(It should be noted that I wrote to TPRG and asked for permission to include it here on this site, but as usual, I got no reply. Just like the letter to Receiver Records, JCC himself, Arrow Books, and JCC's manager. If I were paranoid, I might say it's a conspiracy).
JOHN COOPER CLARKE
The first acknowledged new wave poet, Manchester's John Cooper
Clarke created a genre all on his own, reciting trenchant, often
hilarious poetry in a thickly accented, adenoidal voice; a deviant
British precursor of rap. Looking like a Blonde on Blonde-era Dylan
(but skinnier) and suggesting a mindset lifted from Jack Kerouac or
Lenny Bruce, Clarke exists with one foot in literature and the other
in rock music, using both but succumbing wholly to neither. On most
of his recordings, musical backing is provided by a nebulous
organization known as the Invisible Girls, which, besides a nucleus of
keyboardist Steve Hopkins and producer Martin Hannett, has included
such name-brand players as Pete Shelley and Bill Nelson. When
combined on vinyl, the two forces, Clarke as satiric commentator and
the Invisible Girls as musical adventurers, make for a unique
listening experience.
Ou Est la Maison de Fromage?, originally released by an early
Manchester independent, is a sloppy, ragged, (almost) unaccompanied,
poorly recorded but enthralling hodgepodge - demos, rehearsals and
recitations - of pieces that wound up on later albums. Clarke's
major-league debut, Disguise in Love, contains such classic inventions
as "(I Married a) Monster from Outer Space," "Psycle Sluts 1 & 2," and
"I Don't Want to Be Nice." The collaboration between words and music
works splendidly, although it should be noted that Clarke's approach
doesn't vary on two tracks performed a cappella. The music leans
heavily to electronics, but varies the sound with guitar and weird
noises.
Walking Back to Happiness is a live recording released as a 10-inch
EP on clear vinyl. For over twenty minutes, Clarke goes one-on-all
against a generally appreciative but partially hostile audience, reciting, jousting, cracking deadly one-liners, dealing with hecklers
and being captivating with scathing, funny numbers like "Majorca" (an
attack on tourists) and "Twat." As a bonus, the EP closes with a
studio track called "Gimmix."
Snap, Crackle [&] Bop. matches impressive packaging (the front
cover, of the original edition at least, is a photo of a sports coat
with working pocket containing a lyric book) with awesomely powerful
songs like "Beasley Street," recalling nothing so much as Dylan's
"Desolation Row." And while "Conditional Discharge" is a cheap pun
about venereal disease, the notable "Thirty Six Hours" is Clarke's
most songlike effort to date. On it, the Invisible Girls' backing
matches the bard's intensity dram for dram, creating dense waves of
electronics and electrics that fit the words perfectly.
Me and My Big Mouth collects Clarke's greatest non-hits, drawing
equally from the three previous records, and suffices as an ideal
introduction and overview.
Zip Style Method, still JCC's most recent release, finds him in a
more upbeat humor, and includes a pair of love songs amidst the
remorseless satire. The Invisible Girls are at their best, working in
a number of idioms. More than any of the other albums, this seems to
be a cooperative venture - more organically entwined than
autonomous - between poet and players. That's a major development,
because it makes Clarke's words stand out less, but convey more.
There aren't any bad tracks; although the intensity level isn't up
there with "Beasley Street," songs like "Midnight Shift," "The Day the
World Stood Still" and "Night People" present different, entertaining
sides to Clarke's musical persona. Clarke has continued to perform as
a poet, but regrettably has not recorded anything of late.
[the JCC review is by Ira Robbins.]
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Ou Est la Maison de Fromage? (nr/Rabid) 1978 (nr/Receiver) 1989
Disguise in Love (nr/CBS) 1978
Walking Back to Happiness EP (nr/Epic) 1979
Snap, Crackle [&] Bop. (nr/Epic) 1980
Me and My Big Mouth (nr/Epic) 1981
Zip Style Method (nr/Epic) 1982