Wednesday, October 17, 2007

SCARED FAMOUS by ARIEL PINK'S HAUNTED GRAFFITI



Ariel Pink's in-between songs have been the most mind-blowing pop discovery of my adulthood. 2004's compilation of late 1990's recordings, The Doldrums, sits in whatever personal top ten I care to compose, immune to any whim I may trip over. His is a neon shimmer; Home recorded epics which don't dispense with glitter, melodies which break the technology's defence, playing expansively, hilariously, rudely. As puppy-dog sad, sweet, and familiar as Abba. As weird as them too, splitting the prototypical nexus of harmony into twisted catches of one hundred simultaneous choruses.

Look for Ariel Pink on Youtube and among the splinters you'll find a home-made video to one of his tunes. It is a simple shot of a TV screen, filmed crudely with a video camera as a sequence from The Simpsons plays in the dark. It is impossible to tell if he did it himself or if it is the work of a fan. It seems incredibly apt. Pink's records capture a brittle pop nostalgia; like found Wonder Years episodes on VHS, intercut with half of Repo Man and the end of Benny and Joon, not enough to keep, but you do; like European cartoons (dubbed by one eager voice, girl parts and all) seen while suffering an early romantic illness, a six week relapse with glandular fever aged nine; fretful odd daytime shows never seen again, ghostly animations partly slept through; The Monkees repeats at half-term. Pink's game show buzz is essentially a summary of low pop culture, it's architecture and accoutrements. It sounds like the best bits of other songs, a collection of jingles, like The Residents' Commercial Album tunes played over each other at double speed, or if the BBC Radiophonic Workshop were commissioned in 1974 to make 30 second synth wig-outs for every last US radio and television show, and imports too. It is the history of rock reduced: It is Squeeze squeezed, a cheaper Cheap Trick, a crashed Cars, and so on and so on, rehashes of Denver, John, and Denver, The Last Dinosaur's theme, echoing mantras from Hanna Barbera relics, all shot through with the naive self-belief of a ten-year old playing dress-up, any attic attire, an awkwardly hopeful glam.

Nostalgia is a loaded word. Pink goes beyond. He is (or his records are) open to retro-psychic possibility- Imagine! If you could rewind telly all the way back! Imagine, if telly ran an 'on this day' channel, and just showed Aug 25, 1984, for example, or December 1st, 1972, and just showed everything, adverts, inserts, news, etc, whatever they showed, slow periods, boring bits and all, even the cartoons when they were ahead of schedule. No edited high/lowlights, no contextualising, no modern commentary, no haircut judgements. The seismic shift of witnessing whole slabs of boring, wondrous culture, the million nuances forgotten, would reduce all to tears.

And so Pink goes about his business, not separating what needs to be kept from what doesn't, throwing it all together over (one imagines) thousands of tapes, an endless record. He disinters from the ancient pop texts, trash and all, salvaging drowned tunes from choppy forgotten waters, resuscitating fey homilies and spangled spazz-outs plucked from golden wrecks.

Scared Famous evokes being drugged at a fair on a wet bank holiday, a violent puppet show in a seaside town, staticky reports from aged speakers, and sticky arrests; the glowing suggestion of an uncle's fish tank, tetras sparkling, gouramis kissing, eyes open in gormless wonder. A beer garden with carved kiddy shapes. Suggestible shadows evoking benign demons. Saturday afternoons idling at the abandoned bandstand, vandalising casually, knowing that sunset will come and all this will end.

Gopacapulco starts like a Chiquitos house band turning the hook of Starman below the border, into a twitchy hokum Latino swing, before a stately chorus is unfurled. Howling At The Moon is a synth-fuelled Lou Reed impersonation, bittersweet and hilarious, Are You Gonna Look After My Boys? is the Miami Sound Machine running in the woods on heart power, sweet and catchy as a sexual injury. Beefbud is Barrett, Jesus Christ Came To Me In A Dream is the true, desperate meaning of Christmas past present and future, touching, absurd, stuffed full. Baby Comes Around is a triumphant riff interrupted by half-a-dozen Joe Meek choruses, Politely Declined and Why Can't I Be Me? are manga laments, wistful comic Frankensteins sobbing in caves. Girl In A Tree is Hall & Oates undead and undone, losing a three-legged race, Kitchen Club is a ghostly off-key cut of dub (all Ariel Pink records are dub, in some way) reggae that seems to enigmatically start some kind of (anti) sexist argument, but is all the better for only suggesting this. It may be about food. It's certainly about girls. The List (My Favorite Song) is another (likeHouse Arrest's Interesting Results) of Pink's self-querying lyrics, a lovely ham-fisted attempt to understand the meaning of song writing, the meaning of meaning.

Ultimately, it's always a romance.

Pink sends carefully crafted letters to idols and is crushed when they don't answer. He practices magic, and next to him, your love seems adult and pedestrian. You could vivify trite scripts with his Sirkian water. He's the kid who imagines himself in a relationship with Judy Garland or Lindsey Lohan or the girl next door, just good friends, hoping for more. He believes he can save them. He holds candles tightly, and writes crestfallen ouija rites and crushed odes, commuting with imaginary dead sisters. He writes false back stories for non-existent banged-up Dads, and draws on his hands in electric black. His is a dictionary that requires of him the dedication of Dr Johnson, and includes made up words from far-flung languages, gibberish to the naked eye, but displaying enough grammatical structure and craft to suggest a complex and gorgeous plan. He is a blue-eyed avatar, standing at the LA Hells mouth of pop memory, taking as much in as he can.

The fire crackles. So does the radio.

Monday, October 15, 2007

LEAVING ENGLAND III: UNCLE ROBERT

Because of the firework feeling in his bones, Uncle Robert knew our town was the dead centre of England. 'The reason I ended up here is because it is the middle of everything,' he said.
Many experts would have contradicted him. New surveys of the land came every other year or so and the officially recognised geographical bulls-eye would move, perhaps over the hill beyond Higham, sometimes several miles in another direction. Every place ever named as the centre of the country clung to the very verdict that put them there, and disregarded all subsequent alternative suggestions. They would display their achievements and wares at fetes and carnivals, festivals and parades. But none was ever more extraordinary than the next: Neolithic flint implements, Bronze Age Burial mounds, Roman coins and Saxon suffixes were regularly polished and shown, but to us children, being from the dead centre of England only meant we were further from the sea than almost anyone.

But Uncle Robert had moved to this town as if drawn by some magnetry. And he knew it was the dead centre of England. He walked its contours, plugged himself into its vagaries, soaked up its airs. He pressed the claims of our town in varied ways. 'Have you ever noticed that our train station is far bigger than we seem to deserve or need?' he'd say. 'It is, in effect, a staging post for travellers on a journey through the middle of England, usually from South-East to North-West and back. It’s a route which is a well-set series of wires and arteries that carry fortune seekers, commuters, noise, spite and other cultural exchanges. Look on a map: Britain looks like a wounded man, leaning to the west; it’s the weight of it, that lopsided pull, with everything in the South-East, and something in the North-West, and everywhere else slipping into the wind. And it all comes through here. No matter what they say, this town is the dead centre of the country. That station marks the spot, I’m sure. You can feel it.'

According to Uncle Robert, trains were the lifeblood, the force, angels of fate to take you or usually in our case, leave you behind. They were cartographers of the invisible land; following the best taken path, preselected above man's input, along routes that predated even the tracks. Rivers meander weakly to sea, but train tracks, like roads and shipping lanes, chose themselves. He said if you build a track where it doesn’t want to go, there’ll be an accident sooner or later. 'The sinking of the Titanic proved that you can’t build a track over the North Atlantic, so we should never try. Man hasn’t the power to guide a machine down a set path. A train is actually pacing out the perimeters of nature’s power. Rome, for example, didn’t fall; it was pushed, by men who believed their petty transactions put them in Godly positions. Their folly was not ambition, but that that didn't listen to the land. If you could read the roads and lines, look for accidents as signs, you’d see how the trains tell who did it; With sensitivity, you could plot lines that would circle the truth like Injuns round wagons, they'd be driving gutters into the Earth, grooves of repetition that would bore into the earth and bore the surrounded to death.'
That’s how he'd talk. Mum said he was an Idiot's Haven't. I loved him.

We'd go to the station together, Uncle Robert, his son Tony and I, and watch as trains swung into our town and were thrown out to bigger destinations- Northampton, Birmingham New Street, Liverpool Lime Street, London Euston. We’d watch the faces as they waited to move on, drowsy disinterested abstractions through glass, like timid sketchbook preliminaries. We'd wonder how they stayed so uninvolved in the process, in the glory of travel; Uncle Robert who had travelled, and explored, and Tony and I who longed to.

While the people on the train only ever passed through, Uncle Robert had thrown his fate in with that of the town. And even though he’d come from elsewhere (and still had his busty dialect to show for it) the town seemed to respond to him, as if it couldn’t help it. The events in the town's life intertwined with his. He was born in the year they built the Old Hall, what we knew as the Co-Op Hall. That was a totem in these parts, a landmark that announced itself in an area whose qualities generally had to be coaxed and teased out. For a period, it was the only place to choose for wedding receptions. One New Years Eve, just after the war, some guests slipped on the stairs and several were killed in the crush. That was the same night that, miles away in Leeds, Uncle Robert's father was run over by a car.
Uncle Robert moved to town shortly after marrying Joan in the year they built the ring road, 1972. That road breathed life into new directions, and the Carters lived in a small house up past the hospital, a little hutch that years later we’d drive past and observe like a cute relic; diverting, langourous drives home they were too, and to see Uncle Robert see the first matrimonial home was for me one of the earliest examples of stirring nostalgia. 'The first morning we lived there,' he'd tell us, every time, 'I woke up, stretched, kissed my new wife, and turned to see on the pillow... well, you'll never guess what.'
'Your hair!' we'd chorus, amazed not by the fact that Uncle Robert's hair fell out so quickly but by the fact that he ever had any at all. He lost his front teeth when his first child, Tony, was born, but it wasn’t an incident touched by the supernatural; a combination of celebratory gins and steepling maternity ward staircases saw to them.

He smelt of Vicks and whisky, both of which were always medicinal; he’d give us a nip when we’d twist an ankle, dab both on a grazed limb, and we’d gaze at the bottles together in awe. 'Learned the power of these in King's Gym in Huddersfield in the fifties' he'd say with a wink.
Uncle Robert had been a boxer, but he drifted into wrestling in the lean years, when his honest nose had been crushed one too many times by sly jackhammers that evaded his aging defence. He clearly thought that wrestling was the lesser art, glistening as it did with cheapening pizzazz and silly non-glamorous display, but instead of getting frustrated, or looking elsewhere, he took his opportunity, and brought all his disdain for the tawdry flash of the sport into his role of the villain up at the Co-Op hall for years. He was a good sport, but disliked being forced into uncompetitive surrenders and premature dives by the demands of a crowd and their collective wish, and expectation, of a vengeful pantomime in which the villain cheats the hero and is thus punished. Despite his reservations, he had a surprising knack for increasingly creative acts of dishonour in that ring, and this endeared him to one and all, who, apoplectic at the referee’s distractibility, would bellow a warning to the dazed hero as Uncle Robert approached the groggy saint from the rear with a piece of wood or sandpaper.


Tony and I experienced these bouts only through Uncle Robert's retelling of them. We were too young for the rowdy environs of a wrestling evening, and could only superimpose his actions onto the more family-friendly visions conjured on our television on Saturday afternoons. We insisted, in our giddy re-imaginings in the garden, that the Uncle Robert could trouble not only Les Kellet, Mick McManus, Jackie Pallo, Steve Veidor, and Tibor Szakacs, but would despatch of Count Bartelli, dethrone The Royals, and destroy the smiling, handsome Johnny Saint, who we hated.

Uncle Robert's alter-ego for many years was The Tarantula. His costume consisted of red vest, red trunks and a balaclava-style mask. He had cobwebs painted in silver on his back, but didn't look like a spider. He'd let us play in the costume, one of us tripping over the trunks and vest, the other swallowed by the mask, but we rarely did, just handled it with delicacy, feeling the weight of it's hem and the gritty sparkle of the logo. 'That old thing. My straitjacket,' he'd call it, smiling. The stories were painted in by his chuckling recall. Tony and I would always cheer on our man on as he told us the tales of those times; dreaming we were there, when The Tarantula fought against the course of the crowd and the wishes of natural order.
‘The younger lads, the goodies, they’ve got to win, you both know that,’ he’d say, and we’d nod, sure that Robert would have been the greatest hero of them all if wasn't all rigged against him. The villains interested us, and there always seemed to be new ones to tell us about. The Valkyrie, a screeching sneak who The Tarantula sometimes teamed up with, a melodramatic former child nearly-star (he’d been on the stage in the war years as the bombs rained on Coventry) who wound up dead from the booze in his caravan up the A5 years later. Pirate Pete, a man who was larger than Giant Haystacks, kept puppies in his yard and could lift a mini over his head. The Mysterious Shadow could shin up a lamp-post with his hands tied behind his back, and had a cafe in town for a while before he died. We'd visit and have a bowl of ice-cream, and The Mysterious Shadow would playfight with Uncle Robert for our benefit.
'We're old now,' they'd say when we got too excited. But they fondly recalled how in the nineteen-seventies they created a merry Valhalla, stirring up boisterous crowds in gym halls, clubs and pub backrooms all over the Midlands.

Uncle Robert had his first wrestling bout at the Co-op hall in 1975. The ballroom itself had died a series of squalid deaths over decades of mismanagement, its dignity slipping and trodden into the dirt with every transformation; from celebrations of blessed unions, to ballroom dances, to bingo, wrestling, before being crushed under heel when they painted the interior black and turned the place into a grubby arcade later in the nineteen-eighties. One rainy Saturday afternoon when I was twelve a girl I didn’t even really like refused to let me kiss her there. But that night in 1975, the night of Uncle Robert's first wrestling bout, a London to Glasgow train came off the rails down by the Leicester Road Bridge, dragging up track and dirt until it came to rest on the platform, taking down part of the station roof and thirty-six souls. Uncle Robert joined the volunteers while still wearing his wrestling leotard, and blackened and thirsty, lifted rubble and twisted iron with them all night like some mythological Colossus, rueful and black.

Within a couple of years, Uncle Robert was an established name on the wrestling circuit. When the Scala and Grand cinemas both closed, there was an upsurge in popularity for the events. The Tarantula started a long rivalry with a foppish lad of upstart vulgarity, who would run through Uncle Robert’s legs. The Wasp, as he was known, was a gypsy of Italian origin whose family had come from Naples, and Carter and I would later know him as the elderly drunk who ran the sticky dodgems at the fair. In his younger days he was darkly handsome, a preening stud who the crowd adored. We knew only his slobbering approaches to teens of all genders on August Bank Holidays as the fair struck up for a last night.

Uncle Robert would tell us that he’d have to pretend not to be able to catch the greasy little Wasp, and would wink to Mrs. Carter and baby Tony in the crowd, and Tony Carter would say he remembered all this, even though he couldn’t have been more than one or two. Uncle Robert would have to pretend that the little Italian was too quick for him, and sometimes, he chuckled, The Wasp was too quick, and he didn't need to pretend at all, by that point being almost forty and overripe. By the time the Palace theatre had closed and there had been a murder down the back of the Ringway the following November, Robert had broken a leg when pinning a man from Derby (Gorgeous Geoff or Sid the Saint, depending on what day you were told the tale), a blessing of sorts, in that it gave him the shuffling limp that would give him a new name in the twilight years of his career, The Crab.

And then near the end we got to see him wrestle.
We were nine. It had been a while since Uncle Robert had been bouting, and he was roped out of retirement, he said, as a favour to an old promoter. I think he did it so that Tony and I, so thrilled by the stories, could see one played out in front of us for real. Aunt Joan, never a fan, reluctantly took Tony and I, and we all drove up to Leicester together. She tutted at the language, winced at the dusty aroma, choked on the smoke, but Tony and I stared at it all with wonder. Uncle Robert's tales may have glamorised the settings somewhat; the beery squalor and shabby ring were not what we'd expected; but to us it was the height of exoticism. We were amongst men after dark.
It was the only time I saw the old boy fight, and it was his last time. And he won, ignoring the script to pin some young upstart. He winked at us as he did a lap of honour, and we knew that he'd done it for us. It was to be his last fight.

It had to be the end, because his body wasn't up to it anymore. A couple of months previously, on the coldest night on record in our town, -22 degrees, January 1983, Uncle Robert had ripped something in his shoulder. Though this added to his villainous lean, meaning that the Crab walked more convincingly lopsided than ever, he couldn’t grapple anymore. He soldiered on a little, defiantly, and his last bout in town, a couple of months before the Leicester trip, was the same night they closed down the Ritz for good and converted it into the bingo hall. ‘The last film was ‘Blood Bath at the House of Death’. ‘It was a terrible British comedy,’ he’d say, ‘what a send-off.’

At the end, he was sad to leave. He’d toiled and entertained, achieved minor regional fame, and drew lessons from his experiences like a serum.
‘Wrestling is a medium of truth to us Brits.' he'd say. 'Its essential narrative is about right and wrong. It acknowledges failure. That’s something the Yanks won’t ever get. They think that winning and being right is the same thing.’

And then one day he slipped away after a heart attack aged fifty-four, the same night as the town’s most famous modern son, a light entertainer known to the nation through Saturday night television died. I was away on a school trip, and they didn't tell me until I got back, didn't want to disturb my break. I missed the funeral. Aunt Joan and Tony moved away shortly after that, and continued to move over the years, their radars threatened and confused in his absence. Indeed, not long after he died, there was a survey using new technologies that placed the dead centre of England some twenty miles away. This was the biggest variation I could remember, and subsequent surveys, powered by the precise mathematics of new systems, never remotely came close to suggesting our town was the centre of England again. It was as if Uncle Robert's death had thrown the country lop-sided, never to sit true again.

‘Be careful,’ he said to me once. ‘A good man’s only got twenty years of running in his legs. After that he’s a shadow, living off what he’s done. An early starter like you, he might only have nineteen years, seven, eight months left, give or take a couple of days. You should be writing books. But you’ve only got a certain time, a little noise window. Nineteen years of books in your legs, if you’re blessed.’
I nodded vaguely, and looked out across the garden night. A cheese of a moon was rising into somebody’s birthday.
‘Don’t sleep too much son’ he said, and raised an arm to ruffle the hair behind my ears. As he disappeared into the patio doors, I called him.
‘Have you ever written anything?’
‘Of course not.’ he laughed, as if it was the first time he’d considered it. ‘Waste of time.’

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

LEAVING ENGLAND II: PORTSLADE, SUSSEX

I realise that my departure from London lacks the dramatic scurry of the White Russians or the Nazi-defyers. The way it should be done is to sail into New York Harbour, lose a vowel on Ellis Island, re-fashion thought in Manhattan bustle. Instead, this week I am in Portslade, Sussex, attempting a cumulative time-travel in walks around the hills and estates. I have been looking for a summary of my English childhood in the buildings and driveways. What is here?



Impenetrable pavement graffiti, BT code for drills; the font of MILL CLOSE and MILL LANE, dishevelled studies forever glanced at but never seen. Is there a national address in drippy beer garden furniture and fauna? Morse in crisp packets between slats, borrowed ballards. FORGE CLOSE, FOREDOWN CLOSE, everything close, almost fingertip. But a hazy facebook burr and whirr invades charred memories of school crushes. Is there narrative in deitrus? Coherence in chance? God in numbers? Is there more than just a string of memories prompted by letterboxes and parks? Write for long enough, and you'll charm a metaphor out of shyness. Give Shakespeare a typewriter, and eventually he'll write Twelve Monkeys; a story of time-travel and childhood reminiscence.
On my walks, I've been collating samples of England to take with me as evidence of something or other; names of shops, poster verbiage, signs seen, messages offered:


RED-FACED ROBBERS COVERED IN DYE


CUCUMBERS! TOMATOS! SALAD!


IN LOVING MEMORY OF LYNDA TIMMS 1949-2004: SHE LOVED THE WAVES.


I went to school with a Linda Timms. I don't know if she liked the waves.


BRIT SICK DI FANTASY


PARCELFORCE: PLEASE KNOCK LOUDLY AS THE BELL IS RUBBISH


FOR LOITERERS: EACH AND EVERY THURSDAY, HILLSIDE EXIT LANE ACCESS NECESSARY AND DEMANDED.


Take the first letter of each word of this last one: F L E A E T H E L A N A D


It's clear to me. It's time to Flee the Land.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

LEAVING ENGLAND I: DALSTON BLOCKBUSTER

Self-Savagery 2002: If things are going just fine, leave. Burn your bridges only if they are strong. Give up only good things.



They closed down Blockbuster in Dalston last week, the week I left London. The same branch that I wrote about in an earlier post, entitled 'TRULY SMASHED AND BLOCKED', a piece that was a failed attempt to examine a variety of nostalgias for a variety of unheralded moments; A suggestion that pointless, forgettable passings, must be marked somehow; some arbiter must look up and nod 'duly noted' before returning to important electrical doings.

Dalston's Blockbuster then: I picture it all going up in a psychedelic bonfire, melting titles together, a black mass of disinterned plots from VHS trailers, an explosion of plastic forgettables. A pixelated bomb.

As it burns, hear the concrete music of repeated reversed shootings, rough cutting of disembodied comic cliches and familiar thriller dialogues (rarely with motives beyond, as James Stewart says in Rope, 'the blonde or dollars in the mattress'), spitting and looping ad nauseum, on the fuse and off the beat, confusion breaking bones amid eternal male feuds, china wives and love interests cracking between plots, sucked under in a Hellmouth tide of pop ephemera. As it all falls, a collage of arbitrary summer blockbuster noises, looped and tensionless as a million rainy games of hangman; outlines and suggestions of grave drama, written in dim light but drawn spare and cold. The last few weeks of the store being open saw endless runs of Superman Returns one screen that still worked, sounding to the glancing ear vital and familiar, but on closer investigation a hollow treatise on a million older dreams.

The Dalston Blockbuster always had special offers that lacked specialness. DVDs skipped and brayed like asses in my machine, causing many films I borrowed from there to remain enigmas after I'd seen them: Hidden, The Right Stuff, Far From Heaven, Harry Potter 3 and 4, Pretty Persuasion, Little Miss Sunshine, Art School Confidential, Carnivale series 1, Huff series 1, Family Guy series 5. Fines grew non-existent in recent weeks, a symptom of either famine or plenty.

I picture the aftermath of the gutting flames: Friends boxsets like cakes out in the rain. Overspill from groaning messy stockrooms, grazed and shrunken echoes of prop-rooms at studio backlots, charred and dumped in the street. Cardboard cut-outs of Keanu or Angelina, five-sixths life-size, one half cinema size, five times video size, left by the pound-shops.
Overlapping mantras of the 'Haven't we seen that one?'/ 'No that was that one, this is this one' ilk echo through the empty building still.

So it's gone. Largely unnoticed. There is a bigger and better one up the road. Narrative convention in departure scenes would have me standing outside Blockbuster with my suitcase as they put the 'CLOSED' sign up in the window. I'd sigh, put on my hat and walk away.