Chalkhills, Number 98 Monday, 18 June 1990 Today's Topics: References to XTC Re: Proving Liz wrong Re: But what about the Big Express? XTC's best? Touring? Firsts and lasts Faves and Not-So-Faves Various and Sundry
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 15 Jun 1990 13:38:52 PDT From: John M. Relph <relph@presto.ig.com> Subject: References to XTC I was leafing through a new book, _U2: The Early Days_ by Bill Graham (not the San Francisco impresario), and I noticed that XTC is mentioned twice within its pages. Here are two excerpts, transcribed without permission: But that dire, dreadfully unpunky name, the Hype, had to go -- especially since, in March '78, the band were planning their first step up the local ladder. They entered a Limerick talent contest, co-sponsored by Harp Lager and CBS, for which the first prize would be 500 pounds -- useful money to any band in '78 -- and a demo session funded by CBS. Adam favoured XTC as a model, since the Swindon band's name was both simple and versatile. Steve [Averill] suggested U2, but though an early favourite it was by no means a foregone conclusion. Because they were still in school, the Blazers, the joke name on Steve's list, might be equally apt. But it was U2 who played and won at Limerick, their closest competition an older Dublin R & B band, the East Coast Angels. ------- ... other new Dublin bands emerging alongside U2 and the Prunes. The Blades, led by Paul Cleary, knit the influences of the Jam and Elvis Costello with stringing harmonies and the scene's most danceable rhythm section. D.C. Nien were a raw relative of Ultravox whose bludgeoning rhythmic power wasn't always matched with compensating melodic grace. Slightly older than the rest, the Atrix were a jerky keyboard group, sometimes derivative of XTC, yet capable of a stridently moody Continental circus atmosphere at their best.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 15 Jun 90 14:24:57 PDT From: batman@ebay.sun.com (Life is a short warm romance, and Death is a long cold rest...) Subject: Re: Proving Liz wrong >From: stewarte@sco.com > >>From: eboneste@bbn.com >> >>I think Go 2 is worth the effort; but then, I think I'm the only >>person on this list who likes White Music better than Go 2 (somebody >>prove me wrong!), so you probably don't want to listen to me. > >Okay, I'm proving you wrong. I like White Music better than Go 2. >In fact, Go 2 is probably my least favorite album. Despite that, >I think Go 2 is worth the effort, too; but less worth the effort >than their other albums. I also like White Music better... Though I thing Go2 is ALSO a work of genius. I just like the slightly rawer edge on White Music. >>I, too, am puzzled by the apparent majority's dislike of O&L. It's >>probably because it followed a great album, Skylarking, and critics >>have a difficult time admitting that a group did two great albums in >>a row. The usual complaint against O&L was that it was overproduced, >>and critics cite the "reverb" in the lyric to Mayor of Simpleton: NAh, the real critics cite the fact that, though O&L *is* good record, O&L is **NOT** a good XTC record. The songwriting is banal, the production style is not just heavy handed, but totally wrong for XTC. It's like XTC doing a Dukes style satire of a stupid L.A. pop band. It's *way* too long; the few really decent songs are sandwiched between stuff that, a few years ago, wouldn't have made the record. >I have to agree with Liz' >comment that there's just too much stuff on it. By the time it's over, >I'm tired of it, instead of thinking "what a great album". Exactly right. A sad, sad thing to say about an XTC album. The years of making great records that never made any mony have finally gotten to these guys. They found that they could play to the lowest common denominator and make money. And they're doing it. I hold a faint hope that they can still make the record that they're capable of, but it happens, I will be surprised. At this point, I think of XTC as as an ex-band. God, I hope I'm wrong. -Karl -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Karl MacRae batman@batcave.Ebay.sun.com Sun Microsystems, Milpitas, Ca. (The armpit of Silicon Valley) 1550 Buckeye, Milpitas, CA 95035 Mailstop M21-25 (408)922-4996 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Funk Pop a Roll consumes you whole; gulping up your opium so copiously from a disco; everything you eat is waste- But swallowing is easy when it has no taste!" XTC, 'Funk Pop a Roll' -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 15 Jun 90 18:27:26 -0400 From: How Gone Is Ron <jsd@gaffa.mit.edu> Subject: Re: But what about the Big Express? John White - you are not alone. The Big Express is probably my all time favorite XTC album. I can just keep coming back to it again and again and never find it dull. The heavy rhythm that initially turned you off is probably what makes it so appealing for me. /j/
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 16 Jun 90 03:18:32 EDT From: PRESTON@morekypr.bitnet Subject: XTC's best? Hello again, Just thought I'd add my 7 cents worth to the discussion about _O&L_, etc. I too discovered XTC from a couple of videos from _Drums and Wires_... "Making Plans for Nigel" and "Life Begins at the Hop". Although this was my first exposure to XTC, that album is low on my list of favorites. I think _The Big Express_ , _English Settlement_ , and _Oranges and Lemons_ are much more coherent and unified works than most of the other things they've done, although _Mummer_ is pretty consistant. It just isn't what I expected. _Skylarking_ I cannot understand the appeal of at all. It sounds so unlike XTC that I can't even fathom why XTC fans even consider it. It has Rundgren stepping all over the feel, in every nook and cranny. _Oranges and Lemons_ seems to me to be a very viable product (and I'm not necessarily talking brute marketability here) from a band that's been around as long as XTC have. I enjoy it very much, although it does have its weak moments. Comments? Jeff (a.k.a. "n.n.")
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 16 Jun 90 03:26:44 EDT From: PRESTON@morekypr.bitnet Subject: Touring? From _Playboy_ , July 1990, p. 18, "Fast Tracks": Last summer, concert promoters had to contend with the Stones and the Who, which left concertgoers with little money to see any other outdoor acts. This year, Madonna's tour will end in June, leaving the summer free for a range of performers from David Bowie to Aerosmith to XTC to pick up some cash... XTC? Could it really be true? Jeff (a.k.a. "n.n.")
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 16 Jun 90 16:12 MDT From: <RLANTHIE@ducair.bitnet> Subject: Firsts and lasts Wow, seems to be a lot of stuff happening in Chalkhills land these days. The first album I bought by the band was _Black Sea_ and it is not my favorite album. I then bought _Waxworks/Beeswax_ and loved that, so diverse and all encompassing. I then got _Mummer_ and the _Settlement_. I think _Settlement_ is my favorite mainly as it brings up memories of dancing to _No Thugs_ at a favorite bar with some long- time friends. I agree with the memory hypothesis, about how songs can be elicitors of great memories. What I don't necessarily agree with is the first-is-the-best argument brought up by someone recently. At least it doesn't fit for me with XTC. Other bands it does like _Murmur_ by REM. I think _O&L_ is a pretty interesting album in many ways. In a sense it represents a relatively unknown band (at least to the masses no to "us") going a little commercial. This reminds of Gabriel did with _So_. What I like about these it that it gets the music out to more people. That doesn't in and of itself make it bad, I think it's good that the boys are able to make some dough after years of obscurity AND still put out a good album! I also can empathize with John White's <white@serum.kodak.com> experiences with _Big Express_. It took me a long time as well to get into this album but I now think it's right up there with _D&W_, _Settlement_, and the rest. One disc I definitely need to purchase is _Skylarking_. I can't recall why I never bought this. I think I read a review of it (or heard one secondhand) that was less than favorable. It also came out at a time when I wasn't much into listening to XTC (yes, I'll admit there was a time...). So I never got it and was busy purchasing other things. It seems like there is little consensus about this album. What's the issue with it? Is it just the production issue? Enough for now. Rich <RLANTHIE@DUCAIR.BITNET>
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 18 Jun 90 10:07:55 CDT From: oconnor!keaton!jtl@oddjob.uchicago.edu (Joe Lynn) Subject: Faves and Not-So-Faves lee@quincy.cs.umass.edu (Peter Lee) writes: > Actually, I think English Settlement, Mummer, and The Big Express > are probably their three best albums and they were released in sequence. nobody@kodak.com (John White) writes: > {writing about _The Big Express_): > It's the lyrics that got m e to love the songs. Seagulls Screaming > (Kiss Her, Kiss Her) has good word-play. I felt that _Mummer_ was an inconsistent followup to _English Settlement_, probably due to the strife surrounding the band at the time. I really didn't like this album, with the exception of "Wonderland" and "Farmboy's Wages." I agree with this comment from Stewart from last year (Mon Jun 5 12:33:17 1989, to be exact, Chalkhills #30): > "Great Fire" (which seemed to me like a bit too obvious attempt to > replicate "Senses Working Overtime" -- quirky rhythms in the quiet verses, > which are linked by a big stompy chorus). I've tried a number of times to enjoy this album, but it just doesn't do it for me. As for _The Big Express_: I wasn't crazy about this album, either. I like "Wake Up", "All You Pretty Girls", and "This World Over." Andy's voice on a lot of these songs (especially "Train Running Low") is so horribly out of tune that it's actually painful to listen. Now, John White said: >If you still don't like that album, read the lyrics as yo u listen. A famous musician (Ray Davies? Joe Jackson?) was recently quoted as saying that you can have a good song with good lyrics, or a good song with bad lyrics; but if you've got a bad song, it doesn't matter how good the lyrics are: it's still a bad song. This is how I feel about portions of _The Big Express_. "Wake Up" is a great song with great lyrics, "All You Pretty Girls" is a lot of fun, and "This World Over" is poignant and listenable. Maybe I have a mental block with this album. lee@quincy.cs.umass.edu (Peter Lee) also writes: > I still also have some qualms with "Skylarking", mostly because I > hear the influence of Todd Rundgren overshadowing the band to a large extent I think far too much blame is being placed on Todd for "ruining" this album. If _Mummer_ and _The Big Express_ were indicative of the direction XTC were going in, there never would have been a _Skylarking_. This was the first album since _English Settlement_ that, to my ears, had any consistency to it. It's become a popular thing for XTC fans to say "Oh, man... _Skylarking_ would have been awesome had it not been for Rundgren..." I think it's a great album; Rundgren's production, however thick in spots, only acts to highlight the boys' talent. Could you imagine "Summer's Cauldron" without the 'nature' noises? "Grass" without the strings? And exactly how much of this stuff was XTC's idea to begin with? In one of the many interviews Andy had given last year, he said that one of the biggest problems he had with Todd was his method of working: he said that Todd always had his head stuck in a computer manual with a joint hanging from his lips, and that he had the entire _Skylarking_ album planned out (i.e., song order) from the demos he'd been sent, even before they had recorded a note. I always felt that the "problems" with Rundgren were much more personality- and-work-ethic-related rather than actual production-related. If you complain about _Skylarking_ being over-produced, then _Oranges & Lemons_ has to go with it. (_Skylarking_ is still my favorite XTC album, with _Black Sea_ and _English Settlement_ right behind it.) I'd like to defer to John Relph right now: in the first Chalkhills survey, which albums showed the greatest influence in the "favourites" categories? Could you offer us a recap? --Joe Lynn
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 18 Jun 1990 14:46:47 PDT From: John M. Relph <relph@presto.ig.com> Subject: Various and Sundry Stewart <stewarte@sco.com> asks: >John Relph lists a bunch of interesting things played on the recent >XTC special on KFJC. Can anyone tell me where these things come from? > >> Agony Andy Andy on the Janice Long show helping people with their problems. Very funny. >> Quicksilver Pre-XTC demo track. >> Pearl >> Holding the Baby I think these two (and the track "Monkeys in Humanskin Suits") are >from a radio program, as Andy seems to be talking to a DJ. >> Train Running Low on Soul Coal (acoustic) >From the UK TV special, _XTC Play at Home_. >> Fit of XTC: ``My Mother Called Me Andy Partridge'' A short promo for John Mav's Monday morning "Fit of XTC" on KFJC. >> Mayor of Simpleton (demo) >> Across This Antheap (demo) >> One of the Millions (demo) >> This is the End (demo) These are all demo songs from _Oranges and Lemons_. John Mav got the original tape from Paul Fox. "This is the End" was originally to be the last track on _O&L_, but it got cut. Too fucking bad, it's an excellent song, should have been there. They might use it on a future album, according to John Mav. >> Gangway Electric Guitar (demo) >From the _Skylarking_ demos. What a great song. >> Drunken XTC does Led Zep Recorded in studio during the recording of _English Settlement_. Apparently there is hours of this ridiculous stuff. ------- John White <white@serum.kodak.com> says, on the subject of _Big Express_: > The songs are all so strong that they stand by themselves >better than they mix together. It's the lyrics that got m e to love >the songs... > If you still don't >like that album, read the lyrics as yo u listen. I think that _The Big Express_ is a very good piece of work from start to finish. It moves through a variety of places and sentiments, from anger and city confusion, simple love and lust, sexism, one on one bashfulness, fear of world holocaust, to smalltown concerns, fame and fortune, tyranny, love at first sight, and growing old. Excellent wordplay, melodic twists, and instrumentation. I really like the combination of Linn Drum and acoustic drums, the attack of "Wake Up" and "Reign of Blows", the swirling fogginess of "Seagulls", the distorted intro to an otherwise wonderfully singable pop "You're the Wish You Are I Had", the train noises (and Andy's out-of-tune singing) of "Train Running Low", and the jazzy "Wizard of Oz" feel of "I Remember the Sun". In fact, I will take this time to disagree with the "first is best" theory put forth a few digests back. I first bought _Black Sea_ because I heard "Respectable Street" and "Generals and Majors" on the radio, and was pleasantly astounded at the diversity and quality of XTC's music. But when _English Settlement_ came out, I couldn't stop listening to it, and in fact I still prefer it over _Black Sea_. But _The Big Express_ is still my favorite. By far. I listened to it non-stop for over six months, I'd say. And it's still the first thing I play when I set up my stereo after moving to a new residence. (John Mav also opens his 6am Monday morning radio show on KFJC FM with "Wake Up".) By the way, one of the working titles for _The Big Express_ was "Hard Blue Rayhead", and on the UK vinyl you can find the following scratched into the runout groove: "Bastard son of Hard Blue Rayhead". Also, look for the little green grasshopper on the train wheel. -- John
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