 |
GENERAL
PORTISHEAD ARTICLES
Portishead - Sweet & Sour
Source: CMJ NEW MUSIC MONTHLY, NOVEMBER 1997
Portishead - Sweet & Sour
By: James Lien
Stranger things than Portishead had happened
in the history of pop, but not for a long while. A mysterious group with
ties to the Bristol scene that spawned Massive Attack and Tricky came
out of nowhere--or, rather, a small town in Southwest England--and saw
its debut record go gold. Behind the surface catchiness of "Glory
Box" and "Sour Times" some genuinely dark things were
going on.
Mixing film noir with funk and dance
music is pretty subversive for the pop charts, and Elizabeth Gibbon's
lyrics were certainly not of the moon-in-June variety. Most good pop
records will wake you up if they come on the radio right at the moment
when you're falling asleep. Not so with this band: Portishead's Dummy
was a hit record that sounded in places like an invitation to a
nightmare.
After all, rarely does something as dark as
"Sour Times" stand a chance of going anywhere on the charts -
performed live, in its darker and more unrestrained setting, the hook
really does consist largely of just Gibbons moaning "Nobody loves
me, it's true," over and over again. Something very painful from
very deep within is being brought out into the light.
With its second album, simply called
Portishead, on the way, the group rolled into New York this summer for a
round of interviews and a live video taping. Portishead has only been
around for a couple of years, but it already has all the trappings of a
full fledged rock 'n' roll legend, including a live orchestra performing
with it in concert, a four-figure hotel-bar tab and a reclusive singer
who won't do interviews. The ambiance surrounding the Portishead machine
was distinctly like that of groups ten times its size. No, we can't
mail your passes to you, you have to go to such-and-such an address the
day of the show, and maybe there'll be an envelope there with your name
on it. No, that laminate isn't good for this door, but it gets
you into the secret after-after party at a club across town. It
was a lot of fun watching the machine run.
For a group that surrounds itself with such
mystique, Portishead's history has already taken on a codified,
canonical version. To wit: Main sonic mastermind Geoff Barrow worked in
Bristol studios with Massive Attack in the late '80s ("I was a
fucking tea boy," Barrow scoffs, swirling his index finger like
he's stirring in sugar). Given some studio time and the opportunity to
score music for an underground film project, he jumped at the chance,
naming his group after a small town outside of Bristol. He auditioned
over a dozen singers before he discovered Gibbons singing Janis Joplin
cover in a bar band.
The myth that best describes Barrow's story
is that of the sorcerer's apprentice who quietly hones his skills in
secret until he suddenly rises to overtake his master. Even as he was
spooling tape for Massive Attack, answering the phone and making tea,
Barrow was watching and listening, absorbing and learning, waiting to
make his move. There were no rejected Portishead demos, no years
slogging away in clubs. And now that everyone wants a silver of what he
does, Barrow seems, on the outside at least, to be relishing the
attention. He didn't sell his soul for his success, but a great deal of
thought and planning went into it. The guy is thorough, whether he's
shaping the sound of a hi-hat cymbal to achieve just the right texture,
or putting the pieces of his group together to blend business and music
in the right combinations.
But it isn't always easy being an audio
alchemist, as Barrow reveals when it's time to talk about Portishead.
"It's a weird one for me, it's still really early to comment on
it," he shrugs. "I feel like we just sat down and mixed it. To
be quite honest, it's like it's a bit of an odd one, because we mixed
the last track on a Sunday, we cut the album on a Monday, so in a way
it's like I haven't left that cutting room yet, you know what I mean?
I'm still kind of like, 'Right, right'" and he leans back
like he's listening at a mixing console."You know, still thinking I
can muck about with stuff. I've got to understand it's gone. I
can't even bring myself to listen to it, you know what I mean?"
Unsurprisingly, Barrow suffered from all the
critical and record company pressure for a follow-up. "You get into
vibe. I went through a 13-month complete head fuck on this record. I
just couldn't do anything. I blocked for 13 months. That's why it took
so long to come out."
What happened? "Everything,"
Barrow murmurs. "A complete and utter panic. I tried to
over-analyze. The first record, it was forming for a long, long time.
'You ain't got nothing to prove. You're just doing it for the music, for
the joy of being able to do it.' This one, it was literally a case of
all the pressure went to me head and it was gone." For
emphasis, he makes a fluttering hand gesture to indicate that might be a
warbly theremin sample, or an atmospheric bass line exiting his head and
floating away.
"We finished, you know, touring and
promoting the last album two years ago. From that point until last
month, I was in the studio every day, except the weekends. I was
convincing myself that everything sounded great, or would eventually
come out great, but it never happened. And it was up to the rest of the
band to give me a good kicking, and say, 'Let's just forget about all
that industry bollocks and let's just write a record. If people like it,
good.' I don't know why the first one sold what it did, so why should I
worry about this one?"
The new album sounds, well, even more like
Portishead than the debut. The early tracks we heard are largely similar
to Dummy's soundscapes, but longer, bigger, deeper, less
claustrophobic, more vivid. Parts of them sound truly haunted. To
reverse the old saw, there's even more there there. "In the
beginning, I was influenced by other people, sounds and things that were
going on around England," Barrow relates. "I feel kind of
conscious about it. I worry a little too much about being a combination
of your influences. You know, the grocery list of 'this has got that in
in, that, that, and that.' But we always wanted to create something
through the middle of that as well as influences. There's a vibe going
on, and that's purely what it's about. Me and Ade [Portishead
multi-instrumentalist and co-producer Adrian Utley] are able to go into
our own studio, and I'll play drums or something and Ade will play bass,
or guitar or something. We'd all jam about and we'd get there,
and this album is pretty much what we sound like playing tunes, in a
room, you know."
Although Utley still remains in the shadows,
it seems that he played a larger role in shaping the second Portishead
record. Utley was the one who manipulated the theremin that gave
"Mysterons" on Dummy its distinctive sci-fi feel, and
it was his touch on the Hammond organ that made "Glory Box"
shimmer. "A lot of the stuff on the first album, and everything on
the new album, was co-written with Ade," Barrow acknowledges.
"Basically, we're a band now. We're four pieces of band," he
quips. "Beth, me, Dave the engineer, and Ade."
As he lists the group's members, Barrow
brings up another significant leap into the future that Portishead
helped pioneer: It's one of the first major groups to incorporate its
engineer as an equal member, giving him an equal share of the group's
earnings. Dave MacDonald also owned the studio where much of the group's
debut album was recorded. It's an up-front acknowledgment that how
Portishead sounds is just as important as what it is.
"Dave, he's a live engineer, a studio
engineer, he can do all that," Barrow relates. "You get into a
situation where you haven't even got to nod at people, you just know
what's gonna be next. If Dave is there running the vocal through this,
that and the other, it's still part of the chain. He's been with me for
six, seven years--a massive element within the sound. Ade, you could say
the same thing. He's studied jazz guitar for, like, 15 years. He's a
serious producer of music in his own right." Like R.E.M., things
are so creative around the studios and Portishead's sound is so seamless
that it's doubtful whether anyone will really know each of the silent
members' roles and exact contributions until one of them leaves to go
solo.
Barrow described the arduous process of
arriving at a finished track. "You keep chucking away, recording,
and chucking away, recording, and you get to the point where it hasn't
got any crisp around the edges, and it could be noise, crusty, it could
be spinning out in whatever direction, but the basic element of it is
something pure, something that you're proud of, yourself. You're trying
to get something out that is not just a copy of someone else's material.
And as soon as Beth sings on it, then it's another whole element
entirely."
So why isn't Beth here right now? The day
before the interview, CMJ New Music Monthly had been given a
rather cryptic missive from the band's publicists, to the effect that
Gibbons would agree to be photographed, but not interviewed, while
Barrow would be interviewed but not photographed. What's up with that?
Barrow leans back, as if he's been asked that question before.
"Because we want her to sing on the next one, right, mate? It's a
weird one, that, because me and her, we're the ones who signed on the
dotted line with the record company. You know, we're the ones who did
the press on the first one. I'll tell you this, you don't want to go
there, mate. The industry is a monster, it's a nasty fucking beast...
We're in it purely for that bit of vinyl. And what sounds came out of
that vinyl. And if people want to talk to us, informing people of what
we feel once we wrote that piece of vinyl, well, all right, I'll do it.
Anything else outside of that is bollocks. We might have this thing with
the photos, like, I don't want to do this photo shoot or whatever, with
a $5,000 stylist and a sweater that's not mine and all that. If it means
we don't sell 100,000 copies, then we don't sell 100,000 copies. Then we
can go away and do some more music. We want her to keep making records,
mate."
Portishead's presence in the charts is
significant, and not just because it's the flagship trip-hop band. Other
bands were earlier (notably Massive Attack) and some, such as Tricky,
have equaled or even surpassed its success and visibility in the years
since Dummy. But Portishead opened up the door and walked right
through; it helped liberate '90s music from the hegemony of the rock
guitar, and opened up the charts to new sonic potential. Trip-hop,
schmip-hop: Portishead is the sound of what comes after the sampler and
turntable become full-fledged musical instruments, the new world where
people's record collections become the music that becomes part of
someone else's record collection.
Barrow is struck by that idea. After
politely revealing a tip on the origins of a particularly murky and
atmospheric sample behind a Portishead remix ("I did that for 500
quid, something off a Gong record, I believe"), he warms to the
idea of Portishead as more than just a band, but as a powerful sonic
force. "Yeah, I'm really starting to see where this should go, what
this record should have been," he says. "Not in a bad way,
mind you, but it's like I'm still in there mucking about, you know? But
after this record, I know where I'm going. I know where it needs to
go." |