Tuesday, September 12, 2017
1987 at 30
UK pop was getting twee. The strain in the early decade that brought us Altered Images and Haircut 100 rose like a Phoenix from the ashes of the post punk world. So, instead of new edges emerging from the creamy blandness of always triumphant pop we got The Housemartins and Stock Aitken and Waterman. I was working at a theatre in Fitzroy, earning ok pay and enjoying myself and, for the first time since I was about 12, the year didn't have much of a soundtrack to it. Really, looking back changes that impression but I left the year thinking of my life rather than its records: parties at houses with walls of mirror tiles, perms that would look like wigs either side of the timeline, Moet et Chandon Petite Liqueur at McCoppins, taking a girlfriend to see Blue Velvet at Hoyts, going decidedly solo to Eraserhead at the Valhalla and then with everyone to River's Edge, but also finding Darconville's Cat and Joysprick at the local library and then pretty much admitting it and giving up on the mighty mess of the novel I was trying to write (but really only redrafting passages of it until they were incomprehensible).
LPs:
Strangeways Here We Come/The Smiths - To me the Smiths were a bland outfit with witty lyrics and the occasional strong song. I could make a great album out of half of each of Queen is Dead and the debut and the single How Soon is Now. This one I remember enjoying until it finished and then leaving my memory until I was in the next situation in which someone played it. Then, same thing.
The Joshua Tree/U2 - We got a new flatmate at the start of the year and I took up with her. It went from brilliant to dejection regularly and eventually just splodged out to indifference. She was a fan of U2 but you should also know that she was also a serious fan of a lot of other stuff of genuinely complex and difficult music. By this time every new U2 album sounded like the previous one. Like this did.
Within the Realm of a Dying Sun/Dead Can Dance - With their Factory Records style cover art and big, spooky musicality I couldn't help but love what I heard. One of the few acts I still eagerly listen to now. This one's a corker.
George Best/The Wedding Present - It sounded British, original yet part of its time despite being surrounded by an increasingly flavourless UK pop scene. You put it on and left it on. Two New Zealander brothers who were friends of the house accused the whole album of ripping off every Flying Nun band that ever existed. Only made me like Flying Nun bands more.
Talullah/The Go Betweens - If the single Right Here and its "smiley studio in Sydney" video was any indication (and it was) we were headed for a Go Betweens that would never come up with anything like a Stop Before You Say It again. Tallulah was nice and often engaging but from a much changed band. They still had some fine work ahead of them. The chorus of Bye Bye Pride remains one of my favourites of any pop song with its spine tingling vocal harmony. It reminds me of parties in St Kilda that we went to more dressed up than ever and also the last ones we ever crashed and how that made us feel old in our mid twenties. Ok, so I probably like it but I'm with its critics but I stand on the outer of them as the GoBs shouldn't have tried to sound like a Postcard band in the late '80s.
Document/REM - It was the following year's Green that bade me part ways with REM, an interesting band because they transcended their heavily derivative sound by being both interesting and American. I liked this one when it came out. I was out on Smith St on a Friday night, drinking with the irrepressible Mark Brooke. We stopped in at Leedin Records and I was surprised and delighted to find the new REM album. I had heard nothing about it. We got beer and went back to my share house which I blasted with this. Finest Worksong bashes out on track 1 and the rest keeps that up until side 2 slowly loses puff. A year later Green took even less time to wear off. After that it was lip service for a few years before I realised I didn't care about a band that had received a fair whack of my devotions. I still dig it but now it's more as a time capsule than music without day.
Locust Abortion Technician/Butthole Surfers - I wasn't just resistant to American bands getting cool I was resentful that all that guitar rock we thought we'd shamed to death in the punk wars just came back, cut its hair and did it all again and it was all American. It wasn't just outright horrible like Jason and the Scorchers, a lot of the times it was regurgitated Hendrix played against heaviness like The Butthole Surfers. I've already admitted to liking REM during this time but did so knowing that they were not only not challenging anything but feathering their own future stadiums. So, because I was so sniffy about American bands I came to them song by song (or via an unlabelled cassette as with Sonic Youth). One such was this album. From the designed to disturb title compounded by the cover art with the clowns and the tiny dog, it looked as contrived as you could get and still stop short of the mainstream. But, bit by bit, I softened enough to get a tape of this one. And I liked it. Whereas the rock revival had the Cure sound like Hendrix and REM sound like the Archies, Butthole Surfers grabbed samples from the radio, metal stomp riffs or wailing acid rock solos and somehow it all fulfilled the bright and creepy title and cover art. No one ever mentions this band when they talk about those others from Seattle in the 90s whose own sensibilities grew from this very creative mischief. I still prefer this.
Sister/Sonic Youth - The girl who was into U2 was also into Sonic Youth but that was after she moved in. She introduced the rest of the house to Evol so we all got into Sister when it was released. Now, I don't think it really stands. There are some great tracks like Schizophrenia or Cotton Crown but too much of it feels like filler these days.
Through the Looking Glass/Siouxsie and the Banshees - strange notion that a well established band should do a whole record of covers. While I appreciated how none of the approaches were remotely like the originals I had, by this time, lowered my expectations of almost every band I'd loved at the beginning of the decade.
Singles of Note:
Prince's Sign of the Times almost completely ripped off Donavon's Hurdy Gurdy Man but no one was allowed to say that.
That Petrol Emotion's Big Decision was a corker but featured the strange effect of the obscuring of its message by the indecipherable lyric (its author contrasted it with his previous band The Undertones' It's Gonna Happen as that had just been a "wee pop song").
It's Immaterial's dreamy swing time Rope still enchants even though the naivete of the lyric still jars this non-lyrics listener. I bought the single as it reminded me of the best of the keyboard heavy daze o' the early '80s
New Order's True Faith carried its bittersweet tale of childhood fascination on a tide of massive e-kick and snare, a cool croon from Bernard and a chorus that melts hearts.
Kylie's Locomotion was tolerated as it seemed tokenistic. She joined fellow Neighbour in a Funicello/Fabian retread that seemed quieter than the soft imagery of the video. Even Craig MacLachlan had a shot with another cover from the '60s. Kylie would just go back to neighbours, splice up with Jason and all would be forgiven. I was in my mid-20s and retained the naivete that nothing came of really mediocre things. Then, there was Confide in Me but that was over a decade later.
Eric B. & Rakim's Paid in Full had everything a hip hop record should have, vintage voice samples ("journey into sound" is still something I say when not saying anything else), that old school kick + snare + jazzy high hat + slithering bass and compelling vocal. Ofra Haza, sampled here, got an international career out of it, too. Hip hop's brief glory in the mid to late '80s on the mainstream charts now looks like a fad for novelty singles. Here, as in its native USA, it found its level where it was most needed, among the voiceless and the frowning. Of course there were poseurs, skinny white boys with reversed baseball caps who only reminded me of people with glue mohawks earlier in the decade. Every scene has these but for a brief time they were eclipsed by things like this. Pump up the volume pump up the volume pump up the volume pump up the volume ...
Tone Loc showed that it not only wouldn't be all good but was never going to be with Funky Cold Medina. If there had been a danger of rap getting sold as novelty party records this would be exhibit A along with Morris Minor and the Majors' Stutter Rap. Still, we loved it at three a.m. on Rage and renamed any mixed drink after the one in the title. Errrngh errngh ern ern er-erngh!
Fairground Attraction provided anyone who still looked to the UK for inspiration that it wasn't going to happen. Per-er-er-er-fect sounded like Steely Dan unplugged but was thought of highly. It made me wince.
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