WILDWEED
SYMPATHY FOR THE RECORD INDUSTRY, 2005
In
addition to The Gun Club’s Mother Juno, Sympathy
for the Record Industry just re-released Jeffrey Lee Pierce’s
first solo album, Wildweed. Recorded in London in 1985,
this is Pierce’s most poppy and new wavey record. Craig Leon,
whose production credits by this point included such classics as
the first albums of both The Ramones and Suicide, does some pretty
slick work. While Pierce handles all of his guitars for the first
time, his studio band includes drummer Andy Anderson who just departed
from The Cure and John MacKinzie who was between Wham! sessions.
The highpoint of Sympathy’s release is the added bonus tracks
- the experimental poems and songs from the seven-inch that accompanied
the original LP.
The eerie
cover, picturing Pierce in black and white, staring into the distance
with a shotgun slung over his shoulder, gives as much of an indication
of the thematic material inside as much as the session musicians
do the musical material. While the polished music could use a little
grit at times, the lyrics are the opposite. While Pierce continues
to sing about some of his favorite themes - murder, sex, pain, failure,
debauchery, drugs, and prostitution, the murder part of the equation
is accentuated.
The first
song, “Love and Desperation,” displays Pierce’s
significant progress as a singer, songwriter, and guitarist - containing
a few of his best lines (“somebody hurts you, so you hurt
me/who hurts somebody else, why on down the road/who hurts somebody
else who goes on home… with you). Starting out almost as if
it is might become a no-wavey Contortions type of song, “Love
and Desperation” quickly moves into its pop/ska foundation.
Pierce’s guitar solo, while showcasing his ability, contains
no small amount of cheese. “Sex Killer” is a beat oriented
1980s pop number whose the title gives away the subject matter.
“Cleopatra Dreams On” is almost R.E.M.-ish but contains
some of Pierce’s best Television-style guitar lines. With
its walking bass, “Sensitivity” is jazzy and interesting
despite the production. Just in case you were confused about Pierce
singing a song about this subject, the chorus is: “Sensitivity
is not in you and not in me.”
Next,
the rootsy “Hey Juna” picks up the pace with another
walking bass line and big ghostly production. The lyrics, sung in
English, Japanese, and Spanish, phrased and themed in the style
of Willie Dixon’s “Wang Dang Doodle,” mention
Baby Romi (Mori, his girlfriend at the time), Murray the Man (Mitchell,
a friend from the Fur Bible and Siouxie and the Banshees), Kid the
Squid (Congo Powers, best friend and Gun Club band-mate), and Nick
the Cave (I’ll let you guess this one). Asking, “is
it uptown or down… yellow, black or brown… Chinatown
or funkytown?”, the INXS new wave “Love Circus”
declares, “we haven't seen anyone dead like you / since a
war was near.” As Pierce concludes “you got a price
that is not so nice / you got demise written on your mind,”
one can’t help but wonder if the singer was directing these
lines at himself. “Wildweed,” the punk number on the
record, is the story of a man who kills his wife and children so
he can no longer hurt them. Not “The Stranger,” the
protagonist sets the house on fire and heads to Mexico. While the
song suffers a bit from the sterile production, Pierce’s spazzy
solo deserves special praise. With “The Midnight Promise,”
Pierce ends the album as he began it – with a Jamaican-tinged
pop song. The chorus is very Television, or even, The Las Vegas
Story. In addition to perhaps the best music here, “The
Midnight Promise” also contains some Pierces most interesting
and perverse imagery (“your breathe on the window rings the
note/ you’re always coughing from the smoke and hatching children
in your throat”). This one is about an East Village junkie
prostitute. The only hitch is that the guitar, played a bit like
Tom Verlaine, somehow comes off like a cross between late-period
David Gilmour and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Pierce redeems himself at
the ending as the song fades into a solo acoustic Mississippi John
Hurt style instrumental part.
The most
interesting part of the CD is the bonus tracks. “Open the
Door Osris” is a Burroughsy poem accompanied by a rough almost
jazzy fluit. “The Fertility Godess” is all spoken word
delivered a bit like Ed Sanders. The fertility godess, as it turns
out, is a speedfreak (“I know she’s been awake for weeks…
her skin a grey corpse banner – the flag for all of the amphetemine
nations of the world”). “Portrait of the Artist in Hell”
is a free jazz punk rock number with insane feedback and screaming.
“Chris and Maggie Meet Blind Willie Johnson at a James Brown
Concert” is, as promised, a conversation over, as promised,
a James Brown groove.
There
are a number of good songs and good ideas here. I think my problem
is primarily the production. But for those who like the eighties
pop and new wave sounds, I would recommend this. This of course
is also a must for rabid Gun Club enthusiasts.
©
New York Night Train , 2005
|