Record Buyer - October 2001 - Pages 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
"Parallel
Lines - Blondie In The 21st Century"
Nigel Cross goes into
the bleach as the hit bands six best-sellers are
revamped, revitalized and reissued.
As they used to say in those old Superman comics, it's
a bizarro world. Talk about parallel lines - any
self-respecting rock fan could be forgiven for waking up
of a morning and thinking they were back in 1974 or '75,
perish the thought. They only have to go out on to the
street and stare. Every style-conscious kid is cutting a
dash in flared blue denims, while the weekly music press
(what's left of it) is muttering about a great new scene
emerging from the Big Apple - New York bands like the
Moldy Peaches and the Strokes are being touted as the
future of rock'n'roll. But what's really bizarre is that
the forefathers of these new renegades are all back in
town doing live gigs.
The past six months have seen UK shows by many acts
from the class of '74 - those bands that grew up in the
foetd NY club scene spearheaded by Max's Kansas City, the
Mercer Arts Centre and CBGB's. We're talking Ramones,
Television, Patti Smith, Talking Heads, the Heartbreakers
and Blondie. The Patti Smith Group played to critical
acclaim and a packed house at the Hackney Ocean, while
Televison reformed for the Toroise- curated All
Tomorrow's Parties at Camber Sands. Why, even Talking
Heads spin-off band the Tom Tom Club have also put in a
live appearance.
Sadly for obvious reasons, Johnny Thunders & his
Heartbreakers won't be able to make it, and neither will
an original complement of the Ramones. Recently-deceased
Joey garnered plenty of headlines with his premature
death in April when everyone from Primal Scream's Bobby
Gillespie to Poptones boss Alan McGee paid lip service to
the singer from whose loins punk rock practically
sprang.
That little scene born from dying gasps of Warhol
proteges the Velvet Underground and the glam antics of
the New York Dolls boasted a pedigree and significnce
that has hardly been matched before or since. It was a
musical hot-bed that dished up raw, primeval rock (no
coincidence that Patti Smith guitarist and mainstay Lenny
Kaye had compiled the fabulous original 'nuggets'
garage-band set). While its look for the most part was
all snappy, minimalist threads and haircuts but still
packed a zazor-like intellectualism, that put most of the
prog rock bands of the time with their bogus,
philosphical twaddle to shame. Pete Frame later
succinctly nailed the incest of this tiny scene, charting
all its twisted inter-relationships and rivalries in his
Smouldering In The Bowery Pt 1 and Out In The Streets
family trees. Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood
borrowed generously from it for both the sound and the
look of British punk rock, while ex-Television bassist
Richard Hell coined its catch- all 'blank generation'
monicker. Indeed, back then NY had it all, from the
searing guitar sound of Television, which based its
instrumental prowess on great jazz improvisers like John
Coltrane to the sleazy, smack-addled gutter swagger of
the Heartbreakers that made even Keef Richards seem like
a pillar of society. It encompassed the edgy smart-ass
lyrics and ingenious songs of David Byrne and the
glorious liberating rock of the Patti Smith Group, as
much inspired by old-style '60s garage as it was by poets
William Blake and Arthur Rimbaud. All the bands would go
on to enjoy varying degrees of success.
However there was one group that was part and parcel
of this scene that stood apart - Blondie . Somehow, they
were the jokers in the pack who, to mix metaphors, also
broke the mould. Like their peers, they had attitude by
the yellow cab load - they all carried it like a
membership card to some exclusive street gang. But both
in the way they sounded and projected, Blondie were
unique. Unlike the Ramones, they favoured '60s pop
(singer Debbie Harry had debuted in psych-pop outfit The
Wind In The Willows and an album for Capitol Records) but
their tunes exuded a different tone.
The Ramones may have tipped their hat to the likes of
Phil Spector, but they were equally knee-deep in the
garbage on the street and it was no surprise they were
big fans of creepy cult movies of like Tod Browning's
classic Freaks. Scuzz rock indeed, and hardly the kind of
people you'd want to bring home to a dinner party!
Blondie, by comparison, were far more groomed and
sophisticated. While Patti Smith's unconventional looks
and working boots screamed anti-image, Debbie Harry
could, to quote from one of her songs, have been a
debutante - she was, after all, an ex-Bunny Girl, by the
end of the 70s, had turned into pop's Marilyn Monroe. And
the group behind her in their tight tailored jackets,
white shirts and black ties, drainpipe trousers and sharp
barnets pretty much defined the standard image of the New
Wave as punk quickly became absorbed into the
mainstream.
A lot of their contemporaries stuck to their artistic
guns and quickly burnt out. It's a sobering thought that
Blondie made their UK debut, inauspiciously enough, as
tour support for Television, whose bassist Fred Smith had
been in the Stilettoes with Harry and guitarist Chris
Stein. Television were surfing a huge wave of critical
acclaim with their first long-player, 'Marquee Moon',
high in the charts - Blondie had just released their own
eponymous debut album. Yet a year later, with their
follow-up 'Adventure' torn to bits by those self-same
critics, Television were in tatters, their early promise
now a fast-fading memory. Blondie, meanwhile, were
steadily rising on the ladder to success.
EMI will this month reissue (re-mastered, and with
extra cuts) the first six Blondie albums on CD, a body of
work which catches the band at the absolute zenith of its
powers. This piece is in no way intended to be an
exhaustive overview of the band whose history and
recordings were covered in Record Buyer's March 1999
issue. Instead it aims to examine one of America's
biggest bands as an enduring phenomenon in an industry
where last week's thing might as well have been last
century's!
There are few rock groups - if any - who can actually
boast of having Number 1 hit singles in three consecutive
decades, none of them on the back of a re-release. Yet
that's exactly what Blondie managed to achieve in the UK
when their comeback song 'Maria' sailed up to the top of
the charts in February 1999. By a process of imaginative
and canny re-invention and not a little luck, Blondie
have managed to stay on top in the commercial arena and
still command a lot of respect from both their
contemporaries and successive later generations.
Label manager/scene-maker Marty Thau would
subsequently observe that, in contrast to the rest of the
original pack back then, Blondie were at least
photogenic, while the material they wrote benefited from
having some of the best hooks since pop's '60s heyday. It
was an irresistible, winning combination and, as the
early Blondie got going, they employed some crack
professionals like veteran producers Richard Gottehrer
and Craig Leon to iron out the creases. From the start,
Blondie were a very combo. They were also fortunate to
interest legendary writer Alan Betrock, who produced
their early demos back in 1975.
These fascinating, formative versions of 'Platinum
Blonde', 'Out In The Streets' and 'The Thin Line',
together with both sides of the rare 7-inch on Private
Stock Records ('X-Offender' and 'In The Sun') are to be
found on the reissue of 'Blondie', while the Betrock demo
of 'The Disco Song' (better known as the future Number 1
'Heart Of Glass') crops up as a bonus cut on the
re-issued 'Plastic Letters'.
By the time of the Private Stock 45 in '76, the
line-up was beginning to coalesce into the band that
everyone now remembers as Blondie, with drummer Clem
Burke and keyboardist Jimmy Destri joining Stein and
Harry. Creatively there wasn't enough room for Gary
Valentine (who'd co-written 'X-Offender') and he left to
be replaced by Frank Infante. The final piece of the
jigsaw fell into place with Englishman Nigel Harrison
from Aylesbury arriving just as Chrysalis bought them out
of their Private Stock contract. Rumous -
unsubstanstantiated - circulated that it was for a cool
half million!
The band have always insisted there was no big master
plan, but by March 1978 they were enjoying their first UK
Number 1 with the exceptionally catchy 'Denis'. The
fine-tuning had continued with the arrival of Brit
producer Mike Chapman, renowned for his work with early-
'70s glitter-rockers like the Sweet. The cynical would
say that this was one more smart career move, the
charitable that it was all past of blondie's love of the
early glam scene - after all, didn't they cover T Rex's
'Get It On' (a live version of which crops up on the
reissued 'Parallel Lines')?
With Chapman on board, Blondie really began to deliver
the goods, a to-die-for brand of super- charged pop full
of cool, arty humour and irony that few could touch. Plus
the band boasted some fine playing, especially Destri's
Farfisa work and Burke's imaginative powerhouse drumming.
Yet without Debbie Harry they would have gone nowhere.
Her physical attributtes need few words of explanation -
has a pop singer ever looked more lovely than Debbie
Harry on the front cover of 'Parallel Lines'? But behind
the platinum-blonde sex-symbol exterior was a fine singer
with as much suss as she had sass! Feisty female singers
are ten a penny nowadays but Harry was there 20 years
ahead of 'girl power' and set the standard for those who
came after, from Catatonia's Cerys Matthews to the
Cardigans' Nina Persson.
It was a formula with the midas touch. Between 1979
and 1982, the singles, 'Heart Of Glass', 'Sunday Girl',
'Atomic', 'Call Me' and 'The Tide Is High' all leapt to
the UK Number 1 slot. Memories of the band are many, but
there must be a whole generation out there who'll always
remember them playing us out of the '70s and into the
'80s via a live televised show in Glasgow on 31 December
1979. They were adept at effortlessly straying from their
sleek power pop roots into areas as diverse as reggae and
disco - the electro-pop of the Giorgio Moroder- produced
'Call Me' springs readily to mind. And it's been argued
that, on 'Rapture' (from 'AutoAmerican'), they were the
first white pop band to take on hip-hop. They could mix
it without losing credibility, and took the sound of the
streets into the mainstream.
After the success of later albums like 'Eat To The
Beat' and 'AutoAmerican', the seeds of dissent began to
pull the group apart. Harry's first solo album, a lavish
affair with artwork by Alien designer HR Giger and
produced by disco legends Chic failed to excite. After
'The Hunter' in 1982, not even the combined might of the
Chrysalis label and their heavyweight LA-based manager
Shep Gordon could keep the show on the road as, with
Chris Stein succumbing to a rare wasting skin disease,
pemphigus vulgaris, the band ground to a halt.
Harry nursed Stein through his illness and,
despite periods of depression, continued to pursue her
career as an actress that had begun in 1979's Union City
with roles in John Walters' camp classic Hairspray and
Videodrome directed by David Cronenberg. Always a
chameleon, Harry began to re-invent herself as a singer
too. Early-'90s projects with Stein were no great shakes,
but her work as part of the Jazz Passengers has garnered
her much acclaim, providing if nothing else that the
voice was always as important as the pretty face in her
previous band! Re-forming bands - especially ones that
have enjoyed untold fame and fortune - is always a risky
business. It was therefore something of a surprise to
learn that Harry, Stein, Burke and Destri planned to
return as Blondie in 1998, considering the sea of change
that had gone on in the music biz in their absence.
But it was an even bigger surprise that the first
single 'Maria' from the reunion album 'No Exit' - as
classic a slice of Blondie pop as they'd ever performed -
should scale the British singles chart in the final year
of the 20th century and end up in pole position. It was
as if to say we'll teach these young whippersnappers like
the Spice Girls a thing or two! 'Maria' even got a remix
by Talvin Singh, while the album itself, produced by
Craig Leon, pulled one or two mean punches - not least a
rap duet between Harry and Coolio on the title track. Not
bad for a bunch of superannuated rockers who won't see 50
again!
Two years on, the group - dried-out, drug-free and
benefiting from periods of therapy - has completed a new
album with Craig Leon once again at the helm. Recorded in
NY in studios as diverse as Sony, Chung Kung and Chris
Stein's basement, it's scheduled for possible release in
February, while songs for possible conclusion are
'Persia', 'No Class' and 'Motorman' by recent recruit
guitarist, Paul Carbonara. Harry, meanwhile, is working
harder than ever as an actress with roles in upcoming
movies like Deuces Wild, Firecracker and Red Lipstick.
Outside of Blondie she continues with the Jazz Passengers
and recently collaborated with ex-Police guitarist Andy
Summers on his jazz album 'Peggy's Blue Skylight'.
I'm placing no bets on whether Blondie will do it
again and enjoy a Number 1 in the 21st century. Then
again, Frank Sinatra was written off in the '40s and look
what happened to him! Many never expected the Beatles to
get past 1964. Success may be even more transitory in pop
than it ever has been, but it's always best to expect the
unexpected. The sylph-like figure of Ms Harry that
defined the 'Parallel Lines' era may now be but a memory,
but at a full-on live gig Blondie can still rip it's
audience to shreds.
It'll be very interesting to see whether the parallel
New York scene of the new century can throw up such a
world-beating band - the Strokes and company have an
awful lot to live up to...