I sometimes wondered why I found the overt references to 1930's ballroom music in The Caretaker's work so personally powerful and evocative. Initially a spin-off idea from Kubrick's movie The Shining, by the time of last year's stunning "Persistent Repetition Of Phrases" the concept had taken on a whole other life of it's own. It was only when I read the references to Al Bowlly and Dennis Potter's TV drama Pennies From Heaven in the recent interviews, that the penny dropped.
The reason why the music of Bowlly and his ilk resonates dimly in my skull is all because of my Grandmother. She was a strong presence throughout my childhood (I often stayed at her house and she lived with us in the family home for some time) and I must've been exposed to this music early on by her. A quick search through Gran's record collection yesterday confirmed my suspicions - there they were: the Bowlly records and the soundtrack to the TV series. She had a big pile of old 78s too, but I didn't get around to checking them, nor her massive collection of sheet music. But I spent an enjoyable Sunday afternoon in Grans' company, playing the records and discussing them with her. This was the 'dance music' of her youth and she could still recognise each song just from the opening notes, still knew all the words, and had memories associated with them all. Even without The Caretaker's audio treatments, this music still has a naturally transportative quality - the particular grain of the recordings seem to impregnate the present with a misty aura of the past - in Gran's case, the pre-war glow of her teens, for me a nebulous yet comforting sensation associated with time spent in her company as a child back in the 1970s.
It was a interesting experience and it makes me wonder why I've never spent time listening to music with my Grandmother in adulthood. Always too busy, I suppose. But it felt good to experience this cross-generational exchange and it also got us talking about my Gran's own musical 'career'. Yes, she had a good pair of lungs on her, by all accounts, and built quite a strong reputation on the live circuit. She can still hold a note even now, well into her eighties, but unfortunately no known recordings exist of her in her prime. Apparently many people tried to push her to further her career by appearing on talent shows like 'Opportunity Knocks' in the '60s, but she has an aversion to fame and it's trappings which comes as a breath of fresh air in this age where the pursuit of fame is an end to itself. This Briton Had Talent, she just chose to keep it low-profile. Good for you, Gran...
There's another piece here by me on The Caretaker where he goes into the Bowlly connection in greater depth...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.factmagazine.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1331&Itemid=52
This got put up last autumn when they migrated their website, but it was on their original site well over a year ago; maybe even the christmas before last.
And a review of "Bleaklow" here, for those who want to know what all the fuss is about:
http://www.factmagazine.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1124&Itemid=84
Like Nick said: you really should buy some of his stuff if you haven't already.
thanks for the links, Kek. i remember your ambient series for Fact, but must've missed part 3 for some reason. got lost in the storm of other internet 'noise' i guess. great stuff!
ReplyDeleteoh and one other thing i discovered whilst listening to Bowlly & Stone's 'My Woman' was that it was sampled by (and presumably was the creative stepping-off point for) White Town's No.1 smash-hit 'Your Woman'
ReplyDelete"White Town's No.1 smash-hit 'Your Woman'" - darn; I never knew that...I always thought it was some old Blues record that he'd sampled waaay before Moby. I remember seeing a short tv.doc about him making the record in his bedroom, but didn't recall him mentioning Bowlly.
ReplyDeleteprobably didn't want to draw attention to it for legal reasons, lol!
ReplyDeletefound an interesting article on the track over at the ol' Stylus site:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/seconds/white-town-your-woman.htm
(only name-checks Lou Stone as the artist, though my gran's record credits Bowlly as the vocalist.)
and the final line 'Sadly Jyoti failed to properly clear the samples' kinda backs-up the suspicion that he was trying to cover-up his thievery.