"there are immaturities, but there are immensities" - Bright Star (dir. Jane Campion)>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
"the fear of being wrong can keep you from being anything at all" - Nayland Blake >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "It may be foolish to be foolish, but, somehow, even more so, to not be" - Airport Through The Trees
Talk
Talk always were a band teetering on the brink of'too-much-ness'. One friend couldn't handle
"Spirit Of Eden" because the woodwinds made him think of the theme to
"Pogle's Wood", the psychedelic animated children's show. .O.rang are
Talk Talk's rhythm section, Lee Harris and Paul Webb, and sho'nuff, "Herd
Of Instinct" is as brave and foolish an odyssey into neo-prog excess as
any mounted by their former band.
.O.rang's
methodology is similar to the jam-and-chop approach of Can and Miles Davis
during the early Seventies. The seven compositions on Herd were
edited down from material generated during long improv sessions. As well as
taking on 20 different musical and programming chores themselves, Harris &
Webb draw on a floating pool of 16 musicians (including Graham Sutton of Bark
Psychosis and Matt Johnson). That's a lot of sonic matter for them to daub on
the walls of their grotto-like mixes.
Like their
prime influences (Can, Miles, Fela Kuti, African Headcharge), .O.rang'smusic combines groove and atmospherics,funk and ambient spatiality. And like those
bands, .O.rang's vibe is ethnodelic and shamanistic. Each musician is
represented on the inner sleeve by a tribal totem orcharm, while the artwork and captions like
"a view of the vision mountain from the ageless collective
unconscious" propound a vague pro-aboriginal peoples eco-politics. This
"time to get back in touch with what we in the West have lost" shtick
may be a tad too Wobble-y to take seriously, but at its best .O.rang's music
convinces you they really are plugged into a primal matrix of voodoo energy.
The opener, ".O.rang" is like A.R.Kane circa "69'" if
they'd had a shit-hot rhythm section underneath the textural fantasia, while
the roiling polyrhythms and cosmic guitar of "Little Brother" recall
little-heard NYC mystics Saqqara Dogs.
Perhaps the most ambitious track is
"Anaon, The Oasis". It starts with eerily treated, transcendental
moans echoing through subterranean chambers a la Can's "Augmn" or
Grateful Dead's "What's Become Ofthe Baby" . Then Webb intones a fragile, dejected melodyin a glottal quaver uncannily like Talk
Talk's Mark Hollis, over a meandering groove. Oozy Jon Hassell-like trumpet and
cloudbusting female backing vocals finally push "Anoan" into the vicinity
ofKate Bush's under-rated "The
Dreaming"."Loaded
Values" is even better. Moondust vibes, braying harmonica and blues guitar
trail around a run-away-train groove; decelerating as if hitting a gradient,
the track mutates into something close to techno, as Colette Meury's
scat-vocals vault skywards.
Like
their first band, .O.rang valiantly walk that precarious line between garishly
over-ripe and gorgeously overwhelming,but only rarely slip into the prog-swamp. Herd Of Instinct is a most worthy addition to the post-rock canon.
[in chronological order of release, not of me writing them) The Prodigy Charly EP XL Recordings (for eMusic, Rave Dozen, 2007) by Simon Reynolds The Prodigy’s career could be Exhibit A in the case claiming that rave, far from being anti-rock (like its precursor sounds techno and house) was in fact a futurised reinvention of rock. From ‘ardkore classics like “Everybody in the Place” and “Out of Space” to the digi-punk and Oi!-tronica of “Firestarter” and “Breathe”, the core essence of Prodigy is a teen rampage spirit of bring-the-noise mayhem. Producer Liam Howlett is a riff-master on a par with AC/DC’s Angus Young, while his grasp of tension-and-release, build-and-breakdown dynamics is as consummate as genius pulp hitmakers Chinn & Chapman (the team who wrote and produced most of the classic glam smashes for The Sweet). Yet his pre-rave past as a Public Enemy-loving British B-boy ensured a level of bass-knowledge and breakbeat-science that made the Prodigy sound utterly contemporary. Only the group’s second single (the first, “What Evil Lurks” b/w Android”, has never been reissued for some reason) “Charly” was a Top 3 hit in the UK in August 1991. It singlehandedly spawned the hardcore subgenre of toytown rave, tunes that sampled children’s TV shows (especially where some kind of Ecstasy-pun or druggy double-entendre could be made out of the show’s name or a fragment of dialogue). In ‘Charly’”, the sample is a little boy from a Public Information Film advising children how to avoid getting lost or abducted. “Charley says, always tell your mummy before you go off somewhere,” the kid says, translating the words of a cartoon cat, Charly, whose miauow is transformed by Howlett into the tune’s killer riff. The joke here is the idea of UK teenagers sneaking off to raves where they get up to things that would make their mums blanch. The original version of “Charly” sounds slightly restrained, so the one to go for is the “Alley Cat” mix, its swirly Belgian-style techno-riff expertly simulating the timbre of the cat’s miaouw but turning it into a spine-tingling MDMA-activating noise. In between the two ‘Charlys” you’ll find two other terrific tunes, “Pandemonium”and “Your Love” You are also recommended--nay, urged--nay, instructed--to check out The Prodigy’s debut album Experience, especially in the Expanded reissue version with its bonus disc of back-in-the-day remixes, B-sides and rarities.
THE
PRODIGY
Experience:
Expanded
(for Spin I think; 2001)
by Simon Reynolds
1997's
"Firestarter" might have been their US breakthrough, but in Britain The
Prodigy were massive almost from the git-go. Their second single
"Charley" was a #5 pop hit in the summer of 1991, and the follow-up
"Everybody In the Place" was only kept off the top spot by the
re-released "Bohemian Rhapsody."
Back then the Prodigy were pop ambassadors for hardcore, staple sound of
England's early Nineties rave scene and the hip hop/techno mutant that
eventually evolved into drum'n'bass. All convulsively strobing keyboard vamps,
frenzied breakbeats, and bruising bass, hardcore always was the "the new
rock'n'roll". It's just that Liam Howlett had to add guitars, punk-snarl
vocals, and videogenic hair-rebel shapethrowing before the non-rave world was
convinced that Prodigy rocked.
Experience:
Expanded is a reissue of Prodigy's 1992 debut album with an extra disc of
remixes and B-sides. Sounds slightly dubious, I know, but actually it's a
radical enhancement of an already bona fide classic. The B-sides offer ruff
proto-jungle bizness, and the remixes are the absolute killer versions that
slayed 'em on the ravefloor in 1991-92 (then reappeared in slightly-inferior
remixed form on the original Experience). So this retrospectively
"corrected" Experience now includes the definitive "Alley Cat
Remix" incarnation of "Charly", with its cartoon feline's miaouw
smearing into the miasmic churn of the distorto-synth riff, and the superior
"Fairground Remix" of "Everybody In the Place," a
dementedly whirling dervish-machine that was actually popular on rollercoaster
sound systems.
Experience
is all about speed--not just the synergy-rush of E's and whizz (UK slang for
amphetamine) with exponentially-soaring b.p.m rates, but an entire emergent
culture of hyperkinetic thrills, from videogames to snowboarding. And in 1992
that gave The Prodigy and their hardcore rave brethren real resonance for
Brit-kids languishing under Tory tyranny: when your culture is all about
blockage and stagnation, reaching escape-velocity becomes paramount. Things haven't improved a whole
heap since, which might be one reason Experience still packs such a mighty
buzz.
The Prodigy, prominent in this New York Times feature (January 1993 I think) on Ardkore
For over a year, the most vibrant dance cult in Britain has been "hardcore". The term originally came from "hardcore techno", a style of electronic rave music that's faster and more brutal than its melodic cousin, house. A year ago, "hardcore" meant bombastic synthesiser-riffs, programmed machine-rhythms, and a clinical but crazed vibe. But during 1992, hardcore has evolved into a mutant hybrid of hip hop and techno, merging the former's grit with the latter's futuristic weirdness. Dee-jays and producers started to take breakbeats from rap records and speed them up. In the process, they retained hip hop's funky syncopation, but at tempos (140 - 150 beats per minute) far faster than any flesh-and-blood drummer couldsustain.
Like most rave music, hardcore (or 'ardkore, as it's sometimes misspelt in order to exaggerate the subculture's delinquent aura) is brazenly druggy, both in its sound and its lyrical allusions. Hardcore's manic pace has been influenced by the fact that Ecstasy, the raver's stimulant of choice, has become steadily more adulterated with amphetamine. But beyond its function as the soundtrack to the frenetic club-going of a dissolute subculture of speed-freaks, hardcore has been a strong force in the British pop charts in the eighteen months, attracting large numbers of teenyboppers too young to attend raves. Hardcore is music for the Nintendo generation. Its hyper-kinetic aesthetic provides a sexless exhiliration similar to that offered by computer games. (There was even a hit single based around the theme from the game "Tetris"). The music's non-stop barrage of samples and sonic gimmickry appeals to reduced attention spans.
Like other dance cults, hardcore thrives on a rapid turnover of tracks. Dee-jays search out the latest and most obscure 12 inch singles in order to stay ahead of the competition. This lack of brand loyalty makes for a climate inimical to long-term careers or artistic development. Nonetheless, some figures have emerged out of the faceless morass of one-hit wonders. The most consistently successful of these groups - The Prodigy, Messiah, Eon, Bizarre Inc, Utah Saints, Altern-8 - have recorded albums, and these are now being picked up by American major labels. The problem is that hardcore works best in 12 inch single form, as mixed into a 'total flow' by a club or pirate radio dee-jay. The next best format for the music is the 'various artists' compilation, as put out by "hot" labels like Kickin', XL, Rising High, and others. It's not clear yet whether the scene has generated artists capable of sustaining the listener's interest over the duration of a CD.
If anyone has come close to achieving this, it's The Prodigy, a techno unit from Essex, near London, whose tally of four consecutive UK chart hits in eighteen months is a feat of longeveity quite remarkable by hardcore's standards. The Prodigy's creative core, 21 year old Liam Howlett, originally began in the hip hop field, but was drawn into rave culture by its celebratory, socially inclusive atmosphere. In The Prodigy, he combines the turntable-manipulating skills of rap, with a flair for melody derived from a classical training in piano. The album "Experience" (Elektra, 9 61365-2) is a breakneak onslaught of bustling beats, soul vocals sped up into shrill chipmunk histrionics, and stuttering synthesisers. Everything in The Prodigy sound is designed to heighten the sense of rush, of headlong, goal-less acceleration. Like much rave fare, The Prodigy's music is self-reflexive: the songs celebrate the transitory but real communion of the dancefloor ("Everybody In The Place"), the Prodigy's prowess ("Out Of Space", which promises to "take your brain to another dimension"), and the sensation of speed in itself ("Hyperspeed").
"Experience" includes The Prodigy's smash hit, "Charly", which incorporates a cartoon cat's 'miaoouw' and a toddler's voice from a public service announcement aimed at kids. Tapping into an infantilistic strain in rave culture (gaudy clothes, dancers sucking on pacifiers), "Charly" inspired numerous imitators, who sampled bygone children's TV themes and playground refrains (Urban Hype's "A Trip To Trumpton", Smart E's "Sesame's Treet", Major Malfunctions' "Ice Cream Van"). On the stand-out track "Ruff In The Jungle Bizness", The Prodigy responds to the hardcore scene's vogue for "junglist" rhythms (dense, roiling percussion and seismic basslines taken from reggae). Throughout the album, there's frequent recourse to another hardcore fad, sampling "ragga" singers. Ragga is reggae's equivalent to rap, a patois chanting style whose insolent, uproarious quality ('ragga' comes from "raggamuffin") fits perfectly with hardcore's rough, rowdy rhythms. "Experience" is a perfect document of the hardcore state-of-art. Mr Howlett's genius is his ability to take underground idioms and combine them with the hooks and structure of pop. Similarly, he uses samples not as tacked-on novelty effects but as integral, functioning elements in his songs.
Utah Saints pull off a similar trick on their hit single "Something Good", the opening track on the debut album "Utah Saints" (London/PLG ------). The song's principal hook - a sample from Kate Bush's "Cloudbusting" - is at once gimmicky and gorgeous. Utah Saints take the first syllable of Ms Bush's chorus, "ooh, I just know that something good is going to happen", and modulate it on a sampling keyboard, distending this single vowel like a glassblower shaping an intricate bauble. In the process, Ms Bush's wide-eyed anticipation is amplified into a spine-tingling shiver of euphoria. This little masterstroke of sampling sorcery is the jewel that elevates an otherwise basic hardcore anthem, complete with raucous chants and octave-hopping piano riffs. On the rest of album, Utah Saints try to pull off the same trick again and again, with diminishing returns. "What Can You Do For Me" is totally dependent on its samples (Annie Lennox, Gwen Guthrie), while "New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84)" is a pointless remake of the Simple Minds song of the same title. Too often, Utah Saints don't rework their samples or frame them in a new context, like The Prodigy does, but rely on them to make their songs memorable.
Like "Something Good", Messiah's "Temple Of Dreams" (Def American maxi-single, 9 40655-2) is another fine example of chart-friendly hardcore (both songs were hits in Britain). Indeed, the track's focal sample is a sped-up incantation by Liz Fraser, whose ethereal style is not too many mystic moons away from Ms Bush. Taken from This Mortal Coil's "Song To The Siren", Ms Fraser's enquiry "did I dream, you dreamed about me?" floats over a locust-swarm of synthesier noise. Other stray squiggles of noise resemble massively amplified gastric rumblings. In the UK, Messiah's records are released by Kickin', one of the country's top independent dance labels. But in the US, Messiah have signed to Def American, whose supremo Rick Rubin is convinced that techno is the new punk. Judging by "Temple Of Dreams", Messiah are more like purveyors of bubblegum hardcore. Their debut album, to be released this spring, will doubtless reveal more about Messiah's balance of pop appeal and hardcore frenzy.
Where Utah Saints, Messiah and The Prodigy rely, to varying degrees, on a collage aesthetic, Eon's version of hardcore is based more on pure electronic textures. On "Void Dweller" (Vinyl Solution/Columbia CK 52472) Eon (London-based DJ-producer Ian B) plays with the idea of disco as a sinister form of possession or mind-control. Starting with a line hijacked from a science fiction movie ("we will control all that you see and hear"), "Inner Mind" elaborates eerie ripples and vortices of synthesiser drones. It sounds like a brainwashing machine. The track that cleaves closest to the contemporary hardcore sound is "Basket Case (White Coat Mix)", whose title chimes in with hardcore's imagery of psychosis, disorientation and catatonia (good records are praised as "mad" or "mental"). The track combines horror soundtrack motifs, spooky laughter, deranged screams and eerie electronic pulsations to create a bedlam of sound. If "Void Dweller" is successful as an album-length experience, it's because it's mood-muzak, establishing a chilly, creepy atmsophere. This is techno as isolation chamber, rather than party music.
Rave music has provoked much hostility from rock fans. Ironically, its critics often use the same kind of derogatory terms with which alarmed adults in the Fifties lambasted early rock'n'roll: as mindless, repetitive, barbaric, nihilistic in its pursuit of sensation and kicks. Veterans of punk, in particular, are offended by hardcore techno, accusing it of "not saying anything", of being apolitical, escapist and nullifying. Certainly, hardcore is one-dimensional music. But it commands that dimension with a singleminded intensity that's as close to the primal essence of rock'n'roll as you can get. It's a techno-pagan celebration of dance, of staying up way past your bedtime, of the sheer kinetic exhiliration of rhythm. Perhaps hardcore techno is the new rock'n'roll - it's certainly erected a new generation gap.
The
Prodigy interview, circa Music for the Jilted Generation
Melody Maker, July 16th 1994
by Simon Reynolds
"So
I've decided to take my work back underground... to stop it falling into the
wrong hands."
So
begins Music For The Jilted Generation, The Prodigy's fab second LP.
See, seven consecutive hits and a gold debut album aren't enough for
23-year-old whizz kid Liam Howlett. He's sick and tired of his public image:
peerless purveyor of hyper-hyper bubblegum nuttercore for E'd up popkids. Liam
wants to be taken seriously; more to the point, he wants to be taken seriously
by you, the alternative rock fan. So that's why he's used rock guitar in
a couple of tracks on the album, and that's why Jilted is a sort of
semi-concept album, with a ‘heavy’ political statement.
"The
Jilted Generation, it's all the kids who've grown up on this supposedly corrupt
dance music," says Liam, in between hacking his lungs out (he's run down
by endless remixing and a recent tour of Australia). "The government
are trying to make out the whole scene is bad, and they want to stop everyone
going out and having a good time."
On the
album's inner sleeve, a painting depicts an allegory of this confrontation, as
a police force and a ragged army of ravers glare at each other across a ravine,
with the rave-tribe's chieftain about to slash the ropes of the bridge. The
chorus of ‘Their Law’ – a surprisingly effective metal-riff propelled
collaboration with Pop Will Shite itself – articulates this defiance:
"Fuck 'em and their law". What's riled Liam isn't just the Criminal
Justice Bill, but the unofficial clampdown on legal raves.
"The
police can control the sound levels at raves. Basically, there aren't going to
be big outdoors raves anymore. They're not giving them licenses in the first
place now cos of the alleged disturbance and noise pollution, and all the
drugs. And cos of that, the punters have lost faith a bit. A year ago, you'd
get 20,000 at a big event, no worries. Now you'd be lucky to get 10,000. Events
happen up until the last minute and then they get cancelled, and so people stop
bothering. The Obsession rave, a big three-dayer on the beach, was cancelled,
and that was going to be the only major event this year. The Prodigy haven't
suffered from it at all, we're still packing out shows and selling records. But
it does annoy me, the government telling young kids what they can do."
Because
of the clampdown, rave culture's gone into the clubs and it's fragmented into
factions: scenes like techno, jungle, progressive house, garage, et al. Liam
admits to being nostalgic for the golden days of rave's bygone unity.
"I
think a lot of people are. That's why the housey progressive scene is so
popular, cos even though it's not as mental and sweaty, it's still got the love
vibe. On the hardcore scene, the DJs won't mix up different styles of music,
they just wanna play the brand new 'dubpates' that no one can get hold of, cos
they only printed ten copies."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The Prodigy emerged from the early hardcore scene (what's now
evolved into jungle). Along with Altern-8, they were the principal ambassadors
for 'ardkore in the Top Ten. The Prodigy's Top Three hits ‘Charly’ and
‘Everybody In The Place’ were classic breakbeat tracks, and the debut LP Experience
was ruff jungle bizness, albeit with a commerical sheen and Liam's poptastic
choonfulness well to the fore. But ever since a dance mag accused The Prodigy's
‘Charly’ of instigating "the death of rave" (because it inspired a
rash of lame bubblecore tracks with kids' TV samples, like ‘Sesame's Treet’), an
embarrassed Liam has struggled to distance himself from hardcore.
"It's
the 180 bpm breakbeats I've moved away from. The new album is as hardcore as
anything I've written, but hard in a different way, a German techno way. But I
still use breakbeats, cos I've always been into hip-hop and that side of me
will always be there."
It's all
a bit ironic, given jungle's creative renaissance in '93 and its long overdue
return to hipness in '94. (The dance mag in question just leapt on the
bandwagon along with every other rag in town).
Admits
Liam, "There's loads of quality jungle tracks around. The problem was that
a lot of people thought it was so easy to make hardcore that they just knocked
out white labels and flooded the market with crap. But this year there's been a
lot of intelligent jungle. Moving Shadow are the leading label."
But Liam
still doesn't like the attitude and moody atmosphere that so often surrounds
jungle '94, and which is so different from the nutty, luv'd up vibe of 'ardkore
'92.
"The
reason I got into rave was that hip-hop had gotten too much into attitude. To
me, the jungle scene now is really confused. One minute they'll play something
really uplifting and the next it's dark and gloomy. Also, that music's lost a
bit of energy. Because it's so fast, people don't dance to the 160 bpm drums,
they lock into the reggae baseline, which is half speed. So you dance really
slow. With techno, you dance to the full-on beat. The stuff I really rate is
European, like CJ Bolland and a lot of the German artists."
When I
suggest that The Prodigy are the last representatives in the charts for the old
rave spirit, Liam frowns. What he really wants is to get back his underground
credibility – something as difficult and arguably futile as attempting to
recover your virginity.
"We
actually do everything we can to stay off the telly and out of Smash Hits
and the pop media," he stresses. "We only do interviews that I feel
are credible. It is a battle, a constant battle to get the correct press."
Hence
his flirtation with alternative music and deployment of rock guitar on Jilted.
He's been listening to Led Zep and Pearl Jam, and he might be producing Skinny
Puppy's debut for Rick Rubin's American label. He tells me how much he like
Senser's "energy" (they were actually first choice before Pop Will
Eat itself, but were too busy). As well as ‘Their Low’, grunge guitar features
on the killer next single, ‘Voodoo People’.
But
Howlett doesn't need to latch misguidedly onto that dodo ‘alternative rock’ for
cred; his own roots – in electro and early hip-hop – are solid enough. I always
thought his thang was like a hyperkinetic version of Mantronix's
breakbeats-and-samples collage aesthetic, and sho'nuff, it turns out he was a
big fan. His old-school hip-hop background comes through in the funky, fusiony
‘3Kilos’, which is part of the LP's ‘Narcotic Suite’ – songs meant to evoke
different drug atmospheres.
Back to
the present, to Generation J, the kids who live for dance and drugs… Are they
going to fight back against repression, or are they just going to languish at
home, get despondent, get wasted?
"At
the end of the day I don't think there's anything anyone can do. But as long as
people can still go to clubs, it'll survive. They'll never kill the whole thing
off completely. Why are the government so threatened? I don't know. We live in Essex and there's a massive Farmers festival every year
at the Showground. They block up the whole f***ing road and it's totally
disruptive. But they won't have a rave there. It's the same with football
matches – there's loads of drugs at football now, people taking E’s. So it's
one rule for us, one rule for them."
The Prodigy - Music for the Jilted Generation (from Spin's 90 Best Albums of the 1990s)
60. The Prodigy, Music for the Jilted Generation (XL/Mute, 1994)
After “Firestarter,” the notion of Prodigy as a futuristic rock band doesn’t seem startling. But in 1994, Music for the Jilted Generation was a shocking reinvention, rocketing the group out of Britain’s rave culture and winning them an audience of alt-rockers. The grungy guitar on “Their Law” and “Voodoo People” helped convert many. But the album’s concept also got them taken seriously as spokesmen for youth: The Prodigy’s Generation J was Generation X with a U.K. spin—alienated kids whose weekend rave nirvana was being threatened by repressive policies. “There was never trouble at the outdoor raves we used to play,” says Maxim Reality, Prodigy’s MC. “It was just serious government paranoia about youth massing together.”
The album is perfectly poised between the E-beat roller coaster of the group’s 1992 debut, Experience, and the cyberpunk postures of 1997’s rocktronica breakthrough, The Fat of the Land. Jilted‘s stand-out is “Poison”—the first time the Prodigy used “real” rather than sampled vocals and down-shifted into hip-hop boombastics. “Poison” was “the stepping-stone toward ‘Firestarter,'” says Reality, who supplied the track’s fierce vocals.
Jilted begins with a voice-over: “I’ve decided to take my work back underground, to stop it falling into the wrong hands.” Despite beatmaster Liam Howlett’s obsession with street cred, Jilted showed that the Prodigy’s irrepressible populism had them locked on an unstoppable course for global stardom. All that remained was for vocalist Keith Flint to change his hairstyle.
TheProdigy:
The Fat of the Land
Village Voice, July 8th 1997
by Simon Reynolds
Some say the Prodigy have betrayed the bright promise of the "electronica
revolution", resulting in a techno-rock hybrid that's not so much kick-ass
as half-assed. But the Prodigy have always been a rave 'n' roll band
rather than ‘proper’ techno. The crucial distinction to grasp here is that
techno and rave are not synonymous, and that in some respects rave has more in
common with rock than with club culture.
In the USA, rave is
regarded as the epitome of fashion-plate Europhile trendiness, but in Britain dance
music is the mainstream of pop culture, and rave specifically has a
decidedly lumpen, un-cool aura. "Raves were mass, teenage, one didn't go
to them," is how a veteran of London's
1988 acid house club Shoom explained it to me recently. Purists, who believe
the music is properly experienced in clubs, where DJs play long, varied,
‘educational’ sets to an allegedly discriminating audience, see raves as
alarming close to arena rock concerts. Ravers' rowdy rituals of abandon and
joyous uniformity of attire suggest the very ‘herd mentality’ that clubbers
define themselves against.
By 1990,
huge-scale one-off raves were transforming house and techno into bombastic
spectacles full of lights and lasers, fun-fair attractions, and stellar DJ
lineups. Where a club might have one or two DJs, raves featured ten DJs playing
a bare hour each, sometimes less. To avoid being blown away by the other jocks,
the DJs played crowd-pleasing anthems with their turntables cranked up to
plus-8. Then DJ-producers started making music to fit this full-on tempest. Detroit techno was
‘debased’, or so the official history goes, into the hyperkinetic drug-noise
called 'ardkore (which was when my ears pricked up).
And by
1991, the UK
had a massive circuit of commercial, fully licensed raves, with promoters
booking rave bands as well as DJs. Alongside N-Joi, Bizarre Inc, and Shades of
Rhythm, the Prodigy were the most popular hardcore rave act. Musically, the
Prodigy fit techno's standard syndrome – the boffin (Liam Howlett) knob
twiddling alone in his studio lab. But live and on video, the Prodigy were
always a band, with three other members – MC Maxim Reality, and dancers Keith
Flint and Leeroy – taking up the visual slack.
At the
height of this golden age of rave, the Prodigy encapsulated the contradictions
of 'ardkore: this music was simultaneously an underground phenomenon and
solidly pop. Apart from their first, every Prodigy single released to date has
made the top 15; their second, ‘Charley’, got to Number Three in the summer of
'91, while the follow-up, ‘Everybody in the Place’, was kept off the Number One
spot only by Queen's ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’. All the more remarkable since these
brilliant early singles offer an only slightly more polished version of
breakbeat hardcore, the music that evolved into jungle. Techno purists sniffed,
but I always saw it as the new garage punk: riffs, noise, amphetamine-frenzy
freakbeats, a sort of aggressive euphoria – the spirit of 1966 and 1977
channeled through the body of hip hop. When the Prodigy stepped onstage at IrvingPlaza
a month ago, they were introduced as something "for all you punk rockers,
hip hoppers, and pill poppers." No mention of techno headz or house bods;
indeed, Liam Howlett has been proclaiming in interviews that he never liked
Kraftwerk, the sacred source for Detroit
techno.
Starting
with 1994's sophomore album Musicfor the JiltedGeneration,
the Prodigy repositioned themselves as rock, partly by using electric guitar on
a couple of tracks, and partly by the vague conceptual/protest angle to the
album. The jilted generation, explained Howlett, was kids who'd grown up under
Thatcher, had little to live for but drugs and dance music, and now found even
their weekend utopia threatened as authorities targeted raves. The UK equivalent,
in other words, of the American grunge audience: Generation E.
All that
remained was to bring the noise to America. Step One: turning dancer
Keith Flint into the video-genic vocalist on ‘Firestarter’. OK, the promo is
corny: Flint's Mohican and psycho-youth grimaces. But sonically, ‘Firestarter’
is a sampler-wielding cyber-Stooges, a Dionysian hymn to destruction. Appearing
at the MTV Europe Awards to pick up a trophy for Best Dance Video, the Prodigy
greeted EC youth with "Hold it down!" a vintage '92 rave rallying cry
– as if to confirm 'ardkore's historical victory and vindication. No matter
that out of the early rave bands only the Prodigy had survived the collapse of
the 1990-92 circuit; the music had become what it had always secretly been –
the new rock.
‘Firestarter’
looked like a dead cert as electronica's ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’, but
inexplicably stumbled at the threshold of the Billboard top 30. Maybe
‘Breathe’ – a jungle-punk duet between Flint and Maxim – will bust down the
door, what with its abjection-chic video à la Tool and Marilyn Manson.
Enjoyably reminiscent of Oi! bands like Angelic Upstarts, the song was a
highlight of the Prodigy's otherwise patchy performance at Irving Plaza.
There's rock, and then there's rawk; too often the Prodge crossed the
line. When they dragged onstage a ‘real’ guitarist, nor only did he look like a
ye olde punke relic from the King's Road, but the overall effect was a tad Rage
Against the Machine. Sans politics, of course: the Prodigy's brand of vacant
menace and quasi-insurrectionary mayhem slots into the illustrious plastic punk
lineage that runs Alice Cooper/Sweet/Billy Idol/Adam and the Ants. (The Prodge
even feature an insect in their logo.)
Keith Flint has described the Prodigy as "buzz music." The song titles are
mostly self-reflexive, referring only to the music's own sensations:
‘Hyperspeed’, ‘Pandemonium’, ‘G-Force’, ‘Full Throttle’, ‘The Heat (The Energy)’.
'Ardkore always did belong to a burgeoning ‘rush culture’ that includes video
games, roller-blading, extreme sports like snow-boarding (a hobby of the
band's), and bungee jumping (a popular sideshow at raves), as well as the
obvious illegal stimulants. TheFatoftheLand
is no departure: it's all teenage rampage, cheap thrills, and adrenalin OD.
Fat kicks
off well with the boom-bastic ‘Smack My Bitch Up’. Shame about the obnoxious
title/chorus – teenage boys hardly need any more excuses to strike pimp poses.
In mitigation, it must be said that the Prodigy are not a group that repays
close lyrical analysis; their forte isn't deep and meaningful, but the
profoundly superficial (not a dis by any means). Howlett is a supreme organizer
of dynamics, bridges, and breakdowns, tension and release. ‘Diesel Power’, a
pumping midtempo collaboration with rapper Kool Keith, nods to Howlett's
pre-rave past as a British B-boy. ‘Funky Shit’ – old-school 'ardkore, more or
less – is one of the few non-vocal tracks. Fat's use of ‘real’ singers
is an indication of the band's eagerness to meet post-grunge America
halfway. But it means the Prodigy have to get around the fact that they have
nothing much to say – "this is dangerous/open up your head/feel the
shellshock" is typical – which didn't matter when the music was just
breakbeats, riffs, and samples.
Ironically,
given their desire to be taken as a futuristic rock band, the Prodigy's taste
in yer actual contemporary guitar bands is poor. ‘Serial Thrilla’ samples Skunk
Anansie; ‘Narayan’, a nine-minute collaboration with Crispian Mills of the
god-awful Kula Shaker, is a poor man's ‘Setting Sun’ (the Chemical Brothers'
Britpop/breakbeat merger). The L7 cover ‘Fuel My Fire’ would normally count as
more bad taste by my lights, but I must admit it's an exciting finale, with a
heavily distorted Flint
tirade and Republica's Saffron providing baleful backing sneers. The song fits
perfectly into the Prodigy's shtick: depoliticized punk offering youths a sort
of aerobic workout for their frustration and aggression.
Fat packs
enough big beats, bass-quake, and flechette-insidious hooks to do the required
job (conquering America),
but as an album-length experience it sags somewhat in the middle. In true punk
tradition, the Prodigy are really a singles band, which is why the 1992 debut Experience
(in effect a collection of greatest hits up to that point) remains their
most consistently exciting album. But as opposed to ‘proper’ techno, where
there's no brand loyalty and artists are only as good as their latest 12-inch.
I'll keep faith with the Prodigy. They're a rave 'n' roll band, and I'm a fan.
Liam Howlett mix-CD
Spin, May 1999
Ever since 'Firestarter' and 'Breathe' transformed Prodigy into rave'n'roll superstars, Liam Howlett, the band's leader and musical brain, has taken pains to distance Prodigy from dance culture. He's scorned the concept of "electronica," claimed he never liked house or techno, and dissed most DJs as overpaid and overpraised. So why has Howlett added his own mix-CD, Prodigy Present: Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One, to dance music's deluge of DJ compilations?
The pugnatiously opinionated Howlett sees no contradiction at all, of course. "When I said I hate DJs getting placed on pedestals, people didn't understand that when I started, it was as part of hip hop culture. There was more turntable skill involved than with today's superstar club DJs, who get paid thousands of pounds for basically playing other people's records," he says by phone from his recently acquired country home in Essex, England.
Based on a guest session Howlett recorded for a British radio show, Dirtchamber crams 51 tracks into 55 frenzied minutes in order to show up the blandness of "all those club-oriented DJ albums with a dozen house tracks beat-mixed seamlessly together." Chiming in with the nostalgia that dominated U.K. dance culture last year, Dirtchamber is a guided tour of Howlett's old skool, taking in '70s funk (Jimmy Castor Bunch, JBs), '80s hip hop (JVC Force, T La Rock, Ultramagnetic MCs), the first sample-collage tracks by British DJs (Coldcut, Renegade Soundwave, Meat Beat Manifesto), and breakbeat house (Frankie Bones).
It's a personal flashback to Howlett's teenage years as a Brit B-boy – winning a London radio station's Mixmaster of the Year award at age 15, buying Streetsounds electro compilations and hunting down rare breakbeats, and spinning in a Brit-hop outfit called Cut to Kill. Dirtchamber is also an opportunity "for Prodigy fans to hear what goes on in my head when I'm writing the music. Ninety percent of the tracks are my inspirations."
One of those formative influences, the Beastie Boys, appears twice, which might seem oddly deferential considering the war of words that blew up last year after the Beasties asked Prodigy not to perform 'Smack My Bitch Up' when the two groups shared a stage at England's Reading Festival. Howlett gets the last word, though. In his Dirtchamber mix, he's resurrected some of the pre-p.c. Beasties' puerile humor from Licensed To Ill, specifically "The girlies I like are underage" and "Their father had AIDS so I shot him in the head." It's a cunning way of simultaneously giving props to the band he once loved and jibing at the self-righteous sanctimony of the "mature" Beasties.
"When Mike D phoned me," says Howlett, "he talked about how they'd edited their set for the Reading Festival, removed all the bad language and disrespect for women. Basically, what he was saying was" – Howlett adopts a pious American accent – "'We're better people now.' That wound me up so much. It totally contradicted their last 12 years of work. But I still love the Beasties' music, and I don't feel resentful, just let down." (At press time, the Beasties hadn't heard the tracks and had no comment.)
As its "Prodigy Present" prefix suggests, The Dirtchamber Sessions is clearly intended as a stopgap release to tide fans over until the next Prodigy album, which won't materialize before the summer of 2000. (There will be a new single before the millennium, however, plus a solo album from Maxim Reality, who co-MCs with Keith Flint.) For Howlett, making Dirtchamber not only recharged him after the grind of touring behind The Fat of the Land in '98, but it served as a reminder of why he got into music in the first place.
"It was absolutely inspirational to just scatter the floor with vinyl and listen to all these great tunes. It's not something I get to do very often."
As for the sequel to Fat, Howlett is trying not to feel the pressure. "I'm in that really enjoyable stage of experimenting with sounds and beats; there's a lot of hit and miss." So far, just one track – "punkish, with quite a bit of guitar" – has been completed. But Howlett doesn't plan to use many guitars on the new album.
"To me, it's the attitude of our records that make them sound like rock, not the instrumentation," he says. "We are an electronic band, and if we do have guitar, we should twist it in a clever way. It's about making future rock'n'roll, rather than re-creating something that already happened in the '70s. But it's got to have that punk aggression – not necessarily screaming vocals, but that energy-sound. That is Prodigy."
Scritti Politti / Green Gartside director's cut, Uncut, 2005 by Simon Reynolds
Winceworthy (wins-wur’the),
adj. 1/ embarrassing, specifically
referring to the cringing sensation felt by a creative person confronted by his
early gauche attempts at poetry, songwriting, record-reviewing, etc.
Actually, “winceworthy” isn't in the dictionary. It’s a
freshly minted coinage, making its debut in Green Gartside’s sleevenote for Early, a collection of Scritti Politti’s
do-it-yourself era music. Wincing appears to be how he genuinely responds to
those EPs, unavailable for nigh-on 25 years, judging by the howl emitted when I
quote some lines from one song: “Please,
no more lyrics!”. Does Green really
find this music--which sounds as weirdly gorgeous to my ears as when I first
heard it in 1979--so excruciating?
“All the music I’ve ever made makes me feel
uncomfortable,” says the singer, speaking by phone from his home in Dalston, East London. “And I would go to some lengths to avoid
having to hear it if I could!” So why, then, allow it to be reissued? Green
deftly sidesteps that question, arguing that the final part of the process of
music-making is “the act of consumption” and it would be presumptuous to
interfere with that.
Personally, I reckon Green’s being a wee bit coy here. I
think he knows that, alongside its
immense historical interest as a window into the postpunk zeitgeist, the early
Scritti music, under-produced and scrawny as it is, has enduring aesthetic
value. Tangled inside its wilful fractures you can hear a latent poppiness that
would later blossom with “The ‘Sweetest Girl’” and “Wood Beez.” Listening to
early Scritsongs such as “Bibbly-O-Tek,” you hear a fascinating struggle
between sheer melodic loveliness and an intellectual suspicion of such beauty
as both "too easy” and somehow "not true" to reality. Early isn’t, then, just a timely
release (chiming with the seemingly unflagging resurgence of interest in
postpunk), it’s a long-overdue recognition of an achievement.
It’s hard for me to be objective about Early’s contents, though.
I’ve been a Scritti fan ever since hearing them for the first time on
John Peel, and subsequently have followed every twist of Green’s journey,
across the records and the interviews, delighting in the voice, the words, the
intellect, and the exquisite difficulty.
Appropriately, this story “starts” with Peel and the pleasures of difficult
music. Growing up in South Wales, the young
Green was starved for stimulus and turned to Peel’s show as a beacon in the
banality. “I would tape record his show on a Saturday, and for want of anything
else to do, I would listen to that tape every day until the following weekend.
And what I discovered was that the music you found most challenging on the
Sunday, by the next weekend had become your favorite.”
For Green, the challenging stuff included Robert Wyatt and
the other Canterbury
bands, English folk minstrel Martin Carthy, and above all the politicized
uber-prog of Henry Cow. “They were astringent, even frightening at times.”
Henry Cow’s ever-so-slightly didactic anti-capitalist lyrics and Carthy’s
explorations of traditional music (folk as the people’s music) also correlated
with Green’s other teenage passion: communism. He and Niall Jinks, future
Scritti bassist, attempted to form a branch of the Young Communist League at
their school. “After our inaugural meeting, Niall was beaten up quite
badly.” The local newspaper even wrote a
story about them. “We were named, which heralded the beginning of a decline in
my relationship with my parents.”
The same rigorous, demanding quality that Green admired in
Henry Cow was what drew him to conceptual art. When he went around checking out
art colleges to apply for, he gravitated to Leeds Polytechnic’s Fine Art
department for its radicalism. “I went up there during the degree show, and it
was quite fantastic. In one room, there was a chap making himself vomit, and in
the next room there was someone shooting budgerigars with an air rifle!” If Leeds
became one of the UK’s
leading postpunk cities, it was largely due to the density of art students
there, not bands formed by locals. Among Green’s contemporaries at the Poly
were Marc Almond and Frank Tovey (a/k/a Fad Gadget), while most of the future
membership of Gang of Four, the Mekons, and Delta 5 were Fine Art students at
Leeds University.
At the Poly, Green quickly became a troublemaker. He stopped
painting and started producing only writing. This was conceptualism’s next
step--keeping the concepts and ditching the actual artistic practice, the idea
being that before you created anything, you ought to work out what was actually
valid. The very free-for-all spirit that initially attracted Green to Leeds
Poly now struck him as self-indulgent. “You know what art colleges are like,
all these kids are basically left to their own devices, and they haven’t spent
any time really thinking about why it is they are painting in the manner of x,
y or z. I just thought, ‘somebody has to be asking some questions about what it
means to be doing this, what it means to be in this kind of institution’.” Provocatively, he started a kind of counter-curriculum
within the art faculty, a highly popular lecture series that involved talks
from members of Art & Language, a collective who had given up making
artworks and generated instead an intimidating torrent of text, much of it
devoted to tearing apart other artists. “I was encouraging all these people to
come and basically say what was going on in our faculty was a crock of shit and
everybody was wasting their time!” This combative approach--argument fueled by
heavy reading and heavy drinking--would shape Scrittii, both in terms of how
they operated internally as a band and how they dramatized themselves against
the rest of the music scene.
First, though, came the “Damascene moment,” the
life-changing experience of seeing the Anarchy Tour of 1977 arrive in Leeds. Prior to this, Green and Jinks had toyed with
English traditional music. “Niall could play the fiddle and knew some Morris
tunes, I could play a couple of jigs and
reels fairly badly!” After seeing the Sex Pistols, The Clash, et al, though,
Green persuaded Jinks and their friend Tom Morley to blow the rest of their
grants on a bass and a drum kit. After playing one gig as The Against, they
took the name Scritti Politti, derived from a book by Italian Marxist Antonio
Gramsci. Scritti was a highly conceptual and politicized project from the
start. One of the key ideas was “messthetics”. Says Green, “We were anti-rock,
because rock was too solid, too strong, and too sure a sound. We wanted a music
that’s wasn’t strong, solid, and sure, because we weren’t strong, solid or sure.”
Despite his commitment to social justice, Green’s brand of Marxism was
far from dogmatic. The fragmentary sound of early Scritti was meant to express
the anguished precariousness of those for whom “raised consciousness” doesn’t
mean the end of uncertainty but the start of a life dedicated to questioning everything--including your own opinions
and innermost feelings, which might not be your “own” at all, but ideologically
implanted.
By early 1978, Scritti had moved down to London and into a grotty squat in Camden. Soon the initial
trio expanded into a collective numbering as many as twenty. If theorizing was
crucial to the group, there was no reason why people who weren’t directly
involved in making the music couldn’t contribute. Scritti held meetings at
which ideas were feverishly debated, attended by a menagerie of lively minds,
some of who would form their own DIY outfits, such as the Janet and Johns and
Methodishca Tune. Although Green was always Scritti’s songwriter and typically
the most voluble voice in the band’s numerous interviews, he never felt like
the leader. “Being the songwriter, that would never have crossed my mind as
some kind of privileged status. I knew that I wasn’t any cleverer than any of
the people around me.” More important than the formal meetings, though, was the
informal everyday life in the squat. Scritti put their home address on their
first single, “Skank Bloc Bologna,” and as a result people were always turning
up at their door. “Disaffected public schoolboys, French hippies,
Eurocommunists….” recalls Green. “It was open house. We’d be going out to gigs
most nights, and you’d come back and you never knew who would be there. We’d
stay up all hours talking, about whatever books were of interest or maybe
someone had brought round a new dub pre-release record.”
Green remembers these few intense years as big fun:
drinking, speeding, staying up all night, ideas whizzing about, music playing
nonstop. But he also remembers violence as a constant presence. “We were young
communists and punks and there was violence on an almost weekly basis. We traveled in fairly large groups, of five
or six, and we’d walk to, say, Stoke Newington to see a band at the Pegasus,
and then walking back in the early hours you’d be attacked. You’d be attacked
if you were out selling Challenge, the young communist paper.” “Skank Bloc
Bologna,” the extraordinary debut single, captures something of the
vulnerability of that period, the constant seesawing struggle between idealism
and despair. Green observes a supermarket girl, an early school leaver,
drifting through life, seemingly unaware of the forces that buffet and
constrain her, and with absolutely no sense that the world could be any other
way. It could be seen as condescending, perhaps, if Green’s desire to “tell her
what’s possible” wasn’t so plaintively heartfelt. You get an
glimpse of the gloom of the revolutionary
activist with his spurned pamphlets wondering why the passers-by keep… passing
by. The song’s music, a dejected lope of white reggae overlaid with jagged folk
chords, is as remarkable as the lyric.
Rough Trade’s Geoff Travis wanted to put the single out but
had to bow to the reservations of the rest of the label collective, who thought
the song, at nearly six minutes, was too long. So “Skank” came out on Scritti’s
own St. Pancras label. But Rough Trade did release 4 A Sides, the early Scritti’s best EP. Green became a key figure
in the Rough Trade milieu--then the power spot of postpunk culture--alongside likeminded
bands like The Raincoats, This Heat and The Red Crayola.
If one sensibility united these sonically disparate outfits,
it’s the shared conviction that “the unexamined pop life wasn’t worth living”
(as Green puts it). He describes Scritti, but by extension the entire postpunk
culture, as “a massive Romantic project”, in which the political dread of the
time (Thatcherism, fascism on the streets) jostled with an awareness of music’s
“utopian potential.” If music did have this immense transformative power, then
there was a moral imperative to think hard
about the right path to follow.
Partly because of Green’s eloquence and quest(ion)ing
spirit, Scritti became cult figures on
the UK
postpunk scene, emblems of ultimate
non-compromise. This image was strengthened by the group’s combustible live
performances, which increasingly involved making songs up from scratch. “We did
get less interested in chords and structures for a while,” Green recalls. “But
making stuff up onstage was pleasurable, I should stress. Through everything,
from the theory to the music making, there’s a central hedonistic streak.”
If 4 A Sides captures a group in their
prime, the sheer joy of making music together overcoming the anxiety that
riddles the lyrics, then Peel Sessions, the last of the pre-pop
Scritti’s releases, sees that “central hedonistic streak” disappear almost
completely. It’s the sound of a group falling apart on record, compelling to
listen to but you worry for the worried souls making the fractious racket. This,
you suspect, is the stuff that’s most “winceworthy” for Green today. But he
still finds something to praise about the “scratching, collapsing, irritated,
dissatisfied” sound of “Messthetics” and “OPEC-Immac”, contrasting it with
modern British quasi-indie music. “I heard some of these bands on the radio
recently and I was struck by how there was no trepidation in their
music, no sense that these people were playing with anything that they were
slightly frightened of, or were going anywhere where they weren’t sure where
they would end up.”
Talking of the twilight days of the early Scritti, Green
acknowledges the vein of paranoia, but
says “there was even some pleasure in despair,” in fetishising a totally
apocalyptic fascism-on-the-horizon scenario. “The trouble with that,
though, is that it can tip over into making you properly depressed, completely
inert and deeply unwell.” The crisis for Green came with that legendary Brighton gig in early 1980 (Scritti supporting their
friends Gang of Four) after which Green famously had a “heart attack”.
Actually, it was a monstrous panic attack, which convinced him he was
dying. “It was the whole ambulance with
the sirens going to hospital thing,” Green recalls, queasily. He attributes his
physical collapse to the group’s hardcore lifestyle. “We partied very hard, as
they say nowadays. We were always pretty poorly.” There’s also a sense in which questioning
everything actually turned morbid. “Finding minutiae overburdened with
potential significance, this can contaminate your whole life to the point where
you might describe it as mental illness. Not that I was actually bonkers, but…”
When his estranged parents read about Green’s illness in NME, they set him up in a South Wales cottage to recuperate. “I got it back together
in the country, man,” he laughs. Instead of giving up the band, though, Green
embarked on a thorough reconceptualisation of Scritti. Even before the
collapse, he’d been getting weary of
postpunk, feeling that the DIY scene had merely developed its own sonic
messthetic conventions. Green had started listening to black pop. You can hear
a fitful funk element coming into the music on 4 A Sides, especially on the glorious sinuous groove of
“P.A.s”. In Wales,
he plunged wholeheartedly into funk, soul, and other forms of black music he’d
not grown up on.
Scritti not exactly being your typical band, though, there
was no way Green could simply announce a change of musical direction. Instead,
he “sat down for months and months and wrote screeds of justification. There
was that sense of having to have it understood and approved and thought-through
by the group.” The band came down to the
Welsh cottage and took turns to read the book’s worth of notes. They were
eventually swayed to the new pop vision and set to working up a whole bunch of
Scrit-songs like “Faithless,” informed by Green’s immersion in Aretha Franklin
and The Staple Singers.
Green’s first attempt to “go pop” was only half-successful,
both in chart terms (1982’s Songs To
Remember got to #12, but none of the singles were hits) and aesthetically.
The melodies are beautiful, but the
production was shabby by the standards of the time (set by Lexicon of Love). Above all, Green’s lyrics hadn’t fully made the
transition, combining the old hyper-intellectualism with a new poptimistic
nonchalance, and ending up a bit cute. “Jacques Derrida” was titled
after the French post-structuralist philosopher, while “Getting’ Havin’ and
Holdin” includes both a Percy Sledge citation and the line “it’s as true as the
Tractatus”. Trust me, that’s a real
thigh-slapper if you’re a philosophy
student (Wittgenstein, author of said tome, is all about dismantling truth,
seeing it as a mere figment of language).
But none of this was exactly the stuff of daytime Radio One, which
is where Green wanted to be.
Tensions had also emerged in the band. “Although the shift
to pop was accepted in theory, I think the lived practice of it didn’t sit
well, with Niall particularly,” recalls Green.
One by one, the original members
of Scritti quit, and the group was reinvented as a production company with
Green as CEO. He also quit the indie sector and signed to Virgin, but not
before Geoff Travis had hooked him up David Gamson, a New York based synth-funk prodigy. With
Gamson and drummer Fred Maher as his cohorts, Green started making ultramodern
dance music, all programmed beats and sequenced riffs. Paralleling Scritti’s
mutation into a sleek, streamlined machine-pop, Green developed a style of
lyric writing that secreted its subversive intelligence within words that could
outwardly pass for common-or-garden love songs.
Green was still a bookworm, but for a while he was
preoccupied less with theory than with mastering the technicalities of
studio-based dance pop. The result, Cupid & Psyche 85, “took a long,
long time to make,” says Green. “And an awful lot of money. I was interested in
exploiting all the new technology at the time, as well as with expressing those
really black pop influences. It was a whole new world of sixteenth notes and
syncopation, a language of talking about
music I had never spoken.” As well as enjoying huge UK hits such as
“The Word Girl”, Scritti broke America
with “Perfect Way”.
And so it came to pass that Green Gartside--communist, squatter, Henry Cow fan
and adolescent strummer of jigs and reels--ended up on MTV and in the Billboard
Top 20.
After that moment of crossover triumph, Green got tangled up
in the music industry machine. Most of his joy in music-making was worn away
during the protracted studio gestation of 1988’s Provision, with what remained obliterated by the global promotional
tour that followed: endless TV appearances and interviews, compensating for the
fact that Scritti refused to tour. ( Indeed Green hasn’t played live since the
infamous Brighton gig in 1980). He withdrew for a second time to Wales, where he
spent almost the entire Nineties. A few years back, he re-emerged to make the
not-wholly successful but under-rated Anomie
and Bonhomie, fusing Scritti slickness with hip hop (his great musical
passion of the last 20 years).
Right now, Green is “very much in love” (not bad for a guy
whose “love songs” have often been about the impossibility of love) and busy
working on material for a new album. And Geoff Travis is managing him, resuming
their relationship and making an attractive historical loop in time. Last year, Green went onstage with Carl from
the Libertines to present a music-biz award to Travis. In fact, says Green,
it’s really down to Travis that the early Scritti stuff has been reissued at
all. “It’s a consequence of just a persistent interest from Geoff. He kept
asking…. and it would have been rude to say ‘No’!”