THE KINKS: SOMETHING ELSE BY THE KINKS (1967)
1) David
Watts; 2) Death Of A Clown; 3) Two Sisters; 4) No Return; 5) Harry
Rag; 6) Tin Soldier Man; 7) Situation
Vacant; 8) Love Me Till The Sun Shines; 9) Lazy Old Sun;
10) Afternoon Tea; 11) Funny Face; 12) End Of The
Season; 13) Waterloo Sunset; 14*) Act
Nice And Gentle; 15*) Autumn Almanac; 16*)
Susannah's Still Alive; 17*) Wonderboy; 18*)
Polly; 19*) Lincoln County; 20*) There's No Life Without Love; 21*) Lazy Old
Sun (alternate take).
On a purely formal basis, the leap from Face To Face to Something Else is neither as huge or as unpredictable as the leap
from Kink Kontroversy to Face To Face — this is, essentially,
just Vol. 2 of Ray Davies' ongoing project on the «Personal History,
Adventures, Experience and Observation of Select Members of the British Society
(Which They Never Meant to Publish on Any Account, But Took Kind Advantage of
Mr. Ray Davies to Do for Them)». Some of the more critical contemporary reviews
actually latched on to that, complaining that Ray's passion had become an
obsession, and that the Kinks were becoming boring and formulaic, instead of pushing
forward and breaking the good old boundaries.
So why is it that, eventually, Something Else emerged as a critical
darling, typically rated maybe half a notch below Village Green as the ultimate Kinks experience? The inclusion of
ʽWaterloo Sunsetʼ, Ray's equivalent of ʽYesterdayʼ in the public conscious, has
a lot do with it — but mostly, I guess, it is the tacit understanding that Something Else was the first Kinks
album on which Ray's artistic vision is given to us without any signs of
compromising. In 1966, he was still a pop songwriter, albeit a brilliant one —
yet for each ʽSunny Afternoonʼ, there was still an ʽI'll Remember Youʼ, nice
formulaic pop songs without a soul of their own. If Face To Face was their Rubber
Soul, a brilliant record with certain elements that still tied the band to
their somewhat more constricted past (like ʽWaitʼ, etc.), then Something Else is their Revolver: a record where each and every
song transcends mere «good» and heads straight for the upper levels of
«revelatory» or, at least, «insightful».
In terms of stunning musical breakthroughs, it
is hard to say in which precise spots Something
Else hits anything like that. Apart from a little bossanova on ʽNo Returnʼ
and maybe a bit of French pop influence on ʽEnd Of The Seasonʼ, Ray here is
perfectly fine sticking to the same old sources of inspiration: a little pop, a
little music hall and vaudeville, a shot of rhythm'n'blues to make sure the
wolves still have their teeth intact, and a splash of the harpsichord to show
that they are still committed to that baroque-pop spirit. From this point of
view, the album is not really «something else!» with an exclamation sign, more
like a humble, excusatory «just something else» without demanding any
unreasonably high expectations. The real task that Ray sets for himself has
little to do with «blowing minds» by means of strange sounds never heard before,
and everything to do with writing a perceptive chronicle of everyday life in
his native country — life as it happens to people who might never have even
heard of the UFO Club — and presenting it in the format of catchy, easily accessible,
and aurally friendly pop tunes.
So far, so good. But here is the true catch
that separates Something Else (and
its follow-ups) from oh so many pop-rock and roots-rock albums championing the
underdog: believe it or not, it actually has a very distinct psychedelic flavor
of its own, though it has nothing to do with the psychedelia of Sgt. Pepper, Piper, or Are You
Experienced?. Because first and foremost, Ray Davies is not actually a
chronicler: Ray Davies is a dreamer.
Most of his best songs are dream tunes — fantasies that are grounded in
reality, but twist it according to their creator's impulses,
"I-wish-it-were-so" types of songs. "Wish I could be like David
Watts", "living in a little tin wonderland", "as long as I
gaze on Waterloo sunset, I am in paradise", these are just the most
obvious bits on this particular album. With the exception of just a few obvious
downers such as ʽDead End Streetʼ, Ray seems to have sworn off thoroughly
depressing songs forever — no matter how gloomy the reality, it is always
within your mindpower to create a bubble of light in which you can safely
deposit your conscience. This is the essence of Ray's unique vision, and Something Else is the first of several
records on which it turns out to be fully realized.
What I mean is that ʽDavid Wattsʼ is a fun song
whose continuous fa-fa-fa-fa's will
probably stick in your head with the same ease as the Beatles' yeah yeah yeah's; but it is also more
than a fun song — it is a song about "lying on your pillow at night",
with echoes of today's vivacious school team performance still in your head,
and fantasizing about what it would take to live somebody else's life. (Given
that the real life David Watts, according to Ray's memoirs, was gay, some
people offer a homoerotic interpretation to the song, but sexual themes are
clearly not its main point — the protagonist does not wish to fuck David Watts,
he wishes to be David Watts). Just
think of the song's crude, monotonous, crazyass-pulsating bass/piano duet as a
musical representation of one's wildly pulsating brain, still heavily
adrenaline-charged from the day's events, and all of a sudden, ʽDavid Wattsʼ is
no longer just a funny-silly novelty tune, but a masterful exercise in music
psychology.
Fast forward a bit to ʽTin Soldier Manʼ, and
the pattern repeats itself, except that this dream is not so much a wish
fantasy as an impressionistic metaphor — portraying your routinely disciplined,
punctual, petty-tyrannical neighbor as a living and breathing tin soldier, to
the sounds of one of the catchiest and
most carnivalesque military marches ever written in the land of Gilbert and Sullivan.
It is not a mean song, though: you
may read your social criticism into it if you wish, but you may just as well
look at it as a grown-up child's instinctive impression of the behavioral
patterns of his curious neighbor. There is certainly nothing bitter or sardonic
in the music, those bouncy,
uplifting, toy-military chords that get your feet tapping (it is probably one
of my own most-often-whistled melodies of all time, because how can you ever
abstain?..): Ray is building up his own little collection of Pictures At An Exhibition, open for your
own additional interpretation: take pity on the tin soldier man, despise the
tin soldier man, or simply take the time to tap your foot and admire him as an
exotic exhibit.
Fast forward once again, to the very end, and
the reason why everybody loves ʽWaterloo Sunsetʼ is because the whole song is a
dream — or, at least, a piece of alternate reality that the hero has
constructed for himself, completely blocking out those "millions of people
swarming like flies 'round Waterloo underground" and fully concentrating
on Terry and Julie instead (and still preferring to admire them from afar
rather than introducing himself directly into their lives). The usual focus of
attention here is brother Dave's dense and juicy guitar tone, coming in colours
everywhere from your speakers; but for me, the chief hook of the song comes with
Ray's rising to dreamy falsetto on the "but I don't... need no
friends" and "but I don't...
feel afraid" mini-bridge: this is the part where quiet, peaceful
observation is brilliantly resolved into some sort of internalized spiritual
orgasm — the protagonist being at peace with the world as long as the world
does not bother him and lets him freely concentrate on select individual spots
of beauty that he has chosen for himself. In a truly alternate reality where
literature characters come to life and move freely across time, this would
probably have been Boo Radley's favorite song.
Of course, Something
Else also features plenty of songs where the outside observer seems to disappear,
giving way to third-person narratives about peculiar types of situations: ʽTwo
Sistersʼ, for instance, about a quiet and ambiguous rivalry between a housewife
and a socialite, or ʽSituation Vacantʼ, about how your mother-in-law can
really spoil your day (indeed!). But even ʽTwo Sistersʼ sounds dreamy, with
Nicky Hopkins' harpsichord melody taking your mind far away from the possible
reality of the song — let alone the fact that the story of two sisters only
serves as an allegory for two brothers (Ray and Dave), which is certainly not a
fact that one is obliged to learn in order to enjoy the tune as a modern fairy
tale (and, for that matter, don't the names Sylvilla and Percilla actually sound
as if taken from something by Charles Perrault?). ʽSituation Vacantʼ is a
harsher, harder-rocking little number with distinct bluesy overtones (still,
even that does not prevent Hopkins from inserting a few extra baroque piano flourishes),
but, hilariously, it is also the one song on the album that comes closest of
them all to traditional psychedelia — you just have to watch for the coda and
its combo of ghostly falsettos, buzzing lead guitars, and wobbly bass piano
chords. It does not fit in all that well with the overall mood of the album,
but a bit of unpredictable diversity never hurt a great record.
And what about brother Dave? He has a hard time
living up to Ray's level, but at least he has the good sense to cautiously follow
in his footsteps than insist on recording ferocious rock'n'roll and spoiling
the party for good. ʽDeath Of A Clownʼ, the song that almost won him a solo
career, fits in brilliantly with Ray's subject matter — not as dreamy and
reclusive, given Dave's extroverted nature, but providing the picture gallery
with another subtly painted character portrait (for some reason, «sad clown» imagery
was really popular with British pop
bands around 1966-67: the Hollies, for instance, had at least a couple of songs
devoted to the same matter). ʽLove Me Till The Sun Shinesʼ and ʽFunny Faceʼ are
nowhere near as catchy and sound inspired by Small Faces, but Dave is no Steve
Marriott when it comes to belting, and the Kinks' rhythm section cannot hope to
match that competition in terms of power and crunch, but at least both songs
are still in a pop vein and do not detract from the overall mood. ʽFunny Faceʼ
does stick out as a bit of a sore thumb in between the stylishly sentimental
ʽAfternoon Teaʼ and ʽEnd Of The Seasonʼ, which is probably why my brain always
tends to scratch it out of existence.
So much said and I have not even had the chance
to extol the virtues of ʽHarry Ragʼ (ruffiest and gruffiest and funniest and
catchiest ode to tobacco ever recorded!), or those of ʽLazy Old Sunʼ (another
brave attempt at hammock-style psychedelia), or the decidedly uncatchy, but
charming bossanova experiment of ʽNo Returnʼ — and then there are the bonus
tracks on the CD edition, representing contemporary A- and B-sides, all of
which are treasurable one way or the other, and most of which would
legitimately fit in the same picture gallery. Of these, it is impossible not to
say a few words about ʽAutumn Almanacʼ, a solid contender for the most accomplished
and, well, fundamental song Ray ever
wrote — not only is it technically brilliant, combining a catchy chorus with a
never-ending stream of fluctuating-alternating verse melodies that flow in and
out of each other more smoothly than rivulets, but it's got Ray's entire
emotional palette (tenderness, humor, sympathy, humility, sadness, nostalgia —
everything but anger and bitterness, which he was moving away from at the time)
flashing across your brain in three minutes time: submit to it properly and it might
just leave you a better person by the end, or at least make you think more
fondly of the autumnal season. There's more ideas and feelings contained in
that one pop song than in an entire pop album by the average pop artist — Ray
sure as hell ain't greedy with his hooks, and the result is a masterpiece that
always sounds fresh and exciting, no matter how many times I hear it.
"This is my street and I'm never gonna leave it", in particular,
despite the soft and feeble delivery, is as decisive and definitive a statement
as any punk slogan ever voiced.
That ʽAutumn Almanacʼ became the last Kinks
single until ʽLolaʼ to hip the Top 10, and that Something Else became their last album ever to chart at all in their native homeland is at the same time
understandable and bewildering —
understandable because people like loud, flashy, egotistical thingies that help
them tickle their pride or rally their resources, but bewildering because while
he was still in his prime, Ray never
betrayed the cause of the well-crafted pop hook (or a whole smattering of
those) in favor of his lyrical portraits or sentimental mood swings. With the
exception of ʽNo Returnʼ (too jazzy) and ʽFunny Faceʼ (too Davey), I can still
vividly remember how each song here goes without listening to the album for
years — and the same goes for vaudevillian singles like ʽWonderboyʼ, allegedly
well-loved by John Lennon (it does have a bit of the «positive John» mood in
it) but despised by the record-buying public back in early 1968, though,
frankly, it is just not as anthemic as ʽHey Judeʼ, but it also teaches you to
love life and take it as it comes in memorable verses and choruses. Perhaps
they should have attached a four-minute epic coda of la-la-la's at the end?..
Anyway, fortunately, by the 21st century the
reputation of the album — and post-ʽSunny Afternoonʼ Kinks in general — has
recovered so well that there is no sense defending it; there is only sense in
trying to understand and interpret it to the best of one's ability, and explain
why it is one of the most intelligent and
emotional artistic representations of one person's inner world in 1967. There
are psychological corners explored here that you won't find on Sgt. Pepper, or on Smile, or on any other of those albums with their big guns, blasting
away at the sun, while Ray Davies here is just fussing around with his
microscope. And, of course, this does not make Something Else better than any of those albums — it is simply
needed to round out and complete the picture of 1967 as one of the most awesome
years in popular music. "Lazy old sun, what have you done to
summertime?" is the Kinks' perfect response to the Summer of Love; and,
for what it's worth, the album came out on September 15, opening Ray's personal
Autumn of Sympathy, which is every bit as deserving of its own thumbs up.