10 Album tour through New Wave
(for Radio Raheem - Milan, Italy)
by Simon Reynolds
THE B-52’S – The B-52’s (1979)
Especially after their international smash “Love Shack”, it
can be hard to look past this Athens, Georgia band’s retro-kitsch image and
hear how tough and stark their sound was at the start. The sinewy rhythms and unyielding
riffs find the exact mid-point between Booker T & the MGs and Gang of Four.
This monochrome minimalism is overlaid with the garish Americana of the lyrics
and image, which inhabit the same ‘50s/60s world of B-movies and beehive
hairdos as John Waters’s films. All this might still be just campy fun if not
for the soul-power blast of Cindy Wilson and Kate Pierson, whose vocals reach a scary intensity on songs like “52 Girls,” “Lava,” and “Dance This Mess
Around”.
New Wave lyricists tended to approach social comment in a
methodical manner, as if checking off issues and themes on a list. In the years
after punk there was also a widely felt imperative to write songs about
anything but love (see Talking Heads album title More Songs About Buildings
and Food). Which perhaps explains how XTC came up with “Roads Girdle The
Globe” and “Helicopter”. But the approach works wonderfully on “Making Plans
For Nigel”, an unsettling song about parents who’ve mapped out their son’s entire
future, wrapped in music that reinvents psychedelia rather than repeating it.
Elsewhere XTC’s whooping vocals and herky-jerky rhythms resemble a clockwork
toy wound-up too tight and careening dementedly
around the room.
CHRISMA – Chinese Restaurant (1977)
Because New Wave put further distance between rock and its
American roots, it seemed to open up possibilities for European musicians, who
quickly embraced the blues-less unswinging
sound and the primary-color, plastic-look aesthetic of the clothes and record
design. On their debut, Milan’s Chrisma sound like their heads have been turned
around by Bowie & Iggy’s own Euro moves of earlier in ‘77.
“Black Silk Stocking” recalls the moody monotony of “Nightclubbing” off The
Idiot, while the drooping synths of “Lycee” could fit nicely with the twilight
instrumentals on Low’s side 2. But the killer tune here is “C-Rock”. Its
controlled throb and silvery glisten induces a Neu!-like trance (and the German
group get a namecheck in closing number
“Thank You”).
ELVIS COSTELLO AND THE ATTRACTIONS – This Year’s Model
(1978)
Like Graham Parker and The Jam, Costello’s early sound is
rooted in Sixties R&B and British beat groups, but cranked up on speed and
spite and thus reflecting the tension and bleakness of a far less hopeful
decade. Where other New Wavers declared
both their entanglement with history and their desire to start a new era by
doing punked-up covers of classic rock songs, Costello attacks the past by
sarcastic quoting of lyrics and recycling riffs in mangled or inverted form. It
works as pop – hooks leap out, you can dance - even as the spirit is anti-pop,
perhaps anti-everything. For the Attractions, playing this music must
have felt as uptight and constricting as the skinny ties around their throats when
posing for album cover shots.
THE STRANGLERS – Black and White (1978)
The Stranglers’s classic first three albums, all released
within just over a year of each other,
work in the archetypal New Wave mode: antagonistic rewriting of the Sixties.
In their case, though, there’s one specific ancestor: The Doors. Keyboardist
Dave Greenfield froths over into extended solos of rippling arpeggiation just
like Ray Manzarek. You can hear flickers of Robbie Krieger in Hugh Cornwell’s
more lyrical guitar moments. And the overall vision is dark and brooding in the
Jim Morrison style, especially on this third album with macabre tunes like
“Death and Night and Blood”. They even go in for Doors-style jerky
time-signatures, as with the waltz rhythm of the poignant and eerie “Outside
Tokyo”.
THE WAITRESSES – Wasn’t Tomorrow Wonderful? (1981)
When they weren’t disguising and disfiguring their Sixties
influences, New Wavers sometimes looked to contemporary club sounds, layering
barbed or ironic lyrics over dance grooves. Hailing originally from Akron, Ohio
--the industrial town that spawned Devo -
The Waitresses found a home in New York’s “mutant disco” scene around ZE
Records. If Patty Donahue’s sardonic vocals suggest a gawky Blondie, the
sax-powered funk and droll words recalls New Wave hitmakers Ian Dury & the
Blockheads. The lurching groove and
taunting melody of “I Know What Boys Like” is the killer on Wasn’t Tomorrow
Wonderful?. Later came bittersweet single “Christmas Wrapping” and the
group’s theme for Square Pegs, a cult show about high-school misfits,
i.e. New Wave’s demographic of geeks and freaks.
LENE LOVICH – Stateless (1978)
One New Wave staple was the oddball female singer with a piercingly
shrill voice and a kooky image: see Nina Hagen and Dale Bozzio of Missing
Persons. Of partly Serbian descent, Lovich’s operatic warble and Gothic silent-movie-star
appearance coincided with the era’s demand for weirdos (see also Devo, whose
“Be Stiff” she covers here). The shtick can get wearing, but on the wonderful
“Lucky Number”, a huge 1979 hit, Lovich’s sing-song melody rides the mighty
rhythmic chassis of a propulsive groove. Elsewhere, the almost Cossack-like
“Sleeping Beauty” recalls Sparks, glam-era hitmakers whose ultra-white sound
anticipated New Wave.
SKIDS - Scared to
Dance (1979)
Imagine if rock’n’roll hadn’t been born in America’s Deep
South but in the Scottish highlands. That’s the sound of Skids - cold and clear like winter wind coming off
the moors. The band’s stomping rhythms, slashing guitar riffs and shouted
choruses create a martial feel mirrored in song titles like “Into the Valley”,
“Hope and Glory”, and “Melancholy Soldiers”.
Equally influenced by the clean but florid lead playing of Be Bop Deluxe’s
Bill Nelson and the skirling drone of the bagpipe, guitarist Stuart Adamson
took this rousing “adventures for boys” sound into his successor group Big
Country, who sparred alongside Celtic cousins U2 and Simple Minds in the
Eighties genre known as “Big Music”.
MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS – Metro Music (1980)
This Canadian art-school group should have been called Marthas and the Muffins, because they contained two: Martha Johnson and Martha Ladly, both of whom sang and played keyboards. Like The Members with their New Wave anthem “The Sound of the Suburbs”, the Muffins pinpointed their spiritual habitat in “Suburban Dreams”. But the ennui and occasional ecstasy of life on the outskirts of the action was never captured better than on “Echo Beach”, the hit single off their debut Metro Music. Gliding keyboards and rasping saxophone frame Johnson’s suave croon as she plays the workaday drone (“my job is very boring I’m an office clerk”) who fantasies about escaping to an imaginary seaside idyll.
From Long Beach, California, Suburban Lawns had the ultimate
New Wave name. Lyrically, their prime subject is the post-WW2 landscape of
American banality, that same prefab plastic world satirized in films from The
Graduate to Edward Scissorhands. In “Flying Saucer Attack” the
citizens of the fast-food nation don’t mind being abducted by aliens so long as
“we’re back for work on Monday”. “Mom and Dad and God” scorns the parents’
“mindless devotion to lack of emotion”. As with so much New Wave, you sense
that these CalArts students can really play: it’s the friction of their ability
against punk taboo’s on flashy musicianship that creates the music’s delicious
nervous tension. “Janitor” is the jewel: Su Tissue sings not like a
rock’n’roller but a librarian with a very peculiar imagination.
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