Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Prog Progress 1971: Van der Graaf Generator - Pawn Hearts

Hi, everyone! Welcome to Prog Progress, a blog series in which I journey through the history of progressive rock by reviewing one album from every year of the genre's existence. You can read more about the project here. You can learn about what I think are some of the roots of progressive rock here. You can see links for the whole series here.


Progressive rock came of age in a big way in 1971. Good progressive rock albumseven great onesexist prior to 1971, and the general ethos of the genre had, by this time, permeated the European rock scene for a couple years at least. But when you scan the field for preexisting prog, there's just something smaller about it, some sense that, compared to where the genre would go, the bands just hadn't managed to realize the promise of their live shows and intellectual ambitions. As I pointed out last time, the boundaries between prog, metal, art rock, and pop were remarkably fluid in the UK, such that acts like David Bowie and The Beatles weren't meaningfully distinguished as separate from, say, Yes[1]. And then came 1971, and with it, a flood of prog classics. The Yes Album. Tarkus. Acquiring the Taste. Nursery Crime. Meddle. Freakin' Fragile. Major, career-defining works from major, genre-defining groups. These weren't albums you would ever think about lumping in with Bowie. With these releases—pretty much prog's Cambrian explosion
—progressive rock established itself as something strange, epic, and altogether different from what any other scene in rock music (even psychedelic rock) was doing. With 1971, genre boundaries were hardened; capes were donned.

Pawn Hearts, the fourth album by the Manchester-based Van der Graaf Generator, is not the best of the '71 bunch (that distinction would have to go to either Pink Floyd's Meddle or Yes's Fragile). But it may be the most important, because with Pawn Hearts comes (to my knowledge) the last prog innovation to graft itself onto the genre's DNA: the three-song album.

The three-song album usually goes a little something like this: one side of the LP has two songs, usually 9-10 minutes in length a piece, and usually both a bit light in tone, while the other side of the record has a single, epic suite that stretches anywhere from 17-24 minutes and is usually dark, brooding, and complex. It's a popular structure for progressive rock albums, the two most famous examples coming from Yes, with 1972's Close to the Edge and 1974's Relayer, and it's super effective at imbuing even a relatively slight 34-37 minute album with a sense of grandeur and scope while still giving the band a little room to play with different styles. And as far as I can tell, Van der Graaf got there first.

The idea of having one side of a rock LP be the "light" half with the poppy hits and the second side have the "experimental" stuff had been kicked around for a while before Pawn Hearts, all the way back to '60s Frank Zappa oddities and The Beatles' Abbey Road, and the idea of having a single track encompass an entire side of a 45" had been popular in jazz for well over a decade and had already been explored by rock-ish groups like Pink Floyd and Soft Machine (and even Bob Dylan) for a few years, too. But that specific, fruitful combination of having all the tracks be epic-length, with two of them being slightly less epic, was new. And it gave prog the idea, for better or for worse, that hey, maybe an album doesn't need poppy songs on its "light" side.

Arguably, prog would have gotten to that epiphany with or without Van der Graaf Generator's help. It definitely was moving in that direction already, especially with the increasingly a-melodic, avant-garde grooves of the likes of Soft Machine and Caravan in the Canterbury scene. But golly, if Pawn Hearts didn't give it a shove, because there's not a darn thing on this album that resembles anything close to a traditional pop/rock song, much less a radio hit[2]. The track length definitely has a lot to do with this: "Man-Erg," the second and shortest track, still weighs in at a hefty 10:25. Radio stations barely give half that time for "Hey Jude," much less a Van der Graaf Generator song.

Van der Graaf Generator's a weird band. I mean that in a few different ways. It's an eccentric collection of instrumentalists, for starters: Pawn Hearts alone features piano, organ, guitar[3], three kinds of saxophone, flute, synthesizer, mellotron, and something called a psychedelic razor, and that's not even taking into account the generally cacophonous production and idiosyncratic styles each of VdGG's four players give each of their instruments. Apparently one recording session involved the band recording sixteen (!!) different songs and then playing them back all simultaneously (according to band leader Peter Hammill, the resulting blast of Van der Graafs only made its way into about a minute's worth of the 23-minute closer, "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers"). Other times, as in "Man-Erg," the band crashes screaming hard rock and impressionist saxophone blasts into delicate piano balladry. Even at the album's most melodic, the secondary and tertiary instruments deliver flairs of dissonance and avant-garde fragmentation. All this makes Peter Hammill's vocals (which are actually kind of lovely, echoing both the theatrics and versatility of David Bowie[4]) even more alien in context, again setting melody and pleasantry against a grain of experimentation. It's an odd, baffling sound that nowadays recalls, of all bands, Of Montreal in their noisier moments.

And it's not as if the lyrics help sooth any of this alienation. In pretty much every one of their albums, the band writes in dystopias and apocalypses. Their second record, The Least We Can Do Is Wave to Each Other, closes with a spooky, synthesized voice shouting "total annihilation" just before leaning into a rollicking, repeating outro of "And when the water falls again, all is dead and nobody lives." Cheery stuff. Although Pawn Hearts doesn't have anything quite that bleak, all three of its songs definitely engage with dystopias of varying degrees. The opener, "Lemmings," describes what seems to be the collapse of a kingdom (or even civilization in general); the troubled speaker of "Man-Erg" faces a more existential threat, singing of how "A killer lives inside me" and eventually shrieking, in a rather frightening passage[5], "How can I be free? Am I really me?"; the epic closer, "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers," is sort of a combination of the first two, describing an unfortunate scenario in which someone experiences both interior and exterior apocalypses at the same time.

The extent to which you find all of this "good" is probably a good indication of how much you like prog in general. This intricate, chaotic sound and deadly serious writing definitely anticipates the genre's future, as more and more bands moved away from their playful, psychedelic roots and poppy whimsy and more toward increased complexity and stone-faced grandeur. When at the end of the '70s punk rockers sneered at prog, this is the sort of thing they had in mind[6]. This is prog, folks. Bask in the excess.

My personal take is that the album is overall pretty solid, though nowhere near as good as the best prog would have to offer even during this same year. It's not so much the intent or the disorienting instrumentals or the darkness. I actually really dig the darkness—prog could be pretty darn hippyish in its early-going, so it's nice to see some good, old-fashioned '70s malaise thrown in there. It's that those three—intention, instrumentals, and darkness—don't always synchronize as successfully as they should to make the album consistently engaging. When it's on, it's on: "Lemmings" is the best track here, and it's the place where all the various philosophical and musical impulses gel. At the album's best, the unease delivered by the bizarre instrumentation bolsters the unease expressed by the lyrics, and that's what's happening in "Lemmings" (not to mention that it's got a pretty cool riff at the "We have looked upon the heroes" part, although I'm pretty sure there isn't any guitar in there). It's also what's happening in that spooky mid-section of "Man-Erg." That song isn't nearly as successful overall, though, despite being the most lyrically interesting; its beginning minutes, which feature just piano and vocals, are too operatic for my tastes and stuffy in that '70s FM radio way that's kind of insufferable. "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers" fares about in the middle, grouping some great passages with others that are awkward, overly portentous, or just plain dull. It also does this thing that a lot of early, lengthy prog tracks do, which is that it's more of a bunch of small song ideas stitched into a longer, lumpier mass—in fact, iTunes adds "(Medley)" to the end of the song title, and that seems about right.

Pawn Hearts has the reputation of being a prog classic. On artistic merits alone, I'm not sure if I can fully go along with that consensus. It certainly isn't bad (and I'd say it's good without quite being able to call it great), and it's a vital evolutionary step for the genre, which does make it essential listening for anyone looking to get a good historical survey of the progress of progressive rock, whichwhat do you know!is exactly what I'm doing in this series. Good thing we stopped in, isn't it?

Until 1972!


1] In fact, future Yes pianist and general prog maximalist Rick Wakeman worked extensively on Bowie's 1971 Hunky Dory before eventually declining Bowie's invitation to join the Spiders From Mars in favor of a position in the Yes lineup. The genetics of early '70s British rock is a strange soup.

2] The lone single from the Pawn Hearts sessions, the instrumental "Theme One," doesn't even appear on the official UK release of the album, although US and Canadian versions shoved the track in between "Lemmings" and "Man-Erg" to create what Nirvana would call a "radio-friendly unit shifter." Apparently the band did not approve.

3] King Crimson's creative guide/guitarist extraordinaire Robert Fripp makes an appearance, too, although it's hard to pick him out with the (no joke) dozen tracks dubbed on one another.

4] Who, incidentally, was recording Hunky Dory at the same studio at the same time as VdGG were working on Pawn Hearts. Genetic soup, I'm telling you.

5] This is that part I was talking about earlier with the piano ballad colliding with all the avant-garde stuff. It's super effective at evoking the guy's state of mind.

6] Although interestingly, John Lydon, aka Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols, was apparently a VdGG fan back in the day (no clue on what he thinks of them now).

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Mini-Reviews for June 20 - June 26, 2016

Another week of reviews! Enjoy! Comment! Argue! Love!

Movies

Krampus (2015)
If you like the funny, kind of sadistic, creepy-but-not-quite-actually-scary vibe that sold things like Gremlins, Fright Night, and the opening half hour of Cabin in the Woods, then Krampus will be a blast. I like the aforementioned movies, so I had a blast with Krampus. The creature design is fantastic and, by the looks of it, about 80% practical, which is always neat, and the atmosphere rides the delicious edge between lush and camp. The human beings are mostly rather hate-able, which makes it go down pretty easy (dare I say: enjoyably?) when they start getting devoured by evil gingerbread men and the like, but as unlikable as they get, the screenwriting is sharp enough that it's still fun spending time with them before they start dropping off. Grade: B+

Hush (2016)
A tight, tense home-invasion thriller that's likely to be duking it out with The Witch at the end of 2016 for the best horror movie of the year. The obvious comparison is Halloween, albeit without the iconic score, but this is a lot more than the sum of its influences. For starters, Hush is way more interested in its protagonist than the John Carpenter classic ever is, and it's to its benefit: Maddie, who has lived without speech and hearing since her teens, is an enormously winsome, engaging heroine, and rooting for her (rather than waiting for her demise, as many horror movies ask us to) is one of this movie's distinct joys. Another is just how stripped down the whole thing is. This is a very small movie, obsessed with details, sounds, minute spaces, and it's all the better for it. Horror fans: see it. It's great. Grade: A-

Project Nim (2011)
I can imagine this movie being captial-G Great in the hands of someone like Werner Herzog, who could spin the balls-to-the-wall weirdness of the central facts (a woman mentions that a chimpanzee shows sexual desire for her, and she seemed surprisingly okay with that except for the fact that she considered the monkey "like a son") into something profound. As it is, with director James Marsh, whose work I've never found more than just moderately engaging, we're left with an absolutely fascinating storya '70s experiment tries to raise a chimp as if it were humanwrapped in an overall uninteresting package. The events of the story are so engaging that it's still good, but would that this doc had been something more than just generic talking heads and TV-special-esque reenactments. Grade: B+

Macbeth (2015)
Shakespeare gets the Nicolas Winding Refn treatment, only this one is directed by some guy named Justin Kurzel. But seriously, this is pretty much Only God Forgives with Shakespearean dialogue and great acting (Marion Cotillard's surprisingly vulnerable Lady Macbeth is the best). So you've got lots of slow-mo, lots of violence, lots of attention to color, only this time, it makes some kind of sense, which is more than I can say of the cool, empty Only God. It's not all rosesI say "kind of sense" because the emphasis on visuals does slim down what was already a lean, mean play; it's Shakespeare with a lot of the connective tissue trimmed off, which does put a lot more burden on the actors and our own brains to stitch everything together. Also, (spoilers! [?]) Macbeth doesn't lose his head! What the heck, movie? Grade: B

Attack the Block (2011)
It's like The Goonies, if The Goonies was actually good (and startlingly violent, and set in inner-city London, and more than happy to kill off its kidsnot all, thank goodness, but some). The cast is entirely charming (a pre-Force Awakens John Boyega helms up the lead), and its a testament to chemistry between cast and screenplay that the movie opens with the main cast mugging a woman (Jodie Whittaker, who's great here, too) and not only manages to make us root for them not five minutes later but also convincingly sells a budding camaraderie between the boys and Whittaker's character in the middle act of the film. A great little creature feature. Grade: A-


Television

Deadwood, Season 1 (2004)
Finally embarking on this big one. Among the ranks of the innovative HBO dramas of the early 2000s, Deadwood has the same transitional growing pains that early seasons of The Sopranos had, where the tension between the newfound freedoms of serialization clash up against the episodic conventions of classically structured TV, leading to a few digressions (such as one involving a brother-sister criminal duo starring, of all people, Kristen Bell) that are entertaining but narratively slight. This isn't exactly a liability all the time; Deadwood is the least plotty of those early HBO dramas (certainly less so than The Wire, and even less than the notoriously plot-ambivalent Sopranos), and if anything, the show is less about what happens in Deadwood than who happens. The chief pleasure of the show so far is just spending time with this wonderful, grimy, profane set of characters as they rub up against each other and converse. And my goodness, the conversationthe show has a reputation as "Shakespeare with swearing," but even that doesn't quite capture the glorious feeling of just letting the colorful, elliptical poetry of the dialogue wash over you. Grade: A-

Music

Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool (2016)
I may be alone in ranking this album just slightly below The King of Limbs, the rock legends' divisive 2011 recordthere's nothing quite so transcendent as the sequence of songs from "Lotus Flower" through the record's end. But TKoL comparisons are probably misguided; the Radiohead release that A Moon Shaped Pool most resembles is In Rainbows, primarily because 1) a significant portion of its tracks are long-awaited studio recordings of songs that have been floating around the band's live shows for more than a decade, and 2) it's much more a collection of songs than a unified album (as opposed to the hyper-sequenced, thematically linked OK Computer or even Amnesiac). Neither of those are bad things, especially when the songwriting and production is as tight as it is here. The emphasis on Jonny Greenwood string orchestrations is a particularly effective touch, and songs like "Burn the Witch" and "Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Rich Man Poor Man Beggar Man Thief" come alive under his lush, idiosyncratic direction. And even though Radiohead is at the point in its career where it doesn't need to make an innovative statement with each album, A Moon Shaped Pool has its share of surprises: the cascading piano and marching strings of "The Numbers" are something legitimately new for Radiohead, as is the classical-tinged guitar in "Desert Island Disk." Overall, it's a solid, intermittently great entry from a band that, even nearly 30 years into its career, still manages to be one of the most vital, interesting music acts out there. Grade: A-

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Mini-Reviews for June 13 - June 19, 2016

Another week of reviews! Don't forget to tell me how wrong I am in the comments!

Movies

Captain America: Civil War (2016)
As is increasingly becoming the case with Marvel movies, Civil War is so overstuffed with plot and characters that there's only room for clumsily broad strokes in painting character beats that really deserve a much finer point and way more breathing room. The central conflict between Captain American and Iron Man doesn't ever reach the emotional heights that it should, mostly because the movie doesn't take time to make their argument about anything more than archetypal ideologies, and the lack of development in the supposedly central relationship between Cap and Bucky has never been more detrimental than here. Either of these issues could have been easily fixed if they'd been granted a bit more screen time, but the film also has to make room for Ant Man, Hawkeye, Black Widow, Roadie, Peggy Carter's niece, the Scarlet Witch, the good AI from Age of Ultron, and the two newcomers, Black Panther and Spider-Man. Black Panther fares very well, actually, but Spider-Man, bless his adorable heart, really doesn't belong in this movie, despite the fact that only based on his maybe fifteen total minutes of screen time, I'm ready to declare him the best cinematic Spidey we've ever had. It's not all bad; it's not even mostly bad. It's actually quite good in stretches, particularly a mid-movie fight scene that's probably the best action sequence in the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe. The movie just falls into that unfortunate space where its flaws are just visible enough to make make "pretty good" not nearly good enough. Grade: B

The Lobster (2016)
Even by the standards of black comedy, The Lobster is pretty cruel (though by the standards of Dogtooth, the other movie I'm familiar with from our esteemed director/co-writer, Yorgos Lanthimos, it's positively sunny), so the laughs tend to stick in the throat. By the standards of satirical absurdity, it's pretty average for the eastern-European theater of WTF-ery, although it's still great fun: you check into a hotel for 45 days, and if you haven't found your soul mate by the end, you are turned into an animal of your choosing. It's such a relatively contained premise that it's pleasantly surprising to see just how much the movie keeps unfolding this twisted fantasy world, and by the end, you get that rare, coveted feeling of having been taken on a long journey. Grade: A-

21 Jump Street (2012)
There are a handful of golden jokes in this movie (a recurring explosion-centered joke is particularly hysterical) padded out by a whole lot of mildly funny ones. Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum are having such a blast, though, that it's contagious, and in the end, how good a joke is doesn't quite matter as much as their very winning enthusiasm to throw themselves into anything the screenplay puts in front of them. Grade: B





The Act of Killing (2012)
I'm comfortable calling The Act of Killing the best documentary of all time. It's a bold, searing gaze into the human condition that left me actually shaking. The premise is fascinating, albeit chiling (let the agents of the Indonesian genocide of Communists in the '60s tell their own stories), but nothing about its abstract concept is adequate preparation for the visceral impact of hearing these men glibly and unapologetically recount the vivid details of the scores of atrocities they've committed. Its final momentsin which one of those genocidal agents literally gags over the memories of his actionsrank among the most powerful moments I've ever seen in a movie. This is titanic, thundering, unforgettable cinema. Grade: A+


Music

The Mars Volta - De-Loused in the Comatorium (2003)
Compared to their later work, The Mars Volta on their debut, De-Loused, is spare, punchy, and nearer to the post-hardcore genre than the proggy bona fides from their followup (the incomparable Frances the Mute) would indicate. I stress that this is compared to their later work. Compared to most other bands, The Mars Volta, even here, at their most restrained, remains a cacophonous act of rock maximalism that throws ideas like "spare" and "punchy" right out the window along with their punk cred. For some, this music will be numbing. For others, it's going to be exciting. I'll let you be the judge on where I fall (hint: Frances the Mute is my jam). Grade: B+