Tag Archive: Can


ALL GATES OPEN. THE STORY OF CAN by Rob Young (Faber & Faber, 2018)

All-Gates-OpenThis is a long overdue, but slightly disappointing, study of the career and legacy of a remarkable and unique Krautrock band.

Author Rob Young’s approach is workmanlike although perhaps a little too much in awe of his subject matter. That said, he is well qualified for the task of writing the band’s biography since as he has written articles and conducted interviews over the years, mostly for The Wire magazine.

Gaining access to the inner sanctum of Can’s rehearsal /recording spaces gave him some insights into how their sound was created but despite his thorough research and analysis, the band remain wonderfully enigmatic. Continue reading

EARTHBOUND by Paul Morley (Penguin Books, 2013)

By common consensus Paul Morley is a pretentious tosser and, moreover, he knows it.

He was a weekly source of irritation during his tenure at New Musical Express from 1977 – 1983 but somehow his pieces were impossible to ignore.

His self-consciously provocative style was exasperating but I have to concede that the man can write. With the benefit of hindsight, I think he was providing a valuable service to NME readers by making the point that writing about music is always subjective and personal.

When we listen to recordings or find bands, we bring our own baggage which includes plenty of prejudices and preconceptions. We can never hear these sounds in a vacuum; our responses are coloured by our mood, background and the space in which we experience the music.

In Earthbound, Morley admits that his articles would “seem to be about one thing and then half way through, start to be about something else altogether” and this book follows much the same pattern.

The book is one of twelve pocket-sized Penguin paperbacks inspired by a different tube line to celebrate 150 years of the London Underground. They are intended to illustrate how, although we are all connected in some way, the space we live in shapes our imagination in different ways. Continue reading

BATHING IN BIG BLOOD

big-blood-1373221784-19325Caleb Mulkerin and Colleen Kinsella from South Portland, Maine were once part of Cerberus Shoal, as much a musical community as a band with a revolving and frankly bewildering cast list of members.

When the two made a baby together they decided to perform as a duo, record at home and call themselves Big Blood. Caleb says : “We play when the baby is sleeping… we just play music with and for each other”.

To confuse matters they are sometimes billed as a foursome although closer scrutiny reveals that Asian Mae and Rose Philistine are in fact invented names to express the alter egos of Colleen and Caleb respectively.

They have released an album on Maine’s Time-Lag records but the majority of their albums are DIY affairs, put out on CDRs with lovingly crafted sleeve designs complete with original artwork and handmade album inserts.

Brad Rose of Digitalis is among their devoted fans and appreciates what he calls their “Hypnotic screeching folk jams”.

Colleen’s singular banshee-like wail is what makes their sound so appealing to me and Caleb’s quavering vocals give her a run for her money. There are obvious roots in the old weird America but this is blended with an array of contemporary ‘new weird’ influences.

You can always get a good clue to an artist’s musical kudos by the songs they choose to cover. In the case of Big Blood you will find highly individual unplugged versions of The Cult’s She Sells Sanctuary (on Already Gone I), Blondie’s Heart of Glass, Captain Beefheart’s Beatle Bones ‘n’ Smoking Stones (both on Already Gone II), Syd Barrett’s Terrapin (Big Blood & the Bleedin’ Hearts), Can’s Vitamin C (Sew Your Wild Days) and , perhaps strangest of all, “Indang Pariman” (1.20.07) , a cover from Folk & Pop Sounds of Sumatra Volume I put out on Sun City Girls’ Sublime Frequencies label

You can really dive in anywhere in their back catalogue and be sure to discover strange delights.

John Lennon claimed to have no idea why he called his song Norwegian Wood, but it is not hard to see why Haruki Murakami chose it as the title of his novel (now also a movie).
The ambiguities of the sexual encounter represented in the song illustrate how intimate relationships can often end up as power games where it is not always clear who is in charge.
 “I once had a girl, or should I say, she once had me”  sings Lennon, immediately subverting the convention of the male as the one in control;  significantly, in the end it is the woman who leaves him, not vice versa (“When I awoke, I was alone, this bird had flown”).
Murakami’s characters can mostly be defined by their sexual identity.  At the heart of the novel is the tragedy of a woman, Naoko,  who cannot come to terms with herself as a sexual being. In marked contrast, Nagasawa is a voracious womanizer who picks up girls for one-night stands.
The central character, Toru Watanabe, lies somewhere in between these two characters. He rejects shallow sexual encounters and learns to value trust and openness in his romantic relationships with Naoko, and later, Midori.  “I try to lie as little as possible” he says.
Putting such complex ideas on-screen is a challenging and ultimately impossible task. However,French director  Tran Anh Hung makes a brave attempt and thankfully focuses on the emotional depth of the story. On the official movie  website , he says “I wanted to recreate the raw painfulness of fresh wounds” .
Not  having been to Japan, I found that the movie gave me clear visual framework for the novel. It is helped by the fact that the cinematography of Mark Lee Ping Bin is exceptional. Equally stunning is Jonny Greenwood’s soundtrack which emphasises the underlying melancholy of the story.  The addition of songs by Can is also an inspired move .
Tran Anh Hunghas remains faithful to Murakami’s story although condensing it into a two-hour movie means that some changes are inevitable. There’s no place for “Storm Trooper”Toru’s obsessive dormitory roommate , or  the vivid background story of Reiko Ishida , an inmate of the mountain asylum to which Naoko retreats.
These scenes would distract from the main story  but  cuts of this kind weaken the narrative and illustrate why rich and complex literary novels rarely make for great cinema. Sound and vision are no match for a voice as distinctive as Murakami’s but this movie is about as close as you will get.
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The delicate charm of Rob St John’s ‘Tipping In’ EP shows that inspiration of New Weird America is far from being just a stateside phenomenon.This is a magical record which I had no hesitation in giving a 10 star rating in my Whisperin’ & Hollerin’ review.

Three tracks and less than 15 minutes left me wanting to hear more and also made me curious to find out more about the man behind the sound.

Rob very kindly agreed to answer some questions.

So if you want to know why Jack Johnson sucks, how musical dots can connect Godspeed You Black Emperor with Bert Jansch or simply need a hearty veggie meal in Edinburgh, read on …….

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