THE KINKS: FACE TO FACE (1966)
1) Party Line; 2) Rosie Won't You Please Come Home; 3) Dandy; 4) Too
Much On My Mind; 5) Session Man; 6) Rainy Day In June;
7) A House In The Country; 8) Holiday In Waikiki; 9) Most Exclusive Residence
For Sale; 10) Fancy; 11) Little Miss Queen Of Darkness; 12) You're Lookin'
Fine; 13) Sunny Afternoon; 14) I'll Remember;
15*) I'm Not Like Everybody Else; 16*) Dead End Street; 17*) Big
Black Smoke; 18*) Mr. Pleasant; 19*) This
Is Where I Belong; 20*) Mr. Reporter; 21*) Little Women.
In 1966, Paul McCartney wrote two of the
greatest ever songs about loneliness and alienation — ʽEleanor Rigbyʼ and ʽFor
No Oneʼ. Both were subtle psychological masterpieces of humanistic art, opening
up some awesome depths in pop music and breaking hearts all over the world.
There was one catch about these sorrowful beauties, though: they were decidedly
third-person, with Paul McCartney playing God's angel sending his empathy and
forgiveness out to all the lonely people out there, as represented by the
select cases of Eleanor Rigby and the nameless woman in ʽFor No Oneʼ. There
wasn't too much of Paul himself in these songs, nor could there probably be; in
fact, he was conducting himself quite honestly by playing astute and
sympathetic observer rather than the principal bearer of the grief.
This is where Ray Davies had his day. Unlike
the generally nonchalant McCartney, unlike the angry Lennon, unlike the
philosophical Townshend, unlike the rebellious Jagger and Richards, Ray Davies
was a genuinely shy, lonely, neurotic, melancholic type — actually, like way
more of us than we'd probably like to admit. There was something about him that
even when he sang "never met a girl like you before, girls like you are
very hard to find", you'd get the feeling that he really, really, really meant it, because it must be pretty dang difficult for a guy
like Ray Davies to meet a girl who would empathize not only with his gapped
teeth, but also with his lonesome and deeply disturbed spirit.
But it wasn't until ʽSunny Afternoonʼ, I think,
that we got the chance to see that spirit up close, with no conventional
lyrical or musical veils to conceal anything. This, too, is a song about
loneliness, but not the kind of loneliness that falls on you through some
terrible chain of God-inflicted events where you can do nothing about it —
rather, the kind of loneliness that falls upon us as we plunge into
disillusionment, world-weariness, and dysfunctionality because, you know, we've
just had it; something that, I'd
venture to say, occasionally pursues every decent human with a half-working
brain, and makes it possible for just about everybody to take the message of
ʽSunny Afternoonʼ deeply personally. The strolling tempo of the song,
suggesting a lazy strum of your instrument as you swing in your hammock or sit
on the porch; the descending chords — all the way down, down, down, down, to
the depths of personal despair, then back up only to go down, down, down again;
and most importantly, those vocals.
This is where Ray really arrives as one of the greatest singers of his
generation. Sometimes he raises it to the heights of a soft, silky falsetto,
similar to McCartney's silky tone on ʽHere, There And Everywhereʼ — only that
one was a tender confession of orgasmic love for a girl, whereas here it is a
tender confession of orgasmic love for one's misery and apathy. Sometimes he
sharpens it up, but with an odd, semi-drunk intonation ("save me, save me,
save me from this squeeze..."), as if to let himself be aware of the
imminent futility of such a request. Sometimes he shows a sense of sly humor,
what with the little tone jumps on "and I love TO live SO pleaSAntly"
— a tiny whiff of vaudeville clowning here, perfectly suitable for the song's
message. This may be music hall in form, but it is confessional
singer-songwriting in essence — the likes of which pop music had never seen
prior to that song. Come to think of it, it might not have seen the likes of
this ever since, too; at least, not this kind of perfect mix between pop form
and personal-philosophical substance.
As odd as it may sound, I do not think that
ʽSunny Afternoonʼ feels perfectly at home on Face To Face, the album recorded in the wake of its chart success.
It is significantly better than any of the other songs on the album (and that
does not imply that I am putting those songs down), simply because most of
those other songs, like ʽEleanor Rigbyʼ and ʽFor No Oneʼ, are of an observational
nature — one by one, we see a number of brilliantly painted musical portraits,
but only ʽSunny Afternoonʼ and, perhaps, the far inferior ballad ʽToo Much On
My Mindʼ qualify as proper self-portraits (because the «fallen aristocrat»
image of ʽAfternoonʼ is, of course, purely metaphorical). Perhaps, in a way, it
is a matter of sequencing: if there was a place for ʽSunny Afternoonʼ on the
album at all, it should rather have been at the very end, instead of the
stylistically and lyrically obsolete ʽI'll Rememberʼ (an okay pop song that
they'd recorded way back in 1965 and, for some reason, decided to stick on the
album so as not to let a good thing go to waste, thus almost ruining the
conceptuality of the whole thing).
Nevertheless, this by no means disqualifies Face To Face as the beginning of the
«Golden Age» for The Kinks, as one of the very first conceptual albums (the
songs were to be linked together with special effects, but, unfortunately, the
plan fell through for technical reasons), and as the very first proper Britpop
album, one might say — provided we define Britpop as «pop rock that is
influenced by traditional British pop and tells stories about British people»
or something like that. Prior to Face To
Face, audiences only got that stuff in small doses — from the Rolling
Stones, the Who, the Kinks themselves; with Face To Face, pop music finally got its equivalent of a Charles
Dickens novel or a Thomas Gainsborough portrait gallery.
The most telling sign of the album's conceptuality
is that the songs, much like the future pieces of the Abbey Road medley, do not work as good on their own as they do when
they all hang together. Face To Face
is a series of character-describing vignettes, few of which make their way onto
best-of compilations, but the collective effect of 'em all is stunning. You get
to meet the local Don Juan, chasing after tail at a frantically strummed
acoustic rate (ʽDandyʼ); the unfortunately overlooked and underpaid underdog
of the musical world (ʽSession Manʼ, with quintessential session man Nicky
Hopkins on harpsichord); the disgusting aristocratic brat with his symbolic
property (ʽHouse In The Countryʼ, one of the few cases of seemingly direct
influence on Ray's songwriting by the Rolling Stones — you can clearly hear
echoes of ʽ19th Nervous Breakdownʼ here); the befuddled holiday goer who
probably has trouble telling Hawai'i from the Azure Coast (ʽHoliday In
Waikikiʼ, melodically owing quite a bit to Chuck Berry's ʽYou Never Can Tellʼ,
but with a smug slide guitar riff thrown in for good measure); the bankrupt
loser who probably has it even worse than the protagonist of ʽSunny Afternoonʼ,
but, according to Ray, does not deserve our empathy (ʽMost Exclusive Residence
For Saleʼ); the broken-hearted socialite, doomed to be forever dancing to
acoustic vaudeville melodies (ʽLittle Miss Queen Of Darknessʼ). Frankly
speaking, each of these tunes individually
is not all that original or mind-blowing from a melodic point of view — Ray was
still saving up his best ideas for singles; but together, they form an
intriguing gallery, a snapshot of the various sides of English society with
cool musical metaphors for each of the personalities.
I would argue that ʽRosie Won't You Please Come
Homeʼ is the only one of these portraits that aspires to individual greatness —
hardly surprising, since it is also the most personal of them all, explicitly
referring to the Australian emigration of Ray and Dave's sister. For this tune,
Ray saved up some particularly strange ideas, such as pinning the weepy lines
of the chorus to a creepy, dark melody: "Oh my Rosie, how I miss you, you
are all the world to me" may sound like a weepy complaint, but the
accompanying bassline is a grim threat; perhaps Ray himself did not mean it to
be like that, yet there is no doubt in my mind whatsoever that each chorus
introduces a note of disturbing aggression. Another psychological trick!
One other track that does not quite fit in and
works well on its own is ʽRainy Day In Juneʼ, an early — and rare — attempt at
apocalyptic writing on Ray's part. The track could very well have been the
result of some special LSD trip, except Ray allegedly did not take any drugs at
the time, so it is really more of an effort to write something suitably «epic»,
in a lyrical style that does not come easy to Ray ("a misty shadow spread
its wings / and covered all the ground" — sounds a bit like proto-Uriah
Heep, doesn't it?), but with a moody, almost haunting musical arrangement all
the same. "The rain" becomes symbolic of the end of the world here,
while the repetitive, monotonous chorus ("everybody felt the
rain...") gives the illusion of a zombified row of people, slowly moving
out to meet their final fate. It is no ʽGimme Shelterʼ, for sure, and even with
the thunder and lightning effects, it is nowhere near as terrifying as ʽBlack
Sabbathʼ, but who the heck else wrote about the end of the world in 1966? And
who the heck would have had the idea to stick a song like that right in the
middle of a series of Britpoppy vignettes? To continue the analogy, it is like
going through a long gallery of Gainsborough portraits and suddenly falling
upon a Last Judgement by Hieronimus
Bosch. Just because, you know, all these people died and went to Hell anyway,
so be sure to keep this in mind.
As I said, Face
To Face is not perfect. If it were up to me to change history, I would
probably exclude ʽI'll Rememberʼ (not because it's bad, but because it sticks
out in an incoherent way) and maybe one other track (ʽYou're Lookin' Fineʼ,
with brother Dave on vocals, is totally memorable because its riff would later
be nicked and slightly reworked by Lennon into ʽHey Bulldogʼ — but the
womanizing pop-rocker again sort of violates the conceptuality) and replace
them with such epochal singles as ʽMr. Pleasantʼ and ʽDead End Streetʼ. Today,
they are conveniently tacked on as bonus tracks, but goddammit, both of them
belong right square in the center of the album itself: the former with its mix
of sarcasm and pity at the film-noirish fate of its socially lifted protagonist,
the latter with what might be the
most desperate working-class plea of the Sixties, enough to have The Clash lift
its melody fifteen years later for ʽLondon Callingʼ. Both songs also represent
brave and highly successful steps forward in terms of composition and arrangement
for Ray — the use of the mournful trombone alone is worth a fortune, and the
chord changes on ʽMr. Pleasantʼ, to me, produce an almost Mozartian effect:
simple, logical, and covering the full emotional spectrum from lightly cruel
sneer ("...how is Mrs. Pleasant?") to heartfelt pity ("...and
it's not so pleasant after all..."). This is as good as Sixties pop ever gets, period.
Actually, most of the bonus tracks this time
around are stellar. There is no getting away from the genius of ʽI'm Not Like
Everybody Elseʼ, a song originally written for The Animals but ultimately
handed over to brother Dave — not in the vein of Face To Face at all due to its pronounced garage-rock sound, but a
sure classic of the «get-the-fuck-out-of-my-way» subgenre of the mid-Sixties.
ʽBig Black Smokeʼ pales melodically in the face of ʽMr. Pleasantʼ, with which
it shares some musical elements, but it is still another strong indictment of
corrupt city life, with the big vocal hook of the chorus delivered in a
suitably ominous way — hardly a tune to which the swinging youth of London
would want to latch on, though, because it is one thing when your pop idol
lambasts The Establishment in the guise of ʽMr. Pleasantʼ, but quite another
one when he turns his sarcastic glare at the fates of young folks "sick
and tired of country life". And while it may be understandable why ʽMr.
Reporterʼ was not released at the time — way too long and too monotonous to
work as a single — its Joker-ish guitar / brass riff, condemned with the longest
diatribe these guys ever wrote against the popular press, is still highly
memorable.
Anyway, in this age of ours when track
sequencing becomes a deeply personal matter, I'm sure all of us could play the
fascinating game of finding the perfect setlist and running order for an ideal Face To Face — and even a non-ideal Face To Face, as it slowly sinks in
one's conscience, should be still considered among the top five albums of 1966
(along with Revolver, Aftermath, Blonde On Blonde, and Pet
Sounds, in whatever order you prefer to arrange them). It does mark a
decisive transformation in The Kinks' history, representing Ray Davies' solemn
refusal to look directly in the eyes of The Universal in order to find his
artistic inspiration — instead, preferring to find access to The Universal
through the eyes, minds, and souls of the everyday people whom he regularly
passes on the street. It was an approach that would ultimately ruin The Kinks'
career in the short run and quash their hopes (if there ever were any hopes, that is) at gaining the
same household name level as their top competitors. But it was also an honest
and a bizarrely rebellious approach that would turn out to serve them very
well in the long run; and something tells me that a few centuries (decades?
years?) from now, when the last survivors of the nuclear apocalypse are
shivering in their bunkers and caves, their very last Ipod charges will rather
be spent on the humble humanism of Face
To Face — and the several albums following it, all the way down to the end
of the band's Golden Age around 1971 — than on the grand psychedelic /
idealistic vision of Revolver or Pet Sounds. For now, though, as we
still find ourselves relatively safe from total extinction, just another major thumbs up.
Always thought '19th Nervous Breakdown' was an inspiration behind 'Holiday in Waikiki', not 'A House in the Country'. The latter still has a Rolling Stones feel to it, sure — after all, it was intended for The Pretty Things (and their version came out first, if I recall it correctly). Funny to learn Animals turned 'I'm Not Like Everybody Else' down — the tracklist of 1966's 'Animalisms' is very patchy.
ReplyDeleteOh, and thanks for spotting the hidden menace in 'Rosie', this is what really makes this song special and very true in emotional sense. Ray was frustrated AND angry when he heard about his sister moving to Australia. Being banned from US little did he know about his own future travellings and struggles to find a place he can call home.
I also love that the songs not only paint the portraits, Ray inserts a lot of little social details like 'And even when I'm swimming, I have to pay', which complement the whole picture. Sure we had lots of American folk singers who could put such lines in their songs long before The Kinks, but seems to me it was Ray who first played this trick in otherwise jolly pop song.
'Face to Face' is an observational masterpiece, which paved a way for me to appreciate Blur's 'The Great Escape' and Divine Comedy's 'Casanova' — and in this sense, yes, this is a Britpop album. Don't think I can add any other bands to this very special list and for me this makes 'Face to Face' truly unique.
Oh, and the string of non-album singles running along is fascinating. How could one person cope with touring, rehearsals, family and writing a dozen of perfect songs in one year is beyond me.
Great review, George; thanks. Cheers.
ReplyDeleteAlways great. I never caught the significance of Dunny Afternoon until you pointed it out. That's a big musical deal.
ReplyDeleteThis was a great read from start to finish, I agree with almost everything you stated except I think that "Too much on my mind" is an absolute belter: the way the melody unfolds, the unique subject matter, etc. It may not fit the concept in any way but boy, how much do I adore this little gem of a song!
ReplyDeleteThe Kinks. Right up there with the greatest. F2F one of my all timers (Depending on my mood of course) Something Else, VGPS, Arthur etc. I even enjoy the RCA years and the guilty pleasures of their 80s-90s output and the solo works that followed.
ReplyDelete"This, too, is a song about loneliness, but not the kind of loneliness that falls on you through some terrible chain of God-inflicted events where you can do nothing about it — rather, the kind of loneliness that falls upon us as we plunge into disillusionment, world-weariness, and dysfunctionality because, you know, we've just had it; something that, I'd venture to say, occasionally pursues every decent human with a half-working brain, and makes it possible for just about everybody to take the message of ʽSunny Afternoonʼ deeply personally."
ReplyDeleteExtraordinary songs deserve extraordinary sentences like this. Right on, George. Seriously.