Monday, 5 October 2015

A Journey Through the 80s: Asia-Asia (1982)


Born in 1964, Gentle Reader, I started to get seriously into music in late 1977. I am, therefore, in a very key way a Child of Punk. By this I don't mean that Punk was all that I listened to or even that Punk was my first Musical Love. In fact, I found quite a lot of punk hard to digest. Whisper it quietly but to this day I still don't own a copy of "Never Mind The Bollocks", I prefer "London Calling" to "The Clash" and the less said about the bands that trailed in at the arse end of punk (Angelic Upstarts, UK Subs, The Anti-Nowhere League etc.) the better (And don't even get me started on the wretched Oi Movement- the Exploited, Cockney Rejects, Peter and the Test Tube Babies and so on, forever).

No, I was a Child of Punk in that I swallowed Hook, Line and Sinker, the Punk Year Zero Theory. This stated that PROPER MUSIC started in 1976 when Punk came along. anything made before that was the work of ROCK DINOSAURS and HIPPIES or both and therefore had to be consigned to the Dustbin of History.

Now of course, as with any dogmatically held theory, it was, first and foremost, BOLLOCKS and didn't stand up to any thorough scrutiny, The question "What about the Beatles, the Stones and the Kinks?" would be dismissed with a wave of the hand and the flimsy aside that such bands were listened to by OLD PEOPLE (i.e. Anyone 10 years older than you). The hand grenade marked "David Bowie" would be ignored amidst muttering that "The Laughing Gnome" was shit! However, just because you were on the flimsiest of thin ice didn't mean that you still couldn't hold to the belief religiously and shout it to the rooftops. With the exception of a couple of Greatest Hits, I didn't buy my first pre 1976 record until the late 90s!!

Where Year Zero theorists did feel on safe ground was in decrying the genre known as "Progressive Rock" or "Prog Rock" as it is imaginatively abbreviated to. And this was because Prog Rock was everything that Punk set out to abolish. The list of perceived Musical CRIMES was endless
  • It was the plaything of MUSOS
  • Many of the songs went on for well in excess of 10 minutes (or 10 years if it wasn't your bag)
  • CONCEPT albums abounded
  • It was the work of HIPPIES (who Punks hated with a passion)
  • It was made under the influence of the wrong sort of drugs
  • Public Schoolboys were rumoured to be involved
  • The lyrics were at best impenetrable and at worst vastly pretentious (Exhibit A: March of the Giant Hogweed by Genesis, in which a giant plant marches across Russia, well obviously!)
  • DRUM SOLOS
  • Everyone involved, both musician and purchaser read TOLKIEN (This was in the pre Peter Jackson days)
Just to colour the picture in further, these were the days of the Musical Tribes: Punks, Mods, New Romantics, New Wavers, Rockabillys (Honest, more later), Heavy Metallers, etc. Most though would adhere to the Year Zero Orthodoxy. True, Heavy Metallers got away with Black Sabbath (There was something "Punk" about Ozzy's bat head biting antics) but if they tried to bring Led Zeppelin into the argument, they would get short shrift. 

However, despite the Punkish Spanish Inquisition, The Prog Rock Heretics stood firm, particularly out in the sticks in Folkestone where I lived. Most of them were a couple of years older than me and so had reasonably well established musical tastes and certainly weren't going to have them influenced by Malcolm McLaren or some spotty herbert gobbing in the gutters with a rubbish mohican. I recall Sixth Formers, with their hair just slightly longer than school rules would allow (Oooh the dare of it all), prowling the school corridors with carrier bags containing Barclay James Harvest albums, the result of a lunchtime foray to the local record emporium. I also remember one of them having some form of nervous collapse when Genesis released "Turn It On Again" which to all intents and purposes (despite the lack of a recognisable chorus) appeared to be a POP SINGLE (The Horror, the Horror). I had lost contact with him by the time that Genesis released "Invisible Touch", which was probably for the best and he would have spontaneously imploded upon hearing it! The fact that their music was both unfashionable and unpopular was more of a badge of honour than anything. For being popular inevitably meant SELLING OUT, which was a thought that was beyond the pale.

And then in the early summer of 1982, something odd happened. I was listening as was my wont to the American Chart Show on Radio 1 when they mentioned that there was new Number 1 album on the Billboard Hot 200 and they then proceeded to play the lead single off it and it was this


"Heat of the Moment" by Asia" off the self titled debut album. No alarm bells rang particularly. The American Charts in those days were often full of what the suits called AOR (Actually stands for "Adult Orientated Rock", Wags said it stood for "Any Old Rubbish"). Only a few months before "4" by Foreigner had bagged the Top Spot, an AOR band if there ever was one. I found myself liking "Heat of the Moment" (But then I have always been a bit of a sucker for a slice of AOR as future blogs will make clear), it was catchy, lyrics were a bit odd but other than that, it was a fair shout.

However, I was in for a rude awakening. On Monday lunchtime I was dossing around in my form room when one of the PRB (Prog Rock Brigade) came bounding up to me, looking excited. Both of these things were alarming as PRB members never "bounded", merely ambled, and excitement was a state that I thought they were unfamiliar with as their natural mode was"somnambulist". He then thrust an album into my hands and muttered "NUMBER ONE". Upon staring at the sleeve in front of me (Pictured above), I almost stumbled backwards over a stray 1st former who was acting as a foot rest.

I could see quite clearly that this was indeed "Asia" by "Asia". However what made the eyeballs bulge was that the cover clearly featured artwork by Roger Dean! If you were in the presence of Dean artwork, you knew that the vinyl contained within the sleeve was of the PROG ROCK genre. Dean designed the Yes Bubble Logo and his designs were usually drawn from the world of fantasy.

"You have to listen to it, it's great!" He muttered (To be fair, he may have been speaking clearly but in FLAGRANT contradiction of School Rules, this particular specimen has hair resembling that of a Highland Cow, so he was speaking through a hirsute veil) and with that he hurried away, leaving me holding the baby (Or Dragon in this instance). Holding a Prog Rock record in a public space was akin to shouting "I am wearing Rupert The Bear Boxer Shorts and my mum still ties my shoe laces" so I shoved the thing in my desk and made good my escape. I stayed late after school and smuggled the offending article into two Woolworths carrier bags (A re-definition of the phrase "Double Bagger"). I vowed that if asked I would swear to God that I was carrying a copy of "Combat Rock" by the Clash!

Fortunately I made it home without mishap and taking the tongs that my mother used to put coal on the fire. I placed the debut album by Asia on the turntable!

At this juncture a digression is necessary. Upon perusing the sleeve, it became apparent as the Dean artwork indicated, if not the first single, that Asia were NOT American but they were in fact British (As the decade unfolded there were a number of British bands who had far more success in the US than back in Blighty: After The Fire, The Fixx, Naked Eyes). Furthermore, it became apparent that they were a veritable Prog Rock Supergroup (And I can think of few phrases more designed to install FEAR into the heart of a child of Punk). John Wetton played in Wishbone Ash and King Crimson amongst others; Both Steve Howe and Geoff Downes were in Yes (Possibly the archetypal Prog band, their albums lasted several days even though they only consisted of 5 songs tops!) whilst Carl Palmer was in Atomic Rooster and God Help Us All, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, makers of the Prog Rock Piece De Resistance "Brain Salad Surgery"

It was a BAD Business all round.

Fearing that I was about to plunge into a nightmare world of Giant Plants, Arthurian Knights and NOODLING, I dropped the needle.

As will become apparent in my journey through the 80s, I have considerable fondness for 1982. It saw the release of many excellent albums: "Too Rye Ay" by Dexys, "Upstairs at Erics" by Yazoo, "Imperial Bedroom" by E.Costello, "Tropical Gangster" By Kid Creole, "Lexicon of Love" by ABC amongst many. I have to freely confess that I would include "Asia" by "Asia" in that list. It was/is a GREAT record and, like those listed above, didn't really sound like anything else released that year. Whilst both "Heat of the Moment" and the follow up single "Only Time will Tell" could have passed for Great American AOR (And let's face it, both had Cheesy 80s videos), the rest undoubtedly moved into a different territory, it had a greater sense of drama and grandeur, both things that were very much sourced from the world of prog. It certainly wasn't an album that Foreigner or Toto could have made or any other British band of that time for that matter.

That said, we weren't in Yes territory. Whilst most of these songs are circa the 5 minute mark (HERESY again in the days of the 3 minute single) and undoubtedly saw the strutting of Musical Chops (Hellooooo Guitar Solos, a cheeky keyboard noodle here and there but thankfully Mr Palmer, the drummer, was told that he could beat the tar out of the skins but ONLY when everyone else was playing), all had recognisable song structures and (Hallelujah and pass the Tomato Ketchup) TUNES.

"Soul Survivor" is a cracking "Punch the Air when you get to the Chorus" song (Arse knows what the lyrics are about but when the song is that great, who cares?). "Wildest Dreams" is an Apocalypse Song, soldiers on the streets, world in danger of being wiped out, all accompanied by a driving synth, crunching guitar and choral vocals. PREPOSTEROUS nonsense and, of course, TREMENDOUS FUN!! "Here Comes the Feeling" was the perfect album closer. The verses stray a bit close to Foreigner ballad territory (albeit with chunkier instrumentation) before bursting into another "Punch that air" anthemic chant and a BIG SYNTH SOLO, which says both "80s" and "But who gives a shit?"

Now to be fair, I could have done without "Without You" which I suspect is intended to be the Big Ballad but the record doesn't need it and, in any case, it's a bit STODGY. However, matters are more than compensated by my two favourite tracks. At the time of playing said album, I was in the depths of UNREQUITED LOVE (I loved her, she thought I needed new glasses and plastic surgery, you know the score) and "One Step Closer" became one of my TEEN ANGST records. I would play it and imagine that I too was drawing One Step Closer to winning her over. Bollocks, of course. I had more chance of pulling the cows on her fathers farm but such is the way of the world. Of course whether Messrs Wetton and Downes knew that their song would be used as such by a badly dressed teenager I know not. It's a cracking song, punch the air defiant chorus, guitar solo here and there, some very interesting percussion. You know the score by now!

As I am sure you will have guessed, as I listened to the album for the first time, I had two voices in my head. One said "This is GREAT" and the other said "Marsh, get a Grip, it's a Prog Rock Supergroup". Given my previous aversion to all things Prog and my religious adherence to Year Zero theory, it is perhaps even more remarkable that my favourite track on the album is the most obviously Prog inluenced and longest track, "Cuttting It Fine". It has the least cohesive song structure, guitar and syth solos a go-go and then after 3 minutes 25 seconds the song suddenly drops out and a piano takes over and we are treated to a 2 minute musical coda! If lengthy guitar solos, rambling song structures and choral vocals were to be avoided, musical codas were a sign that pretension had won the day and the 4th Horseman of the Apocalypse was making his rounds.

Yet, those two minutes are the highlight of "Asia" by Asia are sum up what makes it great. Preposterous, probably silly, definitely great and oddly moving.


As much as I had enjoyed the experience and clearly needed a copy of the thing myself, I was in a quandary as to how I would respond to my hairy friend when he asked me what I had thought of it. If I let on that I liked the ruddy thing, word might get round and I would be cast out of the school Jam Fanclub and the next thing I know people would be assuming I liked "Love Over Gold" by Dire Straits (More of which in a later blog) and my hair would find its way mysteriously over my collar.

In one sense I needn't have worried, the album (plus Woolworth Double Bag) was removed from my clutches with nothing more than a "You better not have got any Marmalade on this" (A reference to an unfortunate incident when someone had lent me "Out of the Blue" by ELO and it had had an unpleasant encounter with the Golden Shred. I had to buy a replacement!)

Over the next few days and weeks though, a bizarre phenomenon started to occur. A bit like a rather virulent stomach bug, it transpired that the bloody album was going round the school like wildfire. No one openly admitted it at first but the symptoms started popping up all over the place, People were seen drawing the Dragon from the cover in their rough books; "Cutting It Fine" got played in Assembly and people were seen mouthing along to the chorus and sighing as the song moved into the coda! You would be in trap two of the bogs and hear someone outside singing "Only Time Will Tell". As soon as you opened the door, the singing would stop and there would be no sign of the culprit. Like some kind of bizarre secret society, you KNEW several members of your Class owned it, they had that look in their eye but they would never admit it!!

4 years later I found myself at University. After a night of drinking local Kentish Scrumpy, I decided that confession was good for the soul and I declared that I thought "Asia" by Asia was a classic album and, fortified by the alcohol I said that anyone who thought otherwise was welcome to have a word outside. Ignoring the (frankly feeble) threat of physical violence, everyone in the room (except for the odd cove who didn't seem to like any music except Jean Michel Jarre and Classical) rushed to join me in lauding the self titled mastework to the skies.

As I mentioned at the ouset of my musical journey, many of my CDs don't (due to time pressures) get played that often but this one always has and it hasn't changed. Still over the top, still unlike anything else of it's time, still preposterous and still brilliant!





Friday, 2 October 2015

A Journey Through the 80s: Australia Part 1: INXS/Midnight Oil


Now I think it is fair to say that Abba and anything emanating from the Emerald Isle apart, the majority of music that I grew up listening to originated from the UK or the US of A. However as the 80s progressed my horizons started to widen (Unlike these days when it is just my waistline that broadens, ho ho) and I discovered that one of the countries that was producing great music was the land of Oz (And I ain't talking about Dorothy here). So much good stuff in fact that it'll take a few blogs.

I appreciate that I often come across as a lover of the wilfully obscure so I thought I would kick off matters Antipodean with two of their most commercially successful exports, INXS and Midnight Oil. I only own two of INXS' Six 80s albums, 1985's "Listen Like Thieves" and 1987's Planet Eating Monster "Kick", the albums which marked both INXS' mutation from a more New Wave act into a more traditional Rock band and their achievement of huge commercial success beyond Australia's shores.

INXS' career may seem strange in these days when a Band is listed as a "BBC Band to Follow in 2015/16/17 ad infinitum for ever" before they've even released an album in anger and then sells a shedload simply because they're deemed as fashionable irrespective of the records' merits. The first two INXS albums did bugger all outside of Australia. The next two albums started to make inroads into America and then they broke big Stateside with their 5th album "Listen Like Thieves". And it was at this point that I discovered them. I will no doubt come back to this fact in later 80s blogs but I was a regular listening to Paul Gambachini's American Top 30 show on "The Nation's Favorite" Radio 1 at 3pm on a Saturday afternoon (As a Burnley fan, I was scarcely going to listen to Radio 2's football coverage, we were as likely to feature as Ian Duncan Smith is to be mistaken for Mother Teresa) and it was here that I encountered "What You Need", a Top 5 hit. When I encountered a copy of the album for £2.50 in a secondhand shop (I was a student at the time!!) , I'll thought I'll have a bit of that!

To my mind, "Listen Like Thieves" is INXS' finest album and still stands up as a cracking record playing it now. Taste makers are the same whatever year you live in, they are always trying to foist the next "insert name of popular artist in here" on the masses. I have lost touch of the number of "next Adele's" I've run away screaming from (And, of course, Amy herself was the "Next Amy Winehouse"). When INXS started to breakthrough in the States, I can recall that they were immediately lauded as the "New Duran Duran". This was at a stage when any band that was remotely photogenic and good looking was lauded as the "New Duran Duran" (A-ha would suffer the same fate a little later in the year). INXS fitted that bill, particularly in the form of the ridiculous handsome Michael Hutchence. Musically, the taste makers were trying to make a comparison with the funk-rock (should such a hybrid exist) of "Wild Boys" or "View to a Kill" rather than the more New Romantic material of Yore.

Certainly listening to "What You Need" and the title track, you can see they have a point. However from thereon in the album to my mind is more new wave influenced than Duran Duran and certainly, at its best, more melodic. The strongest part of the album is the next 5 tracks. Just great Pop/Rock. "Kiss The Dirt (Falling Down The Mountain)" is, in my view, INXS finest hour. The 80s were full of singles that should have been massive but weren't and here's another one. "Shine Like It Does" wasn't far behind. "Good + Bad Times" feels Stones influenced (something that would come out even more on "Kick", "Biting Bullets" has a great straight ahead rush to it and "This Time" is the closest thing that the album has to a ballad (and it ain't that close) and another "hit that wasn't".



To be honest, the album tails off a bit after that, "Three Sisters" in particular is a quirky instrumental that feels out of place. But overall it's still a cracking record.

Next up came "Kick" which took INXS into the stratosphere and finally broke them in the UK. It contained 3 Top 5 US Singles "New Sensation" "Devil Inside" and "Need You Tonight" which also went Top 3 in the UK. The album went 6 times platinum in the US and 3 times platinum in the UK. and it took them into the stadiums.

Personally (the contrary old bastard that I am) I have always thought that "Kick" was a lesser album than it's predecessor. It was both much funkier in places and more Stones influenced in others. It seemed less subtle and less melodic. I could never work out why it succeeded in lieu of "Listen Like Thieves". who knows? The late 80s were certainly a time that rewarded the obvious and acts that aimed for the stadium were certainly de jour. All I know is that prior to embarking on my 80s journey, I hadn't played "Kick" for years!

What struck me though is that it's a fine record, actually quite varied and not really a duff track thereon, although I never really "got" "Never Tear Us Apart". "Calling All Nations" is probably the best track and should have been a single, although frankly they had a good return from the ones they released.



Listening to both records, there were a number of things that struck me. Firstly in the UK, INXS have been largely forgotten. You occasionally hear "Need You Tonight" on the radio but in musical histories of the period they rarely merit a mention, not even a derogatory one (Although the lack of criticism is probably linked in with the sad fate of Michael Hutchence). That could be down to the fact that, for all their merits, they were quite a derivative act and they didn't really influence any one in turn. In addition, listening to these two albums, they don't really sound as if they are from the 80s. Leaving aside any proustian rush that goes "Ooh I snogged to "Never tear us apart"" you would be hard pressed to exactly date these albums, particularly "Kick"

Lastly, I think it is fair to say that neither record sounds particularly Australian. In fact I once had  an argument with someone who swore blind they were from New York!! Now, this is not a charge you could label against Midnight Oil and the album "Diesel and Dust". Midnight Oil released a number of records in the 80s but this is the only one I own. I have heard both "10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1" and "Red Sails in the Sunset" but both are too spiky for my tastes and lack enough strong tunes.

"Diesel and Dust" however has tunes in spades and is a great record. For once the general public agreed as the album broke Midnight Oil outside Australia and was a hit in both US and UK, spearheaded by "Beds are Burning".

Now, I have heard INXS and Midnight Oil lumped together (as of course they have been in this blog!) but whilst they are both Australian guitar bands who were successful at round about the same time and both have hugely charismatic frontmen, that's where the comparisons end. To all intents and purposes, INXS were a good time rock and roll band but Midnight Oil were a deeply political concern. Indeed "Diesel and Dust" is one of the most political albums of the second half of the 80s and certainly one of the most successful. Largely concerned with Aboriginal rights, it is direct and pulls few punches, especially on "Beds are Burning" and "The Dead Heart".

Of course, you mention politics and most people roll their eyes and think "Arrgh! Worthy Alert!". However "Diesel and Dust" comes armed with the tunes to carry the message and the whole album bristles with vitality and energy. Again, betraying true perversity, I actually think "Beds are Burning" isn't the best track on the album. That's "The Dead Heart", a staggeringly brilliant track that's both anthemic and mesmerising. It's one of my Top 30 songs of the 80s.


That may be the best track on "Diesel and Dust" but there's some other crackers on there to, "Sometimes", "Dream World" and "Wakaruma" are all personal favourites but there isn't a duffer in sight.

Again, outside of Australia, Midnight Oil have been written out of Musical history, brushed aside as the "Band fronted by that angry bald bloke who went into Australian politics and sold out". Inside Australia "Diesel and Dust" is still rated as one of the best Australian albums of all time". My knowledge of Australian music is not as great as it should be but there is no doubt that "Diesel and Dust" is hideously under rated. Again it doesn't sound like an 80s record and has a timeless quality.

All three records well worth investigating. !