Saturday, 11 January 2025

U2: Pop

Pop (U2 album) - Wikipedia

 

(#567: 15 March 1997, 1 week)


Track listing: Discothèque/Do You Feel Loved/Mofo/If God Will Send His Angels/Staring At The Sun/Last Night On Earth/Gone/Miami/The Playboy Mansion/If You Wear That Velvet Dress/Please/Wake Up Dead Man

 

"Pop never had the chance to be properly finished. It is really the most expensive demo session in the history of music," Bono said, some years after the release of what was possibly the bleakest U2 album since October, and may also have been the most difficult album for the band to make. No last-minute rush job has taken so long to complete.

 

The recording of Pop began in 1995 and stuttered along almost until the last minute. Three of its songs dated from the Zooropa sessions and one ("Wake Up Dead Man") had originated as an uptempo song in the Achtung Baby period. I don't think they had the slightest clue about how to make this album. Over the best part of the two years they spent attempting to record it, they deployed a battery of producers - mainly stalwarts Flood and Mark "Spike" Stent but also Howie B, Steve Osborne and (comparatively briefly, before he decided he had more interesting things to do) Nellee Hooper. "I think it suffered from too many cooks," Paul McGuinness observed.


To add to their self-imposed woes, the band asked McGuinness to arrange dates for their 1997 PopMart tour before the album had been satisfactorily completed. The necessity of doing the latter ate into rehearsal time for the tour, which resulted in substandard performances. Pop had originally been scheduled for a Christmas 1996 release but the Spice Girls would easily have laughed that competition off.


Furthermore, in part necessitated by the time that Larry Mullen needed to recoup from major back surgery, much of the band's playing, including Bono's vox, was sampled and looped (mainly by Howie B), in a doomed attempt to mimic modernity. This leads to the general aural feeling of an A.I. version of U2 having made the record - and perhaps justifies the lamentably ludicrous Wikipedia entry on the album, much of which looks to have been penned by a bot ("'Staring At The Sun' features acoustic guitars and a distorted guitar riff from Edge [sic], and a simple rhythm section from Mullen [sic].").

 

We listened to the album for the purposes of this blog on YouTube because we literally couldn't be arsed to get up and find our CD copy. The intermittent interruptions of the album by commercials actually enhanced its hopeful status of disposable product - maybe they should have done what Sigue Sigue Sputnik did on Flaunt It! and booked advertising space between tracks. They announced the PopMart tour at a press conference held in the lingerie department of a New York branch of K-Mart - had they been watching the Father Ted Christmas Special too avidly? Or did it take U2 too long to realise that the postmodern disposable schtick had gone on for one album and one tour for too many?


I felt pre-emptively glum when preparing to sit down and listen to and evaluate Pop. As regular readers of this blog will know, our principal aim with it is to do our best to see the good side of number one albums - after all, if they become that popular, they can't be rubbish...or can they? Even when approaching something I know isn't likely to be of much good, such as a Boyzone or Robson & Jerome album, I remain intrigued by what has been put into such records and try to work out their appeal as objectively as possible. But I saw Pop as another weary job to be done, from its ghastly sleeve - a really cheap and cheerless affair, akin to a 16 Most Requested Songs zero-budget compilation (yet in keeping with the deliberately cheap pedals and other effects used in the album's making) - inwards. Listening to it again did not dispel that weariness.


6: POP!
2: POP?
6: Protect Other People!
2: People's Own Protection!
(Patrick McGoohan and Leo McKern from their continuous dialogue in the "Once Upon A Time" episode of
The Prisoner, McGoohan demonstrating that he certainly did know his Goethe)
 

Or pop as in the bursting of the bubble, or the exploding of the world; the original, unused end credit sequence of The Prisoner had the symbolic penny farthing morph into planet Earth, revolving in endless stellar darkness, out of which emerged the caption POP.

 
 
Pop was the album, and it couldn't have sounded less like that other sort of pop. "Discothèque" - note that acute accent on the E - begins the record with channel-swapping sabres which do not resemble those said to dwell in paradise before thudding, congealing beats stride in like a wrecking ball as a bipolar, bitonal Bono (in voices both high and low, female and male, and of course the wreckage of Sly Stone in corrugated mind) mumbles and howls, as lost in this carnival of yellowing youthful light as Joe Strummer's white man was at the Hammersmith Palais cabaret ("You get confused but you know it"), or the dancing queen having aged a generation, still lost but now hopelessly so ("Looking for the one/But you know you're somewhere else instead").
 
 
The beats - more militant early Def Jam than anything to do with Ecstasy, marshalled with mirthful pitilessness by mixmaster Howie B - pile up like serrated corpses as the singer searches for an essence which he hopes might not be him ("You want to be the song/The song that you hear in your head"), fully realises that he is wasting his time and life ("But you take what you can get/'Cause it's all that you can find"). In the chorus he shrieks for release - "let's go...and/or let go?...discothèque!(?)" as that Joshua Tree guitar tries to climb back in through the song's porous gaps. But the percussive activity continues to escalate until a climax of whoops and furious hand drumming - A Certain Ratio, the Pop Group, 1979 passim, hard to forget wasn't it? - blocks off all possible exits. In the video the group dressed as a joyless Village People in a halo of bloodied red which made them look as though the Manson family had just paid a visit.

 
It was evident with Pop that U2 had long since realised that the last millilitre of juice had been squeezed out of the pomo Lemon - but still they persevere with it as the record becomes progressively darker and more distant, if not more interesting. "Do You Feel Loved" (and feel loved?) plods on in the belief that EMF and Jesus Jones are still trendy. "Mofo" groans like 1980 Simple Minds (Adam Clayton's bass rotogravure trying its best to be Derek Forbes) inexpertedly crossed with 1997 Primal Scream (Vanishing Point achieves what so much of Pop strives to attain, mainly because, as with Screamadelica, Gillespie was smart enough to leave most of the work to Weatherall). Bono once again laments the passing of his mother, but did it so much more powerfully on "Tomorrow" and far more subtly and profoundly on "Lemon."


As with Achtung, so much of Pop's production is determinedly muddy, but in a more insidious sense, as if the band had been imprisoned in a kandy-kolored mesh and were struggling to escape from it. You can hear the old U2 - the one most people love - attempting to wriggle out to the listener on "If God Will Send His Angels." But "Staring At The Sun," the album's would-be big ballad "anthem," lopes along like a fuzzy Radiohead imitation, with Bono's voice very Yorke-like in places (oh, the IRONY) and where have I heard that little central melodic refrain in the verses before? Oh yes, on "Feel Good Inc." by Gorillaz, released eight years after Pop...

 
The album thereafter crawls along, largely uninterestingly. "Last Night On Earth" sounds like the film theme that it became. The Edge's "siren" effects in "Gone" compare very unfavourably with those on R.E.M.'s "Leave." "Miami" is a gloopy mess redeemed only by the strange, distant signals which materialise towards its end (Wikipedia says that the track "has a trip rock style." What the penny farthing fuck is "trip rock"?). "The Playboy Mansion," the basic leitmotif of which is more or less based on "You Showed Me" by the Turtles, is a wry look at decadent celebrity lifestyles and you end up just wanting to SLAP Bono and get him back to singing about tenements and shitty housing estates in Dublin and about going to church. You know, just something in which he might actually believe.
 
 
"If You Wear That Velvet Dress" is probably Pop's most intriguing song, as low as the bar may be, mainly I suspect due to Nellee Hooper's palpable involvement, and sounds like genuine musical adventure as opposed to plastered-on dayglo signifiers. "Please" calls for the Northern Ireland peace process to get going, but the General Election hadn't yet taken place and John Major was (just about) still Prime Minister so maybe Bono had a fraction of a point there ("Sunday Hopeful Sunday," as the possibly-looped drumbeat may indicate).
 
 
The record terminates with, or is terminated by, "Wake Up Dead Man," an exhaustingly debilitating song and performance which perhaps indicates the journey that Pop has taken - according to Bono, it "begins at a disco and ends at a funeral" - in which a muffled replica of the real Bono, the one you might remember from "The Ocean" when we were all younger and more hopeful, pleads for Jesus to help him and this "fucked-up world" (Wikipedia: "It is also one of only a few U2 songs to include profanity.").
 
 
I derived no joy or real insight from Pop, and it remains clear that U2 had hit a ceiling with their postmodern japes. The album is as dull a dead end as Rattle And Hum had proved to be, albeit for opposite reasons. People were tired of being told that anything meant nothing or that consumerism was evil but by God did we love it. The PopMart tour proved a generally flaccid and underpowered affair, the album initially charted strongly - possibly on the basis of numbers of copies shipped - but its sales rapidly fell off, and the band realised In No Uncertain Terms that it was time to stop pretending to be fashionable and to return to what they knew best and felt deepest. The consequent about-turn - see entry #636 - saw them pull away the gaudy curtains, reopen the windows and let genuine light back into their sharply-defined world. As we have already seen, 1997 really was a case of sink or swim, adapt or die for most artists, and it was no longer sufficient to exist as a name in itself, or to treat one's band as a business, an industry. The art needed to exceed the brand.

Saturday, 4 January 2025

MANSUN: Attack Of The Grey Lantern

Attack of the Grey Lantern - Wikipedia

 

(#566: 1 March 1997, 1 week)


Track listing: The Chad Who Loved Me/Mansun's Only Love Song/Taxloss/You, Who Do You Hate?/Wide Open Space/Stripper Vicar/Disgusting/She Makes My Nose Bleed/Naked Twister/Egg Shaped Fred/Dark Mavis/An Open Letter To The Lyrical Trainspotter


The last song on this album offers a fair warning to people like me. In it, Paul Draper suggests that those who spend endless hours analysing what he says are more foolish than he is, but also that those who consider his words "just gobbledy-gook" might be equally dim. This sermon - a fitting term for a semi-concept album which focuses on a deviant man of God - is delivered in broad Scouse over a misleadingly jaunty uptempo romp resembling one of those throwaway Oasis B-sides, although, as he warns us midway through, the music turns progressively weirder, culminating in random piano bangs and odd looped electronic blips.


Since I am a music writer who is far more concerned about how words are sung than what they're about, perhaps I should disqualify myself from the above category. The ambiguity of "Lyrical Trainspotter"'s words may of course indicate a double-bluff and that we should take Mr Draper's lyrics very seriously indeed. But the song's point is absorbed - stop the waffling and simply experience, and hopefully enjoy, what you're hearing.


In 1997 I bought, listened to and loved this album without ever quite knowing why I did (love it). Listening to it again almost twenty-eight years on inevitably lends a different perspective. If blur represented a detonation of Britpop, Attack Of The Grey Lantern - recorded by Blur's then-support act and released on the same (Parlophone) label - celebrates dancing in its debris.


Conceptually Grey Lantern is a florid mess, and I suspect Mansun would not have wanted it otherwise. Its messiness personfies its charm and quite substantial impact. The overall idea was for a superhero-type figure - the Grey Lantern, as it were - who comes across various sordid inhabitants of an English village and tries to put them right; although Draper admitted that the concept "ran out of steam," the album's basic plot does get resolved.


Certainly the village Draper chronicles is a precursor of places like The League Of Gentlemen's Royston Vasey, but the album's ambition, inventiveness and scarcely-suppressed rage is what engage the listener. It is as though Mansun cut up all the elements of Britpop into pieces, tossed them into the air and reassembled them as brightly and expensively as possible. Or simply take it as the benignly rabid ambition of a young band determined to make as elaborate and complete a debut album as possible.


We are never quite sure where Mansun stand musically. The opening orchestral flourishes of "The Chad Who Loved Me" suggest the introduction to The Lexicon Of Love as deeply as they do John Barry, but when Draper's hoarse vocal protests intercept the idyll halfway through, the effect is comparable to the suddenly-unleashed Barry Ryan in the final third of "Eutopia."


It is definitely clear that the group are looking back at key elements of eighties New Pop in what they do. "Mansun's Only Love Song" shimmers very agreeably with Draper's voice at times floating and swimming as high as Billy Mackenzie, like the mirage of a great pop song. But "Taxloss" is a justifiably vicious assault on unregulated capitalism, taking in not just "Taxman" - if anyone is entitled to evoke the Beatles, it's a fellow Liverpudlian - but also early nineties indie-dance (either mix of Paris Angels' "Perfume" will do) before culminating in machine gun fire and air raid sirens ("Two Tribes"! It's a Liverpool thing).


Interludes like "You, Who Do You Love?" disturb with their grinding of elements from mid-period Verve with aggressive hard rock - and if we listen to Draper's delivery of "I wish I could be you" we realise that we have again reached the looking glass stage of things, where we not only look at the group's precedents but also those who will come after them. But more about that in a moment.


At the time the album's two major selling points were the big hits which succeed each other - if not statistically, then in people's hearts. Both "Wide Open Space" and "Stripper Vicar" thrive in the shadow of Tears For Fears - The Hurting and Songs From The Big Chair respectively - but while the first-named of these songs, absolutely exquisite and perfect in its almost bisected despair (you really feel that Draper is singing in two distinct voices) as the world steadily crashes in on the singer's head, its knitting needle guitar/police siren motif and its gigantic chorus, is sui generis despair, with endless delightful small touches in its arrangement (for example, the fractured piano splinters and gusty male voice choir underscoring the final verse), whereas the second (as "Mother's Talk" also managed) is a shamelessly powerful romp through the back gardens of sexual perversity - what a powerful introduction the latter song has, with its initial drum track abruptly joined by a second one (Big Chair's producer Chris Hughes had once been Merrick, of Adam and the Ants). These two songs both come as close as anything to "perfect pop" and get played as avidly and regularly by me today as they did in 1997.

 

The second half of Grey Lantern continues in a maximalist fashion - songs like "Egg Shaped Fred" and "She Makes My Nose Bleed" are loud and anthemic ("Bring her on DOWN!"). "Disgusting," which features a very Thom Yorkean lead vocal, makes as brilliant a use of bells as Pierre Henry's "Yper Yper" had done thirty years previously, as well as outlining the record's essentially English nature in its deployment of that key English apology for a word, "regretful." Meanwhile, the exemplary hard art-rock of "Naked Twister" - which appears to be about exactly what it sounds like it's about - points its index finger towards the future, for if Draper sounds like anyone, it is a direct precursor to Matt Bellamy, just as Mansun themselves help lay the groundwork for Muse (and, to a lesser extent, bands like My Vitriol). Much like Bellamy, one is not entirely sure what Draper is going on about most of the time, but it doesn't matter because the point is he's going somewhere and you either follow or feel ridiculous.


The big finish (nearly) of "Dark Mavis," where the record's loose plotlines are tied up, makes me think of what a "Hey Jude" written by John Lennon might have sounded like. It is epic, endless and sad - and consider also Vampire Weekend's "Hope," one of last year's most resonant recorded songs - yet also wildly celebratory as hands clap, the strings (great arranging throughout by Stefan Giradet) steadily spiral out of control and synchronisation, and everything settles - with "The Chad Who Loved Me"'s main string line. We finish, Draper's warning coda notwithstanding, where we began.


In some ways Attack Of The Grey Lantern could function as a soundtrack for an episode of Inside No 9; I was in particular thinking of "The 12 Days Of Christine" with Sheridan Smith - its brilliantly frightening use of Andrea Bocelli notwithstanding - as the record might easily represent a "life review" of pop and rock, their histories flashing semi-randomly in our heads before the life disappears forever. Its success as a record again demonstrates that 1997's best number one albums come from those artists who decided just to do what they wanted, and to hell with any consequences. Mansun's second album, 1999's dissolute but fascinating Six, accentuated the art over the rock and doesn't appear in this tale. What happened with both the band and Draper afterwards is outside the scope of this piece. I wanted to concentrate on the Paul Draper of 1997, a gifted autodidact of a songwriter, singer and multi-instrumentalist (with whom the rest of Mansun just about manage to keep up on this record) with everything still open and welcome to him. I think Grey Lantern is ludicrous, overblown and pretentious - and I mean that trio of adjectives as the highest of compliments.

Saturday, 21 December 2024

BLUR: Blur

Blur (Blur album) - Wikipedia


(#565: 22 February 1997, 1 week)

 

Track listing: Beetlebum/Song 2/Country Sad Ballad Man/M.O.R./On Your Own/Theme From Retro/You're So Great/Death Of A Party/Chinese Bombs/I'm Just A Killer For Your Love/Look Inside America/Strange News From Another Star/Movin' On/Essex Dogs (incorporating Interlude)

 

I was maybe too close to things - or possibly too far away from things - at the time really to appreciate how violent and vituperative a gesture the fifth Blur album represented. Its cover was a stock image of a patient being rushed into Accident and Emergency - that's me just over one month ago, then - which was supposed to represent "an anaesthetic dream." Or perhaps the anaesthetic block had begun to wear off.


Blur, the album - or, like blackstar, it may well be that its, or the band's, name doesn't need to be capitalised - still sounds like the virulent aesthetic opposite of everything its makers had hitherto been erroneously assumed to have stood for. It is scarcely a surprise that Blur should pursue that latter path; no doubt after The Great Escape they could have gone further in the direction of Theatreland, with a cast of thousands, high-kicking dance troupes, the London Symphony Orchestra and a twelve-ring circus, but (as Keith Tippett also did after turning from the enormous caravan of Centipede to the minute explorations of Ovary Lodge) the group opted to re-evaluate themselves as a group; all the music on Blur, the album, is performed by them, with no horn or string sections and no guest narrators, and largely played live in the studio (mostly at London's Mayfair Studios, although the vocal tracks for four of the songs were recorded at the Grettisgat studio in Reykjavik, the nearest faraway place).

 

The band considered staying and evolving together infinitely more important than ensuring they remained part of the dwindling Britpop circus. Britpop was, by early 1997, largely burned out, bisected by the twin forks of Girl Power and dance music. Its headlines were spent, and Blur in particular had been severely bruised by the "war" with Oasis, in which they were identified as middle-class fakers as opposed to the honest, working-class Gallaghers; identified, ironically, by a rapacious British media largely run by people who went to public school and Oxbridge. Morning Glory was The Voice Of The People, The Great Escape a Mister La-dee-Dah Gunner Graham sneer at them.


This helped to intensify the band's own generally wretched state. Damon Albarn was hooked on heroin, Graham Coxon on alcohol. Coxon in particular was feeling increasingly alienated from the rest of Blur and was possibly on the verge of quitting. Anxious to save the band, Albarn assured him that he would be given considerably more input than on their previous two albums (where his role had essentially been that of licensed wayward lead guitarist). Furthermore, the showbusiness exhibitionism was to be dropped. Only Blur appear on blur. There are no guest speakers, no horn or string sections, and no wry character studies. This was where Damon was going to come out from behind the masks of Tracy Jacks and Ernold Same, and write and sing about himself, his own life, his personal state of being.


Coxon took that assurance as a challenge. Already a keen fan of American indie music, particularly the group Pavement, he determined to channel its influence into the structures and shadows of the album's songs. This is especially evident on the record's lead track (and lead single), "Beetlebum," where his playing suggests intimate familiarity with Pavement's work on the equally raw, spontaneous and unplanned Wowee Zowee.


The song is introduced by a rhythmic chop from Coxon’s lead guitar, as though desperately trying to restart a demolished Ford Cortina, following which its melody gradually unfolds and lead vocal, bass and drums are added one by one. Comparisons were inevitably made with White Album Beatles, especially “Happiness Is A Warm Gun” (“She’s a gun, now what you done?”) but Albarn’s distressed slouch of a vocal, coupled with the general bleariness of the backing track, also suggests one of Robert Wyatt’s anti-signifier pop songs from the Matching Mole era.

 

A drug song by any measurable standard of metaphor – “Just get numb, now what you done?” – it nevertheless bursts into reluctant light when Albarn’s echoplexed “And when she lets me slip away” provokes the group to harmonise and swing (albeit very slowly) to reveal the elusive umbilical cord to all that we had previously recognised as Blur, over which Albarn pours acidic baths of sweetness (“She turns me on and all my violence gone”), before the regretful minor coda of the bridge descends back into the trudge of the verse-cum-chorus.

 

The premature summer shadows fall back into purple-grey nocturnes of ascending confusion as Coxon’s massed atonal guitar choirs and random “I Am The Walrus” radio tunings drown the final refrain of “He’s on, he’s on, he’s on it” (which sounds slightly like “Piss off, piss off, he’s alright” if you turn the volume up really loudly) before the song, now engulfed, abruptly cuts off with the pressing of the stop button on the cassette recorder and a final vocal grunt which sounds not a million miles away from the word “shit.” Which of course “Beetlebum” isn’t. Far from it.


The worry was that the band's record label would listen to the album, complain about the absence of singles and refuse to release it. It was a benign worry for the band themselves, who went on to compose and record what they believed was their most extreme musical statement to date, 121 seconds of post-Nevermind tick-tock-quiet/ICBM-LOUD punk rock with deliberately "stoopid" (as opposed to "stupid") lyrics.

 

But "Song 2" turned out to be the biggest song of Blur's career; the Parlophone executives loved it and it finally got them noticed in America. It seems a merry and deliberate stamping on any cor-blimey vaudeville tracings...and what a great band performance, too, with doubled-up drums and Alex James' bass going into sinister unison with Coxon's guitars after the first chorus, and Albarn's vocal cheerily not giving a sprig about pleasing the parents. It is truly the best single of 1964 that could only have been released in 1997.


It is only after a couple of listens that you realise that "Country Sad Ballad Man"'s subject matter is identical to that of "Country House" and one could satisfactory call it Coxon's revenge on that alleged Moment of National Unity. The song stumbles blearily but purposively towards its sardonically shattering payoff of "I'm done and I'm fucked," and again the Pavement influence shimmers into audibility; indeed, something like “Sensitive Euro Man," recorded by Malkmus and company in 1994, is practically a blueprint for this post-Britpop Blur with its drooping guitars, semi-shambling beats, use of space and general air of knowing melancholy.

 

"M.O.R." plays with the chords of "Boys Keep Swinging," with a smattering of references to "Fantastic Voyage" - Bowie and Eno got co-composer credits - and is a gleeful and noisy subversion of Blur's recent past ("Here comes a low") with a particularly thrilling climax where the band seemingly hammer their "legacy" into shards with noisily-liberated guitar and piano (and that high-speed staccato piano you hear at the song's beginning predicates LCD Soundsystem's "All My Friends" by two decades). Try singing along to this, they seem to be suggesting.


Actually, that description is seriously underselling things. "M.O.R." sees Blur merrily stamp upon and stamp out everything you ever imagined to be "Blur," as does "On Your Own," a drugged-up account of a forlorn rave pilgrimage to Goa which sounds like "Country House" scrunched and pushed through a rusty mangle, complete with Roland TR-606 Drumatix programming and noise guitar from Coxon which really does not sound like anything readily attributable - not even Arto Lindsay or Sonny Sharrock. Britpop being smothered with grey-tipped graffiti. Nevertheless, one should note how firmly Albarn's increasingly distended and irreverent vocal is pointing the way towards Gorillaz, his unexpected second act.


"Theme From Retro" is a largely instrumental - save occasional vocal samples ("the horror!") - organ-driven elegy somewhere between 1968 Pink Floyd (more Saucerful than Piper, I'd say) and 1979 Wire, which leads to "You're So Great," essentially Graham Coxon on his scratchy and ironically jolly own, akin to Guided By Voices threaded back to the Cavern Club. Due acknowledgement should be paid to stalwart producer Stephen Street - yes, these songs may sound like demos at a distance, but the mixing is artful and cleverly avoids any Achtung Baby muddiness.


There are clear precedents in Blur's back catalogue for "Death Of A Party" - in particular "He Thought Of Cars" - but the exhausted sadness of this, the album's highlight (or lowlight), is not really precedented. The ice rink organ implies a continued Jerry Dammers influence but the song's spaces are so empty and metallic that one imagines the Britpop circus tent to have been entirely dismantled and stripped. The song was actually written in 1992 but was radically reworked for this album. In it, Albarn, as sad and tired as he has ever been heard, sings of the metaphorical party being over, with people dying of Aids through unprotected sex. "Go to another party and hang myself - gently on the shelf," he sings, but that get-out clause fools nobody. It is as though he has stared directly at the essence of Britpop and seen nothing but a hollow, vacated shelf. Musically this sounds nothing like your average eager-to-please-xFm indie wannabes. Flags are at half-mast rather than being waved. This song marks the death knell for something we aren't quite sure ever truly lived. All the people - so few people now left.


Momentary relief comes from the quick (84-second) punk blast of "Chinese Bombs," a Bruce Lee tribute which isn't quite Ash's "Kung Fu" (though doesn't aspire to be as such). But "I'm Just A Killer For Your Love," complete with what sounds like Coxon trampling with guitar through a clogged-up swamp, is detuned glam-rock which may be masking a swipe at Suede.


Possibly the album's most illuminatory moment, however, may be "Look Inside America," in which Albarn finally overcomes his previous prejudices and learns that the nation, flaws and all, can and must be embraced, or at least guardingly accepted (despite his repeated "she's alright"s, the singer remains fundamentally cynical about the place). There's a charming synthesised string section which doubtless left Parlophone anticipating a real one. Not this time around; we'll manage by ourselves, thanks.


But blur then turns more despondent, in ways which had hitherto eluded the band. "Strange News From Another Star" takes its name from the titular short story of Hermann Hesse's 1919 octet collection. That story concerns itself with someone living in the actual world, as you and I would recognise it, and dreaming of a second, idealised world, much like our own but with all the mistakes ironed out. Which is real, which is fantasy etc. Albarn's ideal as expressed in the song, however, would appear to be oblivion - "All I want to be/Is washed out by the sea" - while the song's music wanders between Thomas Dolby's "Airwaves" and Nirvana's "Something In The Way" before settling on a sad early Bowie chorus. "Give me all your stuff/Until I can't get up" could be a heroin reference or equally that anonymous A&E patient on the cover, begging the anaesthetists for final relief and deliverance. Finally there is some rueful reflection on Albarn's own work: "All I've ever done is tame/Will you love me all the same?/Will you love me though it's always the same?" There follows a "Space Oddity" orbital lift-off and the rhythm section enters, active but purposely muffled, as though they are not quite within our grasp.


Coxon's guitar car can't rev itself out of the ditch as that song segues into "Movin' On," an intentionally garish and parodic distortion of everything Blur were perceived to be about. Albarn seems to be gleefully trampling the song into the mud with his hugely sarcastic and occasionally scary vocal - yes, we're supposed to be moving on from all of this, but The Man won't let us, as evinced by Coxon getting stuck in a reverse loop at song's end.


At the beginning of the final track, the guitarist endeavours to get (re)started, but to no avail; his tyres have probably been punctured. There follows a harsh, dark chamber of hellish catacombs down which Albarn - now narrating or reciting rather than singing, much, as I now realise (having just listened to Saint Etienne's The Night) Sarah Cracknell is in the habit of doing - describes the hospital nightmare reality behind the ruddy front of laddism, oi-oi, up for it; it is a landscape of murder, graffiti, puke and piss (why do I think of the Special A.K.A.'s "The Boiler"?), drunken squaddies and, crucially, stilettos; this could be Colchester in the seventies then as vividly as the nineties now. The music, as such, grinds joylessly with a whining dentist's drill of a car siren, newly stripped of driver, boring into one's head more or less all of the time. Strip the airs of ironic modernity from the "popscene" and you are left with the familiar picture from a generation before.

 

There is neither hope nor exit in this music. "This Is A Low" at least suggested a horizon, an escape route. "Yuko And Hiro" saw two lovers divided by economic happenstance. But "Essex Dogs" focuses on the mind, which never left home, being methodically dissected and dissolved. It is another superb band performance - you can tell that all four musicians are working exceptionally avidly to render the piece effective - but ultimately the piece can only but render itself into shards, or composites of The Shard. After an interval we hear the ironically-titled "Interlude," another loop of can't-get-started-or-finished guitar and electronica (Stephen Street used some then-new technology which enabled him to loop and restructure elements of the band's jam sessions - and yes, unlike the We Must Write A Hit laboratory techniques previously applied to their songs, Blur came in and played together as a foursome, jamming until something became apparent) and I am reminded of the sounds and minute shuffles that the patient is apt to witness in Dignitas (see Ute Lemper and Scott Walker's "Lullaby (By-by-by)" for further exploration of the latter).

 

And yet, even if the record had been designed to kill off "Britpop," blur does bear clear signs of hope. The fly-by-night "fans" were free to flee; the album only went single platinum, as opposed to The Great Escape's triple platinum and Parklife's quadruple platinum - but it was the survival of Blur, the band, that was the record's real priority, to dig themselves a tunnel out of gaudy Britannia Rules Again hell (the stylistic similarity of some of "Beetlebum" to the work of The Auteurs did not pass unnoticed). For Damon Albarn it was an opportunity to lay some of the groundwork for Gorillaz, while for Graham Coxon the record was an ultimate vindication of his demands to be noticed and acted upon. For Blur it perhaps provided proof of who the real visionaries of Britpop turned out to be. Me? I came to in the recovery room and was more than happy to munch on a tuna-and-mayo sandwich, having been brought back to life, and all that.

Saturday, 14 December 2024

TEXAS: White On Blonde

 White on Blonde - Wikipedia

 

(#564: 15 February 1997, 1 week; 23 August 1997, 1 week)

 

Track listing: "0:34"/Say What You Want/Drawing Crazy Patterns/Halo/Put Your Arms Around Me/Insane/Black Eyed Boy/Polo Mint City/White On Blonde/Postcard/"0:28"/Ticket To Lie/Good Advice/Breathless


One way of beginning this piece would be to revisit the notion of music from Glasgow and its two parallel paths to America. As I've discussed before, Glaswegian musicians from the eighties onward seem either to want the lush, sophisticated mainstream American sound, or the scratchy backwoods - Philadelphia International, or the Velvet Underground.


In the latter field, Glasgow seemed to be starting to make a substantial impact as 1996 moved into its successor, in particular the group of artists centred around the Chemical Underground record label. That group included Belle and Sebastian, Mogwai, Arab Strap and The Delgados, all of whom looked to be doing something unprecedented with the basic rock group model - even though Mogwai and Arab Strap come from Hamilton and Falkirk respectively, they still made the best sense in Glasgow.


On a tangent to this movement were Bellshill's Teenage Fanclub, then already easing into veteran status with 1997's excellent Songs From Northern Britain. So, from that perspective, it was all happening. But where did that leave the more upmarket Glasgow musicians who continued to crave a lush, mainstream nowness?


Although it would be tempting to talk of Texas, the group, in the same terms as Deacon Blue or Wet Wet Wet, that would be rather misleading. They never really pursued that clipped path, nor did they appear to have much to do with anyone's notion of America - bassist and co-songwriter Johnny McElhone, formerly of Altered Images and Hipsway, was inspired to name the band after the film Paris, Texas. If anything, the partnership which McElhone initially formed with singer Sharleen Spiteri - also technically from Bellshill, although she grew up in Balloch, by the shores of Loch Lomond - puts me in mind of The Smiths. Texas was their child and other band members were employed as a necessity; even that sounds quite harsh, given how integral, for instance, guitarist Ally McErlaine has been to the band's sound over the years. As a group, they have functioned together quite perfectly.


In 1994, however, Texas were not in a good place. Despite their initial 1989 success with the Southside album and its lead single "I Don't Want A Lover," they had subsequently struggled. Subsequent albums Mothers Heaven (1991) and Ricks Road (1993), though good, seemed too dour and withdrawn in an era of kandy-kolored rave and nascent up-for-it Britpop. Had it not been for a degree of continued success in mainland Europe it is likely that they would have been dropped by their record label back then.


Hence the three-year rethink and reboot, which saw the band come up with a large number of songs, far more than the fourteen finally selected for their fourth album. Their lucky break came when Spiteri was invited, at the last minute, to appear on Chris Evans' Channel 4 television show TFI Friday, where she performed a bit of Al Green's "Tired Of Being Alone" (a non-album single for Texas which briefly, if predictably, restored them to the top twenty in 1992), and observers were somewhat taken aback by how good a singer she actually was.


Evans duly and heavily plugged the lead single from the band's forthcoming album, "Say What You Want" on both radio and television, and listeners were moderately startled by how up to late-nineties date it, and they, sounded - which is to say that it sounded as though they had finally opened the curtains and windows and permitted modernity to enter the room. While the record remained redolent, to some extent, of "Tired Of Being Alone" - and, to a greater extent, "Sexual Healing" by Marvin Gaye and "Love, Thy Will Be Done" by Martika - it seemed in perfect keeping with what British pop fans seemed to want, and brought the band who made it dramatically back into the foreground.


There was to be no compromise with White On Blonde. The band felt confident enough to produce the record themselves - though, as I will mention later on, were happy to bring outside producers on board on the rare occasions they were needed - and Spiteri in particular was intent that the record sound as contemporary as possible. No doubt she was influenced on this front by her then-partner Ashley Heath, at the time Associate Editor of THE FACE, who I'm sure gently prompted her towards what was then going on musically. She was not interested in Texas being a working museum of the worthy.


The consequence of all of this thinking was that White On Blonde sounds commendably modern, even if its modernist sheen sometimes conceals a slightly traditionalist outlook. Songs like "Drawing Crazy Patterns" and "Halo" offer vocal stylings which sound as though they're sharing a flat with Chrissie Hynde - although, much as happened with The Pretenders through tragic circumstance, you could view the Texas of 1997 as having reduced to the bare bones of a frontwoman, one other musician and anybody else she could find to understand her.


And the sound of White On Blonde is quite striking in its absence of comfort and reaasurance. The record commences with a brief ambient soundscape - police sirens, Evening Times vendors; oh, this must be Glasgow - which is almost immediately subverted by a sampled string orchestra performing Cole Porter's "I Love Paris."


This then segues into "Say What You Want" - it was a smart idea to frontload the record with its most familiar song - but the song itself is hardly cosy or comforting. Indeed it seems to be much more of an extended fuck-you sermon to somebody who clearly doesn't give a shit what Spiteri wants and more or less sneers at her dreams. Fine, the singer says, but your crap is just going to push me forward, not hold me back, as you so clearly desire. How many of the song's many fans twigged what it was really about...


...or even whom it might be about, since White On Blonde functions as a partial concept album about a failing relationship, if not with a partner as such then maybe with the record label? The record itself implies rather than clarifies such a scenario, since Spiteri's observations are more often than not oblique. There is the profoundly unhappy protagonist of "Drawing Crazy Patterns" who has married too young and is already seeking escape, perhaps violently. But who is the subject of "Halo" - Diana? Thatcher? Spiteri herself? Not that it matters much musically; visiting producer Mike Hedges makes the song sound good - if Spiteri can't haul herself too far from Hynde vocally, Hedges brings that Manic Street Preachers - and Associates - rusted sparkle, as well as the entirely unanticipated mid-song outbreak of squally guitar and Tackhead-y breakbeats, to proceedings.


More disturbing still is "Put Your Arms Around Me," the album's big ballad, for which Texas called on the services of Dave Stewart. If Spiteri moves much closer vocally to Maria McKee on this song - and it is inconceivable that the band would not have been thoroughly familiar with McKee's 1996 album Life Is Sweet, one of the decade's very finest pop records - it sounds much more like "Show Me Hell" than "Heaven." The song sounds as though being played in a mirage, with nightmare effects whirling around Spiteri's increasingly desperate vocal ("Are you ready to let yourself drown?"), clinging on to a chimera of love rather than the thing itself ("You let me believe that you are someone else"). The corridors of shriek pile up until the plug is abruptly pulled from the song, as though the dream, or life itself, had ended.


The record's intensity does not let up; "Insane," also done with Hedges, bears some modish trip-hop touches, including a mournful trombone, real or synthesised, but is generally a grim and unforgiving lament ("No one believes in you...I understand") which grinds its teeth into your neck like a vengeful vampire. Marti Pellow and Ricky Ross did not harbour such ambitions - although Arab Strap certainly did (see "Girls of Summer" from 1999's live Mad For Sadness, the recording of a concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in Lambeth which I attended, for confirmation).


"Black Eyed Boy" goes for a sixties Northern Soul mood but sounds a little overcooked, which may well have been the intention; it also shows a mastery of silence and pauses worthy of Ultravox. It isn't a simple Vandellas stomper (although Martha and the Vandellas' work was anything but simple); over it, Spiteri is essentially essaying a concerned variant on the fuck-you template.


There follows a brief but exceedingly strange breeze of what used to be called "illbient"; "Polo Mint City" seems to be an especially woozy variant on "Wild Thing," possibly threaded through Blur's "He Thought Of Cars," and initially sounds actually quite disturbing. However, since I grew up in Uddingston and Bothwell, I know that Polo Mint City is the local slang name for East Kilbride - so called because the town is surrounded by many, many roundabouts - so I wonder whether this is the band having a wee laugh at the Jesus and Mary Chain.


That interlude leads into the relatively conventional title track, one of those portraits of a lady of her time who has not aged too well (perhaps Spiteri was thinking of how she herself might end up if she weren't too careful). In turn this takes us, unexpectedly, towards the sleazily-garbled rocker "Postcard" which appears to be a send-up of Oasis (Spiteri does a great Liam Gallagher, albeit from a get-me-the-fuck-out-of-Muirhead perspective). The ghost of "Polo Mint City" then performs a fleeting orbital lap of honour, like a recurring dream that cautious consciousness cannot quite shake off.


"Ticket To Lie," though musically the album's most straightforward song, is a nihilistic and threatening précis of a profoundly disturbed mind (its opening line is "Attention annoys me"). It is as if Spiteri is addressing the listener - look, you came here, do you like what you hear, tell me what bullshit you desire and I'll manufacture it for you, oh and I'm not sure that I care that much...


(abrupt fast forward to the Charli xcx of "360" - "I don't fucking care what you think"...!)


Spiteri's expressed essence of insecurity - which has also turned out to be Charli xcx's hallmark - continues to wander through the elegantly-writhing Greek Thomson cloisters of "Good Advice," written and produced with the excellent Rae & Christian and utilising a sample of John Cameron's library music piece "Half Forgotten Daydreams"; "I need some good advice, some good advice, to wear my crown."


The album concludes with "Breathless." Ostensibly a hands-in-the-air end-of-the-show singalong ballad - Lord forbid one should term it an "anthem" - attentive listening reveals the song to be a fairly brutal examination of domestic abuse; the other side of the scenario coin traced by The Blue Nile in 1996's "Family Life" and perhaps revealing the record's real and bloodied subtext.


Whose is that male voice which materialises towards the end of the possibly literally-entitled "Breathless"? The album's credits show it to belong to one Steven Granville, although the harmonica solo in the same song is uncredited (given the fact, however, that three of White On Blonde's songs were co-written with Robert Hodgens, a.k.a. Bobby Bluebell, I wonder whether Ken McCluskey might have played it).


And although Mr Granville sounds like nobody's ghost - an understudy for Marti Pellow, perhaps, but definitely nobody's ghost - he does instinctively put me in mind of another voice (and the presence of Hedges here cannot be coincidental), a voice who could have sung "Put Your Arms Around Me" so easily and beautifully, a voice belonging to the person about whom several of these songs might just, if only marginally, have been concerned.


A person who, not yet forty, had elected to take his own life on 22 January 1997, ten days before White On Blonde was released. While Belle and Sebastian had initially been instigated as a university project, under the tutelage of Alan Rankine, Billy Mackenzie - the great not-wholly-told story of Scottish pop music - had fluttered, flustered and faded. At the time, Texas' record felt as much to me as an unwitting requiem as well as a defiant comeback. Maybe Billy could have done with a lot more of that properly-channelled defiance. But White On Blonde suggested with such subtly persuasive force that some stories' endings had to be defied. Texas' story will continue here.

Saturday, 7 December 2024

REEF: Glow

Glow (Reef album) - Wikipedia

 

(#563: 8 February 1997, 1 week)

 

Track listing: Place Your Hands/I Would Have Left You/Summer’s In Bloom/Lately Stomping/Consideration/Don’t You Like It?/Come Back Brighter/Higher Vibration/I’m Not Scared/Robot Riff/Yer Old/Lullaby

 

I wonder if Glow might now be viewed as a nineties classic if Primal Scream had recorded it. As things happened, Primal Scream (with Andrew Weatherall) were racing towards other places at the time and re-emerged later in 1997 with the compelling Vanishing Point.

 

Glastonbury band Reef named themselves as such because they found it was an anagram of Free (the group). All back to 1973, then, or so it was thought, thanks to the era’s vocal espousers of laddism and in great part to a novelty tag on a Chris Evans television programme.

 

Many felt that the surge of Britpop reopened the drawbridge to the pitchfork-wielding vanguard of know-our-place conservatism (John Major was still Prime Minister at this point), weakly masked by alleged irony. But I don’t think there’s anything remotely ironic about Reef; they want to rock and generally scream about doing so.

 

Glow was Reef’s second album and opens with their most famous (and perhaps most misleading) song. “Place Your Hands” is the one everyone remembers, with Gary Stringer’s unquestionably individualistic vocal stylings. A bit like Ocean Colour Scene’s Simon Fowler having recently and accidentally placed his left thumb in a hot toaster, some cynics might crow, or Ozzy Osbourne receiving an unexpected tax bill.

 

“Place Your Hands” is absolutely and unapologetically traditional, as though 1975 hadn’t really happened, and irritatingly it’s as catchy as fuck. I can picture fifteen-year-old mid-nineties lads busy waving their fists and shrivelling up their already narrow shoulders. Oh, and Mr Stringer is singing “Place your hands on my hope,” not whatever fifteen-year-old you thought he might have been singing.

 

But the song doesn’t really usher us towards a drizzly motorcade of trad rock. Stringer’s artful mangling of Jagger and Plant on “I Would Have Left You” is knowingly retro, “weird” instrumental middle section included. I’m not saying I would ever willingly listen to it again, but it’s cleverer than you might have thought. The band are clearly striving for Black Crowes authority – down to hiring George Drakoulias as producer – and their artistic range is focused (if slightly narrowly so).

 

“Summer’s In Bloom” is ostensibly ridiculous, with Stringer evidently having fun rolling all those “r”s, but I can’t bring myself to dislike it; there’s a spirit at work here. On big ballads like “Consideration” – probably Glow’s best song – he touches James Dean Bradfield territory. “Come Back Brighter” is really rather catchy with its bouncy electro undertow and subtle guitar dissonances which bring, in that order, Denim and Elastica’s “Car Song” to mind.

 

By the time we reach “I’m Not Scared” – I prefer the Eighth Wonder/Pet Shop Boys and Ladytron ones myself, but anyway… - one realises that, yes, Stringer’s voice can be wallpaper razor annoying and the musical moves relatively traditional. But for the fifteen-year-olds who didn’t necessarily know about the older stuff – especially in what were still, to all intents and purposes, pre-internet days – but who felt frustrated about I don’t know what, all they heard was this huge, confident rocking sound and an angry guy yelling at them, and that turned out to be precisely what they wanted.

 

“Robot Riff” is an extended jam – not that far removed from Neu! or even Stereolab, with its circular bassline – which sees the band tentatively venturing into freeform territory (full credit due to guitarist Kenwyn House). Meanwhile, “Yer Old” is Reef’s perfect fuck-you riposte to ageing people like me who would pick holes in their valour. I note that in places, Stringer sounds remarkably like James Murphy of/a.k.a. LCD Soundsystem, and the song could act as a pre-emptive answer to “Losing My Edge” (i.e. “we’re more relevant to the kids than all the ageing fuckers you know”).

 

Overall, while Glow is not my particular cup of musical Roobios, it would be an imperfect launching pad for a diatribe against laddism and Britishness. They rock and people of our age will almost certainly find them intolerable. That is perhaps their chief point. If this was your first chance to hear guitar rock of any kind, then you weren’t going to be worried about whether it lived up to the good old days of A Nod’s As Good As A Wink… or Fire And Water. You were young and pissed off, and Gary Stringer sounded exactly as pissed off as you. Reef have continued, albeit with a different line-up these days, and the singer, who has long since sworn off both liquor and drugs, seems these days to be an amiable fellow. Another equivocal review, then, but I almost certainly wasn’t the right person to review it. If anything, Glow points the way to the unabashed 21st-century rock revivalism of the likes of Kings Of Leon, but with a much more inventive template. And I would much rather listen to Reef’s “Lullaby” than to the one by The Cure.

Saturday, 30 November 2024

ORIGINAL CAST RECORDING: Evita: The Complete Motion Picture Soundtrack

Evita (soundtrack) - Wikipedia

 

(#562: 1 February 1997, 1 week)

 

Track listing: A Cinema in Buenos Aires, July 26, 1952/Requiem for Evita/Oh What a Circus/On This Night of a Thousand Stars/Eva and Magaldi-Eva, Beware of the City/Buenos Aires/Another Suitcase in Another Hall/Goodnight and Thank You/The Lady’s Got Potential/Charity Concert-The Art of the Possible/I’d Be Surprisingly Good for You/Hello and Goodbye/Peron’s Latest Flame/A New Argentina/On the Balcony of the Casa Rosata (Part 1)/Don’t Cry for Me Argentina/On the Balcony of the Casa Rosata (Part 2)/High Flying, Adored/Rainbow High/Rainbow Tour/The Actress Hasn’t Learned the Lines (You’d Like to Hear)/And the Money Kept Rolling In (and Out)/Partido Feminista/She Is a Diamond/Santa Evita/Waltz for Eva and Che/Your Little Body’s Slowly Breaking Down/You Must Love Me/Eva’s Final Broadcast/Latin Chant/Lament

 

(Author’s Note: This review is based on the complete two-CD soundtrack recording; a single-disc seventy-seven-minute-long compilation of highlights was released as Evita: Music From The Motion Picture)

 

It would have been about 8:35 on the evening of Thursday 13 September 1973 when Tim Rice, driving to a dinner party for which he was already late, switched on his car radio to hear the last ten minutes or so of the fifth episode of a six-part documentary series on BBC Radio 4 entitled The Spellbinders.

 

This episode, which was written by Gillian Freeman, perhaps best remembered as the author of the 1961 gay biker novel The Leather Boys (which she published under the pseudonym of Eliot George; the novel was filmed three years later, and the movie is directly referenced in at least three songs by The Smiths), concerned Eva Peron, a name hitherto largely unknown to Rice, except that he remembered her appearing on a stamp – as a boy his principal hobby was stamp collecting.

 

The other five episodes of what the Radio Times billed as “Six studies in 20th-century magnetism” focused on Aimee Semple McPherson, David Lloyd George, Malcolm X, Dr Goebbels – and James Dean, whose 1955 passing Rice recalled from the period he spent in Japan at the time. As that list of names may suggest, there are two sides to the magnetism coin, good and evil. Who falls under which category is largely a subjective decision.

 

Yet Rice was stimulated by the story of another larger-than-life figure who died too early sufficiently to take the idea of a musical about Eva Peron further. He proposed the idea to Andrew Lloyd Webber as a possible follow-up to Jesus Christ Superstar. But Webber was dubious about writing another musical about an icon who died in their early thirties. He demurred and went off to write the musical Jeeves with Alan Ayckbourn. Ironically, Rice and Lloyd Webber had begun composing such a musical, but Rice pulled out because he was worried that his lyrics were nowhere near as witty as the words of Wodehouse. Jeeves premiered in the West End in April 1975 and lasted barely a month; its 1920s dance band arrangements proved unattractive to a mid-seventies audience reared on rock (however, Lloyd Webber and Ayckbourn revisited the idea twenty-one years later, rewriting the show almost entirely under the new name of By Jeeves, and it did eventually become a great success).

 

A wounded, melancholy Lloyd Webber returned to Rice and agreed to work on the Eva Peron idea. As with Jesus Christ Superstar, the pair decided to road-test the show as a double concept album in order to see whether anybody might be interested in staging it. Rice in particular had already done some preparatory research; he travelled to Argentina and interviewed various interested parties – many of Eva’s contemporaries were still alive and well in 1974, and he had to conduct pretty much all of that research under careful cover – as well as watching, on at least twenty separate occasions and by arrangement with the director, Carlos Pasini Hansen’s 1972 ITV documentary film Queen Of Hearts, narrated by Diana Rigg, which laid out the broad lines for the musical’s characterisation of Eva – not a huge amount of time was spent analysing the political undertow of Peronism; the film seemed more interested in Eva as a quasi-saintly phenomenon (a pre-Diana Diana?). So impressed was Rice by Eva’s story that he even named his first daughter after her.

 

What Rice says he did not do, at the time, was read Mary Main’s The Woman with the Whip, a profoundly unsympathetic and perhaps biased and incomplete portrait of Eva. What he almost certainly read was a 1969 collection of essays by the historian Richard Bourne under the umbrella title of Political Leaders of Latin America. I know this work well because my father borrowed it at the time from Motherwell Library. The subjects of Bourne’s studies included both Eva Peron and fellow Argentinian Che Guevara.

 

Rice was tickled by the thought of getting two icons into one show – even though the original character of “Che” is only Guevara by implication, and did not explicitly become Che Guevara until Harold Prince insisted that he do so. Much like Judas in Superstar, he is a rather cynical narrator who remains present for virtually the whole musical to offer his contrary observations on Eva’s rise and fall. Like Superstar, Lloyd Webber and Rice originally wanted their Judas, Murray Head, to take the role, but a few demos convinced them that maybe he wasn’t going to repeat the magic. Instead they turned to the performer then currently playing Judas in the West End, one C.T. Wilkinson – who subsequently became a huge musical star (and a Canadian) as Colm Wilkinson – and knew he was the Che they really wanted. He does an excellently gruff job, by the way, his voice midway between Rod Stewart and Phil Minton.

 

For Eva, they had been impressed by the television series Rock Follies, and persuaded one of its stars, Julie Covington, to portray the role on record (they also hired a few of the Rock Follies backing band as musicians, including Ray Russell, Tony Stevens and Peter van Hooke). Paul Jones, one of several sixties Britpop idols to appear on the album, agreed to play Juan Peron. For the role of the tango singer Agustin Magaldi who, in the show, if possibly not in real life, took the young Eva under his wing and to Buenos Aires, Lloyd Webber travelled one evening to the cabaret nightspot Bunny’s Place in Cleethorpes to witness Tony Christie in concert; although his first run of hits had mostly dried up by 1975, Christie remained a huge and popular live attraction. Impressed by his performance, Lloyd Webber invited Christie to participate.

 

The recording of the Evita album took place between April and September of 1976. Many distinguished performers took part, including Hank Marvin (who plays a very characteristic guitar solo on “Buenos Aires”), Neil Hubbard and then-Wings guitarist Henry McCullough (both formerly of The Grease Band, the original backing group on the Superstar album) as well as session veteran Joe Moretti on guitars, drummer Barry Morgan and keyboardist Ann Odell of Blue Mink, principal drummer Simon Phillips (then principally a member of the Brian Eno/Phil Manzanera art-rock supergroup 801) and stalwarts Mike Moran on keyboards and David Snell’s rather acidic harp (note its discordance on “Buenos Aires” and “Goodnight and Thank You,” as well as its unmoored interlude three-quarters of the way through “I’d Be Surprisingly Good for You”). There are blink-and-miss-them vocal cameos from the Dave Clark Five’s Mike Smith, Mike d’Abo – who succeeded Paul Jones as Manfred Mann’s lead singer – and a not very recognisable (possibly for contractual reasons?) Roy Wood (not to mention from Rice himself, as one of the stuffy officers on “Rainbow Tour”). One of the backing singers is Stephanie de Sykes.

 

The double album of Evita was released in November 1976, as was a taster single of Covington’s “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina.” Originally recorded under the none-too-persuasive title of “It’s Only Your Lover Returning,” Rice borrowed a phrase from earlier on in the show, and it sounded infinitely more convincing.

 

Even if Eva’s job on that song is only to convince her audience that spurious bullshit is true. Here is an edited and frankly reworked version of what I wrote about Covington’s single on the Popular website back in May 2008. You can, however, imagine it as coming from a never-to-be-written book entitled Was Michael Powell Right?: High Tory Principles As Applied To Art.

 

For a pair of writers who were at the time Conservative (with a capital C) in both background and instinct, you could easily mistake Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice for a couple of severely disillusioned Marxists. Jesus Christ Superstar seems for most of its duration to be an unyielding attack on unregulated capitalism and the imperialism to which it gives deliberate birth, as well as the occupational hazard of the destruction of visionaries which is one of its most characteristic by-products.

 

But Lloyd Webber and Rice were primarily fascinated with the spectacle (are we proceeding down the equally inevitable road to Roland Barthes here?) and consequences of how people and things looked. Looks and appearances, and the judgements made on their primary basis, are the backbone of their fascination; the conjecture that the fate of the world can turn on the hue of Joseph’s coat, or the wiriness of Christ’s hands, or the hips of Eva Peron; what these are all trying to project, even if they’re projecting nothing. Perhaps this is to where humanity descends, in the end; the strength of belief and faith being entirely dependent upon how good a spiel their would-be saviour can weave. If the message is bright and loud enough, believers will gladly overlook the lack of actual content, the fatal avoidance of commitment, the shades behind the smile. As has recently been demonstrated (I have added and italicised that final sentence now).

 

Evita is an examination of a bright, possibly naïve and certainly corrupted mind; it doesn’t bother itself overmuch with the inherent corruption in post-war Argentinian politics, and how the subsequent bloody military history of Argentina fit in so astutely with the irony that the individual primarily responsible for dismantling their junta roundabout, via the Falklands war, was Margaret Thatcher (who as Leader of the Opposition in mid-1978 was profoundly impressed by the West End production of Evita, which may have helped to inspire her subsequent perspective on things). The whole musical might represent a dream in which “Eva Peron” is only an imagined existence – yet that existence was real, and its side-effects reverberated for decades as a result.

 

“Don’t Cry For Me, Argentina” is a request, or possibly a plea, for redemption in the resentful eyes of the people out of whom she rose; she has done too many bad things, turned too many backs, is centimetres away from tossing them fragments of semi-swallowed cake. But its pleading is the special kind reserved for the dock; not a genuine cry to be touched, but the cornered, faintly embarrassed confession of someone who’s been caught in the act. Or possibly her big chance to win the gullible fuckers over.

 

Fittingly, the music doesn’t have much to do with Argentina, apart from a very subtle tango rhythm; the song begins with a solemn tabula of low and very English strings, as though Elgar or Delius had been commissioned to write yet another commemoration of the prematurely departed. Then the voice of Julie Covington enters; hesitant, unstable, she whimpers: “It won’t be easy/You’ll think it strange…/That I still need your love after all that I’ve done.” Then, a pause for breath: “You won’t believe me.” The voice is an ideal one; Covington had floated unobtrusively between the worlds of theatre and folk-pop for some years (see for instance 1971’s “My Silks And Fine Arrays”); it is a voice which knows both how to act and how to believe.

 

Brass takes over from strings in the second verse as Covington slowly attempts to assert herself: “I had to let it happen/I had to change,” then, with a sense of real anger slowly radiating into her tone, “Couldn’t stay all my life down at heel.” She immediately tries to excuse that incipient rage: “But nothing impressed me at all/I never expected it to,” and she sounds nowhere near convincing or convinced.

 

Strings return for the chorus: “Don’t cry for me, Argentina/The truth is I never left you.” But what is the nature of that crying – is it mourning for a lost princess, or the baying of a disgruntled mob, crying for her blood? “I kept my promise,” she sings, again on the defensive, before lowering her voice to something like a threat, “Don’t keep your distance.”

 

In the third verse, acoustic guitar and rhythm enter, together with a pan-pipe synthesiser, providing a direct link to post-Fairport Convention modes, she continues to justify herself (-love?): “And as for fortune, and as for fame/I never invited them in.” Later her voice softens again, “They’re not the solutions they promised to be/The answer was here all the time…I love you…and hope you love me.” It is among the least believable “I love you”s in all of pop. The music stops, like a curtain silently sweeping open to reveal the bloodied mouths and the gallows beneath the balcony – I think of Scott Walker’s concept of Clara Petucci, of the terrified sparrow trapped in the room; the difference being that Eva has walked straight into it, voluntarily and ecstatically (and the general tenor of the orchestration, for example the ‘celli and basses as rhythm at the end of each chorus, suggests that Webber was more than somewhat familiar with Walker’s late ‘60s work).

 

Over a drone Covington makes her central titular plea, as though her life will depend upon the outside response – as proved to be the case. There is another brief and rhetorical but seemingly eternal pause, before a chorus, evidently dreaming of Gerontius once again (think of the reinstatement of Elgar as revolutionary as proposed in Alan Clarke’s 1975 TV film Penda’s Fen), hums wordlessly, like a deliberating jury (actually, I say to my 2008 self, this is not what happens – Eva appears to falter, unable to complete her address, so the masses take up the song on her behalf, helping her along, rendering her more powerful). Finally orchestra and rhythm join to frame Covington’s concluding chorus.

 

Then the music glides to a complete halt, and Covington, now seeming for the first time genuinely distressed, whispers: “Have I said too much? There’s nothing more I can think of to say to you,” and is answered by trilling, descending flutes which sound less Latin American, more Le Sacre du Printemps…and then she turns to her jury, to her people, to us, and intones with careful slowness and gravity: “But all you have to do is look at me to know that every word is true.” The syllables of each of these last four words she stretches out over one bar line apiece; the tympani strikes a roll and she is left to ponder her fate.

 

Or is she? As the orchestra plays the melody fortissimo, now reminiscent (or so my father thought) of Aaron Copland’s setting of Streets Of Laredo, there is suddenly a terrible sense of emptiness and not a small degree of numb shock as we realise that Eva has been addressing nobody, no one at all, even though she is pretending to address what might have been tens of thousands beneath the Casa Rosata; the mental camera cuts to the dressing table mirror and she has been rehearsing the whole thing. As with Peter Sellers’ “Party Political Speech,” we gradually understand in retrospect that all Evita has been doing for the last five-and-a-half minutes – the era of the long single hadn’t quite died away with “Bohemian Rhapsody,” after all – is sweetly and grandly saying nothing at all, save a string of crowd-pleasing clichés which in truth promise and pledge not an atom of what remains of her soul.

 

The song and record end, on the single, with the orchestra on a question mark of an unresolved chord, as is only right, and its full meaning can only be grasped by listening to it in tandem with its sister song, “Oh What a Circus,” a long hiss of post-mortem cynicism allotted to Che Guevara (played in the West End by David Essex) set to the same tune but at twice the speed and intensity (converted into a 1968 orchestral maximalist pop song by producer Mike Batt, perhaps with the arrangement of the Kursaal Flyers’ 1976 hit “Little Does She Know” still fresh in his mind) it was a top three single in the summer of 1978). But “Don’t Cry For Me, Argentina” has endured as one of the greatest exposés of bullshit masquerading as emotion in all of pop; the song itself is sad enough to make you cry, and then you check yourself – at what, or whom, are you crying, and why? How much “reality” do you actually desire to derive from a piece of music; and, to extend the argument into the fuller world, look – that is, look – at those recent speeches in the United States of America that we already know only too well, and in most cases are now ducking to avoid, and examine the minute slivers of genuine meaning which exist in either, or neither.

 

That is broadly what I wrote about the single of “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” sixteen-and-a-half years ago. Yet in the context of its parent album it scares the shit out of one, framed as it is by two semi-spoken setpieces on the Casa Rosata balcony; the newly-anointed Juan Peron assuring us that he is not going to stand for any nonsense, and – far more frighteningly – the shrieking, demotic, ecstatic Eva, marvelling at how fully the crowds have swallowed and digested her sentimental Newspeak, going back out and screaming in dissonant concordance with the masses. Diamanda Galas was never more certain of the Devil than Covington’s Eva is at that, her peak moment of existence.

 

The 1976 double album of Evita, which managed a week at number one on the NME album chart in February 1977 (but only peaked at number four in the “official” chart), is an extraordinary, if not overly consistent, thing. It is Carlos Pasini Hansen himself whom you hear in the opening cinema dialogue – one of those low-budget and probably dubbed dime store melodramas in which the younger Eva Duarte would have appeared – and this sequence immediately poses the question: what is spectacle, and do we prefer to venerate, commemorate and worship a spectacle rather than, or in place of, a flawed human being? Note that when the celluloid is allowed to run down and the death announcement succeeds it, there is no audience to hand.

 

The “Requiem” sequence comes as a shock, as was presumably intended; bitonal choruses and booming percussion, a tortuous guitar playing a line we will hear again, in an entirely different context, at show’s end. It’s a bit like the Mahavishnu Orchestra in Goth conference with Britten’s Noye’s Fludde (my school, Uddingston Grammar, staged the latter in the spring of 1976; Britten himself was very ill indeed by November of that year and I imagine was in no fit state to receive or hear Evita). I also discern a subtle Mike Westbrook influence; one of his favourite devices (as used in the opening moments of “View From The Drawbridge” from 1975’s Citadel/Room 315) is for melodies in two entirely contrasting keys to come into accidental contact with each other; the boat sails down the river and we hear a chorus of “Fishers Of Men” as we pass a school.

 

As this sequence escalates its dissonances and threatens to erupt completely, the cloud suddenly breaks and we have the original “Oh What a Circus” in which Che grumpily introduces himself as the one-man Marxist chorus, standing at the side of the stage, commenting on the action and gesturing to the audience: “can you believe this crap?” On this occasion, however, he is interrupted by a teenage girl who appears to be the reincarnated Eva – or perhaps it’s the actual teenage Eva, taking us back towards the beginning of her story.

 

Following which her story is duly told, of how she was a bastard, how her father’s “legitimate” family ordered hers to remain out of sight at his funeral, and how desperate and determined she was to escape her lowly chains. She “befriends” Magaldi – there is the hint of blackmail in the chorus’ reference to a questionable affair with another girl, as well as scarcely-suppressed rage at the implication that she may well have been taken advantage of, or much, much worse, in swinging Buenos Aires – Sammi Cammold’s recent New York production of the show makes no bones about the probability of the young Eva having been sexually abused.

 

Magaldi himself is presented as a faintly ludicrous and slightly sad figure; the initial “On This Night of a Thousand Stars” is delivered to a small and unenthusiastic audience and Che makes catty remarks about how he’s not going to be remembered for his voice. The problem here is that for the character to work, Magaldi really has to be a lousy singer – whereas Tony Christie, if anything, sings the song too well. In fact he sings the song beautifully, like an absolute pro, with subtle nods to the Elvis of “It’s Now Or Never” (but isn’t this supposed to be the thirties?) and by the time he reproduces the ending of the song at the 1944 charity concert where Juan and Eva finally meet (which he never actually did, having died six years previously) the audience (even if recorded) clearly loves him.

 

But Eva works and most likely screws her way up to the top, as “Goodnight and Thank You” is not shy of reminding us. Once she hooks up with Peron, it’s time for the latter’s former mistress (explicitly a schoolgirl, hmm…) to be sent back to school (of sorts). That mistress is voiced by Barbara Dickson – Rice and Lloyd Webber didn’t think she was quite right for Eva, but did give her one song to sing. “Another Suitcase in Another Hall,” which they thought was going to be the show’s big hit (it did pretty well commercially, but nowhere near as spectacularly as “Don’t Cry for Me”). In it, Dickson, singing in a register too high for her (since she was supposed to be portraying a teenager – she pointedly lowered the key for subsequent live performances), muses with audible pain about what it means for somebody like her to be constantly thrown out of people’s homes and lives, with little optimism or even plain hope about what’s going to become of her. There is a nub of real sadness here which Eva seems intent on avoiding, at least until such time as she can no longer avoid it.

 

The characterisation of Juan Peron is, I think, an important weak spot. By Rice’s own admission, that character was underwritten, and generally tends to come across as an amiable doofus rather than a ruthless dictator. And Paul Jones is simply too young and happy-sounding to convince as Peron; when first we hear him, he sounds as though he’s strolled in from recording his contribution to Escalator Over The Hill (I wonder how familiar Rice and Lloyd Webber were with Carla Bley and Paul Haines’ masterpiece – an addendum: Jones asked to be involved in Escalator after attending a New York concert given by Charlie Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra, of which Bley was effectively the co-leader. One of many major setpieces on their self-titled 1970 debut album was a reading of Haden’s “Song For Che”). He does his not inconsiderable best, but we can never quite believe him, enter into his version of the world.

 

Evita’s first half climaxes in and concludes with “A New Argentina”; this should be a political prophecy as frightening as Cabaret’s “Tomorrow Belongs To Me” but is regularly diverted by Peron’s yes but/no but vacillations, Eva’s furious rebuttals and that dentist’s drill rollercoaster of a fuzz guitar line, as well as Eva briefly taking over Che’s intermittent Basil Exposition plot-explaining function to give a potted history of Peron’s arrest and imprisonment, the public uprising and his subsequent release and political triumph. Covington sings with searing and at times screaming commitment – yes, she really believes this is for the best, even though everybody else can see exactly where it’s all heading.

 

The show’s second half begins with the balcony-framed “Don’t Cry for Me” but we have already been alerted of Eva’s, shall I say, superficiality when it comes to human affairs, be it instant poverty remedies or loving other people. The first act’s attempt at a love song, “I’d Be Surprisingly Good For You” (actually a song good enough for Linda Lewis and ACT to cover subsequently), sounds stiffly slick, like a seventies television commercial (which again I think was the intention). In “High Flying, Adored,” a very pleasing love song if you don’t listen to the words, Che observes how high Eva has risen and how far down she’ll have to fall.

 

Act two of Evita isn’t quite as consistent as its first half; there are several longeurs – “Rainbow High” is a wonderful demonstration of shallow commitment (“so Christian Dior me”; of course the Pet Shop Boys were listening and taking notes) and a firm test of vocal registers and octaves for any singer wanting to tackle the role. However, “Rainbow Tour” is a disappointingly prosaic chat about Eva’s doomed pan-European visits, with most of those countries not exactly keen on having another Mussolini, thank you very much. In addition, Eva’s enthusiasm for the enterprise is seen to diminish markedly – indicating a far, far deeper problem.

 

The show goes on to look at what Eva did and didn’t, or wouldn’t, do. Peronism was a confused political grab-bag into which the worst elements of fascism and communism were deposited and shaken about. Eva seems to have thought it was enough for her simply to be seen, “doing things,” even if the Argentinian economy has to be crashed, seemingly beyond repair, in order to pay for them. “And the Money Kept Rolling In” is a moderate rabble-rouser – imagine the Leonard Bernstein of West Side Story doing “Proud Mary” – where Che, with moderate fury, describes how some of that money seemingly rolls into nowhere and to nobody’s real benefit (except, perhaps, the Perons) and that the enterprise was decidedly shaky, but hey, who cares when you have someone who is a Spiritual Symbol of Doing Things?

 

Throughout most of Evita we hear a grumpy chorus of stuffed-shirt upper-class types who don’t seem to like any music after The Mikado – and you can palpate Covington’s hurt and anger when, early on in the show, she screeches “SCREW THE MIDDLE CLASSES!” She’s doing this only for her beloved shirt-sleeved descamisados.

 

But the Army are unhappy. Unhappy with what they perceive as a crass guttersnipe clawing her way towards absolute authority. Unhappy with Peron for falling for it (and, indeed, her). Above all they’re unhappy with the economy. No, as much as they loathed Eva, there wasn’t anything they could do about her as long as the people were happy and the economy was booming. But by the early fifties Argentina was nearly broke and their patience was running out.

 

Peron, in the show, realises this and argues against Eva running for Vice-President (since he knows that this would lead to their immediate overthrow). Moreover, the main reason why she can’t run is because…her own body is letting her down. She is dying of uterine cancer. Very late on in the show, Eva finally realises that, yes, she actually does love Juan – and yet it’s much, much too late. In the meantime – and perhaps it’s the core of Evita – Che and Eva briefly meet for an imaginary waltz (they never met in real life, but Guevara did once write to Eva sardonically asking if she would buy him a jeep, and apparently also conferred with the exiled Juan Peron in the midst of his mid-sixties Bolivian adventures), fail to square their differences, and conclude – in the manner of a cheery Rodgers and Hammerstein stage song which takes the Then Play Long tale back almost to its very beginning – “There is evil, all around, fundamental – the system of government quite incidental.” It might be the musical’s most frightening moment.

 

So she delivers her final address to the nation, revisiting the closing words of “Don’t Cry for Me,” except, this time, she means them. Ill beyond redemption and drugged, she experiences hallucinations of her previous life before placidly concluding with “Lament” – and suddenly we are back in early seventies Basing Street, and Linda and Richard Thompson performing “The Great Valerio” (“I’m your friend until you use me/And then be sure I won’t be there”). She sings of the children she will never have – and I note that her own mother was given the same diagnosis. Eva was apparently told that to survive she’d need a hysterectomy…but the Spiritual Mother could not be seen as unable to bear children, so she declined, and so she declined. The fashionistas of “Rainbow High,” now undertakers and pallbearers, will endeavour to preserve her body familiar. The show ends as quietly as any musical had done since…West Side Story.

 

The 1976 Evita is a forbidding affair. Nobody really comes out of it in a rosy light. Certainly not Che, who demonstrates that he can be a complete c*nt when he wants to, including making fun of Eva’s dying, and certainly not Eva, so consumed by her own image she hadn’t realised that she had eaten herself – I’ve heard the stories about her final, grotesque days, how she was propped up in a standing position in a literal cage, how she may have been lobotomised at her husband’s request, and so on and so gruesomely forth.

 

The impression appears to be that Rice fundamentally approved of Eva – a poor girl arising from the dirt to make life better for as many people as possible – and less so of Guevara, an upper-class medical student of distinguished ancestry who, it is implied, only went into Marxism because he couldn’t cut it as a capitalist (possibly Evita’s most purposely embarrassing moments come when Che plugs his insecticide; in one such moment, he interrupts Eva’s soliloquy in the manner of a random YouTube or Spotify advertisement). Whereas Lloyd Webber seems not to have liked Eva at all, and Covington pointedly declined to reprise the role on stage because she found that she could not summon one atom of sympathy for her.

 

Hence, when Harold Prince agreed to mount a stage musical of Evita – Rice and Lloyd Webber had sent him a copy of the 1976 album to see whether he might think a stage show feasible; Prince commented that any musical that starts with a funeral can’t be bad – they needed a new Eva for the West End. Out of thousands of applicants the pair picked Elaine Paige, a singer I’d previously only known for appearing on an early-evening BBC1 middle-of-the-road singalong medley series called One More Time! (other regulars included Scotsman Danny Street, session pros like Paul Curtis and Jane Marlowe, and, in later series, a young Hazell Dean) and who at the time of Evita was fed up with session singing and not having much money and was on the point of retraining as a nursery nurse. However, her agent at the time recommended that she go out and buy the Evita album because, in her (agent's) opinion, she was cut out to play Eva.

 

Paige did go out and buy the album, played it over and over and learned it by heart…and after eight exhausting auditions she got the part (almost uniquely among the applicants, she made a point of not singing “Don’t Cry for Me” as a party piece). Although she still only had second billing to David Essex (who was, admittedly, a very big star at the time) as Che, she won the audience over from opening night onward.

 

I am not sure how much of that power is evident on the album of the West End production of Evita which came out in 1978. Irritatingly for awkward historians such as myself, only an album of highlights, as opposed to a complete performance, seems to have been recorded. Essex is far and away the best Che – angry, truculent, self-loathing when he needs to be – and it is he who turns the final “Lament” against itself and adds the sinister spoken coda that, following the military takeover, Eva’s body disappeared for seventeen years. Curtain falls on what was, at Prince’s insistence, a sparse, minimalist set.

 

But it’s difficult to discern the impact that the production itself must have made – “A New Argentina,” for instance, is cut to a mere two-and-a-bit minutes – and Paige largely sounds reserved and in places a little hesitant, as though holding back her full power, or conserving it for the stage. The unlikely figure of Joss Ackland – the voice of a thousand television commercial voiceovers – as Juan actually works, however; he is, after all, supposed to be old enough to be Eva’s father, and we get a little more of Peron’s lecherous savagery communicated. Siobhán McCarthy’s evicted mistress is convincing, but Mark Ryan’s Magaldi is slightly stiff.

 

Prince’s production then transferred to Broadway, although Paige could not repeat her triumph as the Actors’ Equity Association insisted that American performers be used. Prince therefore hired two then-largely unknown performers, Patti LuPone and Mandy Patinkin, to play Eva and Che. At the time Patinkin was known only as an actor and had never sung publicly. LuPone found the show a dispiriting ordeal; “Evita was the worst experience of my life,” she told Jesse Green of the New York Times in July 2007. "I was screaming my way through a part that could only have been written by a man who hates women.”

 

Prince’s chief insistence – apart from getting completely rid of the insecticide subplot – was that the musical’s already rather dated-sounding seventies rock moments (“Dangerous Jade”) be either omitted or modified, a.k.a. their rock elements minimised. He knew that the stage show couldn’t simply be a reproduction of the record, that it had to play more like a “traditional” musical in order to compete with Sondheim et al.

 

Prior to Broadway, the show had some tryout runs in Los Angeles and San Francisco, and perhaps to Prince’s surprise gained a huge gay following; Eva as an Argentinian Judy Garland. On Broadway, backed by relentless television advertising, Evita ran successfully from September 1979 until June 1983.

 

A full cast recording of the production was, thankfully, made. Although many who were there and saw the production speak highly of it, I found it as frustrating as Patti LuPone must have done. She does indeed seem to shout her entire role, rather than sing it or unearth concealed emotion. Patinkin sounds like, well, Patinkin, except when he sounds like Meat Loaf when the music speeds up. Bob Gunton’s Peron sounds fine to me. Unfortunately, the late Mark Syers played Magaldi for camp.

 

Alan Parker had actually spoken with Rice and Lloyd Webber about the possibility of doing a movie of Evita not long after the 1976 album had come out. Robert Stigwood, who had unsuccessfully tried to persuade the pair to write a musical about Peter Pan in 1972, was the producer of the West End production of Evita and, round about 1980, very much wanted Parker to direct the film; having just made Fame, however, Parker was loath to commit to another musical so soon (although he did direct The Wall in 1982).

 

After that the film rights were up in the air, open to all comers. In 1981 Jon Peters tried to convince Stigwood that he could co-produce a movie of Evita and persuade his then partner Barbra Streisand to star in it; however, Streisand had seen the Broadway production and was deeply unimpressed by what she perceived to be a sympathetic portrait of a fascist. Then, remembering the success they’d had with the film of Tommy, Stigwood hired Ken Russell to direct. Various actresses and singers were auditioned – Russell was keen on getting Liza Minnelli to play Eva (speaking of “an Argentinian Judy Garland”; Russell screen-tested her using blonde wigs and custom-made period gowns) but Stigwood, Rice and Paramount Pictures were insistent that Elaine Paige should do so; Russell was dropped from the project following further disagreements – he had begun rewriting the screenplay without consulting anyone else, recasting the character of Che as a newspaper reporter and staging “Waltz for Eva and Che” in a pair of criss-crossing hospital gurneys (Eva being treated for cancer, Che having just been beaten up by rioters).

 

Stigwood then approached various other directors, including Herbert Ross (who went off and made Footloose instead), Richard Attenborough (who thought the project impossible), Alan J Pakula and Hector Babenco, without any success. In 1986 Madonna, bringing her into the story six thousand or so words in, came to Stigwood’s office sporting a forties hairdo and period gown to show how good an Eva she would be; she also expressed the preference that Francis Ford Coppola direct.

 

In 1987, however, Oliver Stone began to express interest in making an Evita movie. Madonna met with both Stone and Lloyd Webber but insisted on rewriting the score and retaining script approval, so Meryl Streep was then approached. Stigwood commented that Streep learned the entire part in one week and as a singer and actress was “sensational” and “staggering.” However, the film’s parent company, Weintraub Entertainment Group, dropped the project after suffering several recent box-office flops. Stone then took the film to Carolco Pictures, but Streep’s demands became more numerous, and although they were agreed to, she dropped out of the project for “personal reasons” (ten days after dropping out, she called Stone’s people to inform them she had changed her mind, but Stone had become fed up and moved on to filming The Doors).

 

Disney acquired the Evita film rights in 1990 and were set to begin filming, again with Madonna in the lead role. However, plans were cancelled in 1991 when the film looked set to go some five million dollars over-budget. Ownership rights then changed hands again, but in 1994 Stigwood finally managed to persuade Alan Parker – remember him? – to both produce and direct. Parker was determined to ignore Stone’s alterations to the story and ensured that the film would be more solidly based on the original 1976 album; however, Stone protested that much of the script that was used was actually his, and, following a dispute, Parker was legally obliged to share a co-writing credit with him.

 

Stone had previously met with the then Argentinian president Carlos Menem back in 1988. In 1995 Parker also paid a visit to Argentina to see Menem, who said that, although he had reservations about the project, he would permit filming but not within the Casa Rosata itself, and advised Parker that there were likely to be protests from diehard Peronists, as turned out to be the case.

 

Antonio Banderas was the first major star to be hired for the film, as Che; indeed, he had been pencilled in to co-star from the Disney days. Parker de-Guevaraised the character and had him assuming more of an everyman observer role; if Evita “was Argentina,” then Che could stand for “the Argentinians.” For the role of Eva, Glenn Close was considered, then Streep again, but Madonna sent Parker a four-page letter explaining why she would be perfect for the part, together with a copy of the video for her “Take a Bow.”

 

Parker took Madonna on, but on the firm understanding that he, not she, would be in charge. Lloyd Webber was sceptical about her singing ability and insisted that she take formal lessons; these would have a direct effect on her post-Evita work. Rice, however, was adamant that Madonna was the right choice for Eva; he said that he wasn’t looking for “a singer” per se, but rather someone who could sell the songs. Perhaps he realised that Madonna would, in large part, be singing about herself.

 

Madonna herself travelled to Buenos Aires shortly before starting filming, speaking with those friends, relations and contemporaries of Eva who were at the time still alive. Midway through filming she discovered that she was pregnant with Lourdes. She found the filming experience uniquely intense. Jonathan Pryce was hired to play Juan, Jimmy Nail to play Magaldi.

 

After the film had been wrapped up, the next job was to record the songs in the studio. Madonna and Banderas were both petrified, Madonna so much so that she found the prospect of singing in front of a large orchestra intimidating; she was used to singing to prerecorded backing tracks. Following a crisis meeting, Parker and Lloyd Webber agreed that she could record her vocal tracks separately and take alternate days off recording. Despite thorough training with vocal coach Joan Lader, all of Madonna’s songs had to be taken down in key in order to accommodate her relatively limited vocal range. Interestingly, the music producer was Nigel Wright – who had also produced Robson & Jerome.

 

Musically, the soundtrack very much takes its lead from the 1976 original, as Parker had intended; “Dangerous Jade,” excised from all stage productions, reappears as “Peron’s Latest Flame.” “The Lady’s Got Potential” deletes all references to insecticide and capitalism. The musical chairs shuffle of “The Art Of The Possible,” written for the stage, appears as an interlude between “Charity Concert” and “I’d Be Surprisingly Good For You.” Elements of previous manifestations of the show appear in “Partido Feminista” and the children’s choir of “Santa Evita.”

 

However, a lot of stuff gets lost, possibly to placate the Argentinian authorities so that they could get permission to film on the actual balcony of the Casa Rosata; the “which means” punchlines of “Goodnight and Thank You” are mostly missing, the messy economic mismanagement of “And the Money Kept Rolling In” gets overlooked.

 

Most problematically, Madonna now gets “Another Suitcase in Another Hall,” and out of sequence – it is now a very long way away from “Hello and Goodbye.” While there is a logic to this – the young Eva seeing her life evaporate in endless quick-change liaisons – it has to be said that the seventeen seconds the then-still unknown Andrea Corr gets, as the actual ejected mistress, at the end of “Hello and Goodbye,” are emotionally cutting and might see directly into a rotting and hollow heart. Then again, might not the mistress be just a mirror reflection of Eva herself (and Madonna singing the song balances out with the harrowing reprise of the chorus that she offers at the end of “Your Little Body’s Slowly Breaking Down”)?

 

Rice and Lloyd Webber were also asked to come up with a new song in order to straighten out a few loose narrative ends (and also to qualify for an Oscar); “You Must Love Me” sometimes sounds like an instruction but Madonna generally makes it clear that this really is love and she needs it to be confirmed and reciprocated while she is still capable of receiving it - although the song was subsequently, and far more convincingly, recorded by...Elaine Paige. However, Madonna does a good Julie Andrews on the excitedly morbid “Waltz” and surprisingly negotiates the low lines of “star quality” in “Buenos Aires” and “Rainbow High” more securely than other Evas have managed.

 

Of the other major performers, Banderas’ Che is perhaps misguidedly recast as a Where’s Wally?-type invisible man of the people and retreats to conservatism at picture’s end. Vocally he has the authentic Hispanic accent but he doesn’t cut as deeply or viciously as Essex did. Jimmy Nail I thought an improbable Magaldi – who certainly wouldn’t have indulged in any dalliances with teenagers, but that’s the licence which telling a story buys you – but “On This Night” sounds closer to its tango roots than before, and Nail makes a nice switch-up between his two readings; the first is quavery and uncertain, the second more assured (but isn’t he already a ghost in 1944? Is that one of my hospital nightmares recurring, that second reading – the ghost of Danny Street in the dark, lit up in a packed stadium?). Jonathan Pryce is by some distance the best Juan; he sounds genuinely ominous in the first balcony sequence, yet deeply compassionate when he knows Eva’s life is ending. The arrangements and musicianship are punchily-defined and inventive – Courtney Pine drops by on occasional saxophone, and the lead guitar on “Requiem” is recognisably that of Gary Moore.

 

As for Madonna? Well, I think she plays the part as though auditioning to play the lead in Evita, much as Eva seemed to be auditioning for the part of Argentina’s “Spiritual Mother.” Her vocal range is fairly narrow, but somehow her emotions become intensified as a consequence – she knows that she needs to concentrate more - and she seems to burrow to Eva’s hollow core pretty accurately (because she, Madonna, knows she might be Eva’s reincarnation?); on the closing “Lament” she is as wrecked as the Kristin Hersh of “Delicate Cutters.” She sounds angry when she needs to be angry. The calling card of “Buenos Aires” could have gone on her first album. I’ll get back to her “Don’t Cry for Me” shortly.

 

But what does all, or any of this, tell me about Eva Peron and the cult that has grown up around her? Before Evita, few non-Argentinians knew who she was, whereas every Argentinian, for better or (usually) worse, did. I have listened to, watched and read so much, including Tomás Eloy Martínez’s supernatural thriller Santa Evita…and still I am no closer to understanding what is supposed to be so great and worldly (as in world-consuming) about her.

 

Perhaps it is to do with Trump having killed harmony, happiness and hope a few weeks ago. Despite all of my efforts, I have failed to evade the fact that Trump saw the Broadway production of Evita six times – it is apparently his favourite musical - and was moved by it so deeply he thought he could run for office and be another Eva.

 

Nor can I escape the probability that this show is asking me to sympathise with a figure who facilitated tyranny and rendered it compatible with sainthood. Hence Evita is either lavish and empty, leaning on the love story and soft-pedalling the inconvenient politics, or is a hugely cynical analysis out of which no characters come out well, pinpointing the limbo where far Right meets far Left and each finds and embraces each other in the centre.

 

It may be an idea to listen to “The Electrician” by the Walker Brothers – a study based in great part on the doings of the Argentine military junta of the mid-seventies - to learn everything that Evita doesn’t, or won’t, tell you (and how great a Juan Peron would the “lemon bloody cola” Scott Walker of Climate Of Hunter have been?). Or to hear Sinéad O’Connor singing “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” in 1992, as part of what was lazily assumed at the time to be a cover versions vanity project (how many other hit singles are as fearlessly extreme as “Success Has Made A Failure Of Our Home”?), with its backdrop of a lifetime of inflicted pain and inherited grief.

 

Best of all, go to the glorious “Miami Mix” of “Don’t Cry for Me” where Madonna, free from all singing-lesson and preloaded cultural restrictions, captures absolutely the song’s centre of vapid ecstasy, donating all the emotion she withheld, perhaps on purpose, from the ballad reading (which she had to do, shivering with nerves, in front of Lloyd Webber and was convinced that she had made an absolute mess of it). Then look at our world now, and realise how irrevocably it has been shattered by our deathless deference to the calamitous chimera of “images.”

 

"I don't know, though, which version I should keep. Why does history have to be a story told by sensible people and not the delirious raving of losers like the Colonel and Cifuentes? If history - as appears to be the case - is just another literary genre, why take away from it the imagination, the foolishness, the indiscretion, the exaggeration, and the defeat that are the raw material without which literature is inconceivable?"

(Tomás Eloy Martínez, translated by Helen Lane, Santa Evita. London: Doubleday, 1997; chapter 6, 'The Enemy Is Lying in Wait")