Garden gnomes rejoice as Marion return crack free
Transcription
Garden gnomes rejoice as Marion return crack free
6 Home news The Stool Pigeon December 2006 Garden gnomes rejoice as Marion return crack free I Words MARK FERNYHOUGH Picture HEIKE SCHNEIDER-MATZIGKEIT N the nineties, Jaime Harding’s reputation for attracting trouble was well known: the skinny Marion vocalist’s kidnapping and ransoming of garden gnomes for crack is an often recounted smug industry anecdote. Today, as the second blacked out car in less than three minutes pulls up menacingly alongside us, one wonders whether much has changed. “Jaime, I thought the Russian mafia had finished with you,” whispers guitarist Phil Cunningham, eyebrow aloft. Wandering down the street with Belle and Sebastian is never this perilous. Fortunately for our interview, there will be no impromptu beheadings. Instead, a chap of considerable girth climbs out of the shadowy hearse to enquire if we’re famous. Through Primrose Hill’s residential landscape, it’s not the ghosts of the wilderness years that stalk Marion, but stocky paparazzi vultures. I point towards a translucent Jaime and confirm that his song was once employed as a soundtrack to a Citroen ad starring Bobby Brown. This is BLOOD RED SHOES Mean it when they say, “NO!” pretty much represent everything I hate about “PANIC AT THE DISCO music,” spits Blood Red Shoes’ drummer Steven Ansell of the band that personally requested the Brighton duo for their opening act at Brixton’s cavernous Carling Academy. “They’re like a corporate, packaged-up, stylised, poster boy product to sell to people who buy into it. I don’t find any human connection; they’re big business, and from what I can tell that’s all they are. It’s really sad that they’re represented in a way where people think it’s this really meaningful thing, when it seems to me that it’s quite the opposite.” “We’re gonna play it,” guitarist and co-vocalist Laura-Mary Carter adds, a few days before the gig happened. “But we won’t sell our t-shirts really expensive, like them.” “I like the idea that we can be in that world a bit,” Steven nods, “and people’ll come over and see us and be like, hey, they sell their tshirts at nine pounds. How come Panic at the Disco... Hey, why? Maybe a few people’ll ask a few questions because of that. That’d be pretty cool.” “Also... Brixton Academy!!!” Laura laughs. Blood Red Shoes are two sussed punk kids who make a lean, urgent noise you can dance to. They hooked up when Steven’s old band, Cat On Form, split two years ago, and were offered a gig after their first jam session, which is why they never had time to add a bassist or a sousaphone player to their line-up. A 100-ODD SHOWS AND THREE LIMITED EDITION 7”s LATER and they suddenly find themselves feted by the mainstream music industry they always seemed determined to operate outside of. “But we’re just doing exactly the same thing,” Laura says. “It’s just play anywhere, like always, except NOW WE’RE HOMELESS because of it.” BRS: doing that sole music EAGERLY AWAITED EXTRA!! THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE STORY ---- “Y’know, I grew up in Horsham, where my only access to music was reading the NME or Kerrang! and going to Our Price,” Steven says. “So all the bands I liked were mainstream, obvious, radio bands, and I got into the music that I now like through those bands. I heard The Smashing Pumpkins, and then I heard Nirvana, and then I heard Sonic Youth, and then I heard Blonde Redhead, and then you start getting into a lot more interesting, underground stuff. But I got in there through being into MASSIVE, million-selling mainstream bands - buying their records from a chain shop and reading about it in the Rupert Murdoch-owned press. I’m never ever gonna forget that, ’cos otherwise you get into that sort of WEIRD REVERSE SNOBBERY where you’re like, we’re so punk, we won’t be part of that world. It means a tonne of people can’t access your music, and that’s a fucking shame. “We’re in a world where most bands we know that get on big labels get pushed around, get told what to wear and whether they should sing or SCREAM MORE, and we’re not doing that. WE’RE PRETTY GOOD AT SAYING NO. I think we’re the kind of people that enjoy getting to say no as well, which is funny; it’s almost like a reverse psychology thing. If we’d decided to be like this as a little CAREER PLAN, we probably would be patting ourselves on the back going, ‘It’s worked quite well to say no, it makes people want you more.’” Steven smiles: “But we actually just did it ’cos we actually mean no.” Ones & Twos Words. B. GRAHAM Issue Nine. 2006 more than enough celebrity kudos for our assailant and, within seconds, Jaime’s soul has been stolen five times over via a ludicrously cumbersome telescopic lens. The rest of us trudge off into the distance, laughing heartily like they do at the end of an episode of Thundercats. To recap, during a brief period in the mid-nineties Macclesfield’s Marion were poised to become kohl-smudged stadium giants. Striking an icy shadow over a lager, lager, lager-obsessed climate, their top 10 debut album, This World and Body, boasted dark amphetamine-fuelled tunes by the bucket load, all of which were sung by Jaime in a yearning sci-fi croon that encompassed more drama than a week’s worth of Eastenders. With that, plus a bearded guitarist named Beard, how could they fail? In short, Morrissey handpicked them to precede him on stage. Lesser groups would have been destroyed, sent to madness, pecked to death by locusts following one of Mozza’s ill-fated ‘blessings’ - music’s answer to an Egyptian curse. Marion just heroically giged themselves to death. It gets worse: “Ian McCulloch used to come into our dressing room and steal all our cheap drugs,” complains Jaime. “We toured and toured our first album for years,” winces Phil. “Then as soon as we stopped, our record label gave us one week to write and record the follow up.” This is not the only example of Marion being hampered by record company ineptness. “Our b-sides were always the best songs because we were left alone to write them,” Jaime explains. “We did a track for our first album called ‘Wait’ and a record exec wanted us to add an ‘Every Breath You Take’-esque Sting bass line to it. That won’t be happening this time around.” A facial hair-free line-up of Marion have returned in 2006, upping their game by borrowing Haven’s sticksman, Jack Mitchell, although one assumes his father band haven’t traded him in for some of Jaime’s half-inched garden ornaments. They’ve returned to a host of sold out gigs and upbeat reviews, making you wonder where Marion’s followers were back in ’98 when their Johnny Marr-produced second LP, The Program, bombed so horrifically. “A bigger question is where the hell were we?” ponders Phil, who now splits his time between being guitarist in Marion and another obscure Manc group entitled New Order. Jaime is more specific about his band’s downfall. “Drugs,” he sighs softly. “For years me and Jaime lost contact,” says Phil, regretfully. “So it’s great that we’re working together again.” “I bought an acoustic guitar in Prague, and stopped off in Hungary and Budapest - the best city in the world,” explains Jaime. In the more familiar setting of a swanky London hotel bar, Jaime has no qualms with disrobing into some more photogenic trousers. An 83-year-old female hotel resident seated nearby is clearly roused from her tea-time slumber by this graphic exhibition. It’s understandable that Marion’s fanbase have reached a new level of maturity, but this verges on the ridiculous. At least, and despite a decade of excess, Jaime Harding is not yet receding. “It’s not something that bothers me,” he says, not altogether convincingly. “Look at Nick Cave - he’s well bald now. Although... it is nice to have hair.” “ More like ad-lib than best bib and Tucker ” DAVID HOPKINS fter a lengthy get-to-know-you discussion A on the merits of various metal bands, I ask the master of the ‘drone tone’, Alexander Tucker, to respond to the folk label that his hypnotic, layered guitar and vocal music has been tagged with. While he acknowledges that he went through a major “John Fay phase”, he suggests that his use of technology, especially loop pedals, goes against the roots of traditional folk. He considers his work to be a rather loose, modern interpretation based on “not having any proficiency” and “coming from a place that uses feedback, noise and sound to create your own world”. He adds, after joking about a totally unfulfilling three weeks of classical guitar lessons at school that, “If you give me a guitar with normal tuning I don’t know what to do with it.” hat may be the case, but with a downtuned guitar or electric mandolin in his hands and effects pedals at his feet, you could argue that he has too many ideas floating around in that centre-parted head of his. And that’s part of the joy of his latest effort Furrowed Brow - it’s a far more direct and cohesive album than its largely improvised, rambling predecessor, Old Fog. Alexander agrees, explaining that it was simply a case of being “able to just sit down and focus on the music” in a studio, rather than recording at home with “cardboard all around me, domestic stuff and traffic”. alking me through the intricacies of the methodical way he recorded it - the laying down of numerous guitar tracks in real time to give a “sense of locomotion” two things become clear: first, that I don’t really have a clue what the hell he’s talking about when he uses words like ‘membrane’ and ‘technicolour’ in reference to his music; and, second, that Tucker is like some sort of weed smoking, metalobsessed, home counties incarnation of Leonardo Da Vinci. prolific artisan to say the least, when he mentions that, “It’s still a surprise recording and playing - I feel like I’m having to catch up with ideas a lot of the time,” I can well believe him. Along with his constant painting, illustration, and part-time gilding of sculptures in order to pay his rent, he’s already started work on the next record. “The work I was doing last week is for the fourth album, I suppose,” he says. “It’s definitely going to be much more massively layered - very warm, big and bright. One of the new songs is quite poppy in a way.” long with that revelation, he mentions that a new track is to feature drums, which he gleefully describes as being “quite Boredoms-esque”. Then he delves back into bewildering technical talk about phrasing that makes my face hurt. ith a string of solo dates, a tour supporting Bardo Pond and an appearance at December’s ATP festival scheduled, Mr Complex Music Terminology is going to be busy these next few weeks. No doubt he’ll still manage to craft a few more songs, get round to doing a Godflesh covers band with Tim from Part Chimp that they’ve been talking about, and maybe even gild the odd Buddha’s head. T T A A W