2021-04-13

FALLING IN LOVE WITH FARGO

 

Fargo, the series, languished on My List on Netflix for at least two years or longer, un-watched and repeatedly bumped by other series. I added it to that list as soon as it came out, but something always seemed to demand my attention ahead of buckling down to watch this series. It finally got some sense of urgency for me after season 4 came out and I kept hearing all this chatter about how good it was. So with the new year underway, I finally decided that 2021 was gonna be the time to get my ass in gear and get into this show. After finishing the last episode of season 4 this week, man, am I ever glad I finally took the time to get into this! I won't get into any plot spoilers here, so don't worry if you've not got started or haven't seen it all yet. I just wanna make some generalized comments.

If you're not familiar, the series is loosely connected to the 1996 feature film from the Cohen bros of the same name and is an anthology series where each season tells a different story with a different cast, for the most part. There is connective tissue that runs throughout the series, creating a singular universe where all these stories take place and all these people live, but you gotta pay close attention to spot all these connections because they aren't always obvious and that's part of the fun of it all.

But the biggest draw has to be the craft that goes into creating all of these incredibly well rendered characters. The complexity and "layering", a term I use with particular gravitas, are spectacular and their stories play out like watching a pinball get shot into the game field, bouncing off all these seemingly random events and happenstance. It's thrilling and unexpected and the consequences of each reaction spawn their own set of responses, exponentially increasing the complexity of the interacting plots weaving around each other. It's all gloriously choreographed and punctuated with some dazzling violence, all the while couching it in the politeness and amiability of the mid-western culture it uses as its foundational context. It's an example of some first class, grade A writing for the screen.

The other half of the equation for all these characters after the writing is, of course, the casting and their performances and all four seasons are chocked full of wonderful players doing some of their best work. A consistent trait in all of this is how so many of these performers manage to find completely fresh ways to play these roles that, in many cases, show a versatility beyond what you might expect from that actor. For example, the big revelation in terms of performances in season 4 comes from Chris Rock, who I've never seen do a dramatic role like this and he pulls it off brilliantly. In season 3, Ewan McGregor is virtually unrecognizable and it took me a few episodes to realize he was actually playing two parts! In season 2, Jesse Plemons steals the show as the affable, but daring "butcher" and season 1 belongs to Billy Bob Thornton, who makes the best hair style choice since Javier Bardem in No Country for Old Men!

There are recurring themes throughout the series that stylistically tie it all together. There's the "good person" who gets caught up in a bad situation. There's the vagaries of chance undermining the best laid plans of corrupt schemers. There's the intersection of the ordinary and the extraordinary. There's the surprising connections that span decades and miles of distance that flow through all of this storytelling like subterranean river systems. All of it is so meticulously balanced and threaded through each season that you can only stand back and marvel at the wonderful tapestry of it all.

So, if you're like me and you've been procrastinating on this show for a while, STOP! Get on this shit and enjoy the wild ride!

NOTE: Don't let Netflix push you into watching the newest season first. I fucking HATE how they default to this. Start with season 1 and watch the damn thing in its proper order. Season 4 isn't on there just yet, so you may have to resort to other sources if you're impatient like me.

2021-04-10

PUBLIC IMAGE LTD - FLOWERS OF ROMANCE @40

 

April 10th marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Public Image Ltd’s third studio album, Flowers of Romance, issued on this day in 1981. It followed on the heels of the release of the single of the same name a couple of weeks prior.

After PiL returned to the UK from their short tour of the US in May of 1980, things quickly fell apart for the band. Bassist, Jah Wobble, was ousted or split, depending on who you talk to, and went out the door with a box of the band’s money as payment for his services. Wobble’s penchant for recycling PiL backing tracks for his solo albums had bent Johnny’s nose out of shape enough that a working relationship was no longer possible between the two. Drummer, Martin Atkins, was kinda out of a job too, though amicably, for no other apparent reason than the band going into a state of inactivity. PiL essentially went dormant for a few months, only releasing the live Paris Au Printemps album as a stopgap against the bootleg market and to give fans something to tide them over as there seemed to be no new music on the horizon for 1980.

The remnants of the band wouldn’t venture into the studio to begin work on a new LP until early October and they would do so with an arrest and court case looming for Lydon thanks to a trumped up assault charge incurred while on a trip to Ireland. It was an incident which would have him spending time in the notorious Mountjoy Prison, an experience which would contribute directly to one song and color John’s mood for the entire album. Add to that the near constant police and overbearing fan harassment at his Gunter Grove home and you’ve got the perfectly oppressive, paranoid and claustrophobic aura necessary to create some uncompromising, confrontational music.

However, once Lydon and Levene found themselves in Virgin’s Manor Studio, inspiration wasn’t exactly forthcoming. At first they seemed to be lost and directionless. Keith was often distracted with his “habit” while Lydon languished in front of the TV, though not without spotting the odd “ghost” in the old mansion, a specter which, though destined to become subject matter for a song, had more substance than the yet to manifest album. The Manor unsettled John enough that he took to sleeping in the coal shed because the main house creeped him out so much. The presence of a new studio toy did end up helping a bit though. Virgin head, Richard Branson, had managed to score some Balinese bamboo drums while traveling, which Keith put to use for Hymies Him, an instrumental track that was intended to be a soundtrack component for a feature film project (Wolfen by Michael Wadleigh), but that offer ended up falling through. Hymies Him was the only track to come from those first two weeks of studio time before they relocated to the brand new Townhouse studios in London, which were still receiving some finishing touches in its construction.

After Steve Lillywhite was dropped, engineer Nick Launey came onboard as co-producer. Since they no longer had a bass player, rather than try to bring someone new into the band, their intuitive decision was to shift the focus to the drums and ignore the bass guitar almost entirely. At the Townhouse, its drum kit had been set up on a wooden frame in this unfinished stone room over-top a somewhat large open pit. The acoustics in the room lent the drums a massive natural reverb effect and recording experiments found them to have a walloping great sound with little post processing required beyond pinning the levels to the absolute maximum volume. The sound they got was so impressive, after hearing it, Phil Collins would hire Launey to engineer the same sound for his solo album he’d started work on. What was missing from this equation, however, was a drummer. At the time, Martin was about to go on tour with his band, Brian Brain, but had a few days off and, after popping into the studio for a visit, agreed to come in as a hired gun to lay down some tracks. He ended up recording three credited, finished songs for the album: Four Enclosed Walls, Under the House & Banging the Door. In recent years, other tracks with Atkins such as the original version of 1981 and the unfinished track, Vampire, have surfaced from these sessions on retrospective box sets.

Atkins also did a lot of experimenting on other sounds with Launey while he was there, like the strange ticking sound that provides the background ambience on Four Enclosed Walls, achieved by placing his Micky Mouse pocket watch on a drum head for additional resonance and amplifying it with a dual stereo harmonizer effect. They also had access to an an AMS digital sampler, one of the first digital devices ever available. One day Martin played a drum groove and Nick pushed 'Loop Lock' and tried to make a perfect loop, but the device was too primitive for precision fine-tuning, so you couldn't actually edit it to get it in time. Working within its limitations, Launey randomly kept locking in different beats as Martin played them, until he got one that sounded interesting. That limping, off-kilter loop became the basis for the song Track 8.

With Nick’s help, Martin Atkins would turn out to be the “hero” during this production as his contributions ended up galvanizing the project into something that was starting to have a sense of direction and purpose. His drumming was so much more than mere timekeeping as he came up with these unusual, distinctive patterns that sounded like nothing else and contained their own musical structure, something which allowed songs to stand with minimal arrangements. With these foundations, Lydon and Levene were able to start to piece together the remaining elements, often chaotically and with a kind of mad abandon. Tracks would be left sparse in most cases with odd crazy bits thrown into the mix, like the out-of-tune banjo missing three strings that John beat with a drum stick on Phenagen. Even the TV, a fixture in the studio, became a sound source for such elements as the bits of random opera singing seeping into Under the House, the song which commemorates Lydon’s ghostly encounter at the Manor. Levene found little use for his guitar most of the time, favoring his modular Roland System 100 setup. Only Go Back featured him laying down one of his characteristically searing guitar riffs against a funky drum track, which he also played. When guitar infrequently appeared in other tracks, it was more incidental and was often heavily treated or backwards. As previously mentioned, bass was nearly entirely forsaken on the album with the exception of a bit on Track 8 and Banging the Door, where it throbbed heavy beneath swirls of droning synth ambience and Martin’s martial drum patterns, coming closest to anything done on Metal Box.

Lydon’s vocals were the cherry that would land on the top of the cake when he managed to pull his lyrics together and felt there was enough of a musical bed for them to rest upon. For this album, his lyrics were some of his most esoteric and ambiguous, like the howling call to prayer that opens the album on Four Enclosed Walls, conjuring up images of deserts and holy warriors on the prowl. Yet more concrete subject matter was also dealt with, from sexual inadequacy (Track 8), to annoying obsessive fans (Banging the Door) to right-wing fascism (Go Back) to life in prison (Francis Massacre), Lydon delivered some of the most harrowing and personal performances of his career.

Eventually, emerging from a process that seemed like some kind of barely organized chaos, PiL had an album, albeit a brief one. Clocking in at a lean 34 minutes, just over half the runtime of the monolithic Metal Box, Flowers of Romance offered a tight bouquet of nine songs with none of the sprawling 9-10 minute dirges that had kicked off the previous two albums. Three to five minutes each was plenty for everything on this record. The overall sound was expansive and spacious, highlighting the air between the instruments and the vocals. This made the elements that were there stand out in sharp relief. The emphasis on percussion was actually quite coincidentally contemporary with the trend of the time with bands like Bow Wow Wow and Adam and the Ants going tribal with their double drummers, though the end result with PiL was entirely non-commercial. In fact, it could be argued that what they delivered to Virgin Records was one of the LEAST commercial albums a major label artist ever handed to their label, at least since Lou Reed dropped Metal Machine Music on the heads of RCA.

The album’s title is a reference to the short lived punk band that Sid Vicious had prior to joining the Sex Pistols. It’s not clear why Lydon was drawn back to this name for this album, but it somehow seemed to make sense. For the packaging, which returned to the more conventional cardboard sleeve after the financially prohibitive metal canister of the previous album, both the single and LP used Jeanette Lee’s Polaroid photos, with the album opting for a photo of Jeanette herself up front with no text, simply bordered by black. She’s shown in mid frenzy, with a rose in her teeth, in what appears to be the throws of some debauchery. The rear and inner sleeve contain all the text in an archaic Middle Eastern flavored font and lyrics printed in a run-on religious script style with no separation between the songs, like a transcript from some cloistered illuminated holy book.

I remember distinctly when the album came out. I was heartbroken when I heard that Wobble had left and was concerned PiL were finished. In Thunder Bay, ON, I got very meager press regarding UK bands, so I had no idea they had a new album due when I spotted it on the racks. I was in a hi-fi stereo store I never usually bought records from as they only had a small selection of mostly top 40 releases, but this day in April, I spotted this strange looking record. I didn’t know it was PiL at first since there was no text on the front, but it looked so different from the rest of what was on the shelves, my instincts told me to pick it up. When I saw the text on the back, I felt my heart skip and rushed to the checkout. I immediately called my friend who had a good hi-fi system at his house and went over for a first listen.

When we played it, cranking up the volume for maximum effect, it was pretty obvious from the beginning this wasn’t going to be more of what had been done on Metal Box. The bass was gone and it was all drums and weird incidental sounds. It was so completely different from anything they’d done before. It was a shock and I have to admit I didn’t know quite what I felt about it at first, but it would grow on me quickly and, over the years, I’ve come to appreciate its distinctiveness as the completion of a triptych along with the prior two PiL studio albums. But it would also mark the outer limits of their experimentation and become a barrier past which they’d not be able to extend.

After this and the disastrous New York Ritz multimedia performance in May of 1981, they’d regroup and head back into more conventional rock band territory and they’d never venture this far out into the avant-garde again. They’d effectively painted themselves into a creative corner and the only direction left was irony and faux commercialism, as exemplified by the unfinished Commercial Zone LP that followed and This Is Not A Love Song, their most successful chart single. 1984’s This Is What You Want.. LP had the last dying embers of that provocative fire flickering. These efforts were not without their charms, but once Keith left, that sense of boldness and innovation pretty much evaporated from PiL’s DNA and never returned.

2021-04-07

ROGER TAYLOR - FUN IN SPACE @40

 

April 6th marks the 40th anniversary of Roger Taylor’s first solo LP, Fun In Space, which was released on this day in 1981. As well as being his first solo album, it was also the first solo release from any member of Queen. Roger had previously only released a solo single, I Wanna Testify b/w Turn on the TV, back in 1977.

The album was recorded during downtime between Queen recording and touring beginning in 1978. For this album, in addition to writing all the songs and co-producing, Roger handled nearly all the performance duties including drums, guitars, bass, vocals and the majority of the keyboards. The remainder of keyboard contributions came from co-producer, David Richards, who would become a frequent collaborator with Queen on several of their albums throughout the 1980s. Though Queen were notorious for their “NO SYNTHESIZERS” proclamations on all their albums in the 1970s, up until The Game, Fun In Space counters with the tongue-in-cheek joke, "P.P.S. 157 synthesizers”.

The front cover design was inspired by a Jim Laurier cover of Creepy from the July 1980 issue. In that respect, it shares a similar origin story with the cover of Queen’s News of the World (1977), which was based on a 1953 cover of Astounding Science Fiction. The alien font shown on the front is mostly upside-down Hebrew, though it does not actually spell anything. On the rear, the artwork is reversed to show Taylor holding the original Creepy cover. The cover design was handled by Hipgnosis with photography by Peter Christopherson.

While the album just managed to scrape the lower reaches of the UK top 20 album charts, it went largely unnoticed across the pond in the North American markets. Even though I was a massive Queen fan throughout the latter half of the 1970s, by the time this came out, I was very much onto more progressive avenues and didn’t bother to check out this album at all until some 30 years after its release. That’s kind of a shame as I suspect I’d have enjoyed it if I’d given it a chance earlier. Roger’s songs with Queen have often been my favorites with tracks like Drowse, Tenement Funster, Loser In the End and Sheer Heart Attack being only a few of the standouts he contributed to the band. There are good songs to be found on this solo album, but I do have to say they never quite reach the heights of his Queen classics. Still, it’s an LP that is worth a listen.

Taylor would eventually compliment this album in 2013 with a sequel solo album, Fun on Earth, which was the album that reminded me that I should backtrack and spend some time with its 1981 companion. The two albums taken together offer a wonderful set of “then and now” music showcasing Roger Taylor outside the often overshadowing sphere of Queen.

2021-04-01

RUSH - 2112 @ 45

 

April 1st marks the 45th anniversary of the release of Rush’s fourth studio LP, 2112 (Twenty-one Twelve), issued on this day in 1976.

After the release of their previous album, Caress of Steel (1975), Rush were at a breaking point. The album had failed to connect with fans or critics, album sales were low and concert attendance was dropping off. The group were at a loss as they could feel the audience weren’t connecting with their latest music when they played it live. Their instincts were telling them this was the path they were meant to follow, but the commercial failure of their efforts left them shaken and losing confidence. They were also financially on the precipice of collapse and their international record label had their hand on the plug and were ready to pull. It was only through the intervention of their manager, Ray Danniels, that they were able to hang onto their contract. He flew down to the US offices and desperately pitched to the label heads that the band would refocus and deliver something much more commercially accessible and move away from the “progressive” tendencies they’d indulged in for Caress of Steel.

The band, however, had other intentions. They knew they were on the block and the ax was ready to chop, so they figured, fuck it! If they were going to go down, why not go down doing what they believed in. To this end, while touring throughout the latter part of 1975 and early 1976, they set about putting together the material which would go into their next album. They were careful not to let Danniels hear any of it until they’d worked it all out in detail and had what they felt was a solid, fully realized concept. They’d doubled down on the progressive approach and concocted a concept album inspired by the writings of controversial Russian philosopher and fiction author, Ayn Rand.

Drummer Neil Peart had come up with a science fiction story involving a dystopian fascist religious society where rationality had been outlawed along with music in favor of strict theocratic collectivism. Their story would tell the tale of a lone hero who would rediscover the magic of music by finding an abandoned electric guitar among some ancient ruins and bring the power of rock ’n’ roll back to the people. The cover would symbolize this via what would become the bands trademark icon, the nude man assailing against the red star. The symbolism references the red star commonly used in collectivist governments such as China and the USSR while the nude male represents the purity of intent of the individual fighting against the state.

The band spent two weeks recording in Toronto in early 1976. Once the LP was completed, they threw their “hail Marry” pass at the record buying public and hoped for the best. Much to their relief, the album was an immediate hit with both fans and critics, helping to break them commercially, not only in the US, but also the overseas markets in the UK and Europe as they toured there for the first time. On the road, the band were reinvigorated. The audiences came back in bigger numbers than ever before and people “got it” at last. It became proof positive of their belief in the value of staying true to their principals and served to buttress their determination to maintain that approach for the remainder of their very long and very successful career. It remains one of their most artistically lauded and highest selling LPs, only coming in second behind Moving Pictures.

2021-03-31

LED ZEPPELIN - PRESENCE @ 45

 

March 31st marks the 45th anniversary of the release of Led Zeppelin’s seventh and penultimate studio album, Presence, issued on this day in 1976.  It was the product of yet another tragedy, one of several, which would haunt the band’s career up until it was felled completely by the death of drummer John Bonham in 1980.  In this instance it was a tragic car crash that set the stage for the creation of this album.

In August of 1975, Robert Plant was taking a break after their spring tour to promote Physical Graffiti, traveling around the Greek island of Rhodes.  It was here that he suffered major injuries in a car crash that left him wheelchair bound for much of the next year.  The band had planned to tour the US during the latter half of 1975, but the accident meant that plan had to be scrapped.  Plant returned to his tax-exile home in Malibu, California to recuperate and ruminate on his and the band’s future.  While there, he began to put some thoughts down into lyric form and, after being joined by Jimmy Page, the duo began to work out the basic sketches for what would become the Presence album.

Eventually, Page & Plant arranged to book some time in Musicland Studios in Munich, Germany.  Page favored this studio due to its state of the art facilities, but they were up against a time crunch because they had to be done within a couple of weeks so the Rolling Stones could take over the studio and begin work on their Black & Blue LP.  With Bonham and John Paul Jones joining them in Munich, rehearsals began and the band fleshed out the arrangements for the songs to be included.  Because Page and Plant had already worked out most of the songs in Malibu, the writing credits for the album would feature only one track written by the entire band with the rest credited to Page and Plant. 

Stylistically, the urgency of the time-crunch and the sense of intensity created by the tight schedule helped to solidify the band’s, and particularly Page’s, desire to make this album more hard rock focused.  There are no keyboards used on the album at all and only one track which uses some minimal acoustic guitar.  The emphasis was squarely on heavy riffs.  With Robert being physically limited in what he could do, the bulk of the work on the album ended up falling into the lap of Page and co-producer, Keith Harwood.  Page and Harwood would often tag-team in the studio to maximize their time, with one grabbing a couple of hours shuteye while the other kept the fires burning in the studio.  With a total production time of two and a half weeks, it wasn’t uncommon for them to pull 18-20 hour days.  That production schedule would have the album in the can faster than anything they’d done since the group’s debut LP.  The result of that sort of schedule was an album high in energy and sharp with edge and with no room for the more pastoral, acoustic side-roads common on previous albums. 

While it received massive advance orders and landed on the top of the charts in the UK and US upon its initial release, due to Plant’s ongoing recovery, the lack of a support tour to help sustain sales meant that it ended up being one of their lowest selling albums to date.  The release later that same year of their concert film and its accompanying soundtrack, The Song Remains the Same, didn’t help with sales either.  The critical reception of the album was similarly weak.  Many critics found it lacking in terms of adding anything fresh or relevant to the Zeppelin catalog, though some of those harsh criticisms have been reevaluated as the record has aged.  The fans were also somewhat ambivalent as it was not as varied as previous albums.  

Though the music may not stand as Zeppelin at their “best”, according to some, the album cover certainly managed to make a mark and even won them a Grammy for best LP design.  Created by the legendary Hipgnosis design house, who dominated the LP cover market in the 1970s, the cover is an ingenious bit of subversion, utilizing the seemingly simple device of an enigmatic “object” which is inserted into a variety of mundane domestic settings, rendering them somehow extraordinary merely by its “presence”.  It was intended as a metaphor for the group’s power and influence at the time.  The obelisk like “object” was designed and built by Peter Christopherson of Throbbing Gristle.  Peter had been a design partner in Hipgnosis for a couple of years at this time while he was just starting out in TG.  I recall seeing this in the shops and being constantly drawn to it. I'd stare at the photos and try to imagine what could be going on. Why was this thing in all these pictures? What was it? What did it do? Its blackness and confounding shape implied something mysterious and possibly sinister!

Personally, it’s not my favorite LP by the group, but I find it a solid listen nonetheless. This was the second Zeppelin LP I ever purchased, which I picked up sometime in 1977.  Led Zeppelin III was my first and is still my favorite.  Once punk and new wave came around in 1978, I kinda tuned away from the band, though their last album, In Through the Out Door (1979), had a few tracks I liked.  It wouldn’t be until a couple of decades later that I’d start to be drawn back to them again after a friend blasted their first album at a party one night and I remembered how brilliantly they could rock out.  Once I did take that second look, I’d spend time to explore albums I’d never given any attention to previously.  Within that process, I found myself coming back to Presence with much more enthusiasm than I was expecting.  I like its focus and clarity and sense of purpose.  There’s an immediacy and urgency to it that is, in retrospect, more distinctive in their catalog than people gave it credit for when it was released.  Indeed, its stripped down simplification is quite sympathetic to the zeitgeist of the “Punk” scene, which was just starting to take root in the world at the time.

2021-03-28

BRIAN BRAIN @ 40

 

March 28th marks the 40th anniversary of the release of the debut single from Brian Brain, They've Got Me In A Bottle, released on this day in 1981.

Brian Brain was the creation of PiL drummer, Martin Atkins. Given his on-again / off-again relationship with that band, Atkins took up Brian Brain as essentially a solo outlet he could pursue when not working on PiL. Brian Brain's lineup also included bassist Pete Jones, who'd actually end up joining him in PiL during their Commercial Zone days in the US (1982/1983). Atkins was originally recruited by PiL during the tail end of the Metal Box sessions, with his performance on Bad Baby being his audition, and played live with them during the first half of 1980. He was dismissed after they got back from their US tour and then hired as a session player for Flowers of Romance. He was than pulled back into the band full-time in 1982 after they'd relocated to NYC and hung on through the "Las Vegas show band" days until @ 1985. His last LP with the group was 1984's This is What You Want, This Is What You Get. He also plays on the 1984 Commercial Zone unofficial LP Keith Levene put out after his exit.

Brian Brain tended towards comedic post punk and mutant funk styles which were taking root during the post-disco days of the early 1980s. After leaving PiL, Atkins would set aside the Brian Brain moniker and move into more heavy Industrial-dub influenced alternative rock with bands like Pigface, Killing Joke and The Damage Manual. He also founded his own record label and production company, fundamentally fulfilling the "we're a company, not a band" ambitions PiL purported, but never quite achieved. Today he's an acknowledged expert on indie band touring and has authored books on the subject and engaged in speaking tours, all the while maintaining his prolific musical output through his numerous guises and pseudonyms.

2021-03-27

PUBLIC IMAGE LTD. - THE FLOWERS OF ROMANCE (SINGLE) @40

 

March 27th marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Public Image Ltd’s fourth single, The Flowers of Romance. The song title is a reference to the near mythical short lived 1976 punk band that Sid Vicious was a member of before joining the Sex Pistols. The group’s fluctuating lineup also included such luminaries as Palmolive, Viv Albertine & Keith Levene; among others. They never recorded or performed, but left enough of an impression on John Lydon that he immortalized them in the title of this song and the subsequent LP which followed.

After well over a year’s wait for new material, Metal Box being released in November of 1979, the song itself was the world’s first peek at a post Jah Wobble PiL. With his acrimonious departure after their US tour the prior year, the remaining members had decided that the best way to cope with losing their bassist was to simply drop the instrument from their arsenal. Instead, the focus became percussion and Flowers highlights this with its tribal tom-toms and Spanish Flamenco style hand-claps. The rest of the track is built from droning cello, aberrant violin and a sax solo that sounds like the instrument got caught in a tornado. The rest is Lydon’s wailing vocals with lyrics bringing to mind fragmented images of disillusioned romanticism, worn out nostalgia and abandonment.

For all practical purposes, this could easily be seen as a solo song for Johnny as he played just about everything except the percussion, which was apparently done by an uncredited Martin Atkins. When the band mimed the song on Top of the Pops, Jeannette Lee took on the cello while Keith played the drums. Of course, Jeannette never played anything, but she was responsible for the lovely Polaroid photo of John adorning the front cover of the single.

The non-album B-side, Home Is Where the Heart Is, is a heavily dub-mixed reworking of a previously unfinished song that originated during the 1979 Metal Box sessions and which can be heard on a few live bootlegs from the band’s short US tour in the spring/summer of 1980. Wobble’s bass part was rerecorded by Keith, who created a tape loop of it for the finished version and Martin Atkins, again, plays drums and, AGAIN, misses a credit as the single mistakenly lists original PiL drummer, Jim Walker, in the writing credits.

The single peaked at #24 in the UK charts and was listed as the single of the week by NME upon its release with the reviewer calling it a “sheer delight” and “One of the starkest, most single-minded pieces they've ever done.” It would certainly do the job in terms of setting the stage for the outrageously uncompromising album that they were about to unleash upon an unsuspecting fan base.