Friday, 28 June 2013
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Friday, 21 June 2013
Neu Electrikk - The Bridge House, Canning Town, London E16
NME Listing for Neu Electrikk gig with The The on Thursday 4th September 1980. Note, incorrect spelling of New Elektrikk & Steveo's (Stevo's) Electronic Disco
Thursday, 14 February 2013
Saturday, 9 February 2013
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Matt Johnson - See Without Being Seen
See Without Being Seen –
Matt Johnson
Thumbing through the pages
of the music press had been a weekly ritual for 18yr old Steve Parry. Having arrived in South London in a mini-cooper
hatchback car laden with guitars, amp and a few clothes Parry had taken up
residence in a relative’s house in Croydon. Parry had moved to London looking
for change and suitors to his often abstract concept of sound. Having bought
the popular magazine Practical Electronics Parry would delight in taking things
apart; such as old radios and clocks, fascinated by the mechanisms of everyday objects.
Parry often built sound generators out of waste materials; having a love for
metalwork and woodwork he assembled a guitar from scratch. The self-made guitar
with its innate personality and failure regards tuning had a mishmash of
pick-ups delivering distortion and noise way beyond what his parents deemed
music. This was the guitar that wasn’t! Without having the reverence of a conventional
musical instrument the device became something of a sound source whereby it
would be played with pliers or by inserting metal bolts, paperclips and wires along
the body and neck. Parry had learnt to play classical guitar from the age of 8,
however playing music like Greensleeves by traditional means held little
attraction to him. The construction of various sound devices, though often
frustrating ultimately proved most gratifying.
1979 - Post-punk London
appeared a landscape brim-full of opportunity.
Inspired by a myriad of self-produced music and independent record
labels everything and anything seemed possible. The political dirge and
corresponding unemployment of Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government
created a situation whereby many a musician found liberation in the form of a
government grant (The Dole) and the freedom to go off and do as they
pleased. In this culture of DIY, events,
gigs, happenings, artists, musicians and non-musicians, bands like Throbbing
Gristle, This Heat, PragVEC and Robert Rental found an audience eager to share
in their endeavour.
With a record collection that
included John Cage, The Velvet Underground, Neu, Cluster and Tangerine Dream
Parry set about looking for kindred spirits to form a band. Confronted
with a pile of music publications laid out on the bedroom floor, he would
note down the contact addresses of something of interest. This day a particular advert in the NME caught the eye asking for Bass/lead guitarist
into The Velvet Underground/Syd Barrett.
The advert had been placed
by a 16yr old Matt Johnson. The
resultant telephone call to The Crown, Loughton, Essex, a pub run by his father Eddie, revealed a
good-humoured confident sounding Johnson with the promise of a real musical
revolution. In the weeks, months and years that followed Johnson and Parry
would stay in touch. Johnson sent Parry a copy of his solo tape See Without
Being Seen. The corresponding letter states “the
project which I’m working on at the moment (which the cassette is/was part of)
is See Without Being Seen – which deals with you or I (or anyone whose
listening to the songs) as a spectator seeing abstract views of life be it of
people or situations or how people react to various situations and pressures.”
Johnson apologises for the music being so primitive and
pretty straight as far as experimental music goes. He goes on to say that he only has one
keyboard at the moment (Crumer Electronic Piano) that he puts through various
effects; this he proclaims to this being very limited.
There is a P.S at the conclusion to Johnsons letter:- ‘The enclosed tape was mastered on a ¼ “
track machine so it would be advisable when replaying to plug from your
cassette deck to a large amp and turn up the bass, mid, treb and put a touch of
reverb on.’
In all fairness the music on
SWBS requires no apology at all – the music is experimental, complex and rich
although obviously constrained by the technology available. The music although
naïve at times (hell, it’s made by a 16 yr. old) is also brimming with ideas,
Johnsons open tunings and effected guitar vying with his unhinged vocals amidst
the throb and spit of an analogue drum machine. The songs underpinned by the
wobble and creak of the Crumer Electronic Piano. SWBS is crazy portentous stuff
where lyrically he sings about ‘dancing on graves’ and seemingly a warped love
affair with wallpaper in the shape of ‘My Vymura’.
The music comes housed in a
tape cassette with a sleeve presumably designed by Matt, replicated on a Xerox
photocopying machine.
SWBS is wonderfully plucky, ambitious
music hinting at what is to come from Johnson as a solo artist and as THE THE.
Some ideas, lyrics (‘history repeats itself…’) later turn up on ‘Burning Blue
Soul’.
Parry never auditioned to
join Johnson’s band. That’s another story. Matt went on to create a brilliant
experimental album in Burning Blue Soul, work with the Gadgets and record a
couple or more avant-garde outings with Keith Laws as The The. In a letter to
Parry dated 02/11/1981 Johnson posed the question not knowing what direction he
wished to go in – commercial (as in accessible foot tapping, hum along –
disposable or experimental (as in?)
Johnson, it appears has over
the years often dismissed the early work of THE THE. It’s a shame because
Controversial Subject/Black and White, Untitled and the later Cold Spell
Ahead/Hot Ice 45rpm remain challenging, enchanting statements of experimental sound
that reward the listener to this day.
The music on See Without Being Seen remains unreleased (other than the cassette created by Johnson). It seems
the album had been distributed to very few people. To this day, the music appears
not to have been leaked onto the internet. Therefore SWBS remains an enigma and
fable in its own right - A much sought after artefact of his recorded work.
Postscript – Johnson during
his career has crafted some brilliant political songs that have stood the test
of time. Johnson remains an enigma of which sadly we hear not enough – his current
efforts appear confined to creating film soundtracks and engaging in the
occasional political rant: In 2012 Johnson self-published his father Eddie
Johnsons memoir of living in Stratford, East London in the 1960’s – Tales from
the Two Puddings.
All Compositions M. Johnson 1978/79
Track Listing:-
Troops
Homas Coma
Planetarium
Spaceship in My Barn
Insect Children
My Vymura
Windowledge
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