Sunday, April 27, 2003

SERENITY

Alasdair Roberts - "The Crook of My Arm"

Like a thousand other post cards of towns like this in towns like this, surrounded by hate and indifference, prejudice, ennui. In tomorrow's light, to you, revealed entire: gauche and too exact: just so: a weekender's idea of Scotland. Like that boat in seaside Scottish towns' welcoming docks: a crass word emblazoned on its side, revealing the author for everything he is and believes - to those who can read it - S E R E N U A S. But tonight, nothing more nor nothing less than anything else we use to secure a dwelling in the world: a home: a comfort.

Thursday, April 24, 2003

Sandy Denny – “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?”

“Never admit anything personal, codify, and render… gen-er-al”.

“But we couldn’t help feeling a weight in our air. There was another darkness coming, that was all we knew – no need to reach for it now, no need to second guess, because it was on its way.

One
Thick
Inescapable
Thought
Falling
Hard
And
Numb
And
Bitter
Slicing
Down
The Mind
Tugging
It
Under.”

- A.L. Kennedy, So I Am Glad

Monday, April 21, 2003

Fairy Tales in my Mind

The house is snuffing out around me, I set to listen to this: light by light, rooms gestured into containment: emotions, stresses, fissures folding up and storing in the net of sleep. (To reawaken in the morning). The room: gurry, post-it notes, Revenue Law: Principles & Practice, old sweat, the furniture oriented as a cowl around the television, stray ash, Charles Portis’ Masters of Atlantis, a caved-in dried-out mollusc borrowed from Franny Ponge, time everywhere. Drop a Morbier sandwich and a spate of small miracles will cover the deficit of care, suring it home, intact, miffed and intact. Nothing has happened by the end of today. I haven’t happened.

“for this is how the world occurs: not piecemeal
but entireand instantaneous the way we happen:woman
blackbird man”

Monday, April 14, 2003

John Burnside, A Theory of Everything

A theory of the world where life doesn’t unfurl in linear chronicle, objects do not descend into places in time but life is a succession of moments, each conflating time and space, each thing a non-simultaneous simultaneity. ‘Occur’, then, lightly ironic, poking fun at normal narratives of time: the world doesn’t occur but ‘happens’. The large spaces between the words woman, blackbird, man: a cruel litotes – accentuating their argued ‘oneness’ with hyperbolic spacing. Lofty enough to concuss seagulls.

“Who knows where the time goes?” - nary a suggestion of worry in the English cozen’s voice - “I have no fear of time.” You can hear these words being meant.

(Accidentally allow the CD to slip into the next song – The Handsome Family, “A Beautiful Thing” – soft mellotron and circling acoustic guitar, deep honeyed brogue: “It’s only human to wanna kill a beautiful thing.” Momentarily distracted by Brett Sparks’ voiced concave spoke: almost ‘absence’: the thing next to the thing.) “The thing next to the thing.” Her gums had probably gone all spongy through mixing alcohol with exhaustion. I can imagine her cradling these funny notions about time in between the long drunks, alcohol stilled in her blood. Rendered useless by worry: a momentary lapse at the wheel, one wrong turn, would lead to monstrous circular error, could take her back where she started. I can imagine her worrying this. This is the beauty of Sandy Denny. The music and the reality: can you imagine anyone throwing themselves down a set of stairs with “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?” in the background? I can’t but I can hold these two seemingly conflicting versions of Sandy in stead at once: I can smell the reek of her flesh doused in booze, the curous unglamour of sleep-pressed red-patterned face, the throwing herself down stairs. But I have no hesitation in trusting her when she sings “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?”

A personal note. She awakes that peculiar quality in me, one I thought I’d stopped looking for: relation, empathy. “I can’t relate to it.” A frustratingly common critical, personal response. A stock starting point for teenage obsession: there are others in the world like me. Lithely short-circuiting peoples’ predilection towards individuality with offers of community and understanding. “There’s not enough of my world in my world!” Is that too cynical a parody? I always thought we read, watched, listened to learn about others, (and ourselves in relation). Why, then, the concession? The Glaswegian condition is a strange one: more willing to look west than south: almost preferring cinematic swoops and sweeps to measured reflection: lyrics of shopping-list certainty (sodium lights, rain streaked pavements, late trains) or lyrics indie arcane (B & S, Delgados): the grid-lined city streets seemingly locking in our musicians to these peculiar patterns: as if fate was written into the engineered weave of the city: Scottish pop and deathly romanticism.

There’s a simplicity to Sandy’s song which refuses the particularity of the Glaswegian song-sheet, a broad-sweep universality: similar to the quiet flit of Wallace Stevens’ blackbird: a chiaroscuro of the map of the trees taught the blackbird by the blackbird’s mother: a pastoral and quaint bedfellow of a sinister de-history of time. This twin feelings of wonder (at the voice) and empathy (at her ability to live her reality and sing her half-world). Her harsh history rubbing up agin the Alain Resnais of her song.

I’ve listened to it almost fifteen times in a row now, trying to understand and articulate why I love it.

“What are any of us but the product of our illusions?”

Thursday, April 03, 2003

RECORDED IN HELL, MASTERED IN HEAVEN

The Russian Futurists – “Let’s Get Ready To Crumble”

I forgot I had hairs on the back of my neck. Not that he’d use something as crass as a pun but that he’d use it like that. I’m not ever going to talk about the album’s title, so you can stop thinking that’s the pun. No, it comes in the opening song’s first line, announced with an assassin’s quiet: “I do pop cause that’s what my heart goes.” Take a second to let it slide down the throat, to kick. And the delivery: each word a shallow cascade till the ‘no sir’ declares the last droop of the first line’s sine wave. I never went to the fair, especially not in the seventies, so I can’t tell you that the opening synth-twirl motif sounds exactly like that. But I can say that that’s what it sounds like to me. That’s useful, right? I can say about how the intruding drums chomp up the vocal, hiding it; I mean to say I could say that but it’d only be half true. Matthew did this lots on “The Method of Modern Love”: vocal low and layered like 3d light, to mean solid, or rather trans-solid 3d light, of course. Kinda like he sings the line & that’s put out but the line’s memory also invades the mix, half a millisecond behind the line, shunting it forward.

It’s only a short album, I know that. It only says, like, 27:10 minutes on my CD player when the CD runs dry. Which is a good word to use, I think, ‘cause the bluuts & plaffs of a lot of the drums sound like the plashing of rain. Wet, y’know, like they’re lifted from the sound of kids in puddles. Especially on “When The Sun Drops Like An Anvil”. A dense song, so dense I couldn’t even tell you about the other music. That’s not the drumming, that is. I’ll probably just say it’s all swirly and translucent because that’s exactly what a good description would be.

It’s really hard to tell what kind of music this is but that’s the point of this, right? The third song’s a clue, “Precious Metals”. He’s completely original: a beat-driven, pop, bouncy walkin-down-the-street-oh-look-thekidsinthefirehydrantagain-loveliness jaunt. Obviously, that’s what I wrote before the cryptomnesia dissolved. I’ve heard this song lots. On the radio. It’s a beat driven, pop… Oh, yeah, I said.

The guitar on “It’s Actually Going to Happen” sounds like an aborting sigh that realises its needed, looking like its going, going, but eventually settles on following through. I mean kinda. That’s a bit abstract for a guitar arc. I suppose it just means that it sounds like it’s a receding hair-line that may not have given up just yet but eventually gives up in the end. Which is a bit more clear. If less concrete. Let’s see, try: de-punked Josef K guitar shimmer, like “Chance Meeting” debanged. Just the intro, mind. Or the whole song. Which doesn’t even approach going near the rhythm. If I knew how to put both ‘crepuscular’ and ‘muscular’ in the same sentence, non-clumsy like, I could begin to tell you about that.

Sorry. I forgot to say why it all matters. The album. This is where Daniel Bedingfield is useful: to project onto. Some people think, maybe just thought, now, that it would be impossible to make a Big Lush Important Sound in a small messy unimportant bedroom. They never told Daniel this. He already knew. It’s why he made, partially why he made “Gotta Get Thru This”, which is an album. It’s big pop made in a little bedroom for big audiences. Matthew is on Upper Class. That’s his label. To make the point. See, he knows he won’t be making for big audiences. But this is still big pop made in little bedrooms. I know, or maybe just think, Matthew would like a big audience but he knows that on Upper Class that’s not possible. This is pop destined to unpopularity. That’s not why it matters, which is to say that is why it matters but I’m not going to be as direct as “This matters because…”

I nearly started reviewing these sounds using generic computer game Status Reports descriptions, (primarily, Koji Kondo-led Super Nintendo sounds). My paragraphs would’ve been threaded through with: you’re-running-out-of-life, miniboss, reload-*RE*LOAD!, ice/water/fire/earth level, etc. Which would allow me to freeze the dangerous elements in music in a frame of nostalgia like an old UK number plate. I thought that was risky, though. Reducing a current music down into gates and fences, inanimate memories of past, stilled fans - where (of course) the fan has a Super Mario print-motif - grafting onto this mobile component. So that’s why there’s none of that in here, though if I’m being concessionary, the little hipwiggle synth bit of (7th track) “You Dot, Me Dot, T-Dot”?, like Mario poppin’ coins in his pocket.

Now. It’s important that I end by talking a bit about “The Plight of the Flightless Bird” (9th track) - only for me though. I used to marvel at the way the sky sometimes forgot to fill its whole self up and used to leave little pock-marks of pure space shining through. And some nights it’d remember right enough and there it’d be: the whole sky minus its dot-to-dot-forgotten-filling. I was only young. Young enough to make this convincing. And when the whole sky (thick as a smore of snow) descended, every sound would be like it traveled three days to reach you, like it was from a room next door. This was just a trick of the stubborn air, a conspiracy of pressures, though. Complete, sparse… and thick as haar.

Tuesday, April 01, 2003

Romantic Literature

Arrive like this: stood behind Savinien a beautiful young man.
"Marthe, this is Pierre," Savinien says. "What a freakish downpour! Just out of the Arlequin onto the Tour Montparnasse and caught in a gust of rain. Can you believe it."
We are all harried by thoughts of what might be missing, arranging the room into facts:
"There are three of us then."
Marthe full-face to the mirror, eye-shadow, eye-liner, mascara, face, wearing a light blue t-shirt, pale as spring against her red hair - she looks like a lollipop.
Savinien is still thinking about their new guest. Some soft part, the nape of the neck perhaps, where I’ll fasten my teeth.
"Hello; a pleasure." Nod.
Does he love him? Not in the least.
Some left-over duck waits in the fridge.
"Well," he says to Savinien, "I am hungry."
"Yes," Marthe says, "we are."
"Mm? Oh," Savinien flattened his voice to a wheezy growl. "You can't be hungry."
Heat nuzzled at the bottom of her spine, comfort.
"Hungry hungry hungry," she says.
“You’re so much fun,” Savinien’s slight.
Slatts of light flicker through the blinds, bites of duck placed on a baking tray, a voice mumbles from the back of the room, a radio playing low.
"I think I’m losing weight," she says, as the voice sings ‘tomorrow is something something the something will bring something of something I fear’.
Savinien makes a mental note of subjects to avoid.
“Pierre,” she catches his attention. “Do you have any family?”
“Hn. I have three sisters, a brother, three children, Marc-with-a-c Paul and Jeanne, a wife, father, stepmother, and more in-laws and nieces than I can keep track of.”
"That’s quite the set." A little red-wine into the gravy.
“How about you?”
“I have Savinien.” He looks up from his stove.
“Do you work?”
“I have Savinien.” A smile softens her eyes, the tip of her tongue pokes out in a kind of conspiracy.
He throws handfuls of sliced onions into the pot, then a twist of pepper.
"How long till we eat?" asks Marthe. "I'm famished."
"Another hour."
"Would you like a Gin & Tonic?”
“Please. If you don't mind."
Pierre loves women who drink.
Maybe she smokes!