Mike
Bennett:
July, 2003
Martin
Gordon Interview, Part II
In
the first part of my interview with Martin Gordon, the former
leader of Jet and Radio Stars (and bass player for Sparks
on their classic Kimono My House album), kindly went
over some of his history and talked a bit about his new release
(and first solo album), The Baboon In The Basement
(if you want to buy it, go to martingordon.de
). In this second part of the interview, we talk more in depth
about the record, which is a breath of fresh air during these
often stale musical times. (And I elsewhere this month). And
if you are familiar with his articulate and witty lyrics,
then you won't be surprised that Gordon comes off the same
way in interviews. It was a true pleasure getting to sling
some questions at someone whose music I've enjoyed for years.
MIKE:
Fans of your earlier work, in particular Radio Stars,
will be very pleased with this album. It sounds like where
Radio Stars might have progressed had they carried
on for a few more albums. Beyond the fact that a few songs
were not too far removed from that time, what accounts for
this? How did you avoid the urge a lot of veteran artists
have to sound contemporary' or show some artistic side,
that often should have remained hidden?
MARTIN:
Something of a double-edged question, is it not? You mean
how on earth do I so successfully manage to avoid sounding
contemporary? And what, pray, means 'veteran"? I can
honestly claim to never have knowingly stuck my hand up a
cow's bottom in my life, unlike some I could name...
As
a producer, however, you discover that invariably what works
best is people doing what they are good at. Sometimes there
are reasons for taking an alternative approach, but this Baboon
wasn't one of them. Hence the overall concept of sharp and
snappy, and the roping in of other people to do things very
well rather than my trying to do things as best I could. Technology
of course plays a central role to the Baboon, but perhaps
I shouldn't go into that. Let's merely say that I was striving
for a 'classic' sound rather than a time-defined picture.
Frankly I don't think it sounds as though it comes from any
other time than 2003.... but I would say that, wouldn't I?
What
I do well is write and direct pop songs, and given that most
people's attention span is short, the tunes should be short
as well. There's also something creative about putting up
restrictions to what one can do and achieving ways to get
around them. So, you know... it's what I do. My symphonic
tone poem about the bombing of Dresden arranged for three
klaxons, two rubber chickens and a bicycle-wheel can wait.
In
terms of revealing artistic bents that would better have remained
straight, there was a brief moment (with the Mira project
in 1995) when I let my instincts be swayed by my surroundings,
and we delved into the area of 'world-fusion'; however, my
instincts are usually accurate, by my own standards at least,
and economy is my instinctive thing, along with concept and
content. Given that we WEREN'T Persian, though, there was
no reason for Mira to go on like that. But I lived and learned.
MIKE:
Your lyrics are as witty and observant as ever. Do the lyrics
generally come first, or at least the concept, and trigger
the music?
MARTIN:
You are too kind, Mike (but what about trenchant?). Either
way around will do, in terms of sequence - the strongest concepts
produce the strongest words, but the idea is the thing. No
sniffing around looking for words that fit, in this house
- the idea appears, and the words follow, either concurrent
or before or after the tune, but they do need their own little
bit of inspiration to kick 'em off.
I
find the 'words first' approach produces a more interesting
end result, if only because words don't automatically fall
into even structures, whereas if one's playing aimlessly around
chords, symmetry tends to appear. Unless you are a Persian,
of course.
Most
people can (or I can, at any rate...) tell the difference
between words that have been grafted onto a tune and words
that have some separate inspiration. But there's always something
to write about, if you need to find a topic - as Frank Zappa
said, the building block of the universe, given it's ubiquitousness,
is not carbon but stupidity, and that means an endless stream
of topics just floating aimlessly around in the ether. What
I do militate against, albeit in a very non-active way, is
words written with no discernible thought behind them....but
as this constitutes 90% of current pop music, it's a bit of
a lonely position to defend. Cheapest. most sphincter-shriveling,
least inspired-ever couplet known to mankind? 'Dressed up
to the nines, at sixes and sevens with you'. I rest my case
(again).
MIKE:
Swede Pelle Almgren takes on the vocal chores on this album,
and you seem extremely pleased both by the results and the
working relationship. Do you see this as an ongoing collaboration,
particularly since he is also a songwriter?
MARTIN:
I like Swedes, they are very healthy. Also Brussels sprouts
and cabbage, and carrots are very good for hearing in the
dark, apparently. I have every intention of maintaining my
intake of Swedes. Plus, as noted, collaborations are this
year's black, so count me in there as well, matey. Who knows,
maybe the world won't have to wait another thirty years (twenty-nine,
I should say) for a follow-up.
[Martin
took the opportunity to e-mail Pelle this question, and here's
how he responded]
PELLE:
To me, working with Martin is a bit like being the guy who
sings with Judas Priest now. You know, you are a fan and suddenly
you're working with somebody who's work you've admired since
you where a teenager. All my friends are really freaked out
by the fact that it can happen - and so am I. It's a funny
old (net)world indeed. Never meet your heroes they say. Well,
Martin turned out to be a true gentleman, very funny and easy
to get along with. And he is one of pop's most underrated
song writers, in my book. So of course I'd like to continue
to work with him in one way or another. Either we'll write
some more songs for other artists or I'll be happy to sing
on whatever he may release in the future. Or both.
MIKE:
For quite a few years now you've been playing on a variety
of world music projects. Has that had any effect on your pop
writing whether directly or indirectly? In particular,
how connected and/or disparate is Indian or Turkish or other
forms of world music from rock-and-roll based pop?
MARTIN:
In a general sense, I have rediscovered the joys of working
with performing musicians thanks to the world-music scenario,
as technology tends to be rather absent when you're sitting
in a sandstorm in the Thar Desert in northern Pakistan. But
my non-purist approach is to treat it all the same and certainly,
comparing like with like, Indian pop, Indonesian pop, Chinese
pop - it all has a comparable sensibility. I don't necessarily
mean cases where musicians are consciously adopting Western
pop habits, but when considering indigenous, pre- or post-advent
of technology popular music, you do find, by and large, that
pop aesthetics are often comparable to their Western analogue.
As Robert Fripp is fond of saying rather smugly, music may
well be an international language, it just has a myriad local
dialects. An example of this intercultural palaver is the
Algerian Rachid Taha - have a listen to Rachid Taha Live for
one of the most amazing rock'n'roll records ever...Steve [ex-Gong]
Hillage (Taha's producer and guitarist)...what a geezer etc.
etc. But to be honest, I haven't really tried to combine these
local dialects (with the possible exception of the title track
to the Baboon, which has a Turkish metre from time
to time. Actually, my Turkish friends from the Sezen Aksu
gang like this tune best of all, they told me).
It's
a boring old musicological saw to go on about, for example,
the African origin of western pop, but there's a good case
to be made for it, that's for sure. So there is, in any case,
an inherent connection between East and West, New World and
Old World, but sometimes inherent is enough, and we should
draw the line there.
MIKE:
On this album, you reunite with your old Jet drummer Chris
Townson (also ex- John's Children). I know you've played live
with him in various Jet and John's Children reunion gigs
what was it like working with him in the studio again?
MARTIN:
I rediscovered the pleasures of working with Old Drummer Chris
again in the reformed John's Chickens project. And then the
rather unlikely reformed Jet project, which made a brief tour
around Europe playing a mixture of John's Children, Jet and
Radio Stars repertoire. We recorded it ('Music For The Herd
Of Herring' on Radiant Future) and I thought the drumming
was better than it ever was.
So
when the time came for the Baboon, there as no question
about who should sit on the drum stool...I couldn't get him,
so I asked Chris. I must say that it was great, working with
Chris - we recorded in a studio on a boat moored near the
Russian War Memorial Park in what used to be East Berlin.
In the Jet days, the one thing that Chris used to hate more
than anything else in the entire cosmos was learning parts.
As you can imagine, this could sometime be a bit problematic.
But now, with the advent of technology - I sent him a CD with
the rough demos on, he listened over at home, we set up on
the boat and he just played through every song twice, from
beginning to end. Sometimes he got the parts perfect, other
times what he did naturally was better (actually most of the
time) and occasionally we went over a phrase here and there.
Then I chopped all the bits together and bingo!
We
later reflected on it, comparing the agony and torture that
we both went through in the days of Jet with the achievement
of completing (the recording, at any rate) an entire album
in one day... well, it makes you think, honestly, it fair
makes you think.
And,
believe me, the with- and without-Chris versions of the Baboon
makes me realise exactly what an enormous contribution the
drumming makes to the whole thing. One correspondent noted
that Chris's drumming sounds like a refrigerator falling down
a flight of stairs. But, as Chris noted in reply, that probably
WAS a refrigerator. We have a musical, and personal connection,
that has remained unharmed by the course of events.
MIKE:
Where did you get guitarist Andy Reimer? His work throughout
the album, particularly on the title cut is stellar.
MARTIN:
I'm glad you noticed that, it is rather good, isn't it? He's
a local boy, actually one of the few real born and bred Berliners
that there are in Berlin, most of the residents coming from
elsewhere (Pluto, I think). I saw him playing once in a bar,
and he made some fantastic noises. We talked, and I later
gave him a copy of "Turn It Over" and "Emergency"
by the Tony Williams Lifetime, the last two Jeff Beck CDs
and a bit of latter-day King Crimson, and we never looked
back. I used him on some remixes I did for various obscure
Turkish singers (Candan Ercetin, if you're interested) and
the first thing we recorded together for this *Baboon* was
"Hit Him On The Head". There was an idea to write
some tunes together, which could have been interesting, but
it was postponed by the unexpected arrival of his son Paul.
MIKE:
What was the recording process like? On a few songs, it sounds
like Reimer gets a few parts in. Was there initial recording
and then a lot of embellishments and overdubs?
MARTIN:
It changes really - mostly we did the basic parts and then
I fiddled with them, and then we reconvened and filled in
as necessary. I must say that, apart from working with singers,
the thing I enjoy most is developing guitar parts, in conjunction
with an able guitarist, of course. Chris Townson says that
he hears an eerie echo of Davey O'List [Mike's note: in addition
to a brief hitch with Martin's band Jet, O'List also had a
very brief stint in Pink Floyd, while Syd Barrett was on the
blink, a brief stint in The Nice, when they were P.P. Arnold's
backing band, a (you guessed it) brief hitch with Roxy Music,
and various other stints and hitches...] in some of the parts
but, as Andy hasn't even got a fawn coloured suit covered
with old baked bean stains, I think it's just a sign of how
close to the pavilion Chris is becoming - the stumps have
been drawn and are physically being carried.
MIKE:
"Only One Dream Per Person" is your vision of Heaven
if it were run by Germans. It struck me that if I hadn't read
the press kit, I would have thought this were a vision of
Heaven if it were run by a corporation. In your mind, would
one be preferable to the other? For that matter, who should
run Heaven?
MARTIN:
If you see corporations as enormous, inflexible monoliths
that militate against spontaneity and eccentricity in support
of the perceived greater common good, there actually would
be no difference between Heaven being run by the Germans or
by Fat Cat Corp. Inc. Otherwise, dare I suggest that the English
would make quite a good job of it? No, clearly not. OK, the
Dutch. They seem to have a fairly good handle on how things
work, on how to accommodate the individual within a set of
regulations. I mean their policemen wear hairnets and smoke
dope, for God's sake.
MIKE:
On "Terrible Mess (No-Good Shoebomber)", you take
on the Richard Reid story. Was it different writing a song
that came from the headlines, so to speak, and is your perspective
on the song any different in light of the continuing world
events since 9/11? And did you know right away that the song
would be from Reid's perspective it certainly is effective.
MARTIN:
I always, in Radio Stars days, used to look to the tabloid
headlines for inspiration - the Beast of Barnsley springs
unbidden to mind. These tunes are sometimes as much about
the medium as the message. But not here, clearly - it's merely
a cataloguing of incompetence, fortunately enough for those
involved. I like the aural plane crash in the middle, winding
up in a field of sheep. (Shouldn't it be 11/9, anyway? Or
am I just being parochial?).
MIKE:
On "Green Finger", a guy buys a girl a cheap ring,
and the title explains what happens to her. Was this song
inspired by something within your personal knowledge? Or have
you avoided such romantic setbacks?
MARTIN:
I have had a number of romantic setbacks in my time but not
this particular one, I must say. I should point out that my
setbacks are now resolved as I recently got married (for the
first time). However, I can still use her for source material
("It's Like It's Like..."). I DO however have a
fondness for verdigris and, with a spot of imagination, one
could see that something like this easily COULD come about.
In fact, we could run a competition, whereby anyone who HAS
had this happen to them could win a free *Baboon* in return
for their sending me the green digit in an envelope, so that
I could just check that they weren't trying to pull a fast
one.
MIKE:
"Let's Make Money" could be the new American National
Anthem it's certainly easier to sing than the one we
have. It's a song that may be appreciated by both socialists
and capitalists, depending on their appreciation for irony
and bass solos. While the song is light-hearted, does money
lust bother you a great deal?
MARTIN:
I think most people's capacity for irony and simultaneous
bass solos is probably quite low regardless of their political
orientation, although we (well, I, at any rate) live in hope.
If we're focusing on the need to create money at the expense
of content, unfortunately it's the soundtrack to modern life,
innit... I mean, boy bands, Irish dancing, white rappers......really,
I ask you. I have neither a great lust for money nor a great
amount of it. (Possibly there is a connection). I think, in
art at any rate, slavish pursuit of money brings it's own
limitations along with it, but I have no direct experience
of either. On another note, can I point out that the bassline
is in fact "Colonel Bogey", more or less...?
MIKE:
This record is being released on different labels/distributors
throughout the world Eggtoss in Japan, Voiceprint in
the U.K. and through Navarre.com in the U.S. What was it like
having to hawk your wares to record labels?
MARTIN: Not as exhausting as you might imagine, as the whole
project was really made at the instigation of Eggtoss Records
of Japan. They, in their inscrutable brilliance, thought that
it might be a good idea to make a MG solo record, so I owe
it all to Kiyohiro Shiroya and Shigenori Kato, actually. My
relationship with the Radiant Future label, distributed by
Voiceprint, is such that they're happy to go along with whatever
I suggest, really.... they were happy with the live "Music
for the Herd of Herring", the two Jet re-releases, now
this. And Navarre in the US are seemingly the distributors
of Voiceprint, although this is not crystal clear to me at
present. The situation is quite bearable. I'm currently looking
for distribution in Tierre del Fuego and Patagonia, where
there is apparently a Martin Gordon cargo cult devoted to
worshiping reproductions of the seagull that appeared on the
cover of the Holiday Album. Good for them, I say. One
day I will return, bearing gifts of white goods and model
aeroplanes.
MIKE:
There are more albums coming out now than ever, by far. The
marketplace is now a select number artists on major labels
and countless artists recording for independent labels. Is
this a good thing?
MARTIN:
Musicologists (Allan Lomax, specifically) call this the grey-out/glitter-out
scenario. Either the whole thing breaks up into a myriad tiny
specific-interest groups, all differentiated (indie), or all
movements gradually bleed into each other, producing a homogenous
grey lumpen mass (corporate). It's rather like what happens
to your clothes in the washing machine. Which model is actually
happening ar present is hard to decide. As a consumer, I prefer
the idea of the former, and that's where I fit in as a musician.
If you want to find the music of, for example, Jack Bruce,
who is untouchable for the majors, and a complete hero of
mine - well, there's Sanctuary Records looking after him for
you. It's great from the consumer's perspective, probably
not so great from the artist's position in promo terms but
unquestionably better than a poke in the eye with a sharp
stick. But, back to being a consumer, you can find what you
want if you are prepared to look for it and, so long as enough
people do, then there's our business model. The question is
merely do you go for the complete double cycle or the eco-friendly
reduced speed spin?
MIKE:
So what are your expectations for this record?
MARTIN:
A good question... I have no idea really. I wasn't really
convinced that there would be any need for it at all, which
is why I didn't get around to making it for a number of years
(the exact figure is referred to elsewhere). But there is,
gratifyingly, much more interest than I thought possible.
Now that I've taken the plunge and cleared the decks, perhaps
there will be another Baboon around the corner. Certainly
I feel that I want to use the skills Andy Reimer, Pelle Almgren
and Chris Townson again before one or other of them departs
the planet.
MIKE:
What other projects do you have coming up?
MARTIN:
I would very much like to tour the Baboon, which is
in the hands of other people - if there are any promoters
out there who have Baboon-shaped holes in their itineraries,
they could do worse than to get in touch with me; a few ideas
and proposals are floating around at present.
As a bassist, I thoroughly enjoyed the recent Sezen Aksu tour
and the JC things, and I'm keen to play more, whether it's
Baboon-oriented or in some other constellation - I invite
enquiries and suggestions! Otherwise Sezen is making a new
recording, as and when she gets around to it, and I hope she'll
call me up to join the party. I shall carry on fiddling around
and scribbling words down on grubby bits of paper. Plus, there
is a plot afoot to make The Chris Townson Solo CD, about which
more in due course. Maybe Electrolux will sponsor it. And
then of course I may well feel like turning out Son of
Baboon...
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