Ariel
Joined: Aug 29, 2009
Posts: 1556
Israel
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Posted on Jun 16 2012 01:48 PM
JONPAUL, maybe I can describe to some extent, very generally, that sound, and the appeal, to me at least. Basically, it was post-Punk.
4AD records were based in Manchester, and they were one of the defining production houses of that era. Many of the Euro bands were signed there, so if you want a great representation check out any release by them. (Stone Roses etc. came late '80, so it's a different era when they had a kinda '60's revival. I'm talking mostly early-mid '80's.)
Post punk, as genres go, is a wide and very eclectic collection of bands that came out of or influenced by the punk scene, retained some of the attitude, but mellowed it down. Like, after all the aggression was gone, what was left is mostly depression (not all). Yes, this music is melancholic (again, IMO, mostly, etc...), in a "crying in the rain" sort of way. Very romantic.
You might not be into that, I fully understand. But if you can get over it, you'll find some super imaginative musical ideas, what I like to call landscapes. It had escapism, they built brilliant worlds of sonic atmospheres, the records had a feel, a theme. The music was constant with the look, the album covers, the attitude. Records were like a painting, that you discover more and more layers as you dive into it. I love that, seems that the energy of Punk opened so many artistic doors, and all that were influenced were readily going to explore unknowns, and oh they did.
Some very ballsy productions, they were pioneers of a myriad of sounds that shaped the pop/rock world of today, even when they were regarded at the time as "indy", today it's of the mainstream basics.
Original use of: drum machines, of over the top distortion, of poppy riffs delivered with Punky intent, of layered guitars, digital Reverb all over the place, whiny vocals, black wearing mascara wielding skinny boys, self pity and loath, and total disregard to what's "cool". The ground was fertile, and they jumped right in, to make some very memorable music.
Last edited: Jun 16, 2012 13:51:20
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GangsterNo1
Joined: Apr 05, 2012
Posts: 17
Manchester, England
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Posted on Jun 16 2012 03:26 PM
Hi all, long time lurker but I've never posted before. Mention of Johnny Marr and also Echo and the Bunnymen and thr Jesus and Mary Chain has prompted me to have a go.
I'm also a big fan of Marr, but if I'm honest, at the time I was always more inspired by Will Sergeant of Echo and the Bunnymen. It's only now that I really appreciate Marr for the talent he is.
As a teenage guitarist in the early to mid 80s one of the big things about punk and post punk was the 'anybody can do it' philosophy. I think many people, myself included, saw technical skill in playing any instrument as some kind of betrayal or something that was associated with the 70s rock beast that punk tried to kill. Marr's guitar parts were always far too hard to try and figure out when you didn't have You Tube or the internet for tabs, he was clearly far too good in my young mind. And Morrisey was clearly a geek who had never kissed a girl, he was just too whiney. Ian McCullough and Will Sergeant were just ten times cooler in my young eyes. As were the Reid brothers in the Jesus and Mary Chain. I also loved Billy Duffy's (The Cult) guitar on the 'Love' album.
As an older and wiser man I now find myself listening to and appreciating many artists that my teenage self regarded as garbage. Technical proficiency and skill are things I now wish I had focussed on in my playing from the start. Instead I'm a mediocre ex-Indie boy who is finding new life in the knowledge sharing that the internet age has given me to improve my playing. One thing I don't regret though is the creative kick that not caring how good you were and being willing to use pedals, technology, etc to create more with the guitar gave me. I'm now playing everything from Johnny Cash to the Ventures, to REM and Black Sabbath. And I still can only play a couple of Marr's songs, the rest are beyond me.
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JakeDobner
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 12159
Seattle
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Posted on Jun 16 2012 04:40 PM
Ariel, 4AD wasn't formed in Manchester. They are a London label, part of the Beggars Group. 4AD is an amazing label though. Factory Records was formed in Manchester and counts Joy Division and New Order. Factory also released the works of the 'Madchester' band Happy Mondays. There was also a Electronic release or two(Johnny Marr and Bernard Halford's project).
4AD, my favorite label, was a very defining label for the sound in England in the 80s and even until this day. Their most important releases in the 80s were the Cocteau Twins(one of the best bands from the era) and Bauhaus. Unimportant to this conversation they also released the Pixies first couple albums.
Stone Roses, another 'Madchester' band, were on Silvertone Records. Their first record is one of the great ones of the 80s in my opinion. They are the precursor to Brit Pop, in my opinion. Certainly Oasis', another Manchester band, biggest influence. They talked about the Beatles influence but they had the swagger and energy of the Stone Roses.
The Chameleons from Manchester were initially on Statik Records.
Smiths, again Manchester, were on Rough Trade.
New Order consists of the members of Joy Division minus Ian Curtis the singer.
What else... The sound of the bands from Manchester just are similar enough nor different enough from the bands from the rest of England/Britain. My favorites of the era not from Manchester are the Cure(a bit south of London, Echo and the Bunnymen(Liverpool), Cocteau Twins(Scottish), Jesus and Mary Chain(Scottish). I guess you have My Bloody Valentine(London) as well, but their sound/contribution is a little different.
One bit importance of this era is that almost all of these bands were on independent labels. Independent labels and record shops worked together to bring the music to the people and created a really great 'scene' at the time. The 90s saw this go away, but it has really made a come back, especially in the USA where it didn't exist so much during this era. It allows levels of freedom that allow artists to make the albums they want to with little pressure.
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Ariel
Joined: Aug 29, 2009
Posts: 1556
Israel
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 02:05 AM
of course Jake, thanks for the correction. I mixed up 4AD and Factory (2 of my favorites as well.)
Other Euro labels that come to mind are Crammed records, who produced among others Minimal Compact - a mostly Israeli band who lived in Belgium at that time, made some very original stuff with a great, unique new-wave/middle eastern sound.
and Tuxedomoon - you probably know them, smoky avant-garde and again, super creative use of electronics, string quartets and whiny vocals.
And there was Beggars Banquet who embraced the early Goth scene (Bauhaus, early Cult, Gun club... and my favorite: Fields of the Nephilim. They were trippy, man, kinda Sisters of Mercy meets Pink Floyd.)
Certainly, there was a very natural "scene" happening there (which influencing the rest of the world), just kids getting into stuff without marketing shoving it down their throats.
Last edited: Jun 17, 2012 02:47:53
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djangodeadman
Joined: Jan 25, 2007
Posts: 1566
Brighton UK
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 06:34 AM
JakeDobner wrote:
England had a really great 80s when it comes to music. Add in the Cure, Echo and the Bunnymen, Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, even U2(whose releases WERE great in the 80s).
Funnily enough, I don't really think of The Cure or The Bunny men as 80's bands, although they clearly released a lot of their stuff during that decade. Both released their first albums in the 1970's and I saw them both in 1979 (I get older the more I contribute to this thread).
I also had the great misfortune of seeing U2 in, I think, 1981. Here I can't agree with Jake; they were absolutely terrible, in my not so humble opinion. I have never been given cause to revise this view, although I admit that everyone else in the venue loved them.
— Los Fantasticos
Last edited: Jun 17, 2012 06:37:56
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djangodeadman
Joined: Jan 25, 2007
Posts: 1566
Brighton UK
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 06:37 AM
JakeDobner wrote:
What else... The sound of the bands from Manchester just are similar enough nor different enough from the bands from the rest of England/Britain. My favorites of the era not from Manchester are the Cure(a bit south of London, Echo and the Bunnymen(Liverpool), Cocteau Twins(Scottish), Jesus and Mary Chain(Scottish). I guess you have My Bloody Valentine(London) as well, but their sound/contribution is a little different.
Although based in London, My Bloody Valentine were actually Irish, of course. I saw them when they were still a jingly jangly band supporting That Petrol Emotion. They were OK. I saw them a little while later, after the release of You Made Me Realise; they were absolutely awesome!
— Los Fantasticos
Last edited: Jun 17, 2012 06:38:33
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crumble
Joined: Sep 09, 2008
Posts: 3158
Guildford England
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 06:45 AM
Here's a quote from Morrissey's "morrissey condemns racism". a letter to the "New" Musical Express. I couldn't say it in better words myself, it is 100% true without this music rag most of the bands you're talking about would have never had a look in.
"The New Musical Express was a propelling force that answered to no one. It led the way by the quality of its writers - Paul Morley, Julie Burchill, Paul du Noyer, Charles Shaar Murray, Nick Kent, Ian Penman, Miles - who would write more words than the articles demanded, and whose views saved some of us, and who pulled us all away from the electrifying boredom of everything and anything that represented the industry. As a consequence the chanting believers of the NME could not bear to miss a single issue; the torrential fluency of its writers left almost no space between words, and the NME became a culture in itself, whereas Melody Maker or Sounds just didn't. Into the 90s, the NME's discernment and polish became faded nobility, and there it died - but better dead than worn away".
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JakeDobner
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 12159
Seattle
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 08:01 AM
djangodeadman wrote:
Although based in London, My Bloody Valentine were actually Irish, of course. I saw them when they were still a jingly jangly band supporting That Petrol Emotion. They were OK. I saw them a little while later, after the release of You Made Me Realise; they were absolutely awesome!
I totally forgot they formed in Dublin! And I forgot the current lineup wasn't always the lineup, I did some revisionist history it seems.
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djangodeadman
Joined: Jan 25, 2007
Posts: 1566
Brighton UK
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Posted on Jun 17 2012 04:00 PM
JakeDobner wrote:
djangodeadman wrote:
Although based in London, My Bloody Valentine were actually Irish, of course. I saw them when they were still a jingly jangly band supporting That Petrol Emotion. They were OK. I saw them a little while later, after the release of You Made Me Realise; they were absolutely awesome!
I totally forgot they formed in Dublin! And I forgot the current lineup wasn't always the lineup, I did some revisionist history it seems.
Easily done; I constantly reinvent the past to fit my view of the present
— Los Fantasticos
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morphball
Joined: Dec 23, 2008
Posts: 3324
Pittsboro, NC
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Posted on Jun 18 2012 09:50 AM
I watched that Fender video more times than I care to admit while waiting for my JM jag to arrive! There was an interesting Irish Times article I linked to a while back that has sadly become subscriber-only. Basically, Marr was interviewed about his experiences of being 2nd generation Irish living in England, and reminisced on how frequently hearing live Irish folk music played in his house while growing up had a pretty profound effect on his songwriting. (I think he described it as getting progressively dreamier and sadder as the night went on, which is how I would describe the Smiths sound too). It's always fascinating to hear how ethnicity (i.e., old songs) has played a part in revolutionary sounds, surf music included!
Anyway, Marr is one of the greats! And kudos for the mention of The Cult's "Love" album; man I wore that cassette out back in the 80's, along with "Electric".
— Mike
http://www.youtube.com/morphballio
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insectsurfer
Joined: Mar 22, 2006
Posts: 363
Los Angeles
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Posted on Jun 18 2012 04:42 PM
Johnny Marr is certainly a great guitarist. As a current geezer who came of age in the punk-rock era, if you like Marr, I urge you to seek out recordings by a post-punk band called the Monochrome Set. Morrissey has even admitted being a big fan of them and when i first heard The Smiths , I thought it was The Monochrome Set's guitarist, the humorously self-named 'Lester Square'! They had a singer ,an east-Indian chap known as 'Bid',who was equally as fey and intelligent as Bryan Ferry, only a hell of a lot more humorous. i used to describe their sound as 'English dancehall meets Turkish surf'! Really creative stuff and they even did some great and often surf-style instrumentals-look for 'the Puerto Rican Fence Climber', '405 Lines', 'The Etcetera Stroll', and especially 'Andiamo'...
Their (mostly) vocal stuff is very clever and inventive, and they had a really cool theme song as well!
Their heyday was through the 80s...
Last edited: Jun 18, 2012 16:47:05
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djangodeadman
Joined: Jan 25, 2007
Posts: 1566
Brighton UK
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Posted on Jun 19 2012 02:40 AM
insectsurfer wrote:
Johnny Marr is certainly a great guitarist. As a current geezer who came of age in the punk-rock era, if you like Marr, I urge you to seek out recordings by a post-punk band called the Monochrome Set. Morrissey has even admitted being a big fan of them and when i first heard The Smiths , I thought it was The Monochrome Set's guitarist, the humorously self-named 'Lester Square'! They had a singer ,an east-Indian chap known as 'Bid',who was equally as fey and intelligent as Bryan Ferry, only a hell of a lot more humorous. i used to describe their sound as 'English dancehall meets Turkish surf'! Really creative stuff and they even did some great and often surf-style instrumentals-look for 'the Puerto Rican Fence Climber', '405 Lines', 'The Etcetera Stroll', and especially 'Andiamo'...
Their (mostly) vocal stuff is very clever and inventive, and they had a really cool theme song as well!
Their heyday was through the 80s...
Oddly enough, I saw The Monochrome Set just a couple of months back, here in Brighton. Only Bid remains of the original band, but very enjoyable.
Bid was (and may still be, for all I know) also the musical collaborator of Toby Hyrcek Robinson, who we recorded the two Dead Man's Curve albums with, back in the late 1990's. I recall that some of Bid's guitars were kept at Toby's studio, including a Jaguar.
— Los Fantasticos
Last edited: Jun 19, 2012 02:43:53
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Jazzcaster
Joined: Apr 20, 2012
Posts: 6
Sweden
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Posted on Jul 07 2012 01:04 PM
morphball wrote:
I watched that Fender video more times than I care to admit while waiting for my JM jag to arrive! There was an interesting Irish Times article I linked to a while back that has sadly become subscriber-only. Basically, Marr was interviewed about his experiences of being 2nd generation Irish living in England, and reminisced on how frequently hearing live Irish folk music played in his house while growing up had a pretty profound effect on his songwriting. (I think he described it as getting progressively dreamier and sadder as the night went on, which is how I would describe the Smiths sound too). It's always fascinating to hear how ethnicity (i.e., old songs) has played a part in revolutionary sounds, surf music included!
Anyway, Marr is one of the greats! And kudos for the mention of The Cult's "Love" album; man I wore that cassette out back in the 80's, along with "Electric".
If I'm not mistaken, Marr cites Bert Jansch as a major influence, so there definetely is something "folky" about his songs.
What I personally like the most about him is how he has the ability to take whatever band he's in to a new level, despite his involvement in the actual songwriting being far from that with the Smiths. The The's "Dusk" is probably the best example, but I think he had almost exactly the same effect on Modest Mouse when he joined them. It's no wonder Brock hasn't released another album after "We Were Dead..." - he just knows that one's untoppable without Marr by his side.
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JakeDobner
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 12159
Seattle
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Posted on Jul 07 2012 04:03 PM
I don't think he had a huge effect on Modest Mouse. We Were Dead... isn't too different from The Moon and Antarctica and Good News For People...
And there has been some recordings post-Marr that aren't that different. Most of the really interesting guitar work on We Were Dead... is by Brock.
We Were Dead... is my favorite record of theirs and I certainly favor Marr over Brock in the grand scheme, but Johnny was maybe more of a calming influence, a muse more than integral to the style of music/production on the record.
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JakeDobner
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 12159
Seattle
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Posted on Jan 07 2013 11:40 PM
I was going to post this thinking "look what i found!" but I posted it in my first post. I'm posting it again, might be my favorite Smiths song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=opWlkKBJQrw#t=70s
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PrestonRice
Joined: Oct 05, 2012
Posts: 1725
Austin, Texas
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Posted on Jan 07 2013 11:54 PM
He has a cool jag. 'Nuff said.
— IMO.
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bu2b
Joined: Nov 18, 2012
Posts: 32
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Posted on Jan 08 2013 01:21 AM
Echo and the bunnymen! The Killing Moon!! Ocean Rain! Woohoo!
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djangodeadman
Joined: Jan 25, 2007
Posts: 1566
Brighton UK
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Posted on Jan 08 2013 02:38 AM
bu2b wrote:
Echo and the bunnymen! The Killing Moon!! Ocean Rain! Woohoo!
Just been working on an instrumental version of Ocean Rain. Don't know if it will ever see the light of day, mind you.
— Los Fantasticos
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ChazSurf
Joined: Nov 25, 2010
Posts: 191
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Posted on Jan 08 2013 02:48 AM
Okay......I read this post, and 10 minutes later put on the film Big Bang. The credits scroll....."Music By Johnny Marr".
The lattice of coincidence once again.
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da-ron
Joined: Jan 02, 2009
Posts: 1305
The original Plymouth, UK.
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Posted on Jan 08 2013 07:22 AM
I really rate Jonny Marr as well. One of the greatest guitarists to come out of the UK and I think his influence will last for some time to come.
One of the things I like about JM is his obsessive desire to not play blues on the guitar. When the Smiths emerged it felt like you HAD to play blues to be regarded as a competent guitar player. Marr showed us you could be a great guitarist just be being a great guitarist. The guitar riff for 'What Difference Does it Make?" seemed so uplifting and joyful compared to the endless twiddling and fiddling of rock and blues guitarists that it seemed like a breath of fresh air coming out of the radio. I'm glad he's getting the respect and acknowledgement he deserves, and is even being recognised by guitar magazines who generally only seem to grace their covers with Led Zep, Gary Moore, Gary Moore or Gary Moore.
— http://thewaterboarders.bandcamp.com/
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