Brian Eno-David Byrne
My Life in the Bush of Ghosts
Virgin/EMI
Uncut, 2006
by Simon Reynolds
On
its original 1981 release, this album was widely dissed for being
“cold-blooded,” “detached”, an eggheads-in-the-soundlab experimental
exercise. Yet Bush of Ghosts drips with emotional intensity, it’s just
that the feelings don't come directly from the record's makers but from
the found voices--Pentecostal preachers, Algerian Muslims--harvested by
the duo from American radio and ethnic field recordings. In another
sense, the whole project is framed by the conflicted emotions--uneasy
fascination, admiring envy--that this material stirred in Byrne &
Eno, at once attracted by the fervour of these true believers yet
incapable (as progressive sorts trapped within modernity’s rationality
and temperance) of accessing that kind of passion themselves.
Chances
are, you’ll feel the same cold rush as Byrne & Eno the first time
they heard the preacher who “stars” on “The Jezebel Spirit. ” The
electrifying conviction of his cadences as he exorcises the slutty
she-devil that’s possessed an unfaithful wife will make your hair stand
on end, even as your liberalism recoils from the patriarchy he’s
restoring (“Jezebel, you have no rights to her, her husband is the head
of the house”). Elsewhere, it’s the mystical rather than moralising
aspect of religion that enthralls Byrne & Eno: “Regiment,” for
instance, entwines the ecstastic ululations of a Lebanese mountain singer
with sinuous bass and arabesques of synth. Throughout Ghosts, the duo
lovingly recontextualise their sources, embedding the voices in a sticky
web of psychedelic rhythm, funky ambience, and some of the most
counter-intuitive and contortionist basslines you’ll ever hear.
Tracks
1 to 5 (the original first side) are great, but 6 to 11 (side two) is a
whole other plane, gliding you through a phantasmagoric sequence of
steadily more untaggable and precedent-less groovescapes. Following
“Moonlight in Glory”-- falter-funk laced with the halting cadences of
Scriptural chants and astral gospel plaints, as incanted by a literally
isolated African-American sect from the Sea Islands off Georgia’s
coast--“The Carrier” shimmers like a portent or future-ghost of The
Unforgettable Fire. But instead of Bono, thankfully that Lebanese dude[tte?]
reappears to kiss the heavens. “A Secret Life” is an itchy microcosm as
gorgeously infolded as Can’s “Quantum Physics,” while “Come With Us”
pretzels bass-gloop and stereo-flickering sorcery into a disorientating
audio-maze. Heading out into a non-specifically Oriental hinterland of
gaseous gong sounds, “Mountain of Needles” sounds like God sighing with
satisfaction at the end of the sixth day. Byrne & Eno, the Creators
of an equally marvelous if somewhat more compact universe of sound,
ought to have felt pretty pleased with themselves too.
It’s a pity that
the immaculate construction that is Ghosts now has an extension tacked
onto it: the inevitable slew of out-takes, most of them sketchy and
substandard, diminishes the sense of conclusion achieved by “Mountain”. A
couple of the bonus tracks work as intriguing footnotes ( the ungodly
exhalations of “Vocal Outtakes”, the needling stellar twinkle of “Solo
Guitar with Tin Foil”) but overall, the effect is a bit like the
Almighty following up the Cosmos with an encore of… Croydon.
^^^^^^^^
the excised cut
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