BEE GEES: HIGH CIVILIZATION (1991)
1) High Civilization; 2)
Secret Love; 3) When He's Gone; 4) Happy Ever After; 5) Party With No Name; 6)
Ghost Train; 7) Dimensions; 8) The Only Love; 9) Human Sacrifice; 10) True
Confessions; 11) Evolution.
Probably a toss-up between E.S.P. and this one for the ugliest-sounding Bee Gees album ever.
Okay, E.S.P. would likely still win,
since its production values were about as suitable for the Bee Gees as having
them sing an entire album through a Vocoder; but this monstrosity from 1991
does not lag too far behind, and it has at least one edge over E.S.P. — considering the musical
fashions of 1987, one would not really expect the band to have fared much
better, but in 1991, with hair metal and synth-pop both on their way out, some of the old vets were gradually
starting to get out of their midlife crises and reconcile their older selves
with their true selves.
Not so with the Gibbs, who, for some reason,
thought it beyond their sense of dignity to retrace their steps. What is even worse,
they thought that they still had some hopes of positioning themselves as a
dance-oriented outfit — that after the blandly somber balladry of One, it was high time to return to some
foot-stompin', body-thumpin' rhythms, provided by the latest fads and trends in
nightclub territory. Thus, most of High
Civilization — yes, with the exception of an obligatory bunch of slow
ballads — is set to chuggin' lite-techno tracks, a rhythmic shell that the Bee
Gees embrace just as recklessly as they did with disco.
Alas, if the disco encasing did not by itself
prevent them from losing their strength (melodies and harmonies), this particular style is completely
disastrous. On E.S.P., the singing
was loud enough, but utterly lost in its own echo merging with the sonic
effects of electronic percussion. On High
Civilization, the vocals sort of just splatter away in different
directions, launched in thin pressurized streaks from under the speeding wagon
wheels of the hi-tech vehicle. Once again — anyone
could have sung this crap, Barry, Maurice, Robin, Andy's ghost, the sound
engineer, the cleaning lady, Bugs Bunny, no matter. The harmonies play no role
here, and neither do the melodies — instrumentally, there are none to speak
of, and vocally, nothing makes sense.
In a different age, ʽSecret Loveʼ, aptly
selected for the band's first UK single, could have been a decent Motown-style
hit; and ʽGhost Trainʼ could have been a nice New Wave-style mood anthem —
perhaps they should have donated that one to Bryan Ferry, he might have brought
out its «sensuous potential» by attaching his microphone to his mouth rather
than some other body part. These two are songs with traces of hope; everything else ranks from instantaneously forgettable
(title track) to abysmal (ʽDimensionsʼ, ʽParty With No Nameʼ — in 1991, I'd
honestly rather hear that generic dance crap from the young Alanis Morissette
than from three middle-aged guys way past not only their prime, but also their
ability to get a proper grip on contemporary fashions).
For technical reasons, it is worth noting that
the sound engineer here was Femi Jiya, who had previously worked with Prince
(but it didn't help, not this time); and that the album was supposed to be conceptual — everything except for the
politically loaded title track was supposed to narrate a «secret love» dream sequence
in the head of the protagonist. The Bee Gees later disrupted the psychedelic
cohesiveness of the album by reshuffling the songs, but even if they hadn't
done that, it's not as if the thematic unity of the songs were a good enough
justification for the crap-o-matic unity of the structures and arrangements. Thumbs down,
yucky-yuck.
Check "High Civilization" (MP3) on Amazon
My God, that cover!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWhat's even more amazing is that Barry hasn't hired sound-alikes or outright impersonators off Youtube, and kept the act going.
ReplyDeleteBetter yet, Barry and Robin could have hushed up Maurice's death, hired an impersonator, and then left cryptic "clues" in their music and album covers.
I don't think that a more 1991 cover could exist, unless they somehow found a way to reference the end of the Cold War. And get a load of that floppy disk!
ReplyDeleteAll three of them are floppy discs!
ReplyDelete