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Melody Maker 1987
With Phil from The Rose of Avalanche, Crazyhead, Bomb Party, Gaye
Bykers On Acid etc etc.
"It don't seem right somehow." (Anonymous dork,
Altamont.)
UNBELIEVABLY, in recent months, I have seen bands of ostensibly
sensible, youngpeople hallucinating horribly, covering 'Born To Be
Wild', 'Radar Love' and 'You Ain't Seen Nothin' yet' and I have
these lumpen antiquities applauded! Every day it becomes more
worrying just leaving the house, wondering how soon it will be
before finding an audience that might not laugh at 'Stairway To
Heaven'. The great gorgon Hippy, fornicating with Rock, has
slipped unobtrusively out from under the double chins of The
Mission, to be suckled by the pretend Rock fever of The Cult, and
there's more stubble coming every day.
So let's KILL it!
"It don't…"
IT DOES! It's happening out there RIGHT NOW! Brains usually
softened by allegiance to Sisters Of Mercy, Julian Cope and
Killing Joke are anticipating the luxuries of laziness, when all
you need do is lay back and let the effluence wash over you.
truly, this is the Devil's work. Mystical charms have sprouted
round people's necks and wrists. (Mother Earth! Hot damn, how
interesting!), flares have taken over from the colorado beetle and
a Roger Dean revival could be on the cards, posters and record
sleeves even as we struggle.
Unless something is done to ensure this species are contained, and
then educated, someone, somewhere, may even see fit to emulate
Supertramp, as they are currently exhuming Hendrix. Satan, with
controlling links in afghan coats and coach links with Marrakech
is happy as a pig in castle Donington. How he will reap the wind
caused by people rutting in medieval squalor, as their new Gods
traipse all over them! he will laugh fit to burst as babies named
Druid are breast- fed at free festivals and, when no-one is
looking, he will inflict this country's greatest, most
debilitating curse.
DENIM. For menials who don't try at all.
The roots of this revival are still visible through the top-soil.
There has always been low-key interest in the Sixties, fostered
most recently by brainwashing institutions like Alice In
Wonderland; the clothes, mannerism and increasing torpor have been
severely magnified by the success of The Mission (Jeremy irons on
vocals). As the clothes get gaudier, so the audiences,
short-haired, obtain longer, criminal records. These loners with
perverse listening habits began to get chummy with Rocky Foreplay,
and to them bands like Ghost dance come as a blessed relief! They
haven't got a song worth recounting, but make a pleasantly idle
backdrop for mooching around in post-Goth sackcloth. or, if you
have drippier melancholic feelings to hide, there is the failsafe
support All About Eve can provide. Maybe Victims Of The Pestilence
and their love-ins might work, or the Sixties respectfully
revamped with Voodoo Child? To some, The Prime Movers' socks may
smell sweet, and for the really hopeless cases there is The Cult.
"Be my…Angel!" (Ian Arse.)
THIS is the danger period. 1987, 20 years on from when the stylish
demise of that decade, with its mad and psychedelic bodycount,
became flatulent and dreary. By 1969 you couldn't move for
headlice. The UN was on standby. Do we really want that to happen
again in 18 months? A time, as then, of dim, distant performers,
with considerably dimmer audiences? Acid's already on the way back
in large quantities. IT could happen, and that indolence, that
blank-eyed approval that gave us progressive (sic) and pompous
rock in unforeseen circumstances will be with us again. Remember,
as the expansive minds of these consciousness-raising performers
increased, so their imaginations contracted.
And then came Concept Albums. If anyone seriously wants The
Grateful Dead, Jethro Tull, Led Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplane,
Spirit, YES, ELP or Genesis as role models, today's usually
ostracized pop may become heroic. (Five Star as anarchists?)
So far the signs haven't been too bad. Longhairs with presentable
variety. As people forget about Balaam And The Angel, and
speculate over the date of Zodiac's guest slot with Little &
Large, the newer bands manage an unconnected sense of spirit.
For all their ponchos, Victims Of The Pestilence are a fruitily,
wild bunch, Hunters Club cudgel The Buzzcocks, Voodoo Child claim
to be a reverential archaeological dig and All About Eve know only
too well the power of POP. Stir them in among Fields Of The
Nephilim, Webcore, Batfish Boys, Crazyhead, Gaye Bykers On Acid,
Scratch Acid, Junior Manson Slags and Rose Of Avalanche, all
Hippy-free detergents, and the fall-out is admirably hemmed in.
(Mind you, the Siegfried Sassoon Salon still calls to them…)
To find out where these people are coming from, it is as well to
start with a man who clearly confesses a love of the past, Ricky
Powell of Voodoo Child,.
"It certainly is getting trendy," he reflects.
"Let's face it, most of the bands are putting themselves into
that position. See a bandwagon, and jump on it."
Criticisms of pre-stressed adolescence are cheerily dismissed.
"The music is base din early Seventies, but the way it's
projected is not. I like the way music's gone back to guitar, bass
and drums. It's great, you've got to learn a bit about the
instrument to be able to be a three-piece band. As far as writing
songs goes, I think none of the bands are as good as that
time."
But he has hope.
"I believe what is needed is for one or two of these bands,
like Gaye Bykers, or Crazyhead, or as well as ourselves, to break
big, to say, no, it's not a joke. Bands like us, playing Seventies
rock, is happening now. People forget, they say, 'God, that
happened in the Seventies, why hasn't it died?' For kids of 18/19
it's new, that's why it's taking off. Okay, we are like Jimi
Hendrix our live show is based on that. People ask, 'why are you
doing that?' but come down and see the crowds. They've all heard
of Jimi Hendrix, seen hundreds of videos, but never seen it live.
"Some of the best music ever came out of the late Sixties,
early Seventies, music still being listened to day and bought in
large quantities. I can't imagine Duran Duran still being
appreciated in 20 years' time. I know we'll never recapture it
again, but we are trying to create something from that era."
People haven't heard many madrigals before either but I suppose
there's no point carping continually. (You have to draw breath
sometime.) Bad points Ricky?
"It's to say 'we're not part of the scene', that they're
doing it themselves, always slagging off Hippies. We don't do
that. I can't really see the point. I think there's a bit of Hippy
in everyone somewhere along the line."
(Frantically scans x-rays!) Is there any in Phil Morris of Rose Of
Avalanche?
"If there is, I don't know anything about it!"
Mock accents flying, Rose Of Avalanche's adopted Americana,
straddling both coats could saddle them as revivalists. Never one
to mince words, Phil disagrees.
"We've done it from the beginning, slightly more accessible
now. We can't be put in with this thing. People could associate us
with the image, especially Glenn, our guitarist; classic sixties
guitar hero, glasses and stupid shirts.
"I dunno, it's hard to understand. It's obvious we are
different, but it doesn't seem that we are different."
Prepared to give a brief nod of affirmation towards the idea of
good rock songs, his view of the new pretenders is anything but
complimentary.
"I think it's appalling," he grumbles. "I can't see
what people see in Crazyhead or Gaye Bykers for a start. They're
reverting back to shitpunk, not even good punk."
The openly gregarious, unconcerned vocal trio of Leicester's main
coincidental onslaught, Anderson (Crazyhead), Andy 'Jesus'
Mesquera (Bomb Party) and Mary (Gaye Bykers and, presumably,
Andy's mummy) react with little short of inertia,.
Anderson: "Fair enough."
Mary: "You know 'shit' means? It's a Freudian message for
gold."
Anderson: "It doesn't really matter. It comes down to I know
we do good songs, we're a good band, and that's what
matters."
And he's right. None of these bands induce soporific trance.
Visigoth visitations, here solely to twang contemporary
bra-straps, their emission is far from impossible. Musical
moustaches, the bands on everyone's lips, they are antidotes (in
Bomb Party's case, anti-Christs) with literary awareness; great
expectations stuffed inside their overtly dazzled heads.
Similarly, Simon Detroit of the trusty Batfish Boys, the most
eloquent non-spokesman for degeneration, is bemused by it all.
"You can cross Hip Hop with metal, so you can cross Goth with
Hippy, which would be Gippy, with Metal, which'd make it Gimippy,
and it just goes on and on! It seems everyone's looking for
something to blend together and make their own cup of coffee, but
I think the main reason it's happening is because kids of that age
haven't heard of that music, and it's a new thing, but as regards
all this imagery, what do people think they're doing? It's
HIDEOUS!!!"
Well you've got a strong image!
"I was born with it," he chortles. "We're
state-of-the-art Screaming Metal!"
As long as they don't become rending metal, these bands will
continue holding their heads above polluted waters with their
economical historical affiliations and their ego-comical cynicism,
but it's no good any of them pretending that this is all entirely
natural. They can't just have started playing or dressing like
they've never done before. The Punk and Goth years of the late
Seventies and early Eighties doesn't immediately lend itself to
never telling the barber you're sorry. They chose this direction,
it didn't choose them. Feigning surprise over people's indignation
and questioning is similarly short-sighted. To an outsider, so
much colostomy knitwear and Long hair makes it hard to
differentiate visually between The Cult and something cute,
between a hippy, a rocker and a carthorse. People are being asked
to deal with images, of dirt and malarkey, every nit as much as
they are being subjected to long forgotten ‘artforms', where
even the guitar solo, which once served a purpose,. Could start
beingthe purpose.
"The rebirth of the dirty rocker," as Simon Detroit
adroitly puts it. "Before, in the Sixties, acid was taken to
try and ‘find' yourself. Now it's taken to escape from yourself.
Same thing with music. Whereas before Led Zep might have been
something amazing to be into when it first happened, now it's like
attempting to reverse our troubled times and escape."
The Leicestershire Lovelies hum and hah behind sunglasses and
curls.
Anderson: "That's how we look. I don't know if we did
graduate towards it. Do you sit and analyze how you dress? The
rocker thing I find a bit of a joke. The biker/metal thing is
tedious."
Jesus: "If you think about your image it becomes contrived.
It's a bit like saying why is your arse burning, ‘cos you had a
vindaloo curry last night. That's not why you had the curry, so
that your arse would burn. You had it because you like curry.
Point taken. (At a distance.)
‘Good songs', however, is another matter. The notion, expressed
by some, that it takes backward appraisal to write them is
laughably self-denigrating. Any band with self-respect should feel
itself capable of writing them anyway.
"People ripping off good songs," snorts Detroit,
spinning.
The ultimate crime?
"Ripping off Led Zep badly is the ultimate crime," the
li'il devil continues, "and being accused of ripping off Led
Zep when you're not."
How would you react if someone called you a Hippy?
"I'd probably bite their head off."
"There's a fine line between being basically crap,"
Anderson ventures, "and being a boring self- indulgent muso.
You have to get something in-between. We're doing that fine line.
We're having a good time. I'm total crap. I was born crap and I'm
crap now. It's great…I'm gonna be a star. A crap star."
Julianne Regan of the undeniably Hippy-infected but still
mischievously adorable All About Eve shudders when the word
‘muso' is raised.
"I hope that doesn't happen! I've been listening to Pink
Floyd this morning and even I would find it boring to watch them
for an hour at Pompeii. Good Lord!"
Mary would practically kill for a ticket.
"Love to," he burbles, trousers torn in anticipation.
"They were a really good band. The first two albums were
inspired. Everyone revered The Velvet Underground and, at the
time, The Velvet Underground revered Pink Floyd." (An
extremely unlikely concept - Ed.)
WEBCORE, A BAND WHOSE CROSS-BOUNDARIES AND peculiarities have led
to them erroneously dubbed as psychedelic hippies, find it all
ludicrous.
Mick (vocals): "If anyone's got any values they don't need to
align themselves with any cult or label, because those are
personal values they've got for themselves."
Karen (vocals/gyrations): "They think, ‘Everything else has
been rehashed, so why can't it work now?' Cashing in on
fashion."
Phil (bass): "If it is a revival then it's just a big wank,
isn't it?"
I must be coarse and agree. Prankster pop-metal-funk merchants
Junior Manson Slags, who deserve to be in the end of the dream,
haven't got a clue what it (or anything) is.
"Is it such a bad thing?" guitarist Finn ponders.
"I don't think it is. Rock has lost its entire purity.
Hippies have lost their purity, but the kids….what are they
supposed to relate to? They're relating to the music. What is
better than that as a progression, have you got an answer to
that?"
Yes. Anything.
Ricky Powell, an amiable sage, appreciates the dilemma.
"It's too young yet. No particular band has grabbed it. Going
back to come forward, I can see progression coming in a couple of
years' time."
With any luck we'll all be dead by then.
"It's a pretty optimistic viewpoint," Simon D (!)
rationalizes. "I presume they're saying we're distilling the
essence of rock ‘n' roll and we'll end up with a finer, purer
thing at the end of it but a lot of the original rock they're
taking off had nothing to do with the songs so much as being
there. I suppose. Not that I was, but the whole atmosphere that
went with it, as opposed to anything you could distill out of
it…"
THOSE who want to forget the low stakes of the past are bound to
fall upon them and it's simply a question of how many of our prime
young things and thugs will sink so low. How many will jettison
shares in favor of stocks?
Graven images appropriated by raven lunatics like Zodiac Mindwarp
and The C**t, with poorly rehashed Motorhead and Bad Company
tributes is all bad enough, but with their craving for hollow
theatrics and emotions they may manage it on a huge scale, because
what all these bands had to do before was turn a club band into
‘a show'. With Old father Bono, one of the biggest hippies of
the lot because them they can doze contentedly, safe in the
knowledge that, beneath a landslide of merchandising, in some
foreign field forever Woodstock, only cretins connect. (They also
have the technology.)
"I can put my hand on my heart," Julianne Regan says,
during her Napoleonic impersonation, "and say we do put a
very genuine feeling of love and concern into our songs, so the
good that comes out of it is we'll give some real joy to people,
and get some back for ourselves.
"I'm a bit concerned we're lumped in with all these people
because I do dread it becoming a bit of a joke, trivialized and
turned into a movement because all the bad apples will embarrass
the good. I've got a feeling that these other…folk, are in great
competition to be the vanguard of the Hippym Rock movement. Come
the day of reckoning the bandwagon jumpers, if that's what they
are, will be seen in their true colors. I hope they're getting
ready to hang their heads in shame."
Care to name names?
"I couldn't, ‘cos that's a ‘bad vibe' isn't it?"
(She screeches, which saves me bothering.)
Speculating what degree of involvement Chernobyl has played in
this dreadful occurrence I am interrupted by Mary Byker, being as
sweet as pie.
"Are we going to impose this kind of fascism and say people
are not allowed to be hippies? With youth culture now you've got a
huge spectrum of how you can represent yourself. Hippies represent
pace and love and if that's realistic to them, fair enough."
But we have to stop them, to help them. And alleviate future
breakdowns. Nobody is more embarrassed about the first Hippy and
Rock explosion that lingered bombastically on for five years than
those who took part. These casualties now thrive as capitalist
dogs, running to evade their memories.
"It's like asking us what we think of Curiosity Killed The
Cat," Mary pipes up, taking the question right out of my
mouth. "You see' The Sun' and they're taking acid. A tenuous
word, ‘hippies'."
Anderson: "I don't give a shit. I just wanna make loads of
money."
Simon Detroit polishes off a Norton or two and assesses it all.
"I think the symptoms will be dying out by the end of the
year and those happy little microbes with the strongest sense of
melody will be left at the end. It is happening, that's why you're
writing about it. Front pages of Sounds! When that starts, the
tumbleweed gets rolling. There's no way you can stop it until it
wears itself out and falls apart which is, pessimism akimbo, what
will happen and something else ill come along. People playing bits
of toast, or something."
That's all we need. A Bread revival.
Hippy begat Rock, begat Pompous Drivel until, on the seventh day
of the seventh decade God gave up the meths, saw sense, and
invented Punk. Hippy and Rock have no place now if recreating
sloth, because the old days were times of truce, when that was
still affordable. Days of optimism are over, only cynicism and
anger bears fruit. We need Crazyhead and Batfish Byker Bombs (etc)
over and above the Old Order, as you may need your head dressing
removed.
"It don't seem right somehow." (Anonymous Dork, 18 years
on.)
Look around and wince. McLaren said ‘Never trust a Hippy', which
was a bit rich coming from the likes of him, but the idea holds
true. (Never trust anyone with the initials M.M.) We've got The
Mission, pleasant men, pleasant tunes. Zodiac! Peasant men,
peasant tunes. Aren't we lucky?
So, before anyone spikes your guns, putting petunias down your
barrel, get those machine gun emplacements implanted around those
suburban lawns. Alternatively, hold your nose and pray that an icy
sense of perspective will blow the flower children back into the
compost heap of credibility where they belong.
Chris Roberts' recent (accurate) observation, that Hippy clothes
always look like you've been sick over yourself, ties in with a
couple of things. Mary Byker was correct in his earlier musing.
The Longhairs aren't committing any greater crime than the people
who constantly open the Velvet Underground casket to tamper with
the remains. They simply look worse.
All good things come to those who hate. Take a good look at what
is happening an marvel at what a hopelessly lackluster
‘happening' it is, if you're seeking Ancient Britons then study
the latest Cult video. Notice how they, and the Longhairs at gigs,
look. How the facial countenance and coiffure strive to suggest
torrid oral sex with decomposing mammoths. Then take those
sleeping pills. Plagiarists will always claim they were only
obeying orders, but we know, don't we children?
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