Released
in September of 1981, Cabaret Voltaire’s third full length studio
album, Red Mecca, is celebrating its 40th anniversary this month.
Before
becoming dance floor staples in the mid 1980s Industrial/EBM club scene
with their breakthrough album, The Crackdown, Cabaret Voltaire were
pursuing a strange brand of discordant pseudo-free-jazz funkiness that
drifted between fractured syncopated grooves and flat out noise. The
pinnacle of that strand of their early career is centered on the Red
Mecca album. It’s where they managed find the perfect balance between
accessible grooves and atonal dysphoria. While their earlier efforts
had their moments of genius, they also had experimental misfires or
moments that just came across as merely academically interesting, though
not necessarily “enjoyable” or emotionally engaging. Red Mecca offers
up a much more consistent collection of tracks that straddle the
eccentricities while clinging firmly to the rhythmic core driving the
music forward.
Thematically, the group were very much
influenced by their recent tour of the US and the looming
totalitarianism evident in the American Christian Evangelical movement
which formed a counterpoint against the erupting fundamentalism of
Islamic states like Afghanistan and Iran. How prophetic is it that,
here we are, four decades later, and we’re still witnessing these
ideologies thrashing against each other on the world stage with the US
even more threatened by religious fundamentalism than ever before. In
that sense, the album’s themes have remained just as vital and relevant
as ever.
This was the last full album to feature the founding
trio of Stephen Mallinder, Richard H. Kirk and Chris Watson. Though
Chris would be around for the beginning of the 2x45 sessions, he’d be
gone half way through working on that album, which was a record where
the first steps towards more conventional dance floor grooves would be
emphasized. As such, Red Mecca is the natural end point for the
evolution of the band from its early experimental roots to their fullest
sophistication within the avant-garde musical arena. It’s an album of
spiky beauty and razor sharp charms.
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