Ride - Leave Them All Behind

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Ride - Leave Them All Behind

I originally wrote this journal entry in January 2009 on last.fm:

1992.

I was 20 - an adult. Of sorts. I had been in employment for a year. I maintained contact with many of my old school friends, and during those days my pleasure was derived at the end of a pint glass with most of them. The yin yang of responsible adulthood and the irrelevance of youthful exuberance. My days were spent at work, my nights and weekends in a drunken mess of silliness. Much of the remainder was spent, quite diligently, in music.

The NME, the Melody Maker and John Peel on the radio.

I would go out, be it the pub, a party or a nightclub, always wearing (if dress codes allowed) a music based t-shirt. That was my identity. I would be somewhere, often a place far removed from the world of indie, often a drunken mess amongst neon lights and the latest 'club' sounds of the day, enjoying myself with my peers yes, but also showing my true colours, telling the world who I really was and what really motivated, connected and excited me, secretly hoping that someone would somehow recognise everything going on my head, my real stimulation, connect with me and take me to some magical place somewhere else, just because I happened to wearing a t-shirt. I could have gone further with my image - I contemplated piercings, a pseudo gothic dress sense, something to offer a public demonstration of my feelings, my passions, hunger, spirit and yes, my frustrations. I was however too self conscious to really go there and besides I would have lost my job overnight and my friends at the time would have taken the piss out of me mercilessly as an oddball. My t-shirts were all I had.

At that time artists defined their record label, or vice versa, I never was sure.

Rough Trade had the spunky, spiky, left field bands - music to approach with caution but often I'd find a gem.

Factory Records was the Manchester label which in 1992 was still squeezing the creative juices from the nearly shriveled fruit of the late 80's summer of love and the subsequent indie 'baggy' scene - it had New Order, Happy Mondays and a host of 'Madchester' wannabes.

4AD was was a repository for the indie cognoscenti - Cocteau Twins, Throwing Muses, Pixies. Being an elitist connoisseur of all things 'alternative' I naturally have a fondness for 4AD ;)

Then there was Creation Records - Alan McGee's label whose name aptly captured the innovation of the period. The Jesus & Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine.

Then, in the early 1990's a string of bands, 'shoegazing' bands influenced by the established indiedom of The Cure and their like and the Boston 'scene' but more than anything the contemporary 'wall of noise' dreamlike guitar sound, created with such imagination and inventiveness by Kevin Shields and My Bloody Valentine.

Creation Records were their home. Early records by The Boo Radleys captured this. Slowdive worked too in their own ethereal, dreamy way (as did Lush, on 4AD). For me though, Ride captured it best.

Oh how I loved Ride. To this day, I can't think of a better debut album than Nowhere . Released in 1990 with a wash of distortion, mood, and oblique, often desolate lyrics.

'Nowhere' stands the test of time. I've played it in its entirety this week. It can't be played loud enough. The production by Alan Moulder is sublime, creating a cavernous, engulfing noise with the echoes of the drums, the distortion of the guitars and subtleties of the vocal harmonies. It sounds like a desolate place, particularly on the slower paced tracks - Dreams Burn Down and Nowhere. The faster songs Taste and Seagull fill the room with tension and bitterness in equal measure.

It is heavily influenced by My Bloody Valentine and Sonic Youth records of the period but like Slowdive and Lush, Ride created their own, unique sound - theirs being a melodic, passionate, harmonic wonder.

Sadly they never created anything so unique again. The follow up album - Going Blank Again is good but isn't as special as Nowhere. Much of the record suffers from '2nd album syndrome', where bands fall into the trap of trying too hard - trying different styles, adding too many instrumental quirks and saying 'look at what we can do '.

Ride's subsequent two albums are poorer still in terms of invention, exploring 1970's influences and the songwriting by the two guitarists / vocalists, Andy Bell and Mark Gardener took place away from the band dynamic. Solo projects and subsequent bands have never come anywhere near the creative spark of the early 1990's. Indeed, in recent years it has been hard to see how the Andy Bell who wrote most of the gems on Ride's debut - Dreams Burn Down, Seagull, Taste and Vapour Trail is the same Andy Bell who now plays bass in Oasis and contributes the odd, uneventful song to their albums.

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One day, (like they did in 2001 for a TV show about Sonic Youth), all four members of Ride might get back together and make something truly creative again. That is perhaps just me being greedy. They've done enough to bring sparkle into my life. Maybe all four of them no longer feel a need to make music so passionately and they are happy somewhere else. Maybe Andy Bell is content with playing Champagne Supernova to packed arenas. Good luck to him.

But back to 1992 and Going Blank Again.Ignore what I said about the album. I was talking about everything that appears after track numero uno, the lead single. The best song ever recorded.

Leave Them All Behind


I first heard a 'radio edit' of this single and reacted indifferently to it. As a four minute pop song, it is nothing special at all. But then I bought the single and listened to it in full, all 8 minutes 16 seconds of it. I remember the day, looking at the cd artwork while listening.

When it finished I played it again. Then again. I've been playing it every so often ever since.

If ever I'm asked the question - 'What is your favourite song?' - the answer has been the same since 1992 and probably forever more will be - Leave Them All Behind by Ride.

I love plenty of songs, spanning my lifetime. Many have sounds that energise and move me. Many more have lyrics that capture my mood, emotion, memory or hope. Such lyrically connecting songs, such personal songs.

Leave Them All Behind is different. Lyrically, nothing remarkable at all:

Wheels turning round, Into alien ground, Pass through different times, Leave them all behind

Just to see, We've got so far to go, Until we get there, Just let it flow

Colours shining clear, Fading into night, Our grasp is broken, There's nothing we can do

I don't care about the colours, I don't care about the light, I don't care about the truth

Hardly fills 8 minutes does it?

I understand that the lyrics were written by Mark Gardener and added at a late stage. It makes sense. I like the lyrics - they suit the song but it is the sound of the vocals, the sound of bloody everything in Leave Them All Behindthat is astonishing perfection to these ears.

I know every note of every instrument. The two minute 'intro', the beats of Colbert's drum, the bass riffs, the acoustic break, the crashing beauty of the guitar whooshes. Every distortion, every echo, every effect. All 8 minutes and 16 seconds of it. I wouldn't change anything. The studio version, the version that appears on the album, cannot be bettered.

The live versions only capture part of the magic but here's a performance from Brixton Academy in 1992:

Live at Brixton Academy 1992

Andy Bell wrote most of Nowhere, and thereafter much of Ride's songs were split between the two guitarists / vocalists - Bell and Gardener. Leave Them All Behind is however very much a band effort. All 4 contributed to the song, which they began work on whilst on tour two years previously, and it shows. It is what Ride were all about. For me, it is more than just the definitive Ride song. It is the definitive song. Full stop. It is mine.

What happened in that studio, sometime in late 1991, when Bell, Gardener, Queralt and Colbert recorded that noise two years in the making, and Alan Moulder produced it to perfection , I will never know. Over 17 years on though, I'm writing about it. I'm as moved by it now as I was then.

They made a difference. What a feeling that must be. That is the inspiration.

As I say unlike my other favourite songs, this one doesn't address my mood, bring a tear to my eye, or speak to me about a particular emotion, memory or aspiration. Wonderful and precious as those songs are to me, 'Leave Them All Behind' is the one.

It takes me to another world - some parallel universe where all the thoughts and feelings in my head, my heart, my soul, be they confused, upsetting, joyous or whatever all come together in a cavalcade of swirling guitars, bass and drums. Real life's complexities make sense.

I was 20 when I first heard it. I was young and the prospects of where I would go, what I would do with life were so uncertain that I didn't even entertain any such thoughts. If I did, they were fanciful not tangible. I was naive, immature and just happy to have made it past my education and formative years. I was fitting in with my adult surroundings and at that time I didn't contemplate the aging process. The thought of even turning 30 seemed like such a long time away.

If Leave Them All Behind took me somewhere else, it was still, at 20, a place where everything could fall into place in reality at a point in the future, a point so far away. For then, I was just happy to have made it that far, to have friends, the stupidity of life with them, concerts and compact discs and income from a job that made these things possible.

Leave Them All Behind was an inspiration as well as an imaginative, ethereal experience. One day, I would "grasp those fading colours" and dreams wouldn't "burn down", they could come true.

Somewhere, out of the fog that 20 year old has become 37 (goodness - I'll be nudging 40 before I know it!). What the hell happened there?

But you know what, that 37 year old has still been wearing his music t-shirts. Even in his office. He has been making business chat, concerning himself with professionalism, dividends, and tax compliance, in a sense acting these things out. But his t-shirts have remained. That 20 year old hasn't gone away. He still has dreams. He can still, like those 4 young lads from Oxford in 1992, make a difference, to others, but also to himself.

Now, at a time in my life when I've been contemplating my history, my future, my motivation, my reasons for my very me-ness, I listen again to Leave Them All Behind. Again it is too perfect, but I do have a reaction to it. I'm back. I'm 20 again. Everything I was capable of then, I'm capable of now. If anything I'm better prepared than before.

The noise of Leave Them All Behind still inspires, still takes me somewhere else. I'm going to chase that somewhere else, find it, colonise it and live there, not just visit it for 8 minutes and 16 seconds.

I do care about the colours. I do care about the light. I do care about the truth.

Links:

Ride official site

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Morrissey - Southpaw Grammar (Legacy Edition)

Re-issue! Re-package! Re-package!

Re-evaluate the songs

Double-pack with a photograph

Extra Track and a tacky badge

('Paint A Vulgar Picture', The Smiths)


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Southpaw Grammar (Expanded edition) is a 2009 reissue of Morrissey's often overlooked 1995 album. Remastered with additional songs, new artwork and an overhaul of the tracklisting, it feels like a new album. To my ears it is. Time for a reappraisal.

My favourite Morrissey albums remain 1992's Your Arsenal and 1994's Vauxhall & I. His best work, surpassing anything by The Smiths (who largely passed me by in my 1980's teenage years) and to a lesser extent his renaissance period in 2004 with You Are The Quarry.

In the context of 1995 I looked forward to Southpaw Grammar with much anticipation. However, it just fell a bit flat for me although I enjoyed it in moments. Come 2009's edition and surprisingly the most significant change for me is with the running order.

How important is sequencing to a good album? More than I realised. I think of my favourite album ever - Seamonsters by The Wedding Present and specifically the tracks that bookend it. It has to start with Dalliance and end with Octopussy. It just has to. The same can be said for Southpaw Grammar's predecessor and Now My Heart Is Full and Speedway.

Don't ask me to explain. My favourite artist - Juliana Hatfield has tried to. She wrote about sequencing in her blog earlier this year.

An album that is made to be an album – a series of songs with an arc and a flow – and not a bunch of random songs or singles or “hits” or featured tracks – is called an album because it is presented to the world in a certain sequence. And it matters SO MUCH in what order the songs are presented. If the songs are switched around, it can make a good album a not so good album; something might be “off.” Some kind of je ne sais quoi might be lacking. A great sequence, along with good mix choices, can turn an alright bunch of songs into a whole cohesive listening experience.

Juliana's method may not always be the work of creative genius.

This explains why the original tracklisting on Southpaw Grammar was part of it's downfall. Yet, at the time it seemed to make sense as a concept album, with the two longest (over 10 minutes) songs encasing the album's feel and tone. The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils opened the original album. It is the harshest yet most involving song on the record. Sampling parts of a Shostakovich Symphony with a noisy slow march, it turned the lyrical concepts of so may Smiths tunes on their head - notably of course, The Headmaster Ritual. So much goes on in the track and by the end of the 10 minutes the listener is exhausted. Some of the critics at the time complained that it was Morrissey at his self indulgent, blustery worst. I've always loved the song but it is too much, too soon for the album. The songs that follow don't flow and match the character, and can't help but appear lightweight in comparison.

Knowing that there was another epic song to come at the end (the original cd gave the timings quite prominently on the artwork) diminished the value of the 6 songs inbetween.

The two lengthy songs are now in their right place. The Teachers Are Afraid of The Pupils waits until track 10 to unleash its power on this now expanded 12 track album. Southpaw is now track 6. Although it is a 10 minute song, it doesn't feel as imposing on the ear as The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils and works perfectly as a mid album divergence. It was never that strong as a song which only comes through now in the 2009 sequence. It just fits as an interlude to conventional songs but not as an over emphasised 'epic' (Life Is A Pigsty on 2006's Ringleader of The Tormentors works much the same way).

In this 2009 reissue all this heavy baggage is removed from the opening track and replaced by The Boy Racer. Admittedly not Morrissey's finest moment (and a song which Morrissey agrees should never have been a single), as an album opener it has sufficient gravitas to envelop the listener and help ease into the album as a whole.

The equally adequate Do Your Best And Don't Worry follows. No-one else quite manages lyrics like this:

 

Compare the best of their days

With the worst of your days

You wont win

With your standards so high

And your spirits so low

At least remember ...

This is you on a bad day, you on a pale day

 

Sequencing cannot change the best song though. Reader Meet Author:

 

You don't know a thing about their lives

Books don't save them, books aren't Stanley knives

And if a fight broke out here tonight

You'd be the first away, because you're that type

 

A work of genius in 1995 and now here, as performed for the BBC in 2009:

Three previously unreleased songs now adorn the album.

Honey, You Know Where To Find Me sounds like it should have been a b-side, albeit a good one, from his early 90's acoustic period, post Kill Uncle.

The inclusion of Fantastic Bird is as baffling. Recorded three years previously it sounds like it should do - a Your Arsenal session. This degrades the integrity of the Southpaw Grammar. And in a repackage, integrity is always vital :) You Must Please Remember (a Dagenham Dave b-side) is sadly missing from this repackage and should have been there in its place.

You Should Have Been Nice To Me appears after the aforementioned epic The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils and fits nicely here. A gentle paced comedown similar to the quieter songs on Vauxhall & I this is a worthwhile addition. It is really quite gorgeous and a shame to have been hidden for 14 years.

The future is around me

I see it, I seize it, I use it, I throw it away

Because I'm happy to be like I was in the first place

And finally a fourth additional track now closes the album. Nobody Loves Us, previously available as a b-side and compilation track is belatedly added to the album it should always have appeared on. As an album closer it is perfect. Morrissey as stereotype but nothing wrong with that - there's always been a comforting familiarity about him at times.

The original artwork (a bit pants)​

The original artwork (a bit pants)​

The completely new artwork will delight narcissism watchers now that the cover has a photo of Moz, in line with all of his other albums (World Of Morrissey doesn't count). The original cover reflected his 1995 obsession with boxing and was always horrible. Morrissey admits his mistake here in the sleevenotes.

There remain flaws in the 2009 reissue, that no amount of repackaging can hide.

The indulgence of the drums which open The Operation still annoys as much today. It is way, way too long. In fact, all of it should be deleted. No amount of artistic babbling in the sleevenotes will ever justify this for me.

Dagenham Dave is still rubbish. An inferior musical nod back to the Your Arsenal era and some of the worst lyrics of his career. Humourous social commentary on the age? Not for me, and he would repeat the hopeless method in 1997 on the risible Roy's Keen.

Best Friend On The Payroll still sounds like a great idea for a song but the lyrics seem half finished. These gripes aside, I'm struck by how many of Morrissey's best lyrics are here. (and his worst - see Dagenham Dave.)

Have you ever escaped from a shipwrecked life? (Reader Meet Author)


Born again atheist, Practising troublemaker (Nobody Loves Us)

 

My ears need a good syringe these days so I won't pretend to notice any dramatic improvement on the remastering of the record but it sounds polished.

 In the sleevenotes, Morrissey alludes to Alain Whyte's comparative anonymity in the story of Moz the artist. Too true, and I consider Whyte's contributions to be far more impressive to my ears than those of Johnny Marr. That said, my favourite Southpaw Grammar songs are those co-written with Boz Boorer - Reader Meet Author, The Teachers Are Afraid of The Pupils, You Should Have Been Nice to Me and Nobody Loves Us.

What is clear to me now is I feel like I have a new Morrissey album in my collection, instead of the 8 song flawed concept piece it has always appeared. Artistic freedom, acerbic wit, moments of inspiration, and the odd duffer. In other words: Morrissey.

It was always a good album. It's just taken 14 years, resequencing, repackaging and expansion for me to realise.

Links:

Morrissey official site

Morrissey-solo.com (fan site)

Buy the Southpaw Grammar (Expanded edition) CD

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Lloyd Cole - The Junction 2, Cambridge, England - 28 April 2009

Lloyd Cole is an artist I have been aware of by name if not output, never quite appearing above my musical radar. Not having a really big hit probably hasn't helped (even in the Lloyd Cole & The Commotions days in the 1980's he didn't break the Top 10) and he's always been authentic if never really fashionable.

I took a trip last week to Cambridge to see him perform. I've been to the city before and had hoped that the venue would be amongst historical buildings with some character, providing some culture to suit my increasingly snobbish nature. Sadly, it could have been in any soulless metropolitan retail / entertainment area in the UK, nestled amongst a chain cinema, a Nandos and a Travelodge. A shame. The venue itself though has some modern charm. The Junction 2 in Clifton Way is a small (they doubtless prefer to describe it as intimate) theatre with a seated capacity of no more than about 200-300.

Lloyd largely performs these days alone with an acoustic guitar, and if not exactly a reinvention of himself he now plays his sets in a folky singer/songwriter style and seems comfortable with it. Perfectly suited for the venue too.

The crowd was a predictable bunch of fortysomethings, many of whom seemed to be regular Cole followers. This qualified me to feel young for a change if only just, although as a counter balance I noted that 1) after my haircut earlier in the day I had observed a higher number of grey hairs on the barbershop floor and 2) I was attending my first ever gig which had an interval.

Putting a break into a solo performance is however a very good idea, particularly for the non-devoted, as I was able to appreciate all of the songs with no danger of attention deficit.

Having taken a crash course in his back catalogue prior to the show I was familiar with a few of the songs, which sounded gorgeous in their acoustic form – the crowd seemed particularly pleased with the oldies - Rattlesnakes, Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken? and the encore of Jennifer She Said. The highlights for me were the simplistic beauty of Like Lovers Do and Music In A Foreign Language.

There were a number of covers including Leonard Cohen's Tower Of Song, of which Cole humbly hoped he was of sufficient artistic maturity to justify performing. He was.

He has a refined, unassuming stage presence which seems to delight his audience. He was strangely self-critical of his guitar playing but it seemed highly proficient to these ears. The distraction of the ongoing Champions League semi-final taking place in Barcelona became a running joke and an audience member who announced the final score was politely mocked for 'obviously having not paid attention' to the performance on stage.

The acoustic setting allowed for the lyrics to receive my scrutiny. Often simple, with standard singer / songwriter themes of introspection and relationship misunderstandings. I noted doses of Americana commentary (Cole now lives in the States) and resigned regret. I've found a youtube clip of What's Wrong With This Picture? which gives the general idea.

He is promoting a couple of live CDs and Cleaning Out the Ashtrays - a 4 CD box set collection of b-sides / rarities. I was sufficiently impressed with the show that I bought the latter, which Lloyd signed for me.

Top bloke and a top night out. He is frequently on tour and I would recommend that you catch him if you get the chance.

Links:

Lloyd Cole official site

 

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