Celebrating
its 40th anniversary this month is the album that turned a couple of
"wreckers of civilization" into pop stars, as Chris & Cosey's Songs
of Love & Lust hit the record shops in January of 1984.
As
members of COUM Transmissions and Throbbing Gristle, Chris Carter and
Cosey Fanni Tutti had created reputations for themselves as
controversial outsiders and provocateurs, pushing the boundaries of what
was acceptable as both music and art. However, after the release of
their confection of a single, October Love Song, late in 1983, they set
their sights on creating a kind of music that was seemingly more
conventional than anything they'd done previously. Their move in this
direction began with their first two albums, Heartbeat, and to a lesser
extent, Trance, which had a much more experimental vibe, but Songs of
Love & Lust was purposefully and unapologetically striving towards
accessible pop music, with intelligible, up front lyrics and melodic
hooks that could linger in one's memory of the song, long after it was
finished playing. For hardcore "industrial" music fans, this may have
come as something of a disappointment, but for those willing to indulge
the duo, their flirtations with mainstream song-craft opened up some
wondrous possibilities.
This album was my introduction to Chris
& Cosey, post TG. I'd only really dabbled in TG prior to this
album's release, and didn't know of the existence of Psychic TV or Coil
at all. As such, it functioned as a gateway drug into that world,
offering infectious hooks and grooving rhythms I could relate to quite
easily, where TG had seemed mostly impenetrable. That would all change
soon enough, however, as the rest of 1984 would find me backtracking
through Throbbing Gristle's catalogue, as well as Chris & Cosey's
earlier releases, and eventually discovering PTV and Coil, until I was
immersing myself in their entire oeuvre of sonic mayhem. But this was
the album that truly piqued my curiosity and stuck with me, continuing
to offer up its delights all these decades later. There are still songs
on this album that I consider some of their all time best works.
2024-01-01
CHRIS & COSEY - SONGS OF LOVE & LUST @ 40
2023-12-08
PUBLIC IMAGE - FIRST ISSUE @ 45
Released
on December 8th, 1978, the debut LP from Public Image Ltd, First Issue,
turns 45 years old today. After the spectacular implosion of the Sex
Pistols at the beginning of the year, and encouraged by the band's debut
eponymous single two months prior, punk fans were eager to see what
Johnny Rotten had in store for an encore. Chances are they weren't
expecting to get hit over the head with an album that kicks off with a 9
minute art-rock dirge, pleading for a death that never comes, and ends
with a 7 minute disco piss-take whinging about how they "only wanted to
be loved". And while it may have been dismissed by many at the time as a
petulant private joke, the reality of the album was that the band were
digging in their heels in order to utterly upturn the apple-cart of what
punk (and pop music itself) was and could be.
PiL came into
being thanks to a casual conversation between John Lydon and Keith
Levene back in 1976, when they both realized that the day would soon
come when they'd be on the outs with their respective bands (Sex Pistols
& The Clash) and looking for new opportunities. They promised each
other they'd put their heads together when that time came, and sure
enough, PiL were born a couple of months after the Pistols fell to bits
in January of 1978. With close friend, Jah Wobble, quickly recruited
for bass, and drummer, Jim Walker, sourced via a music paper ad, the
band set about inventing their music the way they imagined it should
sound, as if the Pistols has actually succeeded in destroying rock 'n'
roll instead of reanimating its fetid corpse.
Beginning recording
in July at Virgin Records' Manor studio, the first track to emerge was
the single, Public Image. I've gone into great detail on that song's
single release already, so I won't repeat myself too much here. You can
look it up if you want to. Suffice it to say that the song set the bar
high for the rest of the album, perhaps too high. Following its
completion, the next set of songs, Theme, Religion and Annalisa, were
laid down at Virgin's Townhouse studio.
Theme kicks off the
album with a 9 minute excruciating wall of thunderous bass,
whip-cracking drums and Keith's guitar sounding like you're in a
continuous auto accident with a flurry of shattered glass smashing into
your face. Lydon tops it all off with his insistent wailing of "I wish I
could die", though the song is not anywhere near suicidal. Ironically,
there's something actually quite obstinate and life affirming about the
agony being expressed and the clear indication that nothing is capable
of convincing the songs protagonist to genuinely give up the ghost.
Lydon has described it thus, "Didn't you ever have that feeling when you
get up with a hangover, and you look at the world and think 'Count me
out, I'd rather die!'?"
Religion started off as lyrics written
while Lydon was on tour in the US with the Pistols. He tried showing
them to the rest of the band, but they weren't interested. The idea of
splitting the song into a spoken recitation followed by the full mix
was another example of the LP balking at convention, refusing to pander
to expectations. The song was divisive among the band members. Wobble,
particularly in later years, felt the disparagement of religious belief
was unfair, and he wasn't happy with the contrivances of the mix, with
its radical panning of instruments and voices sounding forced. Keith
always loved the track and came up with the idea of the two versions.
Annalisa follows with its harrowing true life story of a young German
girl starved to death by her superstitious parents, who believed she was
"possessed". That wraps up the first side of the LP, while the single
kicks off the second, leaving the remainder of the album to struggle
towards completion.
After the first four songs were recorded,
Virgin's advance dried up and the band were forced to resort to
recording at Gooseberry Sound Studios, a cheap reggae studio used
because Lydon knew it from the recording of some Sex Pistols demos.
Lowlife, Attach and Fodderstompf were all recorded there, sounding less
produced and immediate in their impact than the first half of the album.
Fodderstompf, in particular, was another divisive track due to its
absurdity and expedience. Jim Walker hated it, considering it a rip-off
for anyone who bought the album. Keith didn't have anything to do with
it. It's really all Wobble and Lydon. Built on a tape-looped drum beat
& some kind of electronic squelching sound, musically it's all
about Wobble's bass, which bubbles and percolates incessantly. Atop
this minimalism, Lydon and Wobble exchange quips in annoying Monty
Python style falsetto voices, wittering on about how they "only wanted
to be loved" and how "love makes the world go 'round". At one point,
Wobble lets slip the true motivation of the track, "We only wanted to
finish the album with a minimum amount of effort, which we are now doing
very SUCCESSFULLY!" As puerile as the humour is, if you love it, you
LOVE IT! I'm in that camp, personally, and consider it the clearest
harbinger of where the band would go on their landmark sophomore
release, Metal Box. The formula, "slap a beat down and do weird shit on
top", is sturdy and flexible and one I've utilized COUNTLESS times in
the creation of my own music. The song even became an underground disco
hit at NYC's infamous Studio 54, where its sentiment had an ironic
appeal for the club's decadent celebrity clientele.
For the
packaging of the LP, the parodying of the press begun with the tabloid
newspaper style wrapping of the single was taken to another level. The
record was packaged in gorgeous glossy photos of the band members, each
emulating a different popular magazine cover. Lydon graces the front,
with his hair a natural colour, combed and contained, all pimples
covered in picture perfect foundation makeup and sporting a vacant stare
that exactly captured the hollow essence of a vapid celebrity. The
same is true for the rest of the band images. On the bottom of the back
cover, the final indignity is printed as "Public Image Ltd would like
to thank absolutely nobody. Thank you." Up yours!
With all
its contrarian cantankerousness, the press had a field day ravaging the
album. Sounds reviewer Pete Silverton said that the single is the "Only
wholly worthwhile track on the album." He dubbed the rest of the songs
as "morbid directionless sounds with Rotten's poetry running just behind
it." CREEM's import reviewer dismissed the album as art-rock nonsense,
comparing Lydon's singing to a rabid Yoko Ono. Yet that initial
disparagement has given way to retrospective praise as the album's
daring and uncompromising nature became an inspiration for future
generations to push their own limits and take their own chances. It was
the beginning of a process that would come to full fruition on albums
like Metal Box and Flowers of Romance, albeit the latter represents
something of a dead end for the intrepid musical traveller when it comes
to PiL's forays into the unknown.
The album wasn't released in
the US until a remastered reissue in 2013. Warner Brothers, the band's
US label, felt it was unsellable and demanded the group re-record parts
of it. They went back in the studio in February of 1979, but their
efforts were for naught and only an alternate version of Fodderstompf
emerged, used as a B-side on the Death Disco 12" single, released later
that year. No other alternate recordings seem to exist, save a
different mix of Annalisa, which was included on the 2018 retrospective
box set, The Public Image Is Rotten. There are rumours of another song,
You Stupid Person, being recorded after the single and subsequently
abandoned, but only Jim Walker seems to recall it, claiming to have a
cassette copy of a rough mix, but the other band members are more vague
about it, and Lydon has no recollection of it at all.
As far as
debut LPs go, First Issue is certainly one of the most audacious to have
come from the original "punk" movement, offering numerous clear
signposts for escaping out of the "Death Valley" of punk's restrictive
three chord thrashing. It's a bratty bastard of an album, but it has
proven to have staying power and influence well beyond the practical
joke it was initially accused of embodying.
2023-12-04
D.O.A - THE THIRD AND FINAL REPORT OF THROBBING GRISTLE @ 45
Released
on December 4th, 1978, the second studio album from Throbbing Gristle,
D.O.A. - The Third and Final Report, is turning 45 years old today.
After the relative success of their debut album, Second Annual Report,
and it's follow up single, United b/w Zyklon B Zombie, TG were able to
finance their next album on the sold out sales of their first, which
they'd pressed in an initial run of less than a thousand copies. It
wasn't a lot, but it was enough of a fiscal foothold that they were able
to put a bit more into their recording process & production values
than had been possible with the first album, including some actual
multi-track recording and a colour LP sleeve.
By moving
beyond the mostly live recordings of the first album, it was an
opportunity to explore the band's sonic potential in a more controlled
environment. There were still live excerpts on D.O.A., but there was
more emphasis on crawling out of the murk and achieving some clarity
with their sound. They also decided to reveal themselves individually
within the context of the band, offering up solo tracks from each of the
four members. Peter Christopherson concocted a pastiche of
surveillance recordings and found sounds, Genesis plucked out a violin
based existential suicidal lament, Cosey invoked homey intimacy with the
sounds of children playing and a remarkably pastoral guitar, and Chris
put together an electronica tribute to ABBA's Dancing Queen.
Overall,
the album offered up a bizarre and rather disjointed collection of
musing and examples of their controversial nature. Death Threats made a
track out of their answering machine tape, capturing agitators leaving
their condemnations for the group. I.B.M. was a harbinger of
technological tyranny, E-Coli warned of a bacterial apocalypse and
Hamburger Lady, the album's crown jewel, told the tale of a burn
victim's unending torment. All in, the album may have been a bit of a
dishevelled assemblage of impressions, but it certainly held together as
an expression of the group's individual and collective obsessions.
The
cover photo and calendar poster, included with the first 1000 copies,
added to the controversy of the release by showing a young girl in a
potentially exploitative situation, deliberately left ambiguous by the
group in order to breed a sense of vague unease with the product.
Other packaging games included having the second 1000 copies of the
album pressed with false track markers (the "bands" visible on a vinyl
disc) to give it the appearance of having fifteen tracks of exactly
equal length and a short sixteenth track. The official TG discography
called this pressing the "Structuralist Spirals" edition.
Because
of the intensity of so many of its individual elements, the album may
be one of TG's most challenging releases, outside the overt rawness of
their purely live albums. It's not casual listening or background music
and, while it has moments of softness, they are shattered by
occasionally brutal assaults, or twisted by deeply unsettling dives into
bleak oblivion, so one must constantly adjust to each composition's
entirely distinct aesthetics. Ultimately, it's an album that manages to
touch on nearly every corner of the human emotional landscape.
2023-11-11
JOHN & YOKO - UNFINISHED MUSIC NO. 1. TWO VIRGINS @ 55
Marking
its 55th anniversary today is the debut album from John Lennon &
Yoko Ono, Unfinished Music No. 1. Two Virgins, which was released on
November 11th, 1968. A record like this can only exist if one of the
people making it is a Beatle who doesn't have to worry about whether
anyone buys it and has access to a record label owned by his band.
That's not to say this shouldn't exist. The fact it does is a wonderful
thing because it's such an incredibly bizarre, self-indulgent mess of
chaotic fun. It's the sound of two people rediscovering their inner
children and sparking a whirlwind romance in the process.
John
Lennon first encountered Yoko Ono in November of 1966 when he was
invited to attend one of her exhibitions in London. She was an obscure
Japanese underground artist and John found her work possessed a
decidedly positive world view, something he found exceedingly appealing
given the general pessimism of most alternative artists. After the
exhibit, he kept in contact with her and, two years later, while wife
Cynthia Lennon was away from their home on vacation, he invited Yoko
over to spend the evening in order to show her his home studio and play
her some of his sound experiments. These were totally avant-garde
improvisations he knew the Beatles would NEVER have any interest in, but
Yoko was fascinated by them and the two began to work on making some
noises together that night. The next morning, Cynthia came home
unexpectedly and discovered the pair dressed in matching white robes and
sitting cross legged on the floor, staring into each other's eyes.
What
they created for this album was essentially a lot of random incidental
noises and vocalizations layered over-top of a series of tape loops and
snippets of pre-recoded bits and pieces. They had no arrangements in
mind or plans for any of it. Lennon described Unfinished Music as
"...saying whatever you want it to say. It is just us expressing
ourselves like a child does, you know, however he feels like then. What
we're saying is make your own music. This is Unfinished Music."
After
it was recorded, Lennon had to spend the next six months trying to
persuade the rest of the Beatles to release it on Apple Records. Their
hesitance was somewhat justified, given it was generally reviled by both
fans of the band and music critics. Actress Sissy Spacek, using the
pseudonym Rainbo, even recorded the song "John, You Went Too Far This
Time" in response to the album's cover! Despite its bizarre nature,
John & Yoko still ended up working with George Harrison to construct
the similarly inspired sound collage, Revolution 9, for the "White"
album.
The album ended up becoming the first of a trilogy created
by the couple, all working within the same strange cacophony of
experimentation. Not exactly the kind of "music" most Beatles fans were
looking for. As a result, these albums have become rather obscure
artifacts within the canon of both The Beatles and John Lennon. The
cover for the album featured the couple stark naked in their birthday
suits. The distributors for the record were none too pleased with such
an image and the LP ended up shipping tucked inside a brown paper bag
for retail sales, which were unsurprisingly minimal.
2023-11-10
QUEEN - JAZZ @ 45
Celebrating
its 45th anniversary today is the seventh studio LP from Queen, Jazz,
which was released on November 10th, 1978. While it was a commercial
success at the time, it followed a pattern of ups and downs for the
group throughout the decade, being viciously ridiculed by critics at the
time of its release, though radically reassessed in later years in the
wake of Freddie Mercury's passing.
Though Queen's rise to
superstardom was initially a continuous trajectory upward, after the
breakout success of Bohemian Rhapsody and A Night at the Opera in 1975,
the band began to suffer through an oscillation of expectations. They
continued so sell millions of records, but the persistent expectation to
exceed past successes meant they were constantly unfairly dismissed if a
record didn't, in some tangible way, seem to surpass what had come
before. It's an impossible position to be in as a band. After
Rhapsody, A Day at the Races, was met with mixed reviews and suspicion,
until News of the World came along the following year and blasted away
all the doubts that critics had been pelting the band with, but then
Jazz came along and the press seized at the opportunity to feast on the
band's flesh anew. Of course, The Game followed next and knocked
everyone sideways before the band fell afoul AGAIN with Hot Space. And
on it went...
When it came time to record Jazz, the band were
staring down the barrel of massive tax bills in the UK, which meant that
recording at home simply wasn't economically feasible. They had to
scramble to avoid being crushed by the taxman and initially opted to
record in France as an alternative. It was while they were attending
the nearby Montreux Jazz Festival, likely the inspiration for the
album's title, that fate would have them run into David Bowie, who was
recording Lodger at Mountain Studios. Bowie recommended the band
relocate to that studio and they were impressed enough with the facility
that they moved operations there in July, the day after the jazz
festival's completion. In fact, they liked it enough that the band
would eventually buy the studio and make it their permanent base of
operations going forward. On July 19, Brian May's birthday, the band
attended the 18th stage of the 1978 Tour de France, which inspired
Freddie Mercury to write the lead single, "Bicycle Race". They spent a
total of about three weeks in Mountain Studios, only taking a few days
off for Roger's birthday on the 26th, when they allegedly trashed a
Montreux hotel. Mercury was reportedly seen swinging on a cut-glass
chandelier in the hotel during the party! After wrapping up in
Montreux, they returned to France to finish off overdubs before sending
the mixes to New York for mastering.
For the packaging of the
album, Roger suggested the minimalist disc graphic he'd spotted as
graffiti on the Berlin Wall. The internal gate-fold photo showed a wide
angle shot of the band's gear displayed in Mountain Studio. With
Bicycle Race and Fat Bottom Girls picked as the premier double A single
for the album, the band concocted a promotional event held at Wembley
Stadium in the UK. They staged a nude female bicycle race that would
provide images for the poster, included with early pressings of the LP,
and the single's sleeve, although they had to paint on bikini bottoms to
avoid protests for the single cover. There are also reports that
Halford's, who supplied the bicycles on loan, hit Queen with a bill to
replace all the seats due to "improper" use. Though the band saw it all
as a bit of "cheeky" fun, they came under fire for their objectifying of
women. Critic Dave Marsh wrote in his review in Rolling Stone, "Fat
Bottomed Girls" treated women "not as sex objects but as objects, period
(the way the band regards people in general)", and finished by famously
tagging Queen "the first truly fascist rock band".
Most other
contemporary reviews of the album were similarly disparaging. Mitchell
Cohen of CREEM called Jazz "absurdly dull" and filled with "dumb ideas
and imitative posturing". Village Voice critic Robert Christgau said
the album was not wholly bad, even finding "Bicycle Race" humorous,
although he said Queen sounded like the band 10cc "with a spoke, or a
pump, up their ass". Sales of the album and its singles were certainly
respectable, but the tactic of releasing another double A-side single
didn't pay off as well as it did with We Will Rock You b/w We Are the
Champions from the previous album. With critics of the era behaving
like a tank of hungry sharks, any signs of weakness were a clarion calls
to start the feeding frenzy. Queen were CLEARLY on their way OUT, so
you'd better get your bite in before they sank into the abyss.
In
the years since its release, Jazz has most certainly been given a
repeal of such undeserved harsh judgments, with both critics and fans
coming to recognized the album's strengths. Within its baker's dozen
songs, the band took fans on a breakneck, whiplash inducing thrill ride
of styles and techniques. Rather than a chaotic hodgepodge, it's a
roller-coaster ride, from the bizarre mania of Mustapha, to the menacing
funk-rock of More of That Jazz, the band keep listeners on the edge of
their seat through every turn. Numerous songs became live staples and
Don't Stop Me Now, in particular, became Freddie Mercury's most
quintessential composition, embodying the singer's philosophy and
attitude in a way that has even been scientifically recognized as one of
the most catchy songs ever written!
Personally, while I loved
the album at the time it came out, and still do, back at the end of
1978, I was beginning a journey into a different realm. Though I
started that year by joining the official Queen fan club, and stocked up
my wardrobe with Queen T-shirts, badges and belt buckles (and I DID go
to high school with ALL of it on!), by the end of 1978, I'd discovered
music by RAMONES, The Clash, Sex Pistols, DEVO & Elvis Costello, so
Jazz was kind-of the "beginning of the end" of my obsession with Queen.
1979 would not see them issue a new studio LP, only the uneven, poorly
received Live Killers, and while I bought The Game in 1980, it was the
last Queen LP I'd spend my money on for at least two decades. But
nostalgia brought me back to the boys eventually and I still appreciate
giving this record a spin now and then.
2023-11-08
THE MONKEES - HEAD (FILM) @ 55
It
was 55 years ago today when the one and only feature film by The
Monkees, HEAD, officially hit theatre screens with its New York City
premier on November 6th, 1968. While the film systematically dismantled
the band's carefully cultivated pre-teen "manufactured image" in the
hopes of appealing to a more mature, progressive counterculture
audience, it ended up only alienating existing fans while the hipsters
never even gave it a chance due to the band's reputation. And while it
was initially a staggering commercial flop, ravaged by critics of the
time, something strange happened in the decades following its release.
Since then, it has become a deeply treasured cult film, inspiring
in-depth analysis and speculation and, in retrospect, is seen as one of
the very few films of the psychedelic era to actually capture the true
experience of the trip, rather than portray it within the context of a
"cautionary tale".
At the time the idea began floating about
for doing a Monkees movie, the TV series was wrapping up its second and
final season. Both the band and the show's producers were looking to
break out of the format of the TV show. While it had been an innovation
in TV structures at the time, it still had its own very rigid internal
formula, one designed to mostly appeal to a younger audience and was
only mildly concerned with making any kind of philosophical or political
statements. Everyone essentially knew they simply weren't interested
in creating a feature length version of a Monkees TV show episode. In
order to help redefine their position and plot a course forward, Bob
Rafelson, the show's creator and producer, hired friend and then an
unknown young actor by the name of Jack Nicholson to help with the
script. As his first foray into the world of feature films, Rafelson
was entirely expecting that this might be his only chance to make a
movie, so he set the basic premise that he wanted HEAD to be a
collection of vignettes, each with a different reference to a Hollywood
trope or style. If this was the only movie he'd ever get the chance to
make, he wanted to make every kind of movie he's ever loved.
In
order to flesh out the details of this conception, Bob, Jack and the
band ensconced themselves at an Ojai, California, resort, where, with
tape recorder constantly rolling, they got high and brainstormed their
little hearts out, spewing forth a barrage of disparate ideas and
scenarios, allowing nothing to limit their imagination. At one point,
someone asked Bob what the blackest thing in the universe could be and,
thinking for a moment, he concluded it was Victor Mature's hair, thus
concocting the premise that the entire movie takes place in his hair.
After the weekend brainstorming session was completed, Jack took the
tapes and began the impossible task of trying to stitch all these crazy
notions together into a script that could make some sort of thematic
sense. He had to craft ways to get from one scene to another with no
apparent connection between them. In the end, he came up with an
approach that took the viewer on a journey as if they were watching the
TV, flipping through channels and landing on random programs, with a
continuity of themes that would keep surfacing again and again with each
change of the channel. Ideas of media control, packaging, pandering to
expectations, confinement, interpretation and escape all wove
themselves together through this madcap journey, dissecting the band's
image and intent, and rebuilding it into a commentary on popular culture
and the nature of reality itself. Ambitious stuff for something that
looked like a hodgepodge mess from the outside.
The music for
the film was obviously still an integral component and the band made
every effort to ensure that its maturity and sophistication went well
beyond anything they'd done before. With two original songs from Peter,
one from Mike, one from Harry Nilsson and two more from Carole King,
they had a half dozen solid compositions to work with. As well as the
band's own performances, session musicians included such luminaries as
Neil Young, Leon Russell, Ry Cooder and Stephen Stills. For Mike's
Circle Sky, the band were filmed performing the song live, with
absolutely zero augmentation or post production overdubs. It's a
roaring proto-punk raver that shows the group off as the tight, intense
garage band they had become in the real world. Carole King's Porpoise
Song became the visual highlight of the film as they utilized the then
unknown technique of solarization, a process which was expensive and
difficult to achieve and which ultimately caused delays in the post
production phase, pushing back the release date. For the accompanying
soundtrack album, Jack Nicholson was put in charge of editing the LP
together, taking the half dozen songs and interspersing them with a
cut-up assemblage of audio and score music cues from the film. The end
result is something akin to the likes of Nurse With Wound or
Negativland, with bizarre juxtapositions of dialogue and sound effects
creating bridges between the album's core musical elements.
Production
on the film got off to a rocky start, with the band discovering that
only Jack would get scripting credits, something that was necessitated
by industry union rules at the time requiring a single name to be
associated with the screenplay. There were also disputes over the wages
being paid to the band, which resulted in the group going on strike the
first day of shooting, with only Peter showing up to the set. It was
pretty tense and the friction between Rafelson and the band afterwards
never really resolved itself, leaving a permanent rift between the
producer and the band.
Promotion of the film was approached
with the same sense of experimentation which had driven the creation of
the movie. Inspired by Andy Warhol's film, Blowjob, which shows nothing
but a man's head and expressions as he receives oral copulation, the
poster for the film and the TV ad showed the head of John Brockman, who
did the PR for the film. As a gag, the title, HEAD, was chosen because
the producers were looking forward to their next film project, where
their promotions could proudly proclaim, "from the people who gave you
HEAD". The ad taglines summarized it as a "most extraordinary
adventure, western, comedy, love story, mystery, drama, musical,
documentary satire ever made (And that's putting it mildly)." The band
themselves were conspicuously absent.
The evening of the NYC
premier, Rafelson commented that he and Nicholson were arrested "for
trying to put a sticker on a police officer's helmet as he mounted his
horse." With the film deliberately destroying the mythology of the
band, young Monkees fans were completely turned off by the product and
the critics took it as an opportunity to destroy the band in print.
With nearly nonexistent box-office receipts, the film vanished from
theatres with little notice and it began its journey through the
cultural underworld, waiting to be reappraised by the public.
My
first exposure to the movie came on December 30, 1974, when CBS aired
it as their Late Movie after the 11 o'clock news. I happened to be out
with my parents at their friends place, where I stumbled on the film on
TV and got a chance to see roughly half of it before I was yanked away
from the screen so we could go home. I desperately tried to find it
when we did get home, but it seemed to have vanished from the airwaves.
I was a fan of the TV series and had no idea what this was, but I knew I
LOVED IT! I was only 11 years old at the time, but something about it
mesmerized me. Yet I had no opportunity to see the complete film again
until about 1989, when I was loaned a VHS tape with a dub of the film on
it, accompanied by John Water's Desperate Living. I watched the two
movies while out of my mind on mescaline and had a religious experience
with both of them. At that point, I became an evangelist for HEAD,
insisting on showing it to everyone and anyone who I could get to sit
down in front of my TV for 90 minutes, preferably under the influence of
a suitably potent psychedelic substance. There wasn't a single case
where the film didn't make an impact, and there are a number of converts
who were created by my efforts. I eventually got VHS, then DVD
editions of the movie and, once the internet came into common use,
discovered that there were many others out there who had come to
appreciate the movie the way I do. I still consider it in my top three
favourite films of all time, which includes the aforementioned Desperate
Living, and The Holy Mountain by Alejandro Jodorowsky.
In recent
years, there have been many people who have done in-depth explorations
of the film's themes and structure. It has spawned actual university
courses! The book The Monkees, Head, and the 60s, written by Peter
Mills, who taught the university course, offers an excruciatingly
detailed exploration of every element of the film, including the threads
that lead to its creation and the aftermath of its release. For many,
myself included, it is a critical document of 1960s counterculture.
Director, Bob Rafelson, went on to produce groundbreaking films like
Easy Rider and Five Easy Pieces. For fans of the band, who have long
since embraced the film in all its eccentric glory, it has become an
indispensable chapter in the band's legacy, one which proves beyond any
doubt that they were artistically and creatively valid beyond any
criticism for their "manufactured" origin.
2023-11-04
BLACK SABBATH -SABBATH BLOODY SABBATH @ 50
Marking
its golden anniversary this month is the fifth studio LP from Black
Sabbath, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, which was released 50 years ago in
November of 1973. As the band struggled to regroup after an exhausting
tour and expand their musical pallet, their eventual success created
perhaps the album defining the pinnacle of their career.
On the
back of the release of their previous LP, VOL. 4, the band had burned
themselves out on a tour which ended up being cut short when guitarist
Tony Iommi collapsed during their LA gig from a combination of overwork
and overindulgence, blazing out on the tail of a massive cocaine binge
which had been going on for days. The situation for the guitarist was
nearly life-threatening and precipitated the band taking their first
actual vacation period since the group was founded. After spending some
time apart to rest and recuperate, the initial plan was to take the
same approach to their next album as had been so successful on their
previous, so they booked into the same LA studios and began their first
attempts at buckling down and getting to work. The problem was that
Tony was bone dry in the inspiration department and the rest of the band
were entirely dependant on him to get the ball rolling when it came to
songwriting. Other factors, like their continued substance abuse, also
conspired to diffuse their focus and make it impossible to recreate the
atmosphere of the previous album. Even their favourite room in the
studio wasn't available as it had been overtaken by a massive
synthesizer system installed by Stevie Wonder.
After
floundering in frustration in LA for a month, the group decided a change
of venue was in order and opted to head back to the UK where they
rented Clearwell Castle in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, England,
in which the likes of Led Zeppelin, Mott the Hoople and Deep Purple
wrote and recorded. The castle provided a suitably ominous creepiness
for them to work, with the armoury and dungeon offering particularly
spooky settings. Band members even reported sightings of ghostly
apparitions while wandering the castle's dimly lit hallways, though
given their penchant for chemical indulgence, who knows what they
actually saw. The group were also prone to pranking each other in the
most vicious manner, which significantly amped up the sense of fear and
paranoia, resulting in some members refusing to sleep there and, in the
case of drummer Bill Ward, who often seemed to get the worst of it, he
insisted on sleeping with a dagger at hand.
Mayhem aside, the
creative damn burst, thanks to the ominous setting, when Iommi stumbled
on the riff for the album's title track. Up to that point, they were
seriously starting to think that they were finished, but once they hit
on that riff, they knew they were back. By this time, they were also
looking to expand the diversity of their sound, so they started to
incorporate more experimental elements like strings, keyboards and
synthesizer. Ozzy had picked up a MOOG synth and the group even got Yes
keyboardist, Rick Wakeman, to guest on Sabbra Cadabra, though he
refused payment for his work and was happy to receive a few beers as
compensation. The group even attempted experiments with instruments
like bagpipes and sitars, but these proved unsatisfactory and were
abandoned from the sessions. At one point, members of Led Zeppelin
dropped in for a visit and an impromptu jam session was recorded, but
never released.
Once the album was completed and released, the
band were surprised to find that they actually created something the
British music press were willing to acknowledge as a good album. Their
previous works had notoriously been dismissed by UK critics, so it was a
surprising about-face to finally receive a bit of praise from this
quarter. But as Ozzy later commented, he felt like he should have
called it quits from the band after this release as the writing was on
the wall that their peak had been reached. Internal conflicts and
tensions between the band members were about to take their tole. They
were far too dependant on Iommi to get songs written and Geezer Butler
was also feeling like Osborne was far too reliant on him to come up with
lyrics.
The album went on to become a commercial success as well
as garnering critical raves. Within the scope of the band's canon,
many consider it the high water mark of their career. After this, their
conflicts and personal demons would undercut their ability to work
together successfully. They still had three more LPs in their pockets
before the original lineup would fracture, but none of those would be
considered in the same light as their first five.