2024-08-22

LED ZEPPELIN - IN THROUGH THE OUT DOOR @ 45


 

Released on August 22nd, 1979, the eighth and final studio album from legendary hard rockers, Led Zeppelin, In Through the Out Door, turns 45 years old today. While being one of their biggest selling albums ever, it divided both critics and fans as it sought to redefine the group's sound after a family tragedy left them on hiatus for the better part of three years.

With the group not having released a new LP since Presence in 1976, the pressure was on to prove that they were still relevant. The interim between albums had seen a C-change in the music culture, with the arrival of punk and new wave music. Led Zeppelin were looking like the proverbial "dinosaurs" that the kids were accusing them of being. The group had been sidelined after the tragic death of Robert Plant's young son while they were on tour in 1977. That unbearable personal loss took the wind out of the band's sails, ending their tour and putting off future plans indefinitely.

By late 1978, the emotional wounds Plant was dealing with had healed enough that he was ready to head back into the studio, but the group knew it would be an uphill battle to reassert themselves in a pop music scene that had radically changed in the years they'd been sidelined. That apprehension was what inspired the title of the album, as the group felt their task was pitting them against the flow. This was all compounded by the process of grieving, for Plant, and the practical difficulties of the band being in tax exile from the UK. With their revenue stream hobbled by their inactivity, their solvency was a serious consideration. This record would need to be a success in order to right their ship again.

Rehearsals for recording began in September of 1978, lasting six weeks before the group decamped to ABBA's Polar Studios in Stockholm, Sweden, where they spent three weeks recording in November and December. In addition to the above mentioned challenge of making a come-back after a long absence from the public eye, the group were also wrestling with internal personal demons that would directly impact the sound of the album.

Half the band were trying to work through substance abuse issues, with drummer John Bonham battling the bottle, a war that he would ultimately lose, while Jimmy Page was distracted by a heroine addiction. These circumstance meant that Robert Plant and bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones were often left to lay down the foundations for the album's sessions. The pair would frequently work together on their own during the day, while Bonham and Page would come in late at night to add their contributions.

The results are clear from the writing credits for the album, with Bonham completely absent and Page, uncharacteristically, missing on two of the album's seven tracks, which were credited only to Plant and Jones. The effect on the sound of the record is immediately apparent by the dominance of the keyboards from Jones, who was left to fill in the gaps created by Page's distractions. Jones was inspired by the Yamaha GX-1 synthesizer he had recently purchased, along with the opportunity to work closely with Plant, a situation that had never happened in the studio before. Only the album's opener, In The Evening, fully features Page's guitar histrionics in all their blustery glory, while the 50's inspired Hot Dog is merely a perfunctory indulgence of tired vintage rock 'n' roll cliches that evolved out of the group's warm-up jam sessions. The rest of the album is mostly about Jones's keyboards, with the 
sprawling Carouselambra being the centrepiece of his contributions.

When it came to the album's packaging, Hipgnosis' Storm Thorgerson pulled out all the stops in order to create one of the most elaborate and complex cover concepts his design house ever produced. The concept was to recreate the Old Absinthe House in New Orleans, Louisiana, in a London photo studio. The staging was meticulously detailed and populated by a half dozen ragtag denizens one might find in such a venue. The central character, a despondent man in a white Panama hat and suit, burning a "dear John" letter, sits at the bar with the bartender looking on and the other characters dispersed throughout the space. The first "gimmick" for the packaging was that the record would be released in six different variants, with the photos in each taken from the vantage point of each of the different patrons, who were all looking over at the man at the bar. The next element was the inner sleeve, which featured a hidden colour dye that was activated by water, intended to be applied gently with a sponge by the purchaser of the record. This would activate the dye and colour the inner sleeve. The final element in the design was that the whole thing would be enclosed in a plain brown paper slip cover with the band name and album title stamped on the outside. Once shrink-wrapped, buyers would not be able to tell which version of the album cover they'd got, though one might be able to peek at the inner spine of the cover to see a letter "A" to "F" as the only indication of the edition.

The album's release was initially planned to be before the group's two night live stint at Knebworth in 1979, but production delays held it off until after the shows. When it finally did hit the shelves, it was met with a strongly divided response from both fans and critics, many of whom were put off by the dramatic change in tone from their previous record. While some fans felt betrayed by the change, critics batted about their opinions in the press like a tennis match.

Reviewing the album in Rolling Stone, Charles M. Young said Page's diminishing creativity resulted in little good material to work with for Plant, whose lyrics Young found inane, and Bonham, whose drumming was viewed as heavy handed. This brought to the forefront the keyboard playing of Jones, who Young said "functions best behind Page, not in front of him". Chris Bohn from Melody Maker said "the impressionable first play" of the record "had everyone in the office rolling around laughing", while accusing the band of being "totally out of touch" and "displaying the first intimations of mortality". By contrast, NME journalist Nick Kent argued that the album was "no epitaph", believing its "potential points of departure" deserved further listening. Robert Christgau also wrote positively of the record in The Village Voice, observing the usual "lax in the lyrics department", but regarding the album as the group's best since Houses of the Holy (1973). He said "the tuneful synthesizer pomp on side two confirms my long-held belief that this is a real good art-rock band", while "the lollapalooza hooks on the first side confirms the world's long-held belief that this is a real good hard rock band". Yet despite the mixed responses, the album soared up the charts to crack the number 1 slot in multiple markets, including both the US and UK, making it one of the groups biggest sellers of all time. Personally, I was well down the road towards much more experimental music, so my response was muted, though I found the opener one of Zeppelin's best tracks, but the rest came across as mediocre or just dumb (I'm looking at you, Hot Dog).

Even the band themselves were a little ambivalent about it, both immediately after its release and in later years, considering it something of a transitional record on the way to something else, though that destination would never be reached. After the Knebworth shows in August of 1979, the band didn't hit the stage again until embarking on a limited European tour in June and July of 1980, with a majority of the shows booked in West Germany. The tour was a way for the band to warm up in smaller venues so that Robert Plant could regain his confidence before attempting a US leg. Before they could head to the US, in September of 1980, the tragic news of John Bonham's death knocked the pins from under them, putting an end to their plans and their career, since none of the surviving members were prepared to continue without Bonham's presence.

I'm sure that tragedy is partially responsible for pushing sales of the album, as it soon became apparent it would be the group's last. The Coda album, released in 1982, contained only studio leftovers from across their career, though somewhat weighted with outtakes from In Through the Out Door. There would be no real Led Zeppelin reunion, save a few rare live shows well dispersed over the coming decades, the last in 2007 featuring Jason Bonham on drums. Jimmy Page and Robert Plant would reunite in the 1990s for a time, first to reinterpret songs from the Zeppelin catalogue and then to record an album of new material with grunge producer, Steve Albini. John Paul Jones was conspicuously excluded from those projects, however.

As a last statement from one of the most important bands in rock history, In Through The Out Door offers some highlights, but mostly indicates that there was much more to be done to get back where they wanted to be. It is only through speculation that we can consider what that destination might have been.

2024-08-17

XTC - DRUMS AND WIRES @ 45

Released on August 17th, 1979, the third LP from XTC, Drums and Wires, turns 45 years old today. The album marked the band's turn away from their experimental leanings into a more accessible pop disposition, giving them their first proper commercial breakthrough. It was their first album after the departure of keyboardist Barry Andrews, who would go on to co-found the successful mutant funk group, Shriekback. His replacement, guitarist Dave Gregory, would help inspire the album's title as the band's sound shifted to emphasize guitars over keyboards, hence the "wires" reference. As for the "drums" aspect, this came down to the group recording in Virgin's newly opened Town House studios, with producer Steve Lillywhite beginning to developing the gated reverb effect that would give the drums their heft and impact. The studio featured the infamous "stone room", which would play a huge part in Public Image Ltd developing their own thunderous and influential drum sound on their Flowers of Romance LP in 1981.

Prior to working on the album, Lillywhite helped produce the breakthrough single, Life Begins at the Hop, which helped set the course for the album to come. The follow-up, Making Plans for Nigel, would solidify the band's trajectory into the upper reaches of the charts, establishing Andy Partridge as a songwriter of significant talents. he would pen the bulk of the songs for the album. While the group was refining their sound into a more radio friendly variant, they were maintaining enough edge to keep themselves in the forefront of the "new wave" and "post-punk" edges of the alternative music scenes. The album's closing track, Complicated Game, in particular, offered one of the group's most intense performances, particularly considering the vocal from leader Andy Partridge literally blew his vocal chords by the end of the song, achieving one of the most self-destructive vocals since John Lennon ripped his voice to shreds on Twist & Shout. Needless to say, the vocal was done in one take.

The strikingly iconic cover graphics were initially conceived by Partridge, who recalls their development: "I quite liked the idea of the letters, the X - T and C, and the little underline actually making the features of a face. And I did a rough version, and we were in the studio and I didn't have time to do any finished artwork. And we got together with a girl, I think she was working at Design Clinic [Virgin's art department] at the time, who did a lot of our sleeves. And I ... said, "Okay - here's the sketch. I want it done in real primary colours. And then the back I want done in more muted kind of khakis and browns. But on the front I want really, really bright primaries." And she took away this sketch and I think she just cut it out of coloured paper or something, originally. And reproduced this little sketch in terms of just these big bright flashes." The 'girl' in question was Jill Mumford, who had also designed the cover for Siouxsie and the Banshees' The Scream, an album that also inspired the selection of Lillywhite as producer.

Drums and Wires would be the first album by the band released in the US market. While it only grazed the bottom of the top 200 in the US, it soared to #2 in Canada, and was also very popular in Australia and throughout western Europe. In the UK, the album peaked at #37, making it their biggest seller up to that point. The critics were fairly unanimous in their praise of the album, NME's Paul Morley decreed that XTC were "doing all sorts of they've never done before and never hinted they would. ... They have moved many steps forward to making a rock classic." In Billboard, the album was deemed "an interesting package from a label that's beginning to make headway in the U.S. It's fresh rock 'n' roll in a new wave vein with a dash of '60s English melody. Of particular note is the inventive mix as instruments sparkle in both left and right channels." The Village Voice critic Robert Christgau wrote: "My reservations about this tuneful but wilfully eccentric pop are ideological. ... Partridge and Colin Moulding are moving toward a great art-pop mean that will set standards for the genre. Catchy, funny, interesting—and it rocks."

I was one of those Canadian kids who helped push the album to the top of the charts in the "Great White North". I saw a video for Making Plans for Nigel, and its syncopated drumming shudder, couple with the authoritarian dystopian lyrics, intrigued me, and then the striking cover graphics had an instant appeal for me to want to pick it up. That closing with Complicated Game was the most impressive moment for me, capturing the sense of helpless hopelessness a teenage aspiring punk working at Burger King could clearly identify with, humming the tune while flipping burgers. It doesn't matter where that burger goes, after all...

2024-08-16

CAN - MONSTER MOVIE @ 55

Released on August 16th, 1969, the debut studio album, Monster Movie, from German Krautrock pioneers, CAN, turns 55 years old today.

The band had formed the preceding year in Cologne, with founding members Holger Czukay (bass), Irmin Schmidt (keyboard), Jaki Liebezeit (drums) and Michael Karoli (guitar). Czukay and Schmidt were both from academic backgrounds and students of the composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, and were fascinated by the possibilities of rock and roll. Before the year was out, the quartet would add a fifth member with the recruitment of American vocalist, Malcolm Mooney. Together, they'd record their first album, Prepare to Meet Thy Pnoom, under the band name "Inner Space", but attempts to sell the record to any label were universally rejected, so the album was shelved and the group went back to the drawing board with a mind to craft something a bit more accessible. That first album would remain in the vaults until 1981, when it was finally released as "Delay 1968".

After abandoning their first recording attempt, the group accepted an invitation from a friend to move into his castle, Schloss Nörvenich, and use it as a recording studio. They also decided to change their name, with Mooney coming up with the suggestion to call themselves "CAN" because of its positive meanings in various languages. "Inner Space" wouldn't be abandoned completely, however, as it would become the official name for the band's recording studio, in its various incarnations, going forward.

While they were set up at the castle, they recorded their second album, which would be their debut release, Monster Movie. The LP brought together elements of psychedelic rock, blues, free jazz, world music and the influence of the Velvet Underground, for starters. It also introduced the band's distinctive approach to editing, with its side long track, You Do Right, being distilled to its 20 minute version from a jam session that originally ran for 8 hours. The end results were good enough for them to snag a contract with Liberty Records, and the LP was critically acclaimed upon its release. The image on the cover is a retrace of Galactus, as originally depicted by Jack Kirby (inked by Vince Colletta) in Marvel's Thor #134 - page 3, released in 1966.

Mooney's tenure with the band would be short lived, after the release of the album. He ended up suffering from e mental breakdown at one of their gigs when he began repeatedly shouting "upstairs, downstairs" for three hours, even after Can had stopped playing. On his psychiatrist's advice, he left Can and returned to the US at the end of 1969. He'd eventually return to the group, briefly, for their 1986 reunion album, Rite Time, though the group would disband again after the release of that album.

In terms of its legacy, Monster Movie established CAN as one of the leaders of the German experimental music scene of the 1970s, with their influence playing a major role in the development of post-punk aesthetics and styles in the wake of the punk rock explosion. Public Image Ltd's mammoth masterpiece, Metal Box, could be seen as a direct homage of sorts to their influence, especially with it being packaged in a metal canister. It's an influence and impact that continues to resonate through the outer reaches of contemporary alternative music to this day.

2024-08-04

PSYCHIC TV - UNCLEAN (12") @ 40

 

Released in August of 1984, Psychic TV's 12" EP, Unclean, turns 40 years old this month. It was the first title issued by Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth's own label imprint, Temple Records, which was inaugurated following the acrimonious demise of their relationship with Stevo's Some Bizzare label, who released PTV's first two LPs, and the single, Just Drifting. Unclean is also the group's first release following the equally conflicted departure of co-founder and former Throbbing Gristle partner, Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson, and his then romantic partner, Geoff Rushton (aka John/Jhon Balance). They departed principally due to their concerns regarding Genesis P-Orridge turning TOPY into a "cult of personality" and would go on to form the widely influential project, Coil.

Without the backing of a major label, leaving the group owed significant sums from their previous releases, budgets for production and studio time were limited, but the founding of an independent label meant that all the proceeds from record sales would belong to TOPY/PTV, and creative control of the product would be entirely under their purview. Given P-Orridge's experience with Industrial Records during the TG days, this was not unfamiliar territory. It would ultimately provide the group with a great latitude when it came to the diversity of their output, from the most bizarre experimentation, to a charting pop single that would help finance a planned film production, though these plans would be eventually derailed by their manager absconding with the single's profits. Still, their own label would help them bounce back from this by virtue of the live series of LPs.

Getting back to the Unclean EP, side A's title track kicks it off with an extended, near ten minute long sluggish dirge that is not too far off from Metal Box era PiL in terms of its repetitive drum loop, throbbing minimal bass and piercing, atonal guitar(?) feedback. Genesis wails atop the cacophonous musical backing with a diatribe against Christianity, declaring its "Saviour" to be a perversion of morality and "obscene". The run-out groove etching on the vinyl exacerbates the blasphemy of the song by declares the record to be "CURSED BY GOD". In comparison to the relatively accessible and tuneful music contained in their first two albums for Some Bizzare, Unclean is nearly a full return to the aggressive bite of TG at its prime, landing comfortably in proximity to something akin to Discipline as far as rhythmic assaults go.

But the mood changes abruptly for the flip side of the record, which includes two ambient compositions that seem to feature P-Orridge as the principal performer. The first is a soundtrack from a Derek Jarman short film, Mirrors, which may be one of the most sublimely beautiful pieces of music PTV ever put to record. It is built from a meandering kaleidoscopic collage of gentle piano improvisations that seem to reflect and refract off each other, perfectly representing the abstract mylar dancing lights of the 8mm film for which it was created. The piece bares a striking resemblance to the fifth and closing movement of the final TG studio album, Journey Through a Body. The section titled, Oltre La Morte / Birth And Death, is also an improvised piano meditation, and likely an early rendition of this conception that now finds its full flower in the PTV recording. I also seem to recall coming across an old COUM era recording of Genesis on the piano performing what sounded like an even more primitive rendition of this theme, so it's likely it was lurking around in various incarnations for years before this most complete realization of its intent.

The third piece, Unclean Monks, is a vocal choral piece created by Genesis repeatedly singing the word "Jesus", layered on multiple tracks to create a sombre, sacred sounding choir reminiscent of medieval monks performing Gregorian chants. As sacrilegious as the A-side is, it's as if Genesis is seeking salvation and repentance with this closing composition, or else and more likely, codifying his curse upon the iconography.

The cover for the single featured the striking graphic template that Temple Records would utilize for many of their "Library" series releases, with it's black and grey primary layout accented by an eye catching red banner. Seeing these releases pop up in the shops was a great way to inspire collectors as aficionados like myself were eager to ensure a complete set of these matching releases. As the label built up its catalogue, seeing all these coordinated artifacts together engendered a kind of satisfying sense of accomplishment in their acquisition. Rather good marketing, I must say. Unclean has remained one of my all time favourite PTV releases, showcasing the group at both their most extreme and confrontational and seductively alluring states.

2024-08-03

TALKING HEADS, FEAR OF MUSIC @ 45

 

Released on August 3rd, 1979, the third LP from Talking Heads, Fear of Music, turns 45 years old today. While being one of the bands darkest and most introspectively paranoid albums, it also signalled a change in direction towards a more rhythmically complex and engaging form of dance music.

At the time the band started recording demos for the album, they were working without a producer and conscientiously focusing on more dance inspired rhythms from disco, Afro-beat and funk influences. However, their initial recording attempts proved unsatisfactory, sending the group retreating back to their home base at Chris & Tina's NYC loft, where they'd previously rehearsed before they were signed to their record deal with Sire. It was at this point that they brought producer, Brian Eno, back into the fold to help them get focused, especially after his successful work on their previous album, More Songs About Buildings and Food. Eno came up with the idea to take advantage for their home base sense of comfort and booked a mobile recording facility so that he could wire up Chris & Tina's loft, which is where they recorded the basic bed tracks for the album. The remainder of the album was recorded at a variety of NYC studios in the area, including the Record Plant and Hit Factory.

Eno played a crucial role in helping the band to push their more experimental leanings, crafting unique processing effects throughout the album's songs and bringing in guest musicians like Robert Fripp to add some flourishes to the instrumentation. As previously stated, they were moving into a much funkier groove, with tracks like I Zimbra telegraphing where the band would head on subsequent albums with their Afro-centric sense of poly-rhythms.

Thematically, the lyrics were very much focused on a kind of dystopian alienation, with song lyrics portraying characters racked by paranoia. Songs like "Air" even took that rebellion against existence to the point of rejecting the very atmosphere that surrounds us. Other tracks explored other states of discomfiting separation, like "Drugs", which perfectly captured the sense of disconnection from reality when someone's had a little bit too much of some mind altering substance or another. Even "Heaven" literally had "nothing" happening in it. Everything was out to get you on this album. "Animals" couldn't be trusted and even the musician's companion, the "Electric Guitar" was an adversary you should "never listen to". It's perhaps the band's most neurotic album ever. The album's packaging reinforced this bleakness, coming as it did in a plain black sleeve with an embossed pattern that resembled metal plating used in factories.

Critically, the album was extremely well received and has continued to garner accolades, often being referred to as one of the group's best and most adventurous records. Commercially, it also did well, though its singles weren't quite as successful as those that preceded and followed the album. This was my gateway into the world of Talking Heads and it has remained my personal favourite of their catalogue ever since I picked it up when it was originally released. It's one of those records that never seems to lose its charm and constantly rewards repeat listening, revealing new details with each encounter.