THE PRETTY THINGS: GET THE PICTURE? (1965)
1) You Don't Believe Me; 2) Buzz The Jerk; 3) Get The
Picture?; 4) Can't Stand The Pain; 5)
Rainin' In My Heart; 6) We'll Play House; 7) You'll
Never Do It Baby; 8) I Had A Dream; 9) I Want Your Love; 10) London
Town; 11) Cry To Me; 12) Gonna Find A Substitute; 13*) Get
A Buzz; 14*) Sittin' All Alone; 15*) Midnight To
Six Man; 16*) Me Needing You; 17*) Come See Me; 18*) L.S.D.
Drummer Viv Prince was kicked out of the band
right before the release of their second LP — in fact, relations with him had
reached breaking point during the sessions, so that many tracks feature
session player (and the band's producer) Bobby Graham instead. Although Viv was
not that much involved in the band's songwriting, it may be argued that this
first out of many lineup changes was the most significant one — think of The
Who firing Keith Moon as an awful analogy. Somehow this initiated a shift of
image, as The Pretty Things began to drop the «wildness» aspect and turn
towards more soulful, psychedelic, and artsy matters: fortunately, not before
releasing their flawed masterpiece of the «wild thing» period.
Get
The Picture? is a massive
improvement over the self-titled debut, largely because much of the material is
now self-written, with Phil May and Dick Taylor emerging as a competent and
convincing songwriting duo — still not on the Jagger/Richards level if you
average out the results, but not so much because they did not have an ear for
melody as it is due to inferior technical aspects of the performances and
recordings. Every time I listen to something like ʽCan't Stand The Painʼ with
its decidedly Stonesy atmosphere (in some ways, predicting the slightly
cavernous mystical-sexual sound of Aftermath),
I can't help but wonder if it could be hailed as a timeless classic of
longing-and-yearning with Mick on vocals and Keith on guitar.
And there are aspects where The Pretties would
indeed go farther than their chief superior competitors. You only have to get
past the opening number (ʽYou Don't Believe Meʼ is a mix of overplaye R&B
ecstasy with crude Byrdsy jangle guitars) to hit the jackpot: ʽBuzz The Jerkʼ
is, I believe, not only the very first pop song to feature the word
"jerk" in the title (only two years earlier, the Stones had to
guiltily censor the word in their cover of Chuck Berry's ʽCome Onʼ), it is as
heavy and as uncompromising as it ever gets (at least, in 1965) in a song
seemingly dedicated to problematic issues of rough sex. The rhythm section is
on an adrenaline kick here: John Stax plays a broken-up bass riff that does
things to your girl that even whacky perv Bill Wyman, all gentlemanly on the
outside but EVIL on the inside, would never dream of, while Viv (I do hope
that's Viv, I don't think Bobby Graham would dare play with that much
aggression) goes so heavy on the cymbals and snares that Keith Moon could be
his only competition. Throw in a mean fuzzy tone from one of the guitarists,
and the entire tune is a two-minute explosion of garage rock wildness that
ranks together with the greatest nuggets of the decade. Finally, by getting
their act together and achieving tight focus, The Pretty Things explode.
The title track, when you take a detached look
at the verse, is just one of those simple Britpop tunes, à la Dave Clark Five, that is usually supposed to put you into a
jovial mood; but with May's breathy-beastly vocal onslaught and Taylor's
crisply roasted guitar, it is only a tad less wild than ʽBuzz The Jerkʼ.
"I ain't gonna quit ya / Get the picture?" predates The Troggs in its
brief musical summary of the life of the Neanderthal lover. Later on, you are
informed that ʽWe'll Play Houseʼ, obviously a nod to Elvis' ʽBaby Let's Play
Houseʼ because of the title, but taking the metaphor to a whole new level. But
the top prize is ʽYou'll Never Do It Babyʼ, a song originally recorded by the
little-known UK act Cops & Robbers in a weak, piano-centered version: it
took the Pretties to open up its full potential — the shotgun-style «blast 'em
and pick up the pieces» riff and May's bluntly threatening lyrics give the song
a bit of murderous feel, as in, she'll never do it, baby, because I've got a
knife and I know how to... oh, never mind, just toying around with the dark
side for a moment.
Not everything is equally exciting: as long as
they keep up and nourish the sinister vibe, the results are cool, but a few of
the songs are second-rate R&B grooves (ʽI Want Your Loveʼ) that pale in
comparison; besides, on this front they are natural losers in comparison with the
Stones, and their version of Solomon Burke's ʽCry To Meʼ is nothing compared to
the slower and far more turbulent commotion of guitars and vocals that the
Stones had going on Out Of Our Heads.
But they are also treading different types of water, such as melancholic folk
rock (Tim Hardin's ʽLondon Townʼ) and soulful blues-rock — ʽCan't Stand The
Painʼ is a very adventurous type of song, alternating between slow, moody,
dreamy folksy passages with groaning, echoey slide guitars and fast, chugging,
paranoid verses. I don't think there was anybody else in Britain in 1965 who'd
be making that same sort of music: it's like an amalgamation of the soft
melancholy of The Searchers with the raw aggressive energy of the Stones.
The expanded CD edition makes things even
better: without getting overboard in terms of length (throw in all those bonus
singles and you still get only 45 minutes of music), it fattens up the record
with such classics as ʽGet A Buzzʼ (this is basically ʽBuzz The Jerk Vol. 2ʼ,
although a tad less explosive), ʽMidnight To Six Manʼ (one of the band's
catchiest singles ever and one of the greatest affirmations of Night Power),
and, oh my God, ʽL.S.D.ʼ — actually, correction: ʽ£SDʼ, so the song formally
refers to currency, but they do sing
it with an L: "everybody's talking about my LSD... yes I need LSD, yes I
need LSD"! Sometimes, you know, it helps
being second class: neither the Stones nor the Beatles would probably be
allowed to issue anything like that, but since nobody cared that much about The
Pretty Things, these guys could get away with everything next to murder. They
just wouldn't be paid for it.
Ultimately, Get The Picture? gets my vote for the most «badass-nasty» recording
of 1965, which is, of course, absolutely not the same as its «best» recording —
in any case, on their second try the band totally got it right, and carved a
proper niche for itself that everybody else was either too afraid or too shy to
try out. Not even The Who were that nasty: with Townshend's «thinking» approach
to songwriting, those guys were far more happy, from the very start, to dress
in Union Jacks rather than Neanderthal furs. The problem was that — at the
time, at least — it was unclear how they could take this thing further, and so Get The Picture? remains the unsurpassed
pinnacle of The Pretties' nasty phase. Their glory days would be far from
over, yet it can also be argued that this was their single most important «individual-identifying»
moment, placing them in nobody's category but their own. A glorious thumbs up
here — do not waste any time trying to buzz the jerk, now.
Yes, nasty and VERY hard-rocking by 1965's standards. But just as in case with The Who's debut, 'Buzz the Jerk' or other fast/nasty/rocking/raw R'n'B numbers carry more historical value rather than instant pleasure for me.
ReplyDeleteIt's the dynamic songs like 'Can't Stand The Pain' (well spotted connection to Stones' 'Aftermath' album!) that stand out. Love the unique combination of uncertainty and self-assuredness and, yes, I value the next album much higher than this one and the debut.