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Monday, October 06, 2008
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Dig Out Your Soul - Biography
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Success, Noel Gallagher concedes, is not without its drawbacks.
"We've been putting records out for fifteen years or so. You might think that, from the experience of all the records you have made, you would just swan into the studio and know how everything is going to go. But it has never been like that, at least not for us. If anything, it's been the opposite. It just gets more and more of a challenge."
Every great piece of work – and Don't Believe The Truth [2005] was one of them – only serves to raise the bar higher, in terms of the expectations of the audience. In the case of Oasis, who have settled into a cycle of three-year gaps between releases of new work, this sense is heightened by the fact that every new album tends to be greeted like a comeback.
Any apprehensions about the quality of 'Dig Out Your Soul' disintegrate within fifteen seconds of the opening track 'Bag It Up', which has every quality of the band's unique finger-in-the socket rock and roll. There's a rough, defiant, exuberant edge to a lot of these songs, notably 'The Shock Of The Lightning', one of those songs which has the capacity to stop you in your tracks – on first, second, or fiftieth hearing – whatever you are doing. The band sound as if they are really enjoying themselves and the exuberance is contagious.
"Both 'The Shock of the Lightning' and 'Bag It Up'", Noels says, "Were written basically in the studio. If 'The Shock of the Lightning' sounds instant and compelling to you, it's because it was written dead fast. And recorded dead fast. And before we knew it we were saying: 'fucking hell: you know what, this is really good.' I'd say it's probably the most current song we have had on a record - ever. Because generally I would write a song, then demo it, then listen to it for months. And fuck about with it. Whereas 'The Shock of The Lightning' basically is the demo. And it has retained its energy. And there's a lot to be said for that, I think. The first time you record something is always the best."
There's a 1961 British film comedy called, Raising The Wind, in which music students Kenneth Williams and Leslie Phillips are lectured on the key elements in composing popular tunes. "Now remember," their teacher tells them. "It goes like this: Verse, chorus; verse, chorus; clever bit; verse, chorus. But never two clever bits. Or it don't work."
'Dig Out Your Soul', maybe more than any previous Oasis albums, deviates from the orthodox approach to songwriting. "I made a conscious decision," Noel says, "not to write what you could call Songs with a capital S. I wanted to write music that had a groove; not songs that followed that traditional pattern of verse, chorus and middle eight. I wanted a sound that was more monotonous, more hypnotic even; more driving. Songs that would draw you in a different way. Songs that you would maybe have to connect to - to feel. And that is probably the biggest progression, from 'Don't Believe The Truth'".
It's a quality that resonates through pretty well every track on this CD, magnificently on Gem Archer's composition, 'To Be Where There's Life'.
'Dig Out Your Soul', I suggest to Gallagher, marks a departure from Oasis's history in other ways. Whereas Definitely Maybe [1994] and (What's The Story) Morning Glory [1995] were essentially glorious, uncontrolled explosions made by boys, this is an album made by men. A carefully paced collection, its lyrics, in the slower songs especially, are more reflective: almost to the point of bleakness. "I wouldn't say the lyrics are bleak in a personal sense," Noel says, "but they are bleak in a sense of addressing the way the world is now. There's no point acting like you're 24 when you're 40. Listening back to the final mixes, I was saying, God is mentioned a lot. And angels. And devils. All kinds of Biblical references. And fuck knows where that came from."
"You do tackle the big questions on this record," I suggest to Noel, "Like on track two, 'The Turning'; a curious mixture of hope and disillusion". "I think the world is at a critical point; like an elastic band, where it's either going to snap, or people are going to come to their senses. There are only extremes. And 'The Turning' is kind of about … what hope do we have of recovering; what hope do we have of getting this back?"
This CD is reflective ('Waiting For The Rapture'), mischievously retro ['(Get Off Your) High Horse Lady' has its roots in Tommy Tucker's High Heel Sneakers] and breathtakingly vibrant: 'The Shock Of The Lightning' may be the most 'conventional' Oasis song on the album, and the one that will be the first to hit FM radio in the US, but it is also absolutely stunning. The album ends with a beautifully understated, strangely haunting song called 'Soldier On'. It reminds me of a 2008 version of 'Take This Hammer'. Noel says, "It was a demo that had been lying around in the studio; everybody had forgotten about it. All we had to begin with was this tiny little section, with a drum accompaniment and one verse. We worked on it, and bashed it out in one night."
"It would have been easier, and more obvious, to put an uplifting song at the end of the album. When I hear 'Soldier On,' I imagine a guy with a big fucking rope and lump of concrete on his back: as if someone has told him right – there's your baggage. Take it through your life, that's why it was last on the album. I really, really love that song."
In 2002, when Oasis released Heathen Chemistry, Noel says, "I thought it was only a third of the way to the place we wanted to be with this band. I feel that Don't Believe The Truth got us half way, and that Dig Out Your Soul gets us to the place where I feel we are all really comfortable, both with each other, and where we're at. There is no need to write, like, orthodox pop songs any more, just for the sake of it. We just write what we like and we just do what we do. Because you sit down and you say to yourself: well, why do you do this? Answer: because I fucking love it. Would I rather do anything else? No."
With Dig Out Your Soul, Oasis have recorded their most bold, ambitious and varied album ever. And they've just raised that bar another twelve notches.
Robert Chalmers May 2008
8:15 AM
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Thursday, August 09, 2007
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OASIS BIOGRAPHY
THE rock annals are so full of myth and invention that every now and again when the real deal shows up, it takes a while to recognise it for what it is.
Noel Gallagher's memories of his first Glastonbury Festival appearance in 1994 are episodic and intimate, like outtakes from a movie he'd wandered into. They're of things like taking possession of a backstage caravan from the band he'd once worked for as a roadie, and coming offstage to be told that Oasis's second UK single, Shakermaker, had climbed to number eleven in the chart; of someone from Creation Records being disappointed to fall short of the top ten while the band, having just heard their music soaring towards a horizon for the first time, now knew there would be no space they couldn't fill, were individually thrilled. Noel recalls having the astonishing intimation that the band's dreams were about to become true. Oasis were at the forefront of a new generation of British guitar groups who stepped out of the shadow of native dance culture and American grunge, with eyes fixed on the mainstream in a way that would have been unthinkable a few years before. 60,000 people went away from that first Glastonbury performance and told a million others about the thrill of what they'd seen: about this band who were the absolute primal essence of rock and roll, refined and distilled to ragged perfection - the impact of whose music, then as now, was so bafflingly much greater than the sum of its parts. We all went away knowing we'd seen something great and that the acts who followed Oasis that afternoon might as well not have bothered.
Talk to the Gallagher brothers about how they made it to Glastonbury and you get no romanticisation, because while their tale might read like a fairy story now, that's not how it began, and you don't have to delve far to find echoes of rock's origins in the Delta. The details of their early lives in the tough Manchester district of Burnage are well documented, but fortunately there were compensations in the form of an old guitar their father brought home one day - in which Noel found refuge for hours at a time - and regular trips to Maine Road Stadium to watch Manchester City play football. In the case of the latter, what fascinated the boys was not so much the action on the pitch, but the 'stands full of crowds singing together, something you never saw (and still seldom see) anywhere else. And what they sang was so uplifting. Noel had been born three days before the release of The Beatles' Sergeant Pepper, but football provided his first real experience of music and it may be coincidence that songs like Don't Look Back in Anger and Champagne Supernova seem to come fully alive in a stadium; that Oasis are one of the few bands you'd rather see in that environment than in a sweaty club. But there again, it may not. Critics who dismiss Oasis's songs as populist fail to recognise the core emotion behind them, which is yearning.
So in their different ways, the songs are mostly about transcendence and it's arguable that what we have here is a form of English soul music… which also explains the uniquely intimate relationship between Oasis and their fans - why their audience not only remains constant, but constantly renews itself, regardless of whatever vogues are playing elsewhere.
Liam formed the band. Noel never played in one until he came home from roadying for Inspiral Carpets and managed to persuade the four friends from the original lineup that he should join forces with them. Liam appears to have been born to his destiny as a rock star – his mother tells a story of him covering dropped lines in a nativity play with a spontaneous impression of Elvis – but Noel expected to be a builder like his dad. None of his mates were into music, but a first sighting of local boys The Smiths in 1984 turned his world upside down, with Liam equally besotted by The Stone Roses' legendary early Manchester shows, setting the seal on the brothers' musical ambitions a few years later.
We often assume the rise of Oasis to have been instant and unchallenged, but it wasn't: the first review in Britain's NME was noncommittal and the second scathing. Nevertheless, by the time that blistering debut album Definitely Maybe arrived, most observers had no trouble recognising it as a stone cold classic. The instinctive theme was the band's dream of escaping the life they'd been born to, but where a song like Rock 'n' Roll Star, with its chorus of 'Tonight...I'm a rock 'n' roll star!' could seem aloof in other hands, this song wasn't about being a rock star, it was about feeling like one; about that fleeting sense of immortality you got when you stalked into a bar at the age of 18 knowing you looked great, felt great, were the very essence and summation of being – the sense that existence could never, ever have more to offer than this. No one has ever captured this precarious thrill better than Noel, while Liam seems its perpetual embodiment. The singer's six-syllable phrasing of the word 'imagination' in the first line of Cigarettes & Alcohol makes it easily the most iconic song line of the 1990s.
Everything which followed was built on this ecstatic foundation. The second album, (What's The Story) Morning Glory?, went over the top when Wonderwall became a world-wide anthem of 1995, while Oasis became part of the national narrative in the UK - and don't we have the memories to prove it. There were the Maine Road and Knebworth mega shows; the sibling feuds and Liam's leery and often hilarious misdemeanours at a time when London was swinging in a way that it hadn't since the Sixties.
Then there was the insanity surrounding the release of the band's third album, Be Here Now, in 1997, of a type not visited upon the British Isles since Beatlemania and which no album could hope to live up to. Notwithstanding its author's retrospective belief that Be Here Now was rushed, it springs a lot of surprises when listened to with fresh ears at this remove: at the very least, it looks like the most perfect expression of its time; of New Labour's victory and Diana's death and the blizzard of cocaine on the city streets, all of which seemed to feed the inevitable post-millennial comedown, and a sense of disorientation which found focus in Standing on the Shoulder of Giants, the album made just before the sudden departure of founder members Bonehead and Guigs. All the same, a period of rebuilding both band and the brothers' personal lives – all reported as news of national significance because, in a funny sort of way, it was - culminated in 2002's Heathen Chemistry, which combined the band's best collection of songs since Morning Glory with the fresh drive provided by new members Gem Archer and Andy Bell.
The interesting thing about the story so far is that, throughout, the group's live audience continued to grow on a world-wide scale, perhaps because the brothers' triumphs and travails seemed to reflect our own as individuals. Just as they are a part of our story, we feel ourselves to be a part of theirs and perhaps the most revealing thing Noel Gallagher has ever said about the band came in response to a question concerning their lack of razzmatazz live, to which he replied simply that 'if you take the emphasis away from razzmatazz, the audience gets more involved with itself.'
And now we seem to have entered a second phase. Their most recent album, Don't Believe The Truth, rightly heralded as a triumphant return, differs from its predecessors in that the writing is shared amongst the band. Liam continues to blossom and mature as a songwriter, while Gem Archer and Andy Bell have stepped forward with telling contributions and are making it increasingly hard to remember a time when they weren't around. Meanwhile, Noel's own tunes seem to be engaging with the world in a more direct way, almost as wry Information Age protest songs in some cases. Where this might lead, it's impossible to know, but anyone who saw 2005/06's world tour will have found Oasis looking and sounding as vital as at any time since '94.
Andrew Smith 2006
10:29 AM
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