Tuesday, March 03, 2009

MISERABLE BASTARDS?

During a career that spanned 1984-1987, Lloyd Cole & The Commotions were one of those bands that divided opinion. To some, they were part of an era that gave us a great cannon of intelligent indie-pop (see also The Go-Betweens and The Smiths), but to others they were a bunch of boring musos led by a pretentious poet with a deadly dull delivery.

Personally, I loved them.

Formed by a bunch of students in Glasgow in the early 80s, they were signed to Polydor Records and put on a fast road to stardom. Just about everyone I associated with in 1984 owned a copy of debut LP Rattlesnakes, while the lead-off single Perfect Skin was high up on most people's 'best of' lists at the time. However, none of the subsequent singles cracked the Top 40, so the record label insisted that the follow-up LP be produced by someone with a track record of singles success....

And so Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley were dispatched to work with the band, and just 12 months later, Easy Pieces was unleashed on the public. A far more polished and poppy affair, it did yield three hit singles and got them out of the pages of the NME and into Smash Hits.

Problem was, it also started to unleash tensions within the band....and it took two years to release their next LP which was tellingly entitled Mainstream, a piece of work that somehow managed to contain some of their finest recordings but also some really dull and unmemorable songs, not helped by many of Lloyd's lyrics becoming ever more melancholy. It was an LP of a band at a crossroads.

But instead of taking time out to solve things, they broke-up. Lloyd Cole went on to enjoy a solo career that continues to this day. Neil Clark, Blair Cowan and Stephen Irvine went onto to form other bands while Lawrence Donegan became a journalist and later an author.

In 2004, they got back together for a very short tour to mark the 20th Anniversary of Rattlesnakes, including a tremendous gig at Glasgow Barrowlands (trivia fact....they were supported that night by a then little known James Blunt....who was every bit as nauseatingly bland and boring as you's imagine).

In total, there were 9 singles released by Lloyd Cole & The Commotions, of which five made the Top 40. Their final effort was a four-track EP that played at 33 1/3 rpm, with a remix of a track from Mainstream and three new songs.

mp3 : Lloyd Cole & The Commotions - From The Hip (remix)
mp3 : Lloyd Cole & The Commotions - Please
mp3 : Lloyd Cole & The Commotions - Lonely Mile
mp3 : Lloyd Cole & The Commotions - Love Your Wife

I think you can tell from the lyrics in the chorus that this was a bunch of guys unhappy with their lot:-

I don't care anymore
I'm sick and I'm tired
And I don't care anymore
This one's from the hip
Why should I know why?
It's a wicked world

In a parallel universe, I'd like to think that someone like Lloyd Cole is being worshipped as a musical god....

Happy(?) Listening.

7 comments:

spaceman73 said...

In my little universe he is being worshipped..

Webbie @ Football and Music said...

Dear Black Type, why is Lloyd Cole so miserable all the time...

Rol said...

I'm stuck in that alternate universe with Spaceman.

I've seen Lloyd solo more than just about any other artist, and he always puts on a wonderful, funny, self-effacing show, packed with great songs. Sadly never seen him with the Commotions though, not even on their recent brief reunion.

Ed said...

Never seen him live, but love the stuff on record. Still think my favourite thing he's ever done is the rattlesnakes LP, though...

Natsthename said...

Never mind the parallel universe...he's worshipped in my own house! Awesome post.

idjut boy said...

I love this album and I'm struggling to think of a poor song on it. I've never heard it for years (my vinyl copy is stored in a garage in East Calder, don't ask!) but after looking at the tracklisting the only track I can't remember is 29. My Bag has to be one of my favourite Commotions songs ever.

Very good blog, BTW. Keep up the good work...

nicolap said...

I so them twice, just after Easy Piecies, in Milan, a great and funny show, that the live album cannot fully illustrate (I have a tape I recorded from the radio with unbelievable versions of Dylan's I don't believe and speedy Four flight up) ; then the Mainstream tour was actually sad, also in the live set