Tag Archive: 4AD


WHAT YOU COULD NOT VISUALISE directed by Marco Porsia (Canada, 2022)

It takes a special kind of music obsessive to contemplate making a documentary about an obscure indie band who released just one four-track EP and only played about a dozen live shows. There are no videos or live footage of Rema-Rema. Even in Simon Reynolds’ definitive study of post-punk, ‘Rip It And Start Again’, the English band are only mentioned in passing to say that Marco Pirroni played with them.

Rema-Rema’s ‘Wheel In The Roses’ EP was the first release on the esteemed 4AD label jointly founded by  Ivo Watts-Russell and Peter Kent. On the 4AD website, Watt-Russell describes hearing the band’s demo for the first time as a kind of epiphany: “It was the first point I knew that we were actually doing something serious.”

The distinctive cover shot of African tribesmen was the main reason why many bought the EP in the first place. The sleeve gives no other information other than to list the musicians: Gary Asquith (guitar/vocals), Marco Pirroni (guitar), Mick Allen (bass/vocals), Mark Cox (keyboards) and Dorothy Max Prior (drums).

Rema-Rema were apparently named after a Polish machine manufacturer (don’t ask!) although it’s probable that it was picked because had same catchy resonance as The Kingsmen’s rock standard ‘Louie Louie’.

Turin-born director Marco Porsia (now based in Canada) has already gained the esteem of serious music lovers through his brilliant documentary charting the rise and rise of  Michael Gira and Swans – Where Does A Body End? (2019). It was no coincidence that Swans were playing in Bologna the day after his attendance at the screening of ‘What You Could Not Visualise’ at the city’s Cineteca. (Swans’ drummer Phil Puleo was sitting in front of me in the audience!)  

In the film, guitarist Marco Pirroni is the off-stage villain of the piece. Pirroni left the band abruptly to seek fame and fortune with Adam & The Ants. The remaining four members could not contemplate carrying on without him. Their story could have ended there but in researching this film, Porsia found to his surprise and delight that he was not alone in regarding Rema-Rema’s 1980 EP as a treasured artefact; a kind of holy grail of post-punk.

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THE BLUES HAD A BABY …..

baby rock

A new generation of rock?

Two bands who supported Sigur Rós at A Perfect Day Festival in Verona were prime examples of Rock and Roll as :

(a) an outmoded genre that survives only as a parody of itself.

(b) a vibrant musical force which still has the power to excite and inspire.

In the (a) corner were dEUS, a Belgian Indie band who were almost big in the 1990s and who are still plugging away trying to sound edgy by mixing in some rap and disco into the standard R’n’R formula.

On stage there is plenty of what The Fall’s Mark E Smith witheringly labelled as “false histrionics” and cries of “let’s do this”. Continue reading

“Architecture is a lattice of literary and academic references” says Gaby Graves .

She is speaking of her debut album, released under the arresting moniker Glass Graves. This stage name proves her point, being a veiled homage to the Glass Family of the late J.D. Salinger as well as a nod to a Claes Oldenburg poem in which he describes painting as being an art form asleep “in golden crypts and glass graves.”

She lists other inspirations as “California’s Death Valley, sepia-tone photographs and vague amorous pretexts” .

Musical influences include Danielle Dax, Curve and Lydia Lunch  and Gaby describes the songs as driven by “an obsession with reverb, 80’s industrial and post-punk” .

The Architecture album can be downloaded free here .

By day, Gaby is a 28-year-old bioethicist in downtown San Francisco. She’s a Californian girl who is probably more likely to be found surfing the net than the ocean waves and you’d have more chance of meeting her in a bookstore than on the beach. Or perhaps you could try hanging around cemeteries since, like every good goth girl, Gaby has more than a passing interest in the dearly departed.

gabyWhen she visited Prague – where she spent a lot of time at the Jewish cemetery –  she felt the strong presence of Kafka’s ghost and this resulted  in The Twin, a track written in the bathtub at her hotel room. The lyrics have suitably bohemian references: “Surrounded by garnet relics and grand facades / Brocade lanterns and Dvorak /Drawling a slow-cobbled filigree through each open door”.

Being struck by the literary nature of these songs,  I wanted to know what Gaby liked to read. She named Anais Nin , Silvia Plath, Albert Camus,  British spy books, particularly John Le Carre, and Arabic poetry. (The song “Glass Lips” is after an Agha Shahid Ali poem about his mother).  In many ways it is a pity that her own evocative poetry is buried beneath the reverb and multi-tracked vocals although,  fortunately, her words can be read on her website.

With her obvious allegiance to the ethos of lo-fi , I was also curious to learn whether Gaby felt part of what Zola Jesus  dubbed the Crimson wave. She replied:  “It’s been a long time since women in this country had ourselves a proper scene or place in music.  One of my first loves, musically, was the riot grrrl situation in the Pacific Northwest during the ’90s, when I was in junior high. I don’t know if any of us feel connected today the way those girls in Olympia did then, but I’d like if we did.  There is a real critical mass of women making excellent music right now, including the likes of Zola Jesus, Grouper, U.S. Girls, Best Coast. As a musician and a fan, it makes me really happy”.

Certainly if you add LA’s Dum Dum Girls and Brooklyn’s Vivian Girls to this list,  the idea of a scene certainly doesn’t  seem too fanciful although it could be the kiss of death to start speaking in such terms.

In this company, Glass Graves is closer in feel to the weird ambience of Liz Harris (Grouper) than to the 60s garage pop revival.

While the opening lines to the first track (The Trap Rebaited) are chilly – “You were born beneath rats , Or so you’d say” the overall tone of the album is more seductive than spooky. It has a  breathy intimacy and the  warm glow of 4AD style shoegaze is ever present.  In the song Mess of Live Vines the image of  “the sun haunted with electricity” sums up well the warm yet creepy atmosphere of these songs

The closing track  Lila Tov (Hebrew for goodnight) has spoken word lines with the same whispered intensity you find in P.J. Harvey’s ‘Catherine’ .  The chorus “And the night blew in And the light blew out /And the blood rushed in And then time ran out” – makes it a perfect dark lullaby to spur uneasy dreams.