BE-BOP DELUXE: MODERN MUSIC (1976)
1) Orphans Of Babylon; 2) Twilight
Capers; 3) Kiss Of Light; 4) The Bird Charmers Destiny; 5) The Gold At The End
Of My Rainbow; 6) Bring Back The Spark; 7) Modern Music; 8) Dancing In The
Moonlight (All Alone); 9) Honeymoon On Mars; 10) Lost In The Neon World; 11)
Dance Of The Uncle Sam Humanoids; 12) Modern Music (reprise); 13) Forbidden
Lovers; 14) Down On Terminal Street; 15) Make The Music Magic.
Even more disciplined and «song-oriented» than Sunburst Finish — although one needn't
get any false ideas about shifting the overall style by simply looking at the
album cover: suits and ties they may be sporting, but the hair is still fairly
long, and even the word «modern» in the album title does not necessarily mean
«New Wave», «punk», «reggae», «electronica», etc. For now, only one concession
is being made, albeit a serious one: Modern
Music shows serious quotas introduced on «guitar wizardry». For the first
time ever, Nelson intentionally refuses to stretch out with heroic solo
passages on any of the tracks — which is why most of them are so unusually
short — and concentrates on songwriting and atmosphere rather than dazzling
technique.
In fact, he might even be concentrating a bit
too hard. The final version of the record has 15 tracks instead of the usual
10, and, although some of these are represented by very brief musical «links»,
the general feeling is that there is too much going on. Some of the songs are
genuinely meaningful and evocative, but on the whole, Nelson is not a master
songwriter, and when he suddenly sets himself this challenge — to generate as
many songwriting ideas as possible per one LP — it is probably inevitable that
a large fraction of these ideas will not work, and those that will may get lost
in the forest. And when I say «forest» with a negative connotation, I mean
tracks like ʽHoneymoon On Marsʼ: big, pompous, Ziggy Stardust-age
compositions, all echo and phasing and anthemic vocals and little in the way of
interesting melodic concept. Unfortunately, there is a lot of such stuff here,
and it has nothing to do with suits and ties, in fact, it almost sounds nostalgic
in the context of 1976.
On the other hand, this is the album that also gave us ʽKiss Of Lightʼ — a conscious
attempt, I think, at recreating the success of ʽSister Seagullʼ, since both
songs are driven by a major hook in the form of a screechy, high-pitched guitar
riff, and both are among the decade's finest brand of «burly romantic»
arena-rock anthems, combining crowdpleasing potential with intelligence and
craft. On paper, a crude start like "the woman of moon flew into my room
last night" might make one cringe, but put it together with Bill's tricky
shuffling of thick distorted riffage and liltingly clean melodic lines — and it
works. Maybe because underneath all that romance, as the guitar and the vocals
suggest, lies a thick layer of irony.
It is also not true that the pomp is never
enjoyable. On ʽThe Gold At The End Of My Rainbowʼ, it most certainly is, since
the anthemic chorus is so elegantly and conclusively shaped — and the song
becomes a credible power ballad even without the power of the guitar solo. But
in general, the most interesting moments of Modern Music are those where Nelson strays the farthest away from
the already well-known formula: for instance, on the funk oddity ʽDance Of The
Uncle Sam Humanoidsʼ, which, according to its title, should be about something
anti-American, but, since it's instrumental, who can really tell (unless the
occasional sound effects such as bullets whistling over your head count as
implicit condemnations of Yankee violence). Or on ʽTwilight Capersʼ which, for
no obvious reason, quotes the Dragnet
theme out of the blue. Or on the title track which opens with a series of radio
noises — including the listener tuning in, out of sheer accident, of course, on
ʽAxe Victimʼ and ʽSister Seagullʼ —
before turning into the album's most sentimental number, almost a prayer to
the power of music on the radiowaves.
Actually, ʽModern Musicʼ is not entirely
self-contained, but rather acts as an introduction (and, later on, as a
reprised coda) to an Abbey Road-style
futuristic mini-suite — the one that includes both boring (ʽHoneymoon On Marsʼ) and exciting (ʽUncle Sam Humanoidsʼ)
parts. Presenting it all as «modern music» seems like a funny miscalculation:
futuristic it may be in spirit, but on the whole, it is still way more
old-school glam-rock than a foresight of the radically new things to come. But
the idea of transition from lengthy, drawn-out space jams to these economic
snippets, where Nelson's guitar forms the backbone of the song, but leaves out
the fireworks, might be such a
foresight — as if putting on that suit and tie was a symbolic gesture that also
surmised imposing limits on Nelson's «sonic ego».
The bottomline is — it all depends on whether
you have more love and respect for Bill as a player or for Bill as a
songwriter. If one of your favorite Be-Bop Deluxe songs is ʽNo Trains To
Heavenʼ, you will need to come to terms with Modern Music, and live with the fact that the end of 1976 was
marked by imposing a heavy tax on guitar pyrotechnics. If, however, going
against the grain of mainstream criticism, you find Nelson to be a great master
of melody, Modern Music has every
chance of becoming your favorite Be-Bop Deluxe album — good melodies or bad
melodies, there is a lot of them here,
and the old spirit, perhaps not as freely roaming as before, is still largely
intact. Anyway, a thumbs up is still well guaranteed.
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