I’m
fairly late in eulogizing Trish Keenan, but there is no reason to omit my own brief tribute to her and her band, Broadcast. I always liked
Broadcast, but I didn’t really “get” them until recently when I
connected them to their influences in mid-sixties psychedelia and early
electronic music. This would have been, of course, obvious to any of
their fans, but it just clicked for me since lately I’ve been interested
in why the mid-sixties holds a profoundly mysterious and unshakable
attraction for me. According to Simon Reynolds, in his new book,
Retromania, it was around 1966 that the last really new thing appeared in
Pop culture, and we’ve been recycling ever since. It was also about
that time, at age 10, I think I started to become aware that culture
could be something beyond mere entertainment. At that time, culture was
represented primarily for me by The Beatles and The Avengers (you have
to start somewhere).
Broadcast's beguiling sound combined almost folksy, lullaby melodies, with layers
of experimental effects evoking vintage electronic music, wrapped in an
atmosphere of creepy darkness. Their first full length album, Noise
Made By People (2000), was reminiscent of mid-60’s pop. HaHa Sound
(2003) delved into a more swirling, psychedelic style, and Tender
Buttons (2005) was reduced to minimal arrangements, à la Young Marble
Giants. Their compilations of rarities and B-sides are treasured for
their more experimental work, some of it sounding very much like Julian
House’s project, The Focus Group.
The
last couple of weeks, I’ve been playing Broadcast’s 3 full-length
albums over and over and over, along with their collaboration with The
Focus Group, Witch Cults of the Radio Age (2009), which, I suppose, must
stand as their last release. The first track from their first album, "
Come On Let’s Go," has continued to have some kind of haunted hold on me.
I’ve been going to sleep with it running in my head, and then waking
up to it still looping in my mental ear. There’s something about the
beginning that is so unsettling. At first it sounds as if it’s in the
Lydian mode, until the second chord, which is the tonic, and you realize
that it all started on the IV chord instead of the I. The B section is
quite sophisticated too, it’s a stream of lovely modulations. The
bones of Broadcast was great songwriting, the results of which evoke,
for me, what could have been hits by 60’s British girl singers, like
Petula Clark, Lulu, or Cilla Black, if they had collaborated with Delia Derbyshire.
Here’s the official video for Come One Let’s Go, from 2000.
Broadcast
performing "Come On Let's Go" live on Jools Holland's Later show in May
2000, two months after the release of their first full-length, The Noise
Made By People.
Trish
died in January of this year from complications with pneumonia after battling the illness for
two weeks in intensive care, having contracted H1N1 following the band's
December 2010 tour in Australia.
Broadcast performing "Lunch Hour Pops" live at the HiFi bar, Melbourne, Australia, only 4 weeks before Trish’s passing:
One
more video, this one directed by Trish for the song, "Black Cat," from
the album Tender Buttons (2005). It appears Trish had an eerie and
beautiful eye for visual art as well:
Thursday, October 13, 2011
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2 comments:
simply and easily my favourite bands....a very good tribute sir
Have you heard about this:
http://theoriginalouterchurch.tumblr.com/post/31687638236
Apparently there's something new on the way that Trish was working on.
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