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GENERAL
PORTISHEAD ARTICLES
Portishead, as Live As They'll Ever Get
Source: Newsday, April 28,1995, pp B23.
Portishead, as Live As They'll Ever Get
It's easy to find dance music that appeals
to happy feet, but gloomy gams have had a harder time of it - until
Portishead, that is. The British ambient-dance-cum-lounge-pop band,
which headlines the Supper Club Sunday night, has pioneered an
electro-torch sound that skirts genres as varied as "spaghetti
Western" film scores, '80s new wave and modern hip-hop. On the
band's achingly beautiful debut, "Dummy" (London), musical
architect Geoff Barrow and singer-lyricist Beth Gibbons beckon listeners
into a landscape that's at once surreal and poignant.
"The last thing we wanted to do was
just throw together a selection of beats," says Barrow, a drummer
who became a producer and has worked with artists as different as
Depeche Mode and the hip-hop horrorists Gravediggaz. "What's
important about music as an art form is the emotion that can be drawn
from it," he ventures. "I think a lot of people working in
dance music have sacrificed emotion in favor of technology."
Thanks in large part to Gibbons' downbeat
but crystalline vocals, melancholy and regret are the emotions most in
evidence on songs like the left-field hit "Sour Times (Nobody Loves
Me)" and the "Cabaret"-styled "Wandering Star."
Beneath her quavering soprano, Barrow scatters samples like old War
albums and the "Mission: Impossible" theme. While not
necessarily textbook psychedelia, the whole is sufficiently
mood-altering to have earned the label "trip-hop."
Barrow admits the members of Portishead -
both confirmed studio rats - don't particularly relish the notion of
live performance: "It's not the most creative thing one can
do," he says. "In fact, it can be quite deadening, since we're
such control freaks that we have to get everything right every
time."
Rather than rely on the computers many dance
acts employ to insure precise concert consistency, Portishead (the name
comes from the blue-collar English coastal town where Barrow spent his
youth) tours with a full band. "When I think of the words `live
performance,' I take them literally," he says. "We've put
together a proper band, no samplers or sequencers . . . I do a bit of
scratching on top, but that's as techno as it gets."
In lieu of a traditional opening act,
Portishead will set the mood for its performance in appropriately
control-freak fashion: A touring disc jockey will spin records, after
which the band will screen its self-produced film, "To Kill a Dead
Man." Barrow says, "If you're going to offer an evening out,
it should be what I call a round one, one that comes together
completely. |