There was a chance twitter feed – a facebook post – and suddenly
there was a new album – new sounds from the past. Existing out there in spite
of the industry - maaaan. A rush and a push and the songs are ours – they just
threw them up on the net. This is not how things used to be done. The times
they are a changin’. Everyone has gone a little Bowie – a touch Radiohead.
You used to have to live with the anticipation of something emerging
– hints that the band were recording – that they’d played a new song live in
someplace in Norfolk. You might find a bootleg cassette at a record fair in
Doncaster with the track listing saying ‘New One’ on it. Could this be on the
new album – would it sound like it did on the tape – would the lyrics have
changed?
I saw The Smiths in 1985 – in Scotland – a short tour of the isles
– an intimate thing before the onset of superstardom – if you count getting to
number 14 a blast of the big time (mind you - you did have to sell more records then – to
be in the charts) and they played Frankly Mr Shankly and Bigmouth Strikes Again
– two new ones – real things played for our very ears. A glimpse of something
fresh coming our way. It made the wait that much harder – us – that is my
Scottish counterparts and I knew that The Queen is Dead would already have two
wonderfully lyrical ditties that we could fail our arms and look effete to.
What I’m getting at is that the wait and anticipation of the ‘next’ album was both
exhilarating and frightening.
Or seeing Smile performed by Brian Wilson in the Royal Festival
Hall. These familiar songs all fitting into place as Wilson let us all share in
his vision – his sound and vision. It wasn’t released at that point – it was
bootlegged and shared and discussed and whispered about - this long lost long player – and now we
we’re hearing it. And we knew it would be released. It built the anticipation.
It filled the waking hours. Okay – not quite – I had a newly born beauty at that
time and she was taking up most of my thoughts – they tend to take most of them
these days too. I do remember buying SMiLe though – I was so worried that the
local shops wouldn’t be stocking it (this is in London mind) that i left work –
boarded a train to the centre of the city and purchased my copy in HMV on
Oxford Street and then zoomed home – to the loft to listen and feel the
psychedelia (do you get me?)
Our two bit rock n roll band once played some merry dates with
Primal Scream and I remember Gillespie playing Automatic by the JAMC over the
PA – it was just out and he was digging it. This new record (well cassette) in
his hands. Was it living up to expectations? In Bobby’s eyes you could tell he
was happy – you could tell that this third record by his friends was a beauty –
full of scowl and growl – tight drums and loud guitars. There’s something
beautiful and tangible in a new release – a new record by.
In some ways I’ve known this record was coming for years – we knew
Kevin hadn’t given up on music – on sonic experimentation – on turning his amp
on and making a racket. No he’d continued that trend since the inevitable
collapse/ demise/ retirement of My Bloody Valentine in the early 1990s. There
where snippets and gossip – map references that led us nowhere. So Sugar given
away with a magazine was a song buried in layers of dirt with squirming guitars
and rolling electronic drums – a continuation but a difference. Then suddenly
nothing. Rumours on pages and casual conversations that heralded Shields as the
new Lee Mavers – obsessed by ancient equipment and elusive sounds that couldn’t
be drawn from his head to his strings – from his hands to his amps. It was as
if we forgot that Belinda, Colm and Debbie also played a part – they have ideas
too. So over the years Shields became this revered thing of sonic manipulation
of playing with the very foundations of pop music. Ephemeral and concrete –
loud and soft – right there with you but dancing in the distance. I have
downloads and bits from ballets and outtakes but what I didn’t have until
Saturday was the new record by My Bloody Valentine. There was a fading hope that there would never
be a new record by My Bloody Valentine – but here it is.
And already there’s disappointment floating and filling cyberspace
– oh if only it had been more like this – or I think it should have pushed the
boundaries more. You know as if the valentines were a contrived thing like
Sigue Sigue Sputnik – out to unite the pointless and facile. They weren’t
making music that they considered new and dangerous they just happened to forge
out this sound – you could see it building from This is your Bloody Valentine –
it’s already there – visceral, pounding and in your face. They are a band who
make music. Some of it sounds similar. Christ, The Beach Boys put out an album
last year – it kind of had harmonies and eulogies to God on – maaan that’s so
67 – soooooo Petttt Sounnnds. It was bound to be. And this is My Bloody
Valentine – the guitars take off like aircraft and shimmer like the heat on the
pavement – they are loud and the words are not clear. What did you want a
fucking U2 meets Radiohead type of vibe?
It’s music – and it’s very good music too. M B V is a wonderful
modern album – an extension of and looking back at the past. Why? Because it
was always going to be like that. And I’m alright with that. I do think the
sound has changed though – it sounds more live in its feel. Guitars are
scratched and strummed – they feedback and jar at times. Nearly drag the song
to a standstill. They sit on top of the mix – they are instruments in
themselves – not the wash and blur of Loveless. It feels a little hurried –
which is ironic – you know twenty years in the waiting all that. Perhaps it is
the download copy I have - but the songs stop and start – they explode into
sound whereas Loveless just felt like it floated along – these songs were there
to breathed.
But it isn’t Loveless – and that’s fine.
I’ve already found myself singing along with the opening tune –
making up sounds like a male Liz Frazer to fill my lack of real words. It takes
off from where Loveless ended – it skips around the houses – pops to the shops
and ends back where it started – with flanged double speed breaks and
stuttering guitars.
There’s always been a beauty in the noise that the Valentines
create, something aching at the heart of it. And it’s there tucked inside every
tune – a fragility covered in bombast – as guitars breakdown and seek therapy.
This post shoegaze psychedelic melee – this unique sound of a band as an army –
taking down the enemy through sonic prowess. I fucking love ‘em. Once again I
trawled the comments and barbed quotes about waiting 20 years to post a review
because that’s how long it took to release the album and someone on The Guardian
debating whether Throbbing Gristle were the real experimentalists – of course
they were – but we’re not all listening to them on a regular basis. They hurt
your ears. Someone even managed to get into a spat about whether Ned’s Atomic
Dustbin really had pushed the boundaries in the 1990s rather than My Bloody
Valentine. There was no irony – or a knowing wink – it was all genuine.
The thing is – Shields and co have released a beautiful noise
ridden long player – it isn’t polished – it is neither contemporary nor rooted
in the past - bar those early 90s drum
and bass riddim breaks. It sounds like the valentines – it has new songs on it.
Brian had to follow Smile – Jonny Carson on Fifteen Big Ones was not a step forward
– so why are we wanting and expecting more from this? In some ways I wish there
was more of the ambient textures of Loveless – that unif(r)ied sound that
captured waking in a dream. I used to listen to the Tremolo EP at New Cross
Station – up for work and travelling to Euston - on a cassette player from
Boots – kind of a walkman – but you could record with it – and those songs used
to merge with the outside world – sounds swapped over – cars, birds, trains and
announcements, conversations and shouts, bleeps from ticket machines and the very
thoughts inside my head mixing in the spaces and shapes that they created. I
used to drift to work.
So here drums are buried and sounds layered – except this time you
can seem to tell when Belinda’s axe is riding over Kevin’s – this is a guitar
band writ large. There’s the sound of computerized bass – but with added
feeling – and tremolo guitars in a song like ‘new you’. Or synthesised organs,
like a futuristic ‘Meant for You’ and heartfelt honesty in ‘if this and yes’. Then
grinding repetitive posturing in ‘nothing is’. It’s like Panda Bear got angry.
If you understand what I mean.
This is the new record by My Bloody Valentine. I like the new
record by My Bloody Valentine.