1963, and Larry Levine is trying to fit a 1948 RCA Ribbon mic into Hal Blaine's bass drum, because Phil Spector won't shut up about the fucking drum sound and Larry Levine can't help that the drum sound leaks because it is for Christ's sake 1963 and they don't have digital boxes or filters or any other damn thing yet. So he's trying to fit this ancient, beautiful microphone into the drum, so that when Hal Blaine hammers out the start of the Ronettes' "Be My Baby," it'll go boom, boom-boom. Snap.
Brian Wilson later declares it the greatest pop song ever made. It's said that he still listens to it every day, as an aural talisman. He was playing piano on a few Spector sessions around 1963, and even wrote a song for the Ronettes.
2004: Kieron Gillen's telling me about this song called "You Are The Generation That Bought More Shoes And You Get What You Deserve," but I'm in Vancouver, and my handheld machine isn't going to download an mp3, so I sit in my hotel suite and fume while a burlesque dancer does bendy yoga poses on my balcony, because Gillen can talk up a song like nobody else. I get to listen to it two weeks later, and it goes boom/boom-boom/snap. It's "Be My Baby" recast for the early 21C. And I've heard that drum figure a million times, because I was born five years after Larry Levine made a drum explode around an old ribbon mic and it's fucking inescapable -- but it's the first time I've really listened to it, I think.
Somewhere, there's a list of all the songs that have ripped off the opening to "Be My Baby." I think that, if it exists, it is probably a history of the Western world since 1963.
1979, and Tony Wilson's doing his pieces because producer Martin Hannett has got Stephen Morris in a booth with the drum kit Hannett's made him rebuild a couple of times, and the studio's costing Wilson an obscene amount of cash, and something funny's going on. And the wires aren't going to the board. The wires are going downstairs to the bloody toilet, where a speaker sits on the toilet seat and a mic points at it, and the wires on that mic run back upstairs into a digital box stuck on the side of the board, and when Morris hits the drums the sound off the board has no humanity or sunlight left in it. It's the sound of the dead. Boom. Boom. Boom. Until it fades into silence. Boom. Boom. Boom.
1967: Brian Wilson's had a massive breakdown, and in the middle of it is claiming that Phil Spector is telepathically stealing all his ideas, calling Spector a "Mind Gangster."
Peter Hook on Martin Hannett: ""Bernard and I were very down to earth, and he was, like, from another planet."
1963, and Lee Harvey Oswald cranks off three from the Book Depository. Boom, boom-boom.
1988, Shaun Ryder on Martin Hannett: "E sorts 'im right out! During the Hallelujah sessions we were givin' him two a day and this were when they were twenty-five quid a go, right. But it were worth it 'cos he kept saying, 'I can't feel anything but I'm in a fookin' great frame of mind.'"
2003: Boom. I think it reverberates around the hallway of Phil Spector's Alahambra mansion. Boom, boom-boom. There's a photo of the gun next to Lana Clarkson's foot. The final percussion shot after the echoing boom.
1991: Martin Hannett, ballooned by drink and oscillating drug use, dies in his chair of a heart attack at age 42. Boom. Boom. Boom. Fades into silence.
Note to Self: When you first wake up do not read the Sunday hangover. You are not yet smart enough. Wait until you have had some cereal, fruit, or Microwaveable pizza pockets, Then try.
I can tell it's very good but I'm gonna need a while to fully comprehend it
Fantastic. The worst representations of time are linear. The best are always like this.
I spend a lot of time thinking about how to solve for prime numbers so I can travel through time and win a million bucks. The two results are not contiguous. It is not travel through time to win a million bucks. The "and" is important. There is a prize. That said, I was listening to a very attractive young woman play music for me this morning, so that I can write some lyrics for her, and I started thinking about where we go from digital because I was thinking about the musicial scales.
Analog was a two point scale. People like Steve Albini prefer the constraints of this. Digital expands that, provides intermediate levels, more choices, but more room for error. It's still on a flat, 2-D scale. The next way might be to recast information within a spherical or other 3 dimensional scale, and then encode not just at keyed levels, but also in direction, and I wonder what Martin Hannett would have done with that?
You know Kieron Gillen, eh? Let's be honest here, there's really only like two hundred people in the UK, right? You've just got a bloody great big holoprojector to fool everyone else into thinking there's more.
malkav11 said:
You know Kieron Gillen, eh? Let's be honest here, there's really only like two hundred people in the UK, right? You've just got a bloody great big holoprojector to fool everyone else into thinking there's more.
That's how they won WWII, They built thousands of Cardboard tanks and troops and set them up along the coast
Yeah, but Joe Meek was just nuts, and I didn't particularly want the magic angle in the piece. Besides, Joe Meek deserves an article all on his own, as does "Telstar."
warrenellis
United Kingdom
September 2005
NOV 10, 2007 08:56 PM