Showing posts with label joy division. Show all posts
Showing posts with label joy division. Show all posts

Friday, December 28, 2007

ZERO: Martin Hannett


Martin "Zero" Hannett

Martin "Zero" Hannett was born May 31, 1948 in Manchester, England. An accomplished student, he received a degree in Chemistry from Manchester Polytechnic. While in college he was a member of the campus social committee and was responsible for booking bands that played at the school. After graduation he accepted a job in a laboratory. The lab job was merely a means to an end as he continued to pursue his passion for music by playing bass in several bands and working as a sound man and roadie. Ultimately music won out and he quit his job to run a musicians cooperative, along with friend Tosh Ryan, called Music Force. The cooperative would book shows and rent PA equipment. The cooperative also had a publicity department that would hang flyer's promoting various shows. From the money earned the pair purchased space to achieve their ultimate goal, setting up a recording studio. The pair initially took any recording commissions that came their way, from recording theatres troupes to producing soundtracks for cartoons. By 1976 Hannett and Tosh established, along with others, Rabid Records which they used to promote a local glam rock group called Slaughter and the Dogs who had experienced some local success. Hannett found himself in the right place at the right time. The music scene in Manchester and throughout England was bursting with promise as Punk groups were forming almost daily and each looking for a way to have their music recorded and sold. Hannett's first professional production job, under the name Martin Zero, involved a local Punk group he had booked a few shows for, the Buzzcocks. Lead singer Howard Devoto would later recall that Hannett was chosen for the simple fact that he was the only person they could find that even called themselves a producer. From this effort evolved "Spiral Scratch", a 4-song EP recorded in a dizzying 8 hour period on December 28, 1976. Apart from being one of the first Punk recordings available to the buying public, it established the DIY ethic that exemplified everything that the Punk movement stood for. The highlight of the EP was the song "Boredom", a Buzzcock fan favorite. It also marked the beginning and end for Devoto with the Buzzcocks as he left shortly after the EP's release to form another groundbreaking Punk outfit, Magazine. Four months later Hannett would produce "Cranked Up Really High" by Slaughter and the Dogs on his Rabid label, but the group would break-up shortly thereafter. Hannett now assumed the title of in-house producer for the Rabid label.

Hannett in studio



For the remainder of 1977 into 1978 Hannett would working with an assortment of groups, all meeting with little to no success. In the Spring of 1978 he went into the studio with a Manchester University drama student Graham Fellows who, recording under the name Jilted John, would release a single entitled "Jilted John". The tried and true story of young love come and gone was an instant hit and, shortly after being snatched up by recording giant EMI, went to number 4 on the national charts. The single ultimately sold over a quarter of a million copies and gave Hannett his first true hit and established his name as a producer. Next Hannett found himself in the studio with art-punk John Cooper Clarke (right), the English Punk version of Bob Dylan. Hannett would produce a handful of singles and several albums for Clarke over the next several years that ultimately led to Clarke getting a major label deal with Epic. During this time Hannett would also form, along with keyboardist Steve Hopkins, The Invisible Girls, to act as Clarkes backing band. Hannett would use The Invisible Girls to support a number of artists throughout the remainder of his career, including former Velvet Underground member Nico and ex-Penetration lead singer Pauline Murray.

The use of electronic effects, be it drum machines, digital delay or other non-musical elements were a trademark of any Hannett produced recording. This was no more evident than on his work with Joy Division (right). Hannett, now producing for the Factory record label (which he helped co-found with Tony Wilson), had his first experience with Joy Division in 1979 and the recording of their groundbreaking debut album "Unknown Pleasures". Initially reluctant to use any synthesizers, Hannett convinced the group to include them on the record. The results stand as the seminal Hannett recording, employing the various electronic devices and non-musical noise, such as breaking glass, to augment the bands classic post-punk style. Hannett would go on to produce every studio track recorded by Joy Division. The suicide of Joy Division lead singer Ian Curtis hit Hannett hard. While most of the members of Joy Division were indifferent to Hannett's use of electronics to frame the bands sound, Curtis was always a strong ally (Hannett was portrayed by actor Ben Naylor in the Ian Curtis biopic "Control" released this past year).

During this period of his career Hannett's use of drugs, especially heroin, began to escalate. Despite his personal shortcomings, his work with Joy Division still made him a producer of choice. 1979 to 1981 were the high water mark of his creative output. A young Irish band, inspired by his work with Joy Division, sought Hannett out to produce there second single. In May, 1980 Hannett entered a Dublin studio with U2 to begin work on recording and the result, "11 O'Clock Tick Tock", would be his one and only collaboration with the group. Hannett's working relationship with the band was tenuous and the band would eventually utilize Steve Lillywhite for the remainder of the debut album "Boy", which was released toward the end of 1980. The experience was so bad that the group would leave "11 O'Clock Tick Tock" off the album all together. Around the same time the Psychedelic Furs would call Hannett's number, having been inspired by his work with John Cooper Clarke, asking him to produce 4 songs initially slated to be issued on an EP. The EP fell through but two of the songs, "Susan's Strange" and "Soap Commercial" would later be included on the groups self-titled debut album upon it's release in the United States. Hannett would work with the group a year later, steering the song "Pretty in Pink" during the recording of their follow-up effort "Talk Talk Talk" in 1981. Studio sessions with old Buzzcock acquaintance Devoto would follow, producing Magazine's (left) third full length album "The Correct Use of Soap" as well as singles by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark ("Messages"), London based band The Only Ones ("Oh Lucinda"), and Wasted Youth ("Rebecca's Room"). Hannett was as known for his stubbornness and dictatorial production style as he was for the electronic and digital sounds he added to each recording he was associated with.



The years from 1982 to 1988 would come to be known as Hannett's darkest. Becoming more unpredictable, deeply in debt and harboring a profound drug problem, Hannett disappeared from the recording studio. A prolonged law suit with Factory over missing wages cost him another two years and he would not reappear in the studio until the late 1980's. Having kicked heroin, he patched up his differences with Factory and eventually worked with the Happy Mondays in 1988 ("Bummed") and Kitchens of Distinction in 1990 (the single "Quick as Rainbows"). But he his earlier success would elude him, primarily due to his heroin habit having given way to his abuse of alcohol. His heavy dependence on alcohol further deteriorated his mental and physical health, effectively ending his recording career. He died on April 18, 1991 of heart failure.

Links:

Martin Hannett: http://www.martinhannett.co.uk/bio.htm http://www.discogs.com/artist/Martin+Hannett
Factory Records: http://www.factoryrecords.net/ http://www.partypeoplemovie.com/
Buzzcocks: http://www.buzzcocks.com/
Joy Division: http://www.incubation.ch/ http://members.aol.com/lwtua/joydiv.htm http://www.enkiri.com/joy/joy_division.html http://www.controlthemovie.com/
Magazine: http://shotbybothsides.com/
John Cooper Clarke: http://www.johncooperclarke.com/

Sunday, November 25, 2007

A Good Noise: Half Japanese

Half Japanese


The birthplace of Punk? CBGB's (http://www.cbgb.com/)? A clothing/fetish shop in London? Depending on who you ask, the birthplace of Punk will be identified as one of any number of locations. Some say the single greatest influence on the masses to start bands that would come to be defined as Punk and New Wave was a performance by the Sex Pistols (http://www.sex-pistols.net/). Held at the Manchester Lesser Free Trade Hall ( http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2002/02/21619.html) on June 4, 1976. Most, if not all, of the 40 or 50 souls in attendance that night went on to start bands...with names like Joy Division (http://www.joydiv.org/), The Smiths (http://www.askmeaskmeaskme.com/) and The Fall (www.visi.com/fall).

But if you ask the parents of Jad (http://jadfair.org/) and David Fair, Punk can be traced directly to the bedroom of their two sons, located in the 200 year old house they owned in Uniontown, Md. Somewhere between 1975 and 1976 the Fair brothers, despite little to no musical ability, decided they wanted to form a band. Self taught, neither Fair brother had the ability to play guitar beyond the one or two notes they would repeat over and over. The remaining members, Mark Lickling and brothers Ricky and John Dreyfuss , formed the rhythmic core of the group. Somewhere in 1977 the group, under the name Half Japanese, made their first home recordings, copying the cassettes and adding forming their own imprint, the 50 Skidillion Watts label. Entitled "Calling All Girls", the tapes were handed out or mailed to friends and acquaintances as well as any record label the pair could locate an address for. The lone response they received was from Warner Bros. who stated in a written response that they defintely would NOT be releasing it. Each cassette was decorated by hand and in some cases the recipients were addressed by name on their individual cassette. The cassettes were shared and copied throughout the underground resulting in a recording deal with a small British label Armageddon.





David and Jad Fair

In 1980 Half Japanese issued a 3 record box set entitled "1/2 Gentlemen/Not Beasts". A collection of early home recordings as well as covers (Dylan, the Temptations and Buddy Holly) and various guitar/electronic feedback noise, the release marked the first known multi-record box set ever issued. The fact that "1/2 Gentlemen/No Beasts" included music that was such a drastic (not to mention strange) departure from anything that had been released to date made the box-set an instant cult phenomenon. It's limited supply only fueled the buzz. Throughout the early 80's Half Japanese would issue an odd assortment of recordings. A combination of distorted feedback and minimalist ranting, both "Loud" (their second Armagedeon release in 1981) and "The Horrible" Ep (released under the Press label in 1983) only cemented their cult appeal. David Fair would later describe a Half Japanese song as either "a love song or a scary song". Their fascination with both the opposite sex and horror movies permeated virtually all of their early work. Jad's unique voice left each song, regardless of the topic or subject, with an innocence and a vulnerability that was not heard by any artist of the day. Throughout this period the group would maintain a mailing list of 50 or so fans that they would send artwork and cassette tape recordings to, free of charge.

Recording for the Iridescence label, the 1984 releases of "Our Solar System" and "Sing No Evil" marked a rather dramatic leap forward for the group. Where Solar System branched out, carrying a more jazzy feel, Sing No Evil was the groups most accessible, listener friendly effort to date. Most fans and followers agree that Sing No Evil was the best work of their careers. The assortment of backing musicians provided a much cleaner pallet for Jad's improved songwriting to be heard. By the mid 80's David Fair began to withdraw from the group to turn his attention toward raising his family.


Jad Fair

Jad carried on the Half Japanese name with a varying group of musicians as well as starting projects as a solo act. Finding himself without a label following the demise of Iridescence, Jad sought to revive his homegrown 50 Skidillion Watts label, but lacked funding. Enter longtime admirer and magician Penn Jillette (http://www.pennfans.net/). As detailed in the excellent 1993 documentary "The Band That Would Be King", this was a time of great monetary success in Jillette's career. But the monetary success came in direct conflict with his own artistic standards. A reoccurring character on "Miami Vice" (http://www.miami-vice.org/) allowed him to make some good money. The fact he was receiving the money for this "work" on the almost cartoonish 80's crime drama made it a bitter pill to swallow. After hearing of Jad's plight, he decided that the spoils of the Miami Vice gig could, after all, be used for a greater good. Using that money, Jillette helped Jad revive the 50 Skidillion Watts label and secure the master recordings to Half Japanese's latest recordings, which were being held ransom by the owner of the failed Iridescent. On the shelf for over four years and now rescued from Iridescent, "Charmed Life" was released in 1988. A review in Spin Magazine (http://www.spin.com/) at the time ranked the recording with "Exile on Main Street" and "Sgt. Peppers" as one of the most influential recordings ever released.
The groups releases ending the 80's became more experimental in nature and were not as well received as their earlier work. But in 1993 one of the groups fans, Nirvana's (http://www.nirvana-music.com/) Kurt Cobain, asked Half Japanese to be the opening act on the eastern leg of their 1993 "In Utero" tour, exposing Half Japanese to an entire new audience. Velvet Underground drummer Moe Tucker (http://www.spearedpeanut.com/tajmoehal/) would also become a strong advocate of the group, not only playing on the 1993 release "Fire In The Sky" but also utilizing the group to act as backing band on her own tours and include Jad as a guest on her own solo releases. By the mid 90's Jad turned his attention to the visual arts (http://jadfair.org/art/), exhibiting his paintings throughout Europe. Following a string of live and greatest hits packages, Jad reformed Half Japanese after a four year lay off and released "Hello" in 2001 on Alternative Tentacles (http://www.alternativetentacles.com/).
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on bass, watt:

We have all had those momentary brushes with a "celebrity". Everyone's idea of a celebrity will vary, but one of my more memorable close encounters came with Mike Watt (http://www.hootpage.com/). It was probably sometime in 1990, although the exact date cannot be determined by me, my wife or best friend as to when exactly we traveled to Lawrence, KS to see fIREHOSE (http://www.trouserpress.com/entry.php?a=firehose&tr=y) at The Bottleneck (http://www.thebottlenecklive.com/). We got there early, took our position at the front of the stage and waited with the 10 or so other people that were there for the show to start. Opening up that night was Sebadoh (http://www.sebadoh.com/), a band we knew of but knew little about. Nonetheless, not wanting to give up our prime position, we stood at the base of the stage throughout their set. All I remember was it was loud and it was fast, perfect for an opener. Somewhere in the middle of their set we suddenly found that we were no longer alone and that Mike Watt had come out to take in the set as well. Wearing his usual flannel shirt and thick, black rimmed glasses, Watt bounced along to Lou Barlow (http://www.loobiecore.com/) and company along with us. Immediately seizing the opportunity, my buddy handed him an empty mug and we poured him a beer. Now, I'd had a few beers in my time up until this point of my life. But I'd never, ever seen anyone drink a beer with such voracity or with a singular purpose as Mike Watt did that night. He went after it with gusto, like a sailor who'd been away from port way to long. We poured him 3 or 4 in all, each sucked down in 2 or 3 gulps with more than a few drops ending up on the front of his shirt. As Sebadoh was wrapping up their set we looked around and he was gone.

Dick Watt, Mike's Dad, was a Navy man and it required him to move the family all over the country. While in San Pedro, CA. (http://www.sanpedro.com/) and faced with yet another move, his parents divorced when he was 12 years old. Watt soon took up with Dennes Boon (http://sidemouse.com/boon.htm), who lived in the same area of Pedro as Watt. The two had a shared interest in music, listening to Credence Clearwater Revival (http://www.creedence-online.net/) and Blue Oyster Cult (http://www.blueoystercult.com/), among others. After a few false starts they formed The Reactionaries (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Reactionaries_%28band%29) along with schoolmates Martin Tamburovich (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Tamburovich) and George Hurley (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Hurley). After Tamburovich moved on, Watt, along with Boon and Hurley, formed The Minutemen (http://www.theminutemen.com/) in 1980. Boon's untimely death at age 27 started a lifelong journey for Watt, as he has searched to fill the void left by his friend and collaborator. Starting with the all bass duo dos (www.myspace.com/dosasintwo), through leading fIREHOSE, his solo efforts, leading more bands and playing bass for Iggy and the Stooges (www.iggypop.com) and Porno for Pyros, Watt has seen and lived more through his music than most, if not all, survivors of the early days of punk. Always on the cutting edge, Watt maintains a great website (http://www.hootpage.com/) devoted to his various musical directions, both past and present.

Mike Watt

I recently sent Watt an email to his myspace page (http://www.myspace.com/wattfrompedro) and, much to my surprise, he responded (at least I think it was him). Had I known he would actually reply I would have taken more time to think up some better questions...maybe next time. Thanks Mike.

roe: What was your first musical memory?
watt: a toy piano on the deck at someone's house my ma and pop took me to... it would reoccur in many dreams later.
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roe: What would you have done had you not been a musician?
watt: probably something in electronics maybe?
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roe: Greatest concert/live performance you ever witnessed (not performed with, just as an audience member)?
watt: man, this one is really hard... I wouldn't feel too honest about being for sure certain which was the "greatest" ever, know what I mean? sorry.
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roe: Why did you choose the bass?
watt: d. boon's ma picked it for me.
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roe: Who you are currently listening to?
watt: much much roky erickson. and john coltrane.
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If you cant find Mike Watt, you're not trying very hard. He is currently playing live dates with his latest trio, Mike Watt + the Missingmen, lending his bass lines to Iggy and the Stooges as they continue to tour the globe, channeling John Coltrane and Iggy with former members of Porno for Pyros in Hellride and playing with friends in his jazz influenced project Banyan.

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Thursday, November 8, 2007

Who, What, When, Where and Why: Au Pairs


Political unrest, sexual politics, emotional instability and women’s rights: rarely has one band been influenced by a wider variety of personal and societal factors than the Au Pairs (http://www.myspace.com/aupairs). Formed in Birmingham in 1979, the Au Pairs (http://www.comnet.ca/~rina/aupairs.html) burned bright for a mere four years, from 1979 to 1982, but left a lasting impression on a number of music scenes over the years. Influencing the style of the alternative era Pixies (http://www.pixiesmusic.com/), heard in riot grrl groups like Sleater-Kinney (http://www.sleater-kinney.com/) and singled out by current day punk revivalists Chicks on Speed (http://www.chicksonspeed.com/) and The Rapture (http://www.therapturemusic.com/), the Au Pairs had an impact.


Lesley Woods (vocals and guitars), Jane Munro (bass), Paul Foad (guitar and vocals) and Pete Hammond (drums) formed the nucleus of the band. But it was Woods who gave the group their distinct voice. A well read feminist and unabashed lesbian (at a time when few women in the punk scene were officially “out”) Woods singing had range that clearly conveyed the emotional roller coaster found in each song. While Woods may have been the driving force behind the Au Pairs, both musically and emotionally, it was the songwriting (a chore shared by all members) that set them apart. Songs like “Come Again” (http://www.houseoflyrics.com/lyrics/au_pairs/come_again.html), “Diet” (a women’s place in the world) and “It’s Obvious” (gender relations) placed sex and the battle between the sexes clearly in the forefront. But the message didn’t just stop with sex. Songs such as “Armagh” dealing with the fire brand topic of the political and religious tensions in Northern Ireland and “America” which attacked the Reagan government’s use of military power, set the band apart from many of their contemporaries in the second wave of punk rock. This was songwriting using both the big and little head.

And then, it was over. After touring continuously behind their second full length release “Sense and Sensuality”, the band disintegrated. First Munro left, citing Woods increasing emotional instability. Preparing to head into the studio to record their third album the group, now including Graham Hamilton (trumpet), Nick O’Connor (bass) and Carla Tivey (keyboards/vocals), officially broke up when Woods failed to appear for a show in France. The third album, slated to be produced by U2 (http://www.u2.com/) collaborator Steve Lillywhite (http://www.answers.com/topic/steve-lillywhite), never saw the light of day.

Discography:
Playing With a Different Sex, Human Records, released May 1981
Sense and Sexuality, Kamera Records, released August 1982
THE VERY BEST OF THE AU PAIRS, Cherry Red Records (http://www.cherryred.co.uk/), released 1999

The band also was one of the featured artists in the seminal concert movie of the time "URGH! A Music War" (http://www.urgh-dvd.com/index.html).



The Ten:
My periodic list of songs you can't live without. Call it my "deserted island" list, but remember, when we're all stuck on that island, don't blame me if you don't have them (and no, I won't let you borrow my ipod).

1. Come Again - Au Pairs
2. Take This Town - XTC
3. Silver Rocket - Sonic Youth
4. Leaders of Men - Joy Division
5. Rev It Up - Jerry Harrison
6. Love To Hate Love - Eleventh Dream Day (right)
7. Borstal Breakout - Sham 69
8. Waterfront - Simple Minds
9. Pulse - Psychedelic Furs
10. Cameras In Paris - The Fixx

Sex Pistols on You Tube