GENERAL
PORTISHEAD ARTICLES
English rock band is nervous about its
unexpected success.
Source: Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service,
April 17, 1995
Title: English rock band is nervous about its unexpected success.
Author: Cary Darling
To hear Geoff Barrow tell it, things aren't going well for his band,
Portishead.
The group's debut album, ``Dummy,''
reportedly has sold more than 300,000 copies in the United States. And
the initial single, ``Sour Times,'' has become a staple on alternative
rock and adult album alternative stations.
Not only that, but Portishead _ named after
the band's hometown near Bristol, England _ has received a rapturous
critical reception from underground and mainstream media outlets such as
as The New York Times, People and Rolling Stone.
To top it off, the duo _ composer/arranger
Barrow and singer Beth Gibbons _ have been hailed as being at the
forefront of a new musical movement dubbed trip-hop, a languid, jazzy
and cinematic brand of malaise and melancholy. In Portishead's case,
it's the torched soul of prime-era Peggy Lee dressed in spy movie,
spaghetti Western and '90s urban cool. Perhaps the best description
appeared in Mixmag: ``Beth Gibbons sounds like a chain-smoking Joni
Mitchell hanging out with Cypress Hill.''
But Barrow, 23, is not altogether happy, and
he's not even sure how long Portishead will survive.
``We didn't expect to sell more than 30,000
copies in England,'' he said by telephone on the eve of the band's
first-ever U.S. dates. ``I wanted to release three albums before we
crossed the channel, and it's all gone wrong. And I think it will finish
us, to be absolutely honest.''
Later, Barrow backs down a bit.
``We will do a second album,'' he conceded.
``We'll most probably survive, but the second album will be damned in
England. There are trendier people out than us now.
``I don't want to come across as ungrateful.
I'm very pleased with what's happened. I feel incredibly lucky, because
it never happens to some bands. But I was working to a plan, and things
break open and that's very dangerous _ unless you've got a backup plan,
which I've not got.''
The plan began in 1991, when Barrow, a disc
jockey and recording-studio employee in search of a singer for a
collaborative project, met Gibbons in an unemployment office.
Barrow already had started on various
recordings but wasn't happy with any of it until Gibbons wrote ``Sour
Times.'' ``(That song) saved it all, really,'' he recalled.
And that's the song that caught the ear of
alternative America.
Many critics have remarked on Gibbons' dazed
depression and noir nightmares, her sense of spiraling ever deeper into
a pitiless purgatory. Barrow says even he's not sure where all this
sorrow comes from and has been quoted as saying he doesn't care.
``I care if it's going to be mentally
damaging to her, but, on the other hand, I'm not a great lyrical
person,'' he said. ``I don't get involved. I just make sure it works
sonically. The melody lines are what I care about. Lyrically, I trust
her. She is being honest. She's not writing a song just to make money or
sound distressed.''
But he says what's been written about
Gibbons isn't always true. For instance, it's been said she doesn't do
interviews, but Barrow maintains that only applies to the British press.
``She was nervous to do interviews,'' he
admitted. ``But she found doing European and American interviews, they
seemed to be a lot more honest and to the point.''
As for his own musical influences, Barrow
admits he has listened to many soundtracks.
``I'm more into soundtrack music as music
than actually the films or the images,'' he said. ``I've never seen the
films for most of the soundtracks I've owned. I just collect records I
like: ones from the late '60s and '70s, Italian, French and American spy
movies and thrillers.''
Though Barrow started off sampling, he says
the current tour will feature live instruments, even though the group
has performed only occasional concerts.
``Hopefully, it will still keep the same air
about it,'' he said. ``It's not going to sound exactly like the album,
but I wanted it to be a live thing rather than a computerized event.''
When he gets back to England after
Portishead's brief U.S. swing, Barrow is going to start the second album
_ and wait for the P-head backlash to start.
``Someone's already written that they want
the Portishead backlash to start now,'' he said with a laugh. ``It just
cracks me up. People will believe it, and then people will start
slagging our stuff.'' |