CARDIACS: HEAVEN BORN AND EVER BRIGHT (1992)
1) The Alphabet Business
Concern (Home Of Fadeless Splendour); 2) She Is Hiding Beneath The Shed; 3)
March; 4) Goodbye Grace; 5) Anything I Can't Eat; 6) Helen And Heaven; 7)
Bodysbad; 8) For Good And All; 9) Core; 10) Day Is Gone; 11) Snakes-A-Sleeping.
The Cardiacs suffered a few setbacks in between
1989 and 1992, mostly in the form of gradual loss of band members: saxophonist
Sara Smith, percussionist Tim Quy, and keyboardist William Drake had all left
in the interim, leaving the band so shaken that Tim Smith did not even bother
looking for replacements. Instead, he hired an additional guitarist, Jon Poole,
and opted to record the next album in a traditional four-piece format: two
guitars, bass, and drums... well, not really. Most of the songs are still
chockfull of keyboards and brass, with Sara contributing guest sax and somebody
else providing the keyboards (not listed in the credits).
So I would not say that in terms of the overall
sound, Heaven Born sounds any
sparser or, in fact, all that different from the «classic» releases. Certainly
this is not the impression that you get at the outset, when ʻThe Alphabet
Business Concernʼ invades your room like a massive choral anthem, with the
same level of ironic pomp and playful pretense as always. However, as the songs
progress, you do get a gradual feeling of tiredness — could it be that the band
is beginning to run out of ideas? Or, rather, not out of specific ideas
(there's still more going on inside a single Cardiacs song than on a complete
LP by zillions of less inventive bands), but out of The Idea itself: somehow,
if you reach this album in chronological order, this is, for the first time,
where they seem to be hitting a brick wall. Objectively, the energy is still
there, but they are not really saying anything they didn't say before.
As always, there's a bunch of fast, crazy,
mad-organ-and-guitar-led prog-punk anthems with furiously fast,
incomprehensible vocals (ʻAnything I Can't Eatʼ, speeding along like a
friendly, more psychedelic sibling of Deep Purple's ʻHighway Starʼ); some
overdriven power-pop with a hysterical edge (ʻDay Is Goneʼ); some echoes of
classic British psychedelic pop with music hall and martial overtones
(ʻMarchʼ); and some songs that combine all that in various manners. The main
problem with that is that more than ever before, the basic mood behind each
song is pretty much the same — a state of somewhat random exuberance, when the
protagonist wishes to share his strong emotions with a world that is too busy
trying to understand the reason for these emotions to partake of them. Tempos
and tonalities may shift, but the drive remains the same, as well as the lack
of hooks — because the melodies are way too twisted and unstable to ever sink
in.
For some reason, Tim Smith has later stated
that Heaven Born remains one of his
own special favorites, because, to him, it had some special mystery to it.
This opinion was not shared by the band's fans in general, who tend to see the
record as a letdown, and unless we are all missing something, this does ring
true: I fail to notice any special distinctive marks here (except for maybe a
more pronounced guitar sound, which is hardly an asset in itself — who could
ever be seduced by a «prominent guitar sound» in 1992?), and compared to the
previous two albums, the songs basically sound like self-repetition where the
band, instead of keeping it natural, has to whip itself into a frenzy to
artificially demonstrate that they have not really lost it. Well, technically,
they haven't, but you know the drill: «progressive» has the obligation to
progress, and if it does not progress, it just rings hollow.
I think the keyboards were mostly played by Tim on this one, maybe a bit by Jim Poole, too. At least it seems I read that somewhere.
ReplyDeletePretty accurate in many ways, though I enjoy the spastic flailing of these guys more than you, so I naturally enjoy it a bit more.
Nobhead.
ReplyDelete