BE-BOP DELUXE: FUTURAMA (1975)
1) Stage Whispers; 2) Love
With The Madman; 3) Maid In Heaven; 4) Sister Seagull; 5) Sound Track; 6) Music
In Dreamland; 7) Jean Cocteau; 8) Between The Worlds; 9) Swan Song.
This stylistically similar follow-up to Axe Victim sounds somewhat inferior to
me: the novelty of approach is gone, the hooks do not seem to be quickly
hurrying to the rescue, and the slight toning down of «glam» elements results
in the whole thing looking more sullen, solemn, and serious in form, but not
necessarily in substance — at the same time sacrificing some of the humor and
irony of Axe Victim.
The band itself is completely different: this
time, we have a trio, with Charlie Tumahai (originally from New Zealand, no
less) on bass and Simon Fox on drums — and the music produced by Roy Thomas
Baker, who had earlier worked with Queen and Hawkwind, among others. However,
the show is still completely run by Nelson, now overdubbing his own rhythm,
lead, and keyboard playing — so that only a highly perceptive ear will notice
the subtle changes from Axe Victim,
at least, the ones that do not directly deal with Nelson's own artistic evolution.
The subtlest change, perhaps, is that there are
no more songs like ʽJet Silver And The Dollsʼ: that strain of ceremonial-idealistic
space anthem songwriting has been eliminated in favor of sharper, sneerier
compositions that look more and more like free-form post-Shakesperian monologs.
An example is ʽBetween The Worldsʼ, released as the first single from the album
but withdrawn after just one day of (non-)sales — a stormy, theatrical
performance that gets by on the strength of Nelson's passionate guitar parts
and Hammill-esque vocals, but little else. It was then quickly replaced on the
shelves with ʽMaid In Heavenʼ, a shorter, more heavy riff-based power anthem
that could, perhaps, be described as «Boston covering Hunky Dory-era Bowie»: emotionally uninvolving music, redeemed by
the frontman's personality and then,
for some reason, provided with an extra level of thick distortion, phasing,
background vocals, etc., as if putting on all this makeup might be enough to
finally make our heads spin. No, I don't think it really works.
Sometimes it does — when the frontman manages to come up
with a truly impressive musical or «sonic» solution. ʽSister Seagullʼ, for
instance, has a two-part heavy / high-pitched riff that registers well in the
head, and the «seagull» motif is featured very consistently in Nelson's
playing, nowhere more so than in the directly birdcry-imitating outro. ʽStage
Whispersʼ opens the album with a barnstorm of crazy licks, promising to be even
more of a gas than ʽAxe Victimʼ — but then it ultimately fails to deliver on
that promise. Everybody can produce that sort of gallop; not everybody can make
it stand out, and this time, even Nelson's technique does not help.
I give the album a thumbs down. It was a tough
decision to make: the frontman has lost none of the conviction, energy, or
technique, and I have no reason to doubt that this boldly anti-commercial
music (although one could probably list Nelson's kick-ass guitar-hero playing
style as a commercial element all the same) truly comes «from the heart». But
I was not able to get into almost any of these songs, with the exception of
ʽSister Seagullʼ; even the music-hall and pastoralist elements in the
Brit-pop-influenced ʽMusic In Dreamlandʼ never seem to gel together into anything
genuinely meaningful, or at least «probing». On the whole, this just looks like
one of those «sophomore slumps» — the best ideas having all been used up for Axe Victim, Futurama is just scraping the bottom of the original proverbial
barrel.
Check "Futurama" (CD) on Amazon
Check "Futurama" (MP3) on Amazon
Man. I could not disagree more. To my ears, this is Nelson's obvious masterpiece and sounds nothing like the ragged jammy and far less distinct Axe Victim. The sound has grown more elaborate and epic in every way, and this is some of the most creative use of guitar in all 70s pop (not just the "guitar hero" poses, but the layering and tones and production of the axe). The rhythm section is much tighter and rocks way harder. You haven't even mentioned the two side-ending epics, "Sound Track" and "Swan Song," fantastic productions crammed with melodies and ideas. I can understand not liking the record, but to call this it a slump will only subtle deviations from the debut...that just seems off the mark. This is basically a total rewrite of the sound.
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