1) Breaking Water; 2) Night Of A Thousand Furry Toys; 3) Hidden Fear; 4) Runaway; 5) Unfair Ground; 6) Satellite; 7) Woman Of Custom; 8) Interlude; 9) Black Cloud; 10) Far From The Harbour Wall; 11) Drowning; 12) Reaching For The Rail; 13) Blue Room In Venice; 14) Sweet July; 15) Along The Shoreline; 16) Breakthrough.
General verdict: A conceptual art-rock record about the trials of depression in name, an intentionally uninspired adult contemporary album in nature.
I have always admired Rick Wright as a
personality — the «quiet» member of the band, almost a symbol of amicable
humility, a consummate musician with none of Gilmourʼs flash or Watersʼ
political ego, and a classy gentleman who looked more like a university
professor onstage than a member of a rock band. Unfortunately, all these things
always worked best within the context of Pink Floyd than on their own. Wet Dream had already shown that a Rick
Wright solo album was not such an exciting idea; and to expect something more
from a follow-up project in the «Dave Floyd» era would be a rash thing indeed.
Allegedly, Broken China is a concept album whose main theme is «inspired» by Rickʼs
then-current wife Mildredʼs then-current battle with depression (he had only
married her one year earlier, but I suppose he knew what he was doing). I think
it is relatively safe to say that the record would sound something like this
regardless of the circumstances in which it had been produced — it is
definitely a little more somber in tone than Wet Dream, but not by much, and, like almost any Floyd-related piece,
its melodies and arrangements combine notes of pessimism and gloom with
elements of hope for the future and consolation in beauty. Everything here is
quite true to Wrightʼs vision and personality. It is just that the music itself
is deadly dull.
The album is awfully long, clocking in at
just under an hour, and once it is gone, remembering any specific moments from
it is hard. In general, itʼs the same old atmosphere: somber, bass-heavy melodies,
ranging from rhythmic and danceable (ʽNight Of A Thousand Furry Toysʼ) to minimalistic
synth-assisted heavenly prayers (ʽBlue Room In Veniceʼ). About half of the record
is instrumental, with Rick himself singing on most other tracks and inviting Sinéad
OʼConnor to take lead vocals on two of the key tracks, including the album
closer ʽBreakthroughʼ; however, the vocals throughout are used in the same way
as any other instrument — very even, very monotonous, consistently bent on generating
steady atmosphere rather than emotional jolts.
There is an attempt at modernisation, too,
with some of the tracks featuring trendy trip-hop rhythm tracks (ʽRunawayʼ) and
a few even bordering on house (ʽSatelliteʼ) — but in the end, all of the album should
really be described as «adult contemporary» due to the absolute lack of energy
and ecstasy; an intentional lack, but one that is not compensated by any
extraordinary chord sequences, sonic combos, or even lyrical revelations (the
lyrics, by the way, are mostly taken care of by Anthony Moore, Floydʼs resident
lyricist in the post-Waters era). Guitars are handled by Tim Renwick, Steve Bolton
(largely known for his work with late period Atomic Rooster), and Stingʼs
sideman Dominic Miller, so nothing to write home about. Bass duties are given
over to Pino Palladino, who is obviously good (anybody who has been chosen to
replace John Entwistle for the Who has to be) but isnʼt really given a lot of
chances to shine, other than hold down a nice, steady groove on the recordʼs
more danceable tunes. Gilmour is noticeably lacking, though he did play on the
original recording of ʽBreakthroughʼ — after which Rick decided that was not
what he wanted, and re-recorded the song, which is really all you need to know
about the level and the functions of Broken
Chinaʼs musicianship.
I have no idea what to write about individual
songs, seeing as how there are absolutely no stand-out themes or ideas on any
of them — and, in fact, even most of the positive accounts of the album I have
seen rarely concentrate on the musical aspect, instead going off on all sorts
of tangents about how the experiences processed on this album really relate to
their own problems etc. etc. Well, as somebody who also has to face depression
on a regular basis, I must say that I feel very little in common with these
softly sanitized moods; I am not sure how exactly this musical equivalent of
watching paint dry is supposed to count as therapy, but probably for some
people it does. Nor do I find the lyrics particularly hard-hitting: hearing Sinéad
OʼConnor deliver the lines "But sooner than wake up / To find it all
unchanged / Iʼll sleep through the day ʼtil the daylight ends" in her
familiar icy tone just brings on a feeling of predictability.
Of course, there will always be people swearing
by this record as some sort of forgotten, defiantly un-commercial masterpiece
of subtle, but immense psychological depth; to me, though, it is just another
sign of how desperately Rick needed the assistance of his bandmates to bring
genuine life and beauty to his cold and hollow Apollonian structures. The
motives behind this record are more than noble; the end results, alas, amount
to little other than morose sonic wallpaper.
I keep trying to give this one a chance, but it always goes in one ear and out the other. It's like a post-Project Alan Parsons album that thinks it's The Wall.
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