 |
GENERAL
PORTISHEAD ARTICLES
INWARD-LOOKING PORTISHEAD DIGS DEEPER FOR
ORIGINAL IDEAS
Source: The Georgia Strait, Volume 31, December
11-18, 1997
Written by John Lucas
INWARD-LOOKING PORTISHEAD DIGS DEEPER FOR
ORIGINAL IDEAS
Whatever else Portishead may be, it is not a
trip-hop band. Despite the Bristol, England-based group's penchant for
scratching, funky breakbeats, and samples, Geoff Barrow is quick to
distance its music from that label. On the phone from a tour stop in
Atlanta, Georgia, Barrow explains that, in England, trip-hop is
"seen as a really dirty word". Trip-hop, he says, is a form of
instrumental dance music that was developed by DJs in New York, and has
nothing to do with the slow, soulful mood music proffered by Portishead.
In 1994, at roughly the same time that this nascent genre was taking
root in English clubs, a new sound was emerging from Bristol. Portishead
released its first album, Dummy, and like-minded artists such as Tricky
and Massive Attack were rapidly attracting the attention of the fickle
British music press.Somewhere along the way, the signals got crossed,
and the Bristol sound was incorrectly slapped with the dreaded label.
"We don't come from dance
culture," says Barrow, who plays keyboards and drums in the band.
"We've never particularly been into dance culture. But it's so
massively huge in Europe, and a lot of the people who were making this
so-called trip-hop came from dance culture. They worked in clubs and
came out of house music, and slowed stuff down and did all that kind of
stuff. For us, we were never about that. It was never about club music.
So we always felt completely separated from that."
Whatever the label, Dummy was a remarkable
debut. Beth Gibbons' mournful vocals and Adrian Utley's minimal,
spy-movie guitar lines were a magic combination. Topped off with
tastefully mixed snippets of old jazz records and Mission: Impossible
soundtrack albums, songs such as "Sour Times",
"Numb", and "Glory Box" seemed to come from the past
and the future at the same time. The album sold some two million copies
worldwide, and has had a far-reaching influence.
When Barrow began hearing that influence
every time he turned on the radio or television, he realized the next
Portishead album would have to be different. He says th band's members
became "very distrusting of our own sounds" when it came time
to record their eponymous sophomore disc.
"What caused a lot of the problems on
the second record is that we were hearing the sounds we had used on so
many other things. On TV adverts... It seems to be the general mood, you
know?" In order to work from a fresh sonic palette, they agreed to
a complete moratorium on sampling; Well, almost complete. "There's
two really tiny samples on the album" Barrow admits. "And
they're more like the icing on the cake, rather than the body of the
work on the track, whereas 'Sour Times' was based on a Lalo Schifrin
sample, and 'Glory Box' was based on an Isaac Hayes sample."
Barrow acknowledges that the music on Dummy
was heavily influenced by what the group's members were listening to at
the time - everything from film-noir scores to American hip-hop - but he
says that more recently, Portishead has been into, well, Portishead.
"In the end, instead of looking outside for inspiration, we just
went deeper inside of what we actually do. And that's why it's called
Portishead," he says.
For Gibbons, going deeper meant wading into
some uncharted emotional waters. The lovelorn victim of Dummy has been
joined by a stronger, more vengeful character. When she snarls lines
like "The truth is sold/ The deal is done"
("Cowboys") or "Why should I forgive you/After all that
I've seen/Quietly whisper/When my heart wants to scream?"
("Seven Months"), the delivery is worthy of Eartha Kitt or
Shirley Bassey (the former being best-known for her TV role as Catwoman,
the latter for her rendition of "Goldfinger").
"There was a little bit more
frustration and anger on this record than the last one, in her vocal
style," Barrow says. "I think it's just her finding other
places. We were all massively conscious of trying not to go into the
same areas again, and do something new and refreshing, rather than Dummy
Part 2."
With so much emphasis placed on fresh
musical ideas, perhaps lazy critics will quit lumping the band into the
currently trendy category of "electronica". Watching
electronic artists press buttons and twist knobs can quickly become
tiresome, but when Portishead plays live, which it will do Saturday
(December 13) at the Rage, it does so as a true band. In concert, the
core lineup of Barrow, Gibbons, Utley, and engineer Dave McDonald is
joined by keyboardist John Baggot, bassist Jim Barr, and drummer Clive
Dreamer. "There's nothing coming from a sequencer," Barrow
announces proudly. "I think it's fine for people to use sequencers
and everything else, but for us, the people who play with us are
incredibly talented, so there's no reason why we should. And we feel
like we can change stuff, we can bring stuff up, we can actually give
our own emotions into the playing of it."
Ultimately, all these labels, categories,
and subcategories are mean-ingless, especially if the music lacks
quality and the artist lacks talent or conviction. Happily, Portishead
lacks neither. "For us, it's about making music, and trying to be
as original as you can," says Barrow. "That's all that matters
to us." |