Manafonistas

on life, music etc beyond mainstream

2019 20 Sep

Als Brian einmal komplett falsch lag

von: Michael Engelbrecht Filed under: Blog | TB | 4 Comments

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Künstler sind ja nicht immer die kompetentesten Kritiker ihrer eigenen Werke. Wie oft, nach „The Blue Mask“, verkündete etwa Lou Reed zu jedem neuen Album, das sei nun wohl das herausragende Werk seiner Karriere. Ein ums andere Mal lag er falsch, vielleicht nur einmal nicht, auf seinem wundervolles New York-Album. Das wirkte schon wie eine Marketingstrategie.

 

 

 

 

Ein anderes, interessanteres Beispiel betrifft Brian Eno. Dank Uwe Meilchen konnte ich ein Gespräch nachhören, dass ein aus der Klassik kommender Dirigent (?) mit osteuropäischem Dialekt und offenen Ohren für andere Spielarten der Musik mit Brian führte, vor Monaten, irgendwo im badischen Raum. Während sich der werte Herr für ein Album, respektive einen Song aus diesem Frühwerk des Mannes aus Suffolk begeisterte, stöhnte Eno fast, und konnte die Begeisterung für „Here Come The Warm Jets“ im grossen und ganzen gar nicht teilen.

Es war sein erstes Songalbum nach der Trennung von Roxy Music. Er habe damals Zeitdruck gehabt, einige Geldschulden auch, und bei ihm sei daher wohl ein bestimmtes Warnsystem – er nannte es „alert system“ – ausgefallen: so habe er ein Gitarrensolo von Phil Manzanera mit einer  dauerhaft-tremolierenden Verzerrung bearbeitet, was ihm, in der Rückschau, dilettantisch vorkomme. Nun, ich habe mir das Album daraufhin noch einmal zu Gemüte geführt, das ich stets  weitaus mehr schätzte als die ersten zwei Roxy Music-Alben zusammen, und fand auch die Passage, auf die Brian Bezug nahm. Betörend, waghalsig, tollkühn, wie das gesamte Werk.

In Enos Kartenspiel „Oblique Strategies“ kann man eine Karte ziehen, auf der zu lesen ist: „Honour Thy Error As Hidden Intention“. Ich glaube felsenfest, wären auf diesem Album nicht so viele „Fehler“ gewesen, es wäre nie so genial geworden. Bis heute zählt es – neben „Nerve Net“, ein Opus, das Eivind Aarset über alles liebt –  zu dem anarchischen Meilensteinen in Brians Diskographie.

 

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im Juli 2017 schrieb ich, hier auf dem Blog, zu dieser Arbeit: Das war der erste Streich der vier Songalben von Eno in den Siebzigern, und über keine Platte aus diesem Quartett wurde in den Jahren der Manafonisten weniger gesprochen als über dieses. Völlig zu Unrecht, für mich steht es auf einem Level mit den drei Nachfolgern. Die Songs sind so bizarr und surreal wie das Cover, Eno wandelt seinen Gesang,  seine „persona“, von Track zu Track. So war es unmöglich, seiner Stimme ein kommerziell taugliches „branding“ zu verpassen – er entzog sich jeder biederen Vereinnahmung – viele andere Künstler, die „ihre‘ Stimme gefunden hatten, wiederholten diese Rezeptur bis zum Sankt Nimmerleinstag. Und die ständig wiederkehrenden herzerweichenden Melodien? Inmitten all der Songwildnis? Sie  konnten nie Hits werden, weil ihr instrumentaler Untergrund zu subversiv war, ihr Text zu erratisch. Proto-Punk. Psychedelic Exotica. Pure Pop. „Weird, very weird, very strange, disturbing and utterly beautiful.“

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4 Comments

  1. Douglas Wolk, Pitchfork:

    Eno is one of the smartest artists who’s ever made a pop recording. His is the kind of smartness that can trip itself up through overthinking, or make for art whose interest is mainly formal. But he dodged that bullet thanks to his other great obsession, which is giving up his conscious mind’s control. He had a particular fondness for setting up systems complicated enough that they could take him somewhere unpredictable; he famously never wrote down his synthesizers’ settings, in order to avoid falling into habits with them. Eno often sang his songs before he figured out what their lyrics were, composing them sound-first and word-second so his subconscious concerns could bubble up. “It is important to remember that all my ideas are generated by the music,” he told an interviewer in 1977. “The music is the practice that creates the ideas that generate the discourse.”

    Also, he liked to rock out. His first solo album, 1974’s Here Come the Warm Jets, lunges out of its gates with the gigantic tone-bending riff of “Needles in the Camel’s Eye.” It’s a startlingly simple song—its guitar solo is essentially just the major scale you learn at your first lesson—made glorious by Eno’s fanatical attention to details of arrangement and timbre, and by his one-of-a-kind voice, precise and heady, with the long, rounded vowels of a former chorister.

    That’s not all Eno got from the church hymns of his childhood. Like his other ’70s rock records, Warm Jets includes a handful of songs that you could easily think were sacred music if you only caught their melodies. The church appeared in his language, too—there’s a slaughtered heifer preceding the long, terrifying Robert Fripp guitar-spasm that’s the centerpiece of “Baby’s on Fire,” and something like an Our Father emerges from the title track’s deep-in-the-mix lyrics. Even the title of “Needles in the Camel’s Eye” is a mangled Bible quote.

  2. Michael E.:

    Und jetzt wirds noch interessanter, und ich habe es erst gerade zufällig entdeckt:

    Lee „Scratch“ Perry has announced details of his second album of 2019, produced once again alongside Adrian Sherwood. You can hear a track from the record, called ‚Enlightened‘, above.

    Titled Heavy Rain, the album is presented as a companion to Perry’s last album, Rainford, which came out in June. The new LP sees Perry and Sherwood reworking material from that album.

    “Brian Eno and The Wailers‘ Vin Gordon both feature on Heavy Rain. Eno’s contribution sees him overhauling Rainford track ‚Makumba Rock‘ which is renamed ‚Here Come The Warm Dreads‘ on the new record as a callback to Eno’s own debut solo album. There are also two entirely new tracks featured, titled ‚Dreams Come True‘ and ‚Above And Beyond‘.

    Source: The Quietus

    Heavy Rain will be released digitally and on vinyl via On-U Sound on December 6.

  3. Martina Weber:

    Die Oblique Strategies sind sehr interessant und wenn sie sich auch hauptsächlich an Musiker / Komponisten richten, habe ich eine kleine Liste von Lieblingsstrategien:

    Discard an axiom

    Destroy nothing; Destroy the most important thing

    Emphasize the flaws

    Use an unacceptable color

  4. Michael Engelbrecht:

    They are, of course, brilliant failures. To understand how the mind of one ex-art student turned ’non-musician‘ can arrive at such brilliance, seek out two records not actually included in these remasters. The first is his debut single entitled “The Seven Deadly Finns“: a skewed, headlong rush through verbal sub-Lear surrealism with a coda that involved a lot of yodelling. The other is his 1975 single: a cover version of “Wimoweh“ (or “The Lion Sleeps Tonight“). Its cod-African hokiness perfectly suited Brian’s vision of ‚fourth world‘ music: all ethno-forgery filtered through his parents‘ Bert Kaempfert records. Both sounded like pop music, but made by someone who had only been on the planet for a week. They were actually the sound of the future.

    The first single featured his temporary backing band, The Winkies (which goes some way in explaining its pre-punk rush), but on his albums he was using an incredible cast of players to turn his quirky visions into reality. No one had told him that you couldn’t put rockers like the Pink Fairies‘ Paul Rudolph or Roxy’s Paul Thompson in the same studio as out-and-out fusionists such as Percy Jones or avant gardists like Holger Czukay. The methodology (or lack thereof) also resulted in some of greatest work from the real musicians who helped him out. To this date no one has managed to get a better solo out of Robert Fripp than on Another Green World’s “St Elmo’s Fire“. The same goes for Phil Collins‘ work on this and its follow-up.

    Another…was, actually, Brian’s big turning point. The first two albums often seem by another artist. Warm Jets was a work of genius because it didn’t know the meaning of restraint. For instance, “Some Of Them Are Old“ travels from doo wop, through gospel to Hawaiian idyll without once stopping to ask for permission. It contains humour (“Dead Finks Don’t Talk“), pornography (“Baby’s On Fire“), great tunes (“Cindy Tells Me“) and some fabulously mannered singing. Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) was a work of genius because it didn’t know the meaning of repetition. It merely took Warm Jets and refined it into a smoother lump of oddness.

    Chris Jones, BBC, 2008


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