GENERAL
PORTISHEAD ARTICLES
Portishead showing more group effort
Source: The Atlanta Journal and Constitution,
December 2, 1997, pp D02
PREVIEW: Portishead: 8 p.m. Wednesday. $20.
The Roxy, 3110 Roswell Road N.E. 404-233-7699.: Portishead showing more
group effort
The music of Portishead swirls and shimmers
like a dervish. A sense of foreboding surrounds the listener with hints
of James Bond theme tunes of the '60s and soundtracks from science
fiction and horror classics all pegged to the urban beats of the '90s.
The band's second U.S. jaunt brings it to
the Roxy on Wednesday, with its four members augmented by two disc
jockeys. Between the two American tours, Portishead did play a stateside
show in July at New York's Roseland Ballroom that was taped for
broadcast on British television. "It was terrifying, mainly,"
says multi-instrumentalist Adrian Utley speaking by phone from the
group's hometown of Bristol, England. "(With) all these cameras
tracking around and all this white light, we thought, `This is a
mistake.' It looks good though. We'll probably sell a long-form video in
the next year."
Utley sees little difference between
American and British audiences. "If we play in England it has a
different connotation for us." But, he adds, "It's just the
way we feel. It's the same kind of people that come to the shows
everywhere."
The band's new CD, titled simply
"Portishead," has received rave reviews but less attention
from radio than the debut, "Dummy." "Sour Times"
from the latter record caught the radio and the public's ear with its
forlorn refrain of "Nobody loves me, it's true, not like you
do" sung by the achingly beautiful voice of Beth Gibbons.
Adding to the mysterious atmosphere that
surrounds the band, Gibbons rarely talks to the press, but often
consents to photo shoots. Previously, leader and songwriter Geoff
Barrows has handled most of the interviews, but Utley's higher profile
of late does much to negate the perception that the band is a duo. As
Utley puts it, "I was always there from the first day. It was the
way it was marketed by the record company."
The new record even looks like more of a
collaborative effort on paper. Unusually, the fourth member is the
group's engineer and sound man Dave McDonald. McDonald's role becomes
more understandable when you know the band's recording process, which
makes intensive use of the studio.
"We're all involved ---Dave, me and
Geoff in the studio," says Utley. "Geoff and I tend to write
the backing tracks, with the live beats first (that's Geoff's
department). We'll have a sound in mind, like a soundtrack we're
inspired by, then multitrack it, maybe put it onto vinyl and sample it
from vinyl. Then that goes to Beth, and she'll write her lyrics and
melody on that. "
Why record your own samples, rather than
taking them direct from someone else's recording? "Because if you
use a sample (from another artist)," Utley says, "a few weeks
later someone has the same sample on their record. (Also) if you make
your own samples, you can make the chord sequences go the way you want
them." |