Gardening at Night is the same kind of thing. A descending guitar riff is descanted by a vocal that seems to have its top sheared off. The title does appear in the verses and choruses but to what purpose? meanwhile we have a bed of changing textures within the brief of the pleasant wash. Carnival of Sorts (Box Cars) adds minor key tonality to the line up and a more skittish rhythm. The interplay between lead and backing vocals creates more of the appeal. Flip sides and 1,000,000 brings more of a casual white funk vibe and a rougher edged vocal. "I could live a million years." Stumble returns us to the busy bright clean chord arpeggios we began with.
What does it mean? In an era when the most obscure industrial acts were taking pains to render their intents clear, however abstract their affectation, this band that sounded like a home demo version of The Monkees trying to be The Byrds didn't seem to have a syllable of a message. The cover art of the 12 inch mini-LP was a blue tinted closeup of a gargoyle with a band pic on the rear. They look young and fresh but unremarkable.
But the thing about this disc is your projection as a listener. If you want, you can put it on and leave it on and just groove to the candy choruses and sugary riffs without a further thought. Or, you could look at the obscurantist song titles and imagine what they meant. Phrases like "gentlemen don't get caught" could mean that getting caught is for chumps or the elite never pay for anything they do. There are things like this in every track. It almost seems to be a band created to be enjoyable with the worst P.A.s imaginable.
An interview in RAM from the time (or a little later after the LP murmur) had them from the U.S. south (Georgia) and a university town (Athens). They were on I.R.S. a label started by the drummer of The Police and his brother which already featured The Go-Gos, so they came with indy credentials.
I didn't have a copy of this record until years later, nor even had a tape of it from someone else's stacks. I noted the gargoyle on the cover and, while I liked it, wondered if they weren't just a small label version of a hair metal band. But I did hear some of this played on 4ZZZ and recall getting caught in the high flavour jangle which then gave way to whatever that announcer was putting on. It was back announced. I knew what r.e.m. sleep was and the notion of the abbreviation as a band name gave it a psychedelic tone which I was compelled by.
Little did I or anyone know, though, was that this band would not only crash through at an indy level with their debut longplay, Murmur, the following year but that it would be one of the ways you could be a guitar band with honour in that anti-rock environment, but that, as they ditched that and moved more and more back into solid concrete convention and played stadiums only with big clearly annunciated songs that would make Midnight Oil blush.
All bands who pursue their own paths must develop and change and the idea that this must be along the same lines as their beginnings is a massive fallacy. You might lose thousands of early fans when you tour the big rooms but you gain millions and that's what happened with REM. Did they get worse with fame? Not really, more that they just ditched all the things that gave them the spark of originality that pricked up all our ears. I saw them after that point when they toured the Green album in 88 and 89. It was at Festival Hall and they were supported by The Go-Betweens. That band had tried to make a similar leap and produced some essential and appealing music but never broke through to much more than this kind of spot or smaller scale tours that they would continue with. The headliners vocally congratulated them on their set before launching into their own with Pop Song 89 a song intended as irony but really only offered a token.
Once upon a time, though, they made records as sweet as cola but as intriguing as a shot of golden spirit that you might have with it on a hot day. That's what this record sounds like.
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