Today is apprently 'Blue Monday' - the most depressing day of
the year. Three weeks after Christmas, January proving as miserable
as ever, we're all feeling glum, and it's Monday, couldn't get much
worse. So in order to cheer you all up a bit, here's New Order's
most beautiful love song, 'Temptation'. Nine minutes of
arpeggiating synths, Bernard Sumner's plaintive cry of 'I've never
met anyone quite like you before' and Hooky's pulsing bassline. So
if you're feeling a bit down, and this doesn't cheer you up, then
there's no hope.
(I've listened to this three times already today.)
Culture
We Love
Serge Gainsbourg
Serge Gainsbourg's classic 'Histoire de Melody Nelson' is
getting a long overdue re-release. The 1971 concept album financed
off the back of 1969's erotic 4 minute tribute to the desperation
of love, Je T'aime Moi Non Plus. Gainsbourg used the capital
accumulated of the back of that single's shock value (it was banned
in numerous countries) to finance what would become his most
complete work.
Essentially formed around two interlocking and overlapping musical
themes than run across it's brief 30 minute run time, primarily
Jean Claude Vannier's orchestral strings that riff across a series
of motifs, and free-form improvised guitar work of Alan Parker. All
over dubbed with Gainsbourgh trademark laconic vocals, telling the
tale of his infatuation and seduction of the teenage Melody Nelson.
It's seedy and beautiful in the way only Gainsbourg manages.
It's also a hugely influential record, as seen by the amount of
time's its been recalibrated and reperformed with everyone from
Beck to Sean Lennon to Mike Patton. Put on your finest polo neck,
crack out the Pastis and Gitanes, and relax to two of Histoire's
finest tracks, 'Ballade De Melody Nelson' and 'L'Hotel
Particulier'.
Culture
We Love
Jesus And Mary Chain
East Kilbride, 1985, two brothers, Jim and William Reid form the
Jesus and Mary Chain. Their influence on music is now so widespread
that it's almost impossible to imagine them not existing, punk had
the energy and antagonism that forms part of their sound, but it's
the dense sonic wall of violence on their early singles that
redefined the sound of British indie for the late 80s/early
90s.
They may have started out as a band of black-clad amped up LSD
taking outsiders, but nothing symbolises their insidious movement
towards the mainstream than 'Just Like Honey', worming its way into
adverts and movies.
Those Phil Spector drums destroyed by wailing feedback and deadpan
atonal vocals, first single 'Upside Down' was a radical, nihilistic
jolt, but it's in the ambiguous emotional depth of 'Just Like
Honey' that ensures the band's continued reputation, so it's about
time their disocgraphy is getting the deluxe remaster treatment,
especially as even though first album Psychocandy may be their
best, every subsequent release saw the brothers Reid experimenting
with new sounds and ideas. Such as on the underrated 'Stoned and
Dethroned' that features the beautiful duet 'Sometimes Always'.