ALAN PRICE: BETWEEN TODAY AND YESTERDAY (1974)
1) Left Over People; 2) Away,
Away; 3) Between Today And Yesterday; 4) In Times Like These; 5) Under The Sun;
6) Jarrow Song; 7) City Lights; 8) Look At My Face; 9) Angel Eyes; 10) You're
Telling Me; 11) Dream Of Delight; 12) Between Today And Yesterday.
The success of O Lucky Man! must have popped the cork off Alan's little bottle of
hitherto hidden ambitions, because he very quickly followed it up with the most
«serious» album in his career so far, and maybe ever — Between Today And Yesterday is a full-fledged conceptual piece
about everyday life (today and yesterday) in Northern England, a sort of epic
«Ode to Geordie» that will clearly strike the biggest chord of all with
Tyneside people, but might just as well appeal to everyone concerned with the
struggle and strife of ordinary people living in small, depressed towns all
over the world — the "left over people" of the album's introductory
song.
It is not some sort of breathtaking
masterpiece, no; Price is neither the master of the heart-tugging musical hook,
nor is he some fabulous unique singer who'd be capable of making his shopping
notes come alive under vocal pressure. But he's got style, taste, basic
songwriting capacities, and, above all else, he knows what he's doing and what
he's singing about — this is a tactful, honest record, and with repeated
listens, it gets under your skin through sheer humility and understatement
alone, never mind the melodicity and the pleasant arrangements. If there's any
reason why it could hardly hope to become a major international hit like some
Kinks album, it's because it is even more «British» musically than any given
Kinks album — with but a small handful of bluesy exceptions, it's all
vaudeville and music hall (although the Randy Newman influence is also very
keenly felt throughout).
In the UK, he did (rather unsurprisingly)
achieve his biggest commercial success with the record, which rose to #9 on the
charts; and the single ʻJarrow Songʼ reached #6, which would be the last time
ever he'd crack the top 10 on the single charts — an excellent song, too,
commemorating the Jarrow March of 1936 with a slightly-merrily-drunk anthemic
chorus and a cool structure, where the old-school music hall verse-chorus
segments are written from the point of view of the original participants of
the March and the more modern, rockier bridge section is written from the
author's point of view ("I can see them, I can feel them, I can hear them
/ As if they were here today"), until the author finally merges the past
with the present ("My name is little Alan Price..."). It's cool,
creative, sensitive, complex — precisely the way one should be writing songs of
social protest if one does not want them to be here today and forgotten
tomorrow — and arguably one of the finest glorifications of the "Geordie
boys" ever written, though probably too convoluted and too personal to be adopted as a high school anthem anywhere in
Tyneside.
The album as a whole is conceptually divided
into the "Yesterday" and "Today" parts, corresponding to
its two sides — and the "Yesterday" part, I'd say, is somewhat
superior, since that is where he most fully unleashes his arrangement skills,
with colorful use of brass, keyboards, and orchestration. ʻLeft Over Peopleʼ
and ʻIn Times Like Theseʼ continue the good old tradition of sarcastic social
criticism under the sauce of cheerful, catchy vaudeville; and ʻAway, Awayʼ is a
touching, but not overtly sentimental account of wives seeing their husbands
off to work in the morning. Probably the most underrated of all these is ʻUnder
The Sunʼ, a lush orchestrated ballad where, for once, the weakness of Alan's
voice works strongly in his favor —
the strain, the shaky intonations, the occasional slip-ups make it all far more
human than if Engelbert Humperdinck ever wanted to have a go at the stuff.
The "today" side, which was probably
intended to sound more «modern», is slightly patchier for that reason — this is
where we meet the somewhat corny synthesizers of ʻAngel Eyesʼ and the
substandard «modern R&B» number ʻCity Lightsʼ; however, I am quite partial
to the slow, bitter-burning blues of ʻYou're Telling Meʼ, with some good old
Animals-style organ soloing and quietly understated guitar runs, and I cannot
quite decide if ʻDream Of Delightʼ sounds more like Crosby, Stills & Nash
or like James Taylor, but on the whole, it's a decent acoustic ballad, although
it remains in sore need of a decent hook to rise above pure «atmosphere».
The link that ties both sides together is the
title track, first presented in a stripped down piano arrangement and then
expanded to a full wall-of-sound arrangement, with tempestuous strings, a loud
rhythm section, and a gradual vocal crescendo. The basic melody is a bit
generic (remember Badfinger's ʻMidnight Callerʼ?), but this does not prevent
the song from reaching an epic climax. The point of the song, so it seems, is
to tell us that nothing ever changes, and "draw the shades" and
"let me drink black wine" — sort of a resigned conclusion, not
particularly alleviated by the fact that most of these songs have either a
tender or a humorous nature to them, because once again, like Roger wrote,
"quiet desperation is the English way", and it's as if Price made
this entire record to prove him right.
Anyway, do not expect any grand melodic
breakthroughs here; the record is to be enjoyed somewhere at the crossroads of
an intelligent concept, a charismatic personality, and deep musical experience
rather than because of outstanding songwriting genius or illuminating social
philosophy. Its purpose is to entertain your tired ears while at the same time
making you feel some compassion for the underdog — the kind of thing that we
normally expect from people like Billy Bragg, yet, as it turns out, Price had
the whole punk movement beat here for about two or three years, and he didn't
even have to resort to chainsaw buzz or «electro-busking» here. Patchy in
places, yes, but unquestionably a high point of his career, well worth another thumbs up.
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