have managed to cling to the bandwagon by enlisting the best technoheads around. If James want to do likewise, they’d better get someone who can do a better job at improving the rather leaden attempts at electronica on here. Or they can forget the zeitgeist and return to being the pre‑pomposity weirdo folkies still to be glimpsed occasionally.

Which way, Tim?

(review by Col Ainsley)

James: ‘Whiplash’
Mercury Records/Fontana Records, 534 354‑2 (731453435421)
CD/cassette album
Released: 24th February 1997

Get it from:
on general release.

James online:
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February 1997 – album reviews – The Bathers’ ‘Kelvingrove Baby’ (“full of Celtic soul histrionics, surging choruses and delicate instrumental interludes”)

24 Feb
The Bathers: 'Kelvingrove Baby'

The Bathers: ‘Kelvingrove Baby’

Oh, but I do worry about Chris Thomson.

Chris Thomson is The Bathers. He’s been ploughing his lonely furrow for ten years, since the break up of the seminal Glasgow group Friends Again (who also featured James Grant of Love And Money ‑ no, me neither…). This is The Bathers’ fifth album ‑ it will doubtless be received with the same resounding silence as all the others, save for the tiny devoted following who will think manna has descended from heaven. So why was I worried? Well, the sleeve to the last album, ‘Sunpowder’, contained the desperately insecure messages “Support the Arts ‑ Hug A Musician” and “The Dream Is Over ‑ Long Live The Dream”. Sob.

Now you’ll have to take The Bathers to your hearts, surely…?

https://youtu.be/h6JwcH4NllQ

In truth, the first three or so tracks are a touch disconcerting by normal Bathers standards. The (frankly pretentious, but marvellous) European‑influenced titles are absent; the credits show a preponderance of Wurlitzer, Rhodes and electric pianos rather than the normally ever‑present ethereal strings and chiming classical piano lines. And while Van Morrison has often been an undoubted influence, on this album the influence is perhaps too pervasive, and it verges at times on sounding like an avant‑garde Hothouse Flowers. The trio of Girlfriend, If Love Could Last Forever and East Of East Delier ‑ whilst gloriously late‑night ‑ can make them sound like a barely‑audible, zonked‑out but musically polite cafe band. At one point, I half expected Thomson to slur: “Ladeez and gennelmen, we’re your band this evening. Gonna take a little ol’ break now. See you at the bar, which is now open.”.

But for East Of East Delier, the European outlook (“I dreamed she’d come from Copenhagen…”) is back, serenaded by Thomson’s 2 a.m‑feel, decidedly tipsy, highly emotional display, and the album twitches into life with No Risk No Glory. With a sparse acoustic base to the verse, and sympathetic soul‑style backing vocals (by, of all people, Del Amitri’s Justin Currie ‑ bang goes the indie cred) that echo Thomson’s lyric, the chorus rises to breast‑beating Celtic soul and a lyric full of self‑awareness ‑ “I was born to suffer.”

And after a slightly hazy start to the album, Once Upon A Time On The Rapenburg restores my faith. It’s like an old friend, and you should never change an old friend. All the signature Bathers motifs are there ‑ the classical piano, the strings, the over‑emotional vocals, the continental cool. And the lyrical concern is a familiar one about kissing a girl under starlit skies in various exotic European locations. What a guy…

Kelvingrove Baby itself is the album’s central epic ‑ there’s always one, full of Celtic soul histrionics, surging choruses and delicate instrumental interludes. It begins as a simple piano motif before bursting into life with haunting voices and an operatic diva weaving in and out of Thomson’s lyrics ‑ which could be corny, but instead sends a shiver down the spine. He’s expectantly waiting for a girl again, and dedicating his overflowing paean of love to her hometown. The music regularly builds, swells and bursts like a raincloud, as Thomson reaches ecstatic preacherly heights of inspiration: “when your girl looks at you, and she sighs, / when she moves beside you, you want the moment touched with magic and immortality. / You want rain, / you want soft music, / and the last words to be about love!” Pianos and drums explode. The song ends, soaked to the skin and smiling.

On a quieter tip, Girl From The Polders is a good example of what Thomson does so well: taking a standard, timeless melody (you know the tune already, from the first notes onwards) and drawing out of it something haunting and emotional. He seems to be waiting through the seasons, until summer, for her this time. (Hands up if you see a lyrical theme emerging…)

The one unforgivable track ‑ the first real blot on Thomson’s copy book I’ve heard in ages, is Dial. More cafe band music; too mellow, man. Lots of filmic guitar, elongated major‑7th chords, treacle‑smooth backing vocals and an irredeemably cringeworthy chorus ‑ “Caller, you’re divine.” Ugh. But Hellespont In A Storm (yes! titles! titles!) wins us back: a late‑night lament guided by an accordion, acoustic guitar and violin. Although, gorgeous as it is, Thomson’s way with a familiar melody takes a tumble in the verses, where echoes of Unchained Melody can be clearly heard. Oh, never mind…

The final track, Twelve, finds Thomson devoting himself to a girl in the most poetic and tangible of ways; “I’ll love you ’til the roses lose their perfume… / until the poets run out of rhymes… / ’til the twelfth of never. / And, baby, you know / that’s a long, long time…” Then that “Bathers moment” appears ‑ distant voices appear and disappear through snatches of ghostly telephone conversations, string passages shoot up at the back of the recording like incense rushing up the dome of St Peter’s. The callers hang up.

https://youtu.be/5cndoHOhF0E

Chris Thomson will be waiting for you, bottle of red wine in hand in the late‑night rain, under the street lamp’s orange glow. He’ll be singing quietly to himself.

Goodbye, Chris. See you at the same place next time.

(review by Vaughan Simons)

The Bathers: ‘Kelvingrove Baby’
Marina Records, MA 22/MACD 4468‑2 (4 015698 446821)
CD-only album
Released: 24th February 1997

Get it from:
(2018 update) the original Marina pressing of this album has long since sold out, so is best obtained second-hand. The 2000 reissue on Wrasse Records is still available.

The Bathers online:
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February 1997 – album reviews – Cranes’ ‘Population 4’ (“lacking in their usual ambition to take flight”)

3 Feb
Cranes: 'Population 4'

Cranes: ‘Population 4’

Coming out of the closet as a Cranes fan has been a dangerous thing to do, throughout their career. Unadventurous (and sometimes frankly spiteful) reviews have continually harped on that word ‑ “Goth” ‑ and Alison Shaw’s distinctive vocal style. Cranes first emerged against the hideous trend that was “indie‑dance” or “baggy”, and have remained resolutely out of step with the musical climate, with a small coterie of the artier music journos and a band of devoted fans to sing their praises.

The cover of Cranes’ last album proper, ‘Loved’, showed Degas’ ‘Blue Dancers’, and the album echoed those dusky blue hues and nineteenth‑century European Romantic feel. The music came swathed in atmosphere, but with each track having its own style and exploring a different, often new, facet of Cranes’ collective persona. Then the experimental nature of the ‘Orestes Et Electre’ project ‑ sandy, static theatre music ‑ hinted (semi‑successfully) at startling new directions. So here I am, fully prepared to herald the genius of Cranes… and they present a back‑to‑basics band sound chained to, of all things, an American college rock influence. Why?

 
Why does Fourteen ‑ for all of its stop‑start dynamics and distorted guitars ‑ sound like Veruca Salt?! The sophistication of the lyric is such that Alison Shaw appears to be singing “yeah” throughout most of the track. Oh. Breeze features bright summery chords all around, lyrics about sitting on golden beaches with views of the sun, sea and shore. The musical dynamics ‑ the few there are ‑ show no sense of originality or of Cranes’ usually meticulous, almost classical arrangements. It sounds like Belly. Anyone can “do” that: few people can “do” Cranes. Can’t Get Free is similar, complete with sweet “la la la” backing vocals, and a lyrically excruciating chorus that no doubt imagines it is being deeply profound about an emotional situation: “how can it be? / Why can’t I see? Just can’t get free / It just can’t be.” I nearly swallowed my tongue.

But look, if this new “direction” is to persist, then Cranes should concentrate on the likes of Sweet Unknown, which comes across like Mazzy Star stripped of the Velvets’ langour and opiate haze. It feelingly documents the end of a relationship: “for a while our world seemed right… / My whole world has gone away…” Or there’s Angel Bell, a very restrained attempt at a deep South/Birthday Party dynamic song in an ice‑cool Cranes style, with a primal rhythm being ripped out of an unidentified instrument. Possibly a cello being mutilated in the name of Gothic atmosphere. Saint Nick (Cave, that is) would be pleased.

 
And, thankfully, there are moments when Cranes reveal a taste of the album they could have made ‑ a development of their music but still recognisably, uniquely, Cranes. The album opens (lulling one into a false sense of security, it has to be said) with Tangled Up ‑ one of those beguiling, metronomic laments with sparsely clipped acoustic guitar and Alison’s wispy, vulnerable child vocals echoing in the night (you have my permission to groan at that unoriginal description of her voice). Oh sure, Cranes could probably do this sort of thing in their sleep, but it’s inimitable; one of the eeriest and most affecting sounds around.

https://youtu.be/R7HXOkGK0i4
 
Stalk is also a standout track. A chilling, menacing tale of someone obsessively watching, watching, watching ‑ “the bars at your window / are killing tomorrow for me” ‑ set to a claustrophobic soundtrack of rumbling drums and stroked acoustic guitar. The problem comes in the vocals ‑ the track’s sung by Jim Shaw, normally the skilled arranger of the band’s musical atmospheres. While he does sound low and menacing, and you can feel his breath behind you, he also has no singing voice whatsoever, frankly. Shame.

 
Another relative high point is Brazil. Very like Jewel (their, um, “hit single” from the ‘Forever’ album) in its dry upfront sound, with the guitars providing a slightly Spanish acoustic feel. The sound is deepened by, on this occasion, by the very un‑Cranes‑like bright electric piano which, surprisingly, works beautifully in these surroundings.

But still there is that feeling of an incomplete Cranes, lacking in their usual ambition to take flight. To Be, the final song, exemplifies the problem. A slow mini‑epic of the sort that Cranes usually specialise in to such mesmeric effect, drowned in harmonies, atmospheres and intricate classical structures, is rendered less powerful by its resolutely “live band” feel.

‘Population 4’, then, ends with a song that barely leaves terra firma, when it could have the ability to soar. Cranes are still a very special group, not worthy of their bad press. It’s just that, for whatever musical or personal reasons, they have held themselves back this time.

Cranes: it’s a vision thing. We want the vision back.

(review by Vaughan Simons)

Cranes: ‘Population 4’
Dedicated Records, DED CD 026 (743214315224)
CD/cassette album
Released: 11th February 1997

Get it from:
(2018 update) best obtained second-hand.

Cranes online:
Homepage Facebook Last FM

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