the sound | xltronic messageboard
 
You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
 
Now online (2)
Roger Wilco
recycle
...and 475 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2614093
Today 6
Topics 127542
  
 
Messageboard index
the sound
 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:34 [#00980085]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



i just love them and if you love them you can read about
them here.They are so true

by Andy Kellman
The Sound's inability to break through to the type of '80s
post-punk prominence reserved for the likes of Joy Division
and Echo & the Bunnymen, the two bands the Sound fell in
between sound-wise, isn't all that easy to explain away. Any
deep-minded attempt to do so leaves one with a sort of
abject sourness that can only be directed for, well, the
human race. When a deserving band fails at to become
something of a household name, the easy targets — the
industry, the press, the drug problems, the coke-head
producer who mangled what was supposed to be the "Big
Record" — are normally fingered. But none of those targets
truly apply here in the strictest sense. While most of the
Sound's records were never released in the U.S., no American
record executive can take any blame; they can simply point
to the fact that the Sound were merely respectable unit
shifters — a prototypical cult act — in their homeland
of England, so they wouldn't have fared well across the
pond. The press was generally supportive, especially early
on; collectively they gave the band more positive reviews
than most others, which makes perfect sense because none of
the Sound's five studio LPs suffered from uneven
characteristics. Each one made progress from the previous
and each one ranged from good to spectacular. Their songs
had hooks and emotional impact without bombast, with lyrics
that often confronted the problems of young adulthood
without simply moping and falling into escapist chutes. The
members themselves weren't cute teen idol types (though they
were far from being tough on the eye), and they didn't have
big personalities or say big things during interviews, but
that's obviously no fault of their own. They were able to
cultivate large followings in Germany and Holland, but aside
from those countries and a couple other European
territories, indifference and history has made them all but
invisible.
The Sound formed in South


 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:38 [#00980087]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



countinue London in 1979, shortly after a band called the
Outsiders dissolved. It isn't a very well-distributed fact,
but the Outsiders' 1977 LP Calling on Youth was the first
self-released British punk LP, issued roughly four months
after Buzzcocks' infamous Spiral Scratch 7".
Guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Adrian Borland led the
Outsiders though a couple of other releases, but the band
sputtered out three years after their 1976 formation.
Bassist Graham Bailey (aka Graham Green), who had joined the
band in time for their final recordings, followed Borland
into the new group with a drummer named Michael Dudley and a
saxophonist/clarinetist/keyboardist named Bi Marshall.

Fittingly enough, Borland's motivation to cut ties to the
punk movement mirrored that of original Buzzcocks member
Howard Devoto, who left his own band after Spiral Scratch.
Like Devoto, who had gone on to pioneer yet another field
called post-punk with Magazine, Borland looked around, saw
all the bands who played straight-ahead chug-chug-chug rock
& roll, and decided that the tired blueprint was in need of
a little more depth and variation; atmospheres, tensions,
and unfamiliar twists on the interplay between the
instruments would be needed. Lyrics were another thing. Not
content with simply railing against the government or
grunting and yelping about trivial matters to merely keep a
song moving, Borland became one of the few post-punk
songwriters whose lyric sheets were truly worth ingesting
and analyzing. Former Outsider Adrian Janes aided the cause,
remaining involved with Borland in a behind-the-scenes
manner, writing some of the band's lyrics with his former
bandmate.

The Sound made their first recordings in the living room of
the Borland family home, with Adrian's supportive father Bob
acting as recording engineer. As demonstrated on Propaganda,
a posthumous release from 1999 that collects these sessions,
the band was gradually — not so drastically and suddenly
— leaving the Stooges/Velvets axis and applying touches
that would


 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:41 [#00980088]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



be developed into something all their own. They received
their first break of sorts from Stephen Budd, an early
supporter since the Outsiders days, who had recorded and
released some material by Bailey and Borland's
electronically inclined side project, Second Layer. Budd's
label, Tortch-R, made a small profit from a Second Layer
release, so he opted to put it right back into the Sound's
first release. Budd also became the band's manager, booking
studio time for them with Nick Robbins in Elephant Studios
and finding places for the band to gig.

The first release made a humble impression. Physical World
was reviewed positively in the NME by Paul Morley, and DJ
John Peel took minor interest, playing it a couple times
during his influential BBC program. Though the Sound hadn't
the will to pine for a major label deal, the WEA-affiliated
Korova label (home of Echo & the Bunnymen) came knocking
when they found out the band was going back into the studio
to make a full album. Korova heard the rough mixes of the
album and a deal was made. Regardless of the label's
involvement, Jeopardy was recorded cheaply, and upon its
release was reviewed extremely favorably by all the
important outlets. Reviews in the NME, Sounds, and Melody
Maker gave it five stars. Rightfully likened to the
Bunnymen, the Teardrop Explodes, and Joy Division in those
reviews, one only needs to hear the weakest song from the
record to realize that the Sound — from the very beginning
— belonged in that high class.

Bi Marshall left the band and was replaced by Max Mayers
(aka Colvin Mayers) before the Sound went in to work with
master producer Hugh Jones, who had previously worked with
the Teardrops and the Bunnymen, for the follow-up. From the
Lion's Mouth took full advantage of the band's atmospheric,
mind-bending capabilities by coating their songs —
accessible and economical as ever — with richly layered
productions that didn't hide the rock-solid foundation the
songs were built on. Another round of positive reviews and
another round of


 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:45 [#00980092]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



positive reviews and another round of general indifference
from the public ensued, though a cult following was
festering. Korova became a little anxious with the band and
wanted some hits. Surely, the next one would break them.

It wouldn't happen. Working again with Nick Robbins, the
band was pressured by the label to compromise and play the
pop game. Not only that, but the band was shifted to WEA
proper, a move that probably had more to do with taxes than
music. The heat from the label and the climate it spawned
resulted in All Fall Down, one of those historically
troubled third albums (i.e., the one that super-diehard fans
defend to their grave). The Sound responded to the situation
with their least penetrable record by a couple brick walls.
And WEA responded to the response with no promotion.
Criticized for being too willfully distant, for
cannibalizing the back catalog, and for lacking immediacy
(i.e., "tunes"), the record still has much to give the
listener. Although it's not the band's best moment by a long
shot, it's hardly something the band would feel ashamed of
later on. To little surprise, the band wound up without a
label and decided to reconsider their direction.

The period of dormancy involved a collective realization
that the enthusiasm for making music and playing it, despite
being a little drained from their experiences with WEA, had
never really waned. Several major labels expressed interest
in signing them, but in the end Statik won out; the band
decided it would be better to go with the small independent.
(Surprisingly enough, the band worked out a short-term deal
with A&M to release material in the States, but it was
pretty pointless.) Shock of Daylight, a six-song EP, was
released in 1984. The time off served them well, resulting
in some of the band's most fiery and uplifting material.
This carried through to the following year's glassy/classy
Heads and Hearts, the band's fourth studio album. Two dates
at the Marquee during August were recorded for the double
live album In the


 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:51 [#00980097]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



In the Hothouse, which was released in 1986.

For their final album, 1987's Thunder Up (released on Play
It Again Sam in Belgium and Nettwerk in Canada), the band
allowed the darkness from All Fall Down and the shivering,
plaintive desolation of Shock of Daylight's "Winter" to
creep back in. Few were still paying attention, but the
Sound released a swan song that most of the members
considered to be their finest work, with plenty of variety
that hangs together. Nearly a decade of empty wallets and
minor personality clashes had eroded the band's resilience,
so the band decided to stop shortly after its release.

Borland continued in music throughout the next two decades,
producing other acts and releasing another batch of
under-appreciated records as a solo artist and as a member
of a couple side projects (the Honolulu Mountain Daffodils,
White Rose Transmission). Bailey, Dudley, and Mayers left
music for the most part. Mayers passed away in the early
'90s, a victim of AIDS. And on April 26, 1999, Borland took
his own life. Thanks to the Renascent label's reissuing
program in the late '90s and early 2000s, the Sound's
discography has been restored and revitalized.






 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:52 [#00980100]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



i hope you listen tho this and read it i love it


 

offline loneranger from Sweden on 2003-12-06 18:59 [#00980105]
Points: 137 Status: Regular



dosent anybody heard about them


 

offline steve from chicago on 2003-12-06 19:48 [#00980177]
Points: 1156 Status: Lurker



I dig the Sound. I've got:

All Fall Down
From The Lion's Mouth
Jeopardy + Live Instinct
Shock Of Daylight + Heads and Hearts


 


Messageboard index