I'm in the process of re-listening and re-evaluating my record collection, in no particular order. I'll be sharing the results of my evaluation and thoughts on the music in this blog.
Wednesday, 25 May 2022
Vangelis "China 中國" 1979****
Tuesday, 17 May 2022
Green On Red "Green On Red" 1982****
I discovered Green On Red (GoR) around '85-'86 by chance. At the time I was into taping music from radio, especially Giannis Petridis' radio show "from 4 till 5". Petridis was a legendary radio figure - I think that for influence, raio show longevity, and popularity only John Peel can compare with him. At a time when radiowaves were strictly monopolized by the state, his show was our only regular source of information on "foreign" rock and pop, since state radio usually only promoted Greek and classical music. There were also pirate stations, of course, but these had weak signals and would appear and disappear without warning since the police were very much active in persecuting them. So I would sit next to the radio with my hand on the Rec button and wait for a song to start to press it. If, after a few seconds, I decided the song wasn't a keeper, I'd quickly rewind and wait for the next one. One of my favorite songs on these cassettes was Green On Red's "Sixteen Ways". The lyrics were dark and cryptic, and the music reminded me of my favorite classic rock bands but also sounded contemporary. I got their Gas Food Lodging LP soon afterwards, and played it a lot. I started going to concerts when I got into college in '88, which means I narrowly missed GoR's Athens concert in 1987. It was quite an eventful one, too: singer Dan Stuart apparently had a nervous breakdown onstage and left, marking the end of the band's classic line-up. I was sad I didn't get to see them, but all (well, some anyway) good things come to those who wait, so when the band reunited in 2006 they played Athens' Rockwave Festival, and I was there. I had a good time at their concert but, to be honest, the moment had passed. Sometimes timing is everything.
**** for Death and Angels, Hair and Skin, Black Night, Illustrated Crawling, Aspirin
*** for Lost World, Apartment 6
Monday, 2 May 2022
The Tiger Lillies "Onepenny Opera" 2022***
"Police" is an upbeat number emphasizing the symbiosis between police and thieves, both corrupt in their ways. It focuses on Macky and the chief of police's former comradeship fighting in England's imperialist wars, and their current mutual understanding - the equivalent of Threepenny Opera's "Canon Song", only even darker and more cynical. Other songs from the Brecht/Weill play also have their lyrical equivalent here, e.g. "Poor Maid"/"Pirate Jenny". In the end, just like in the original play, Macky is rescued from the gallows at the last moment thanks to a royal pardon. In the original work, Brecht, true to his communist ideology, had already made the point that Macky and his band of cut-throats, beggars and whores are no better or worse than the aristocrats, bosses and cops. From killing the "brown and yellow fellows" and looting their land in the name of the King to robbing and murdering the rich clients of a whore, the difference is a question of scope rather than of quality. All Macky did, it transpires, is take capitalism's lessons to heart, so who are we to judge him? As he famously says at his trial "What is the robbing of a bank compared to the founding of one?" Taking this into account, executing the scoundrel would be a mockery of justice, so Brecht made an uncharacteristic break from realism and spared him his life. With typical black humor, The Tiger Lillies take it even further: Macky is not only pardoned, he also enters the service of the Crown, murdering and procuring prostitutes for the gentry. He's the same-old killer, only this time he's untouchable because he's joined the ruling class. He's come full circle, thus it makes sense to close with "Mack The Knife", the popular song that opened the original version. It is one of two Brecht/Weill covers here - the second is "Alabama Song". A puzzling choice to say the least: not only it's from a different play (Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny) but it doesn't fit in the plot. I can only guess that Jacques got so caught up in the Brechtian world that he felt he had to try his hand at this famous ditty, too. I must say that, while I enjoyed the Berlin show immensely, I found the CD less special; something of a slightly inferior reprise of their previous take on the subject, Twopenny Opera. The lyrics are, as always, delightful, but the music starts to seem a bit repetitive, at least for someone like me who already owns more than a dozen of the band's albums and can spot their frequent self-plagiarism. Compared to the past, there's a more pronounced use of theremin and musical saw, and Jacques sings in a slighly lower register, but it's otherwise business as usual. By Tiger Lillies standards, this is about average - it displays all their typical traits without any real highlights. Next to older recordings "Bastard" and "Police", the best tracks are opener "King Of The Cut-Throats", heartbreaking (or masochistic?) ballad "Hit Me" and poetic waltz "Soho Moon" - upbeat music hall number "Selfish Git" is also rather entertaining. I would certainly recommended this CD as a souvenir of the show, or to someone who likes the original play and would enjoy a different, twisted, take on it. For the full effect though, it's like the saying goes: You should have been there!
**** for King Of The Cut-Throats, Bastard, Police, Hit Me, Soho Moon, Selfish Git
*** for Macky Is A Swine, Down With The Poor, Married, Poor Maid, Free, Face, Alabama Song, Death Row, Finale I, Stupid Clown, Finale II, Victory Song, Mack The Knife