The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features

High-voltage humans

By ANDREA FELDMAN  |  April 5, 2006

No Wave has never sounded as of-the-moment as it does now, thanks to a marked resurgence in bands expanding upon its signature sound (Liars, LCD Soundsystem, Glass Candy, Erase Errata, les Georges Leningrad) and a spate of reissues, the most vital of which is the Holy Grail of No Wave, Brian Eno’s seminal No New York, long out-of-print and much sought-after as the compilation that started it all.

No New York presents No Wave at its most uncompromising. Four bands — Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, James Chance and the Contortions, DNA, and Mars — are represented by four songs each. Pulling no punches, the occasionally intimidating, always remarkable compilation is all sinew and no filler. No wonder that Island, Eno’s label, balked when it heard the music and proceeded to dump the compilation out on its bargain-bin label Antilles. More than 25 years later, this music hasn’t lost its bite or its ability to shock.

Leading the way was Lydia Lunch. Her first order of business was to dismantle punk’s over-reliance on, as she put it, “tired Chuck Berry riffs.” Through her first band Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, she stripped the music as close to the bone as possible, making a minimal, atonal racket as aggressive as it was arresting. (How minimal, you ask? She chucked James Chance out of the band because his saxophone blare was too flowery.)

Perhaps the most theatrical of No Wave performers, James Siegfried drew on a background in free jazz improvisation and a keen interest in the sounds of Motown to create his alter ego James Chance; with his backing band the Contortions (and later, the Blacks), he created music as kinetic, danceable, and wildly charismatic as James Brown’s “I Got You (I Feel Good).” The shock of the new came from Chance’s melding of Motown’s flair and showmanship with the jarringly nihilistic ideological pose that informed his every unhinged howl.

DNA’s music was stunning in a way that Duchamp’s “R Mutt” must have been to everyone at the Armory Show. On songs like “Blonde Redhead” and “Detached,” Arto Lindsay spoke in tongues, his throaty shriek matched by his inventive guitar, which threw off shards and sparks. Somehow the chaos was brought to order, anchored by Robin Crutchfield’s keyboards or Tim Wright’s bass.

Compare either volume of Soul Jazz’s lovingly researched New York Noise compilations with No New York and you can see the tonal breadth of this music — from the aggressive minimalism of Mars, to the startling, oddly delicate rawness of Ut and early Sonic Youth, through to the extroverted, kitschy humor of all-girl percussion band Pulsallama (once described as “12 girls fighting over a cowbell”). In their hands, even dance music became confrontational, playing out like a philosophical inversion of disco’s beatific, up-with-people optimism. If disco seduced you into giving yourself up to the beat like a sacrificial lamb, No Wave’s coruscating, electric pulse fought you every step of the way. And yet there was something irresistible about it too. It could be forbidding, yes, but just as often it was raucous fun.

< prev  1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Erin McKeown: Lafayette, Listen up, Word power, More more >
  Topics: New England Music News , Entertainment, Hip-Hop and Rap, Music,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments
High-voltage humans
great article!
By mellowtron on 04/05/2006 at 9:50:45
High-voltage humans
Didn't know about the No Wave/Hip Hop connection. Who knew?
By Brucie A on 04/07/2006 at 7:32:17
No Wave is only half the scene: the other half is Cinema of Transgression
Read "Deathtripping" by Jack Sergeant and you'll find the other half of No Wave: the Cinema of Transgression movement. A good chunk of No Wave bands have worked with and starred in films by Richard Kern and Nick Zedd, and have performed in hybrid sound/visual performances called "Expanded Cinema."
By Larry Red on 08/13/2008 at 5:50:17

[ 12/04 ]   Squeezebox Stompers  @ 80 Border Street Cultural Exchange Center
[ 12/04 ]   Robin Spielberg  @ Center for Arts In Natick
[ 12/04 ]   Crybabies + Time Beings + Commandos + Musclecah  @ Ralph's Diner
ARTICLES BY ANDREA FELDMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REELIN’ ’N’ ROCKIN’  |  February 06, 2008
    Deer Tick singer John McCauley’s lived-in anthems harken back to the old-school traditions of Nashville, a boozy world of dim lights, thick smoke, and loud, loud music.
  •   DAYS LIKE THIS  |  December 11, 2007
    It’s hardly your typical rock ’n’ roll saga.
  •   PERSISTENCE OF MEMORY  |  November 27, 2007
    Though you don’t need to know anything about Elvis Perkins’s colorful and, at times, deeply tragic family history to appreciate his debut album, significant details can’t help but call out to you.
  •   SUSTAINABLE SOUNDS  |  July 10, 2007
    For every high-gloss record label driven primarily by commercial concerns, there are any number of smaller-scale labels putting beautiful sounds out into the ether.
  •   FOO!APALOOZA  |  July 10, 2007
    What began life as the comparatively modest Fool’s Ball has mutated into an unruly (but lovable) behemoth.

 See all articles by: ANDREA FELDMAN

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group