Tag Archive: Ohio


"Are you talking to me?"

Say cheese!

MARK KOZELEK LIVE AT THE BRONSON CLUB, RAVENNA, ITALY – 5th April 2014

There’s a quiet menace about Mark Kozelek. His songs reveal he’s a sensitive guy but his highly personal, story songs never stray into sentimentalism.

The lyrics are full of the humdrum details from his life at home or on the road yet are delivered with such intensity that they seem positively revelatory.

He sings of being unable to shake his melancholy nature, a condition that I imagine is exacerbated by touring on his own and having time to brood in lonely hotel rooms.

On stage during this two-hour solo performance he’s not ice cold but not warm either. There’s no charm offensive. He seems pissed off that the audience don’t talk to him but doesn’t do much to meet us half way. He doesn’t even know what city he’s playing in so you get the impression that part of him doesn’t give a damn who’s listening and why.

He wonders why there is so much graffiti in Rome but nobody dares venture an opinion as to why Italians are so into street art. In the US, Kozelek says, kids have better things to do; they’re too busy mugging and stabbing people. This is a topic he also touches on in song form in Richard Ramirez Died Of Natural Causes.

Having a few rows of seating and playing under dimmed lighting efficiently communicates the fact that you take pictures or videos at your own peril. And amazingly, no-one does. I can’t remember the last show I went to when there was so little chatter and so few pulling out smart phones. “You are a nice, respectful audience”, Kozelek acknowledges near the end and he was not wrong. Continue reading

BACKTRACKING # 39 : We are DEVO!

Part of an irregular series of bite-sized posts about 7″ singles I own – shameless nostalgia from the days of vinyl. (Search ‘Backtracking’ to collect the set!)

DEVO – Mongoloid b/w Jocko Homo (Booji Boy, 1977)

Q: Are we not men? A : We Are Devo!

The title and content of the A-side is quite topical in view of the recent controversy over Ricky Gervais’ casual use of the word ‘mong’ on Twitter. I actually always regarded Mongoloid as the flip-side as Jocko-Homo seemed a lot catchier. The synthetic panic pop in the style of Talking Heads seems deliberately designed as an irritant and, if so, it works a treat.

You can’t hear it without picturing the band with nerdy dance routines, yellow jump suits, silly glasses which made them look like a tacky Ohio version of Kraftwerk.

There is some pseudo sci-fi bullshit behind the whole band concept that doesn’t really merit close investigation.

The single has a novelty value but musically it’s a mess. It ended up in my collection because high profile connections with Neil Young, David Bowie and Brian Eno raised my expectations that this was more than just hype.

“Every man, woman and mutant shall know the truth about Devo” is a line from the promo video and the sad truth is this is a very crap record indeed. “We’re pinheads all!” was an all too apt rallying cry.