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TRANSVISION
VAMP - POP ART / VELVETEEN SPECIAL EDITIONS
Universal
Ahh,
Transvision Vamp... massively popular for a few years, then ridiculed
by idiots for the next couple of decades, until people realised
that here was a band that were the perfect collision of rock 'n'
roll, pop culture, sex, kitsch and cool. If any group feels like
Strange Things Are Happening distilled into musical
form, then this is it.
The band were fronted by Wendy James – our last great
pop star, a sultry, teasing, pouting, self-aware role model for
teen rebels who barely hid her contempt for Radio 1 morons or
her ambition, and seemed to encapsulate the post-80s feminism
emerging at the time, no longer bitter and angry, but confident,
sexy and full of piss and vinegar, taking no prisoners and no
bullshit. No wonder their record label crushed the life out of
them at the first opportunity, refusing to release their third
album in the UK, despite its predecessor hitting the number one
spot.
These two reissues are a great reminder of just what a vital FastPop
force TV were in those pre-grunge, pre-rave days. Sounding a little
less Eighties than you might think (production wise at least),
the two albums, now expanded into double CD sets, are vital, lively
explosions of pop genius, rammed with infectiously catchy tunes
from Nick Christian Sayer, guitar riffs, pop culture references
and a fin-de-siecle mentality where the end of the 20th century,
and the hopes for the 21st, collide. With references to Marilyn
Monroe, William Burroughs, Andy Warhol, 2000AD,
MTV, Che Guevara, Elvis Presley, and LSD scattered throughout
their oeuvre, the band were the perfect end of the century pop
entity.
1988's Pop Art, if the title doesn't make it
obvious enough, sets out its stall on opener Trash
City, a sci-fi, comic book low culture celebration
that is very much in the spirit of Pop Will Eat Itself at their
referential best. The track is the opening salvo in one of the
best side one's ever recorded, as the band tear through song after
song. There's breakthrough single I Want Your Love,
the fantastic Revolution Baby, the blasting
Psychosonic Cindy and the hippy chill
out of Sister Moon. Incredible stuff!
The
second side takes its foot off the pedal slightly. The
cover of Holly and the Italians' Tell That Girl to
Shut Up is a punk-pop masterpiece, but Wild
Star and Alan Moore-referencing Hanging
Out with Halo Jones are the two weakest tracks on
the album – not terrible by any means, but lacking the energy
and the effortlessness of the rest of the album.
Still, two out of nine ain't bad, and the album finishes with
the cynical Andy Warhol's Dead and the
epic, gloriously seedy Sex Kick –
a potent 'fuck you' to the ending decade of sexual repression
and a heady mix of violence, kink, lust, Frankie Goes to Hollywood
and guitar riffs. Magnificent.
The new material starts on disc one, with Andy Kershaw session
recordings of Trash City, Andy
Warhol's Dead, Sex Kick
and non-album track Sweet Thing. These
are a lot rawer, less poptastic and more rocking than the album
versions – no bad thing, though it makes you wish that room
had been found here for the BBC In Concert recording
of the band as well, another blasting performance currently to
be found only in the outer limits of the internet. Trash City
comes complete with Burroughs samples, Andy Warhol's Dead is laden
with jangly guitars, Sex Kick offers
more of everything (including Wendy's extraordinary agony/ecstasy
orgasm howl) and the lovely Sweet Thing
points the way towards the Sixties pop influences on second album
Velveteen.
Disc two offers the unreleased (on album) stuff, and is a mixed
bag. B-side track Vid Kid Vamp is a
collision of Trash City and Seventies
glam, in what feels oddly like an unfinished prototype (lyrically
at least) that is nonetheless entertaining. Revolution
Baby B-side No It U Lover
is a pointless and very Eighties remix of the song that
is really horrible. God Save the Royalties
is a track played backwards, which I guess would have caused some
American politicians to have kittens. There are alternative 12
inch mixes of Revolution Baby and Tell
That Girl to Shut Up that, truthfully, are really
not improvements. The Knuckle Duster
mix of Tell That Girl... is a simultaneously
beefed up and stripped down, mostly instrumental version of the
track that is especially pointless, and rather sums up everything
wrong with 12 mixes from non-dance acts of the time. Only the
Ciao Portobello Mix of Sex
Kick, stripping back the guitars to give the song
a bass-led, electro, darker edge really works in these remixes.
Rather better are Sweet Thing (here
sounding similar to the Kershaw session), the chirpy Evolution
Evie (included in both acoustic and electric versions,
and reminiscent of Halo Jones), the
punky Oh Yeah, and the bouncy, defiant
Long Lonely Weekend, all of which could've
been album tracks. Honey Honey is a
charming acoustic love song and Walk On By
(not the Bacharach/David song!) almost becomes a power ballad,
showing that the band were far from one-trick ponies.
Velveteen was Transvision's Vamp's finest hour
– an album that hit Number One and stayed on the chart for
26 weeks. And rightly so, because it's a magnificent album that
hits the ground running with one of the finest pop songs ever
recorded, Baby I Don't Care –
a glorious, flawless song of romantic indifference that even survives
the indignity of being murdered in a lamentable cover by some
soap opera halfwit several years ago. The original TV version
is genuinely fantastic – pop as it should be, fast, rocking,
shouty and sticking two fingers up at polite society.
Oddly, this edition of the album features I Want Your
Love – a great, pivotal track, but one lifted
from Pop Art and most definitely not
part of the original Velveteen release. It's
inclusion here, while perhaps welcome to people who haven't bought
Pop Art, is frankly baffling.
Things get back on the official track with The Only
One, another bouncy, effortlessly catchy uptempo
tune, that, alongside Landslide of Love,
has a Sixties vibe. Landslide... does
it more obviously, channelling girl groups of the era flawlessly.
Falling for a Goldmine takes the foot off the pedal,
and is one of the weaker songs on the album, though as a moody.
atmospheric ballad, it works well. Down on You
livens things up again, but maintains the darker feel that dominates
the album from hereon in. The idea of putting the upbeat pop tunes
upfront is a smart one – the album is allowed to develop
its style organically, without uncomfortable switches in tone,
and from now on, it's a much moodier affair. Side One closer Song
to the Stars is a slight, but effectively minimal
country song, while Side Two opens with the sleazy low-fi garage
punk number Kiss Their Sons –
a great little number that shows how the band had developed their
sound from the first album. Born to be Sold,
sadly, is the weakest song on the album, despite a surfeit of
pop culture namechecks, and probably a bad choice for the final
single release – it just lacks the dynamic sound needed
to work.
Pay the Ghosts, on the other had, is a belting,
driving and sinister foot stomper, with a mix of wild guitar soloing
and rockabilly twanging, as James' breathy vocals reach a crescendo
of sneering contempt. Marvellous stuff! As indeed is the lugubrious,
stripped back ballad Bad Valentine,
where Wendy groans “I'm so bad, bad, bad all the time”
in a way guaranteed to send shivers down your back.
The album finishes with the title track, a near-ten minute epic
that runs through several movements (really!) and is an impressively
moody, creepily sinister and cinematic tale of sex and seduction
that is almost operatic in its approach. It's a pretty astonishing
piece of work that builds to a suitably frenetic climax that is
admirable in its sheer audacity.
Disc Two, as with Pop Art's bonus disc,
is a mix of B-sides and remixes (though thankfully fewer of the
latter), and again is a mixed bag. The Abigail's Party
Mix of Baby I Don't Care
teases with the idea that it might be an effective extension before
tossing in a lot of Eighties gubbins to mess it up and emasculate
the song. The 'extended versions' of The Only One
and Landslide of Love are better, in
the sense that they remain more faithful to the original, but
it does feel like needles padding. When you've got it so right
the first time round, why mess with it?
Luckily, there are better things on offer here, including a demo
version of Sex Kick (less polished than
the album version, less crunching than the Kershaw version but
still a solid rendition) and several B-side songs. Time
for Change is another bouncy, Sixties-inspired,
upbeat number, while Strings of my Heart has
a rockier feel – both tracks, notably, lacking the polish
of the album, which gives them a rawer, live feel – not
a bad thing.
Saturn 5, also called a demo version,
comes across like a Pop Art outtake (both musically
and lyrically), and while no great loss from that album, it's
a welcome inclusion here. The Mystery Song,
on the other hand, is a sweet acoustic number that reveals Wendy
to be a better singer than people gave her credit for.
Love
Me is a curio – an instrumental, off-kilter
number that seems influenced by left-field alt rock like Devo.
I could see this fitting in nicely on Mitchell Froom's Cafe
Flesh soundtrack! W11 Blues
does what the title promises – a stomping tale of dodgy
characters and dodgy deals in Notting Hill.
In fact, the B-sides from this album show a TV up for experimenting
with their sound. Hardtime is electro
pop with subdued vocals and soaring guitar breaks that is nice
try, albeit one that doesn't really work. He's the
Only One for Me is closer to traditional Transvision
sound, but stripped down and made more rock 'n' roll – it's
arguably the closest in spirit to Wendy James' recent single
release. Kiss Me is a pure rock,
with minimal vocals and lots of guitar riffing.
The album ends with two live tracks – Down on
You, oddly, seems less dark and moody here than
on the studio version, but their version of the Rolling Stones'
The Last Time is suitably rough, ready
and rocking.
Taken as a whole, it's impressive how these albums still hold
up. The production is dated, but not as dated as much 1980s stuff,
and the tracks on the main releases are incredibly, consistently
good. As part – possibly on the edge of - of a late Eighties/early
Nineties, female-fronted music scene that also included The Darling
Buds, The Primitives, Voice of the Beehive and all the way through
to Alisha's Attic and Shampoo, Transvision Vamp arguably represented
the final point - to date – that pop music in the UK had
any value, when it was still tied to rock 'n' roll and rebellion,
rather than the bland offerings of Britpop or the polished to
the point where it was safe for small children output of Simon
Cowell and his bastard associates. It's no surprise that all those
bands were rapidly abandoned by a music business and radio DJs
who like things safe and simple.
As
Wendy says during the introduction to the final song on these
two albums, “I can't bear it you know, you spend three,
four years doing something you really care about and some tossy
journalist says 'uh, that's shit, fuck off and die'.”
Transvision Vamp may have been ground into the dirt by said tossy
journalists (and equally tossy DJs and record labels) but these
two great albums show that the naysayers were wrong,
as usual.
Now, can we have a special edition of Little Magnets vs
The Bubble of Babble please?
DAVID FLINT
BUY
POP ART (UK)
BUY
VELVETEEN (UK)
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