
No easy answers indeed…
The other day I was having a most pleasant time browsing in a record shop in Camberwell that specialises chiefly in dub records. The staff thought I was a clever boy as I’d recognised that they were playing Yellowman in the background – not really that clever, since I know of only one albino toasting about the size of his penis…
One of the fellows behind the counter recommended a record to me. It was the Swimmer One album “The Regional Variations” and I was excited to see a staff written note praising the record as a cross between The Divine Comedy and Boards of Canada. Now I’m a massive fan of Neil Hannon – simply one of the archest and cleverest men working in pop today, and a loyal listener of Boards of Canada – they do uncomfortable ambience very well, and I’d just that day been listening to their remix of cLOUDDEAD’s “Dead Dogs Two” – a peculiar Sergeant Pepperish tale for the noughties that I recommend. Anyway, two groups I adore. Crossed, mixed, multiplied - whatever. So I bought the record.
I was most disappointed. Whilst indisputably sounding like The Divine Comedy and Boards of Canada, and lots of other things besides – shades of Pulp, Belle and Sebastian, The Associates, the Pet Shop Boys were all present – it sounded by far their lesser. I’m not going to review the album in any kind of depth, since frankly it bored me and would bore me thusly to review it – suffice to say I find there to be a curious lack of melody that sticks in the brain and the production does it little favours (“You listen to music on such crap speakers!” “Ah, but if it’s any good it will transcend such material concerns” “Shut up Ben”). I will listen again in a while of course – everyone gets things wrong – but I think I’ve made my mind up on this one sadly.
This all got me thinking. The conclusion of such dangerous cogitation was the realisation that there isn’t a formula for good music. Of perhaps all the mediums, music most ratifies the subjective within me – I respond so passionately and occasionally vehemently that I treat it almost objectively. This is both brilliant, but in many ways highly annoying. I long for the formula. Why can’t a x b = ab ever truly work? There seems to be no guarantee that I will enjoy ab.
The other day I was having a most pleasant time browsing in a record shop in Camberwell that specialises chiefly in dub records. The staff thought I was a clever boy as I’d recognised that they were playing Yellowman in the background – not really that clever, since I know of only one albino toasting about the size of his penis…
One of the fellows behind the counter recommended a record to me. It was the Swimmer One album “The Regional Variations” and I was excited to see a staff written note praising the record as a cross between The Divine Comedy and Boards of Canada. Now I’m a massive fan of Neil Hannon – simply one of the archest and cleverest men working in pop today, and a loyal listener of Boards of Canada – they do uncomfortable ambience very well, and I’d just that day been listening to their remix of cLOUDDEAD’s “Dead Dogs Two” – a peculiar Sergeant Pepperish tale for the noughties that I recommend. Anyway, two groups I adore. Crossed, mixed, multiplied - whatever. So I bought the record.
I was most disappointed. Whilst indisputably sounding like The Divine Comedy and Boards of Canada, and lots of other things besides – shades of Pulp, Belle and Sebastian, The Associates, the Pet Shop Boys were all present – it sounded by far their lesser. I’m not going to review the album in any kind of depth, since frankly it bored me and would bore me thusly to review it – suffice to say I find there to be a curious lack of melody that sticks in the brain and the production does it little favours (“You listen to music on such crap speakers!” “Ah, but if it’s any good it will transcend such material concerns” “Shut up Ben”). I will listen again in a while of course – everyone gets things wrong – but I think I’ve made my mind up on this one sadly.
This all got me thinking. The conclusion of such dangerous cogitation was the realisation that there isn’t a formula for good music. Of perhaps all the mediums, music most ratifies the subjective within me – I respond so passionately and occasionally vehemently that I treat it almost objectively. This is both brilliant, but in many ways highly annoying. I long for the formula. Why can’t a x b = ab ever truly work? There seems to be no guarantee that I will enjoy ab.
And yet so often I do enjoy ab. What are The Divine Comedy but a knowing reference to so many of the greats of our time: Bowie, Brel, Coward, Merritt and Walker (now there’s a festival line-up I would actually be interested in seeing!) and the great devices they employ – comedy, nostalgia, strings, vibrato, wit et al? The process is even referenced in the wonderful "Perfect Lovesong" offof (a brilliant word I've picked up from Alan Warner's "Morvern Callar" but I think Paul Magrs may have used it first) "Regeneration", nevermind the numerous cover versions of the songs of the above. Boards of Canada have raided the archive of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, watched late-night Open University programmes, Protect and Survive prophecies of doom – all the stuff that spooks me but fascinates me - with frightening but delightful results. Top tip for those as sad as me/have a clue what I’m on about: watch the 70s BBC training video “Barry Letts demonstrates CSO” with “Music has the right to children” on in the background. Terrifying. If I ever remake “The Stone Tape” I know who I’ll get in touch to do the incidental music…
All this thought of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop means I’ll have to dematerialise and go and listen to some. Maybe Delia Derbyshire will appear to me in a dream and explain the formula – she studied Music and Maths at Girton don’t you know? She used to appear in my dreams in a terrifying period in early 2003, operating tape reels bigger and hotter than the sun. Frightening but then so’s this why-how-music-works stuff. Not science but alchemy.
All this thought of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop means I’ll have to dematerialise and go and listen to some. Maybe Delia Derbyshire will appear to me in a dream and explain the formula – she studied Music and Maths at Girton don’t you know? She used to appear in my dreams in a terrifying period in early 2003, operating tape reels bigger and hotter than the sun. Frightening but then so’s this why-how-music-works stuff. Not science but alchemy.


