WOMEN ARE STRANGE WHEN YOU'RE A
STRANGLER
New Musical Express, April 30th, 1977
Phil McNeill
"About giving the
woman some stick."
Thus begins the
ecstatic review of this album (referring to the opener, "Sometimes") in
Strangled, the apparently Stranglers-sanctioned free fanzine of what seems
to be The Stranglers Fan Club.
Evidently the
niceties of the late '60s social humanism - women's lib, gay lib, and the
respectful terminology that seemed such an essential basis for their
fragile advances (not calling women "peaches" of gays "faggots" like you
don't call blacks "nignogs" unless you're wearing an NF armband and have a
crowd of thugs around you) - all this seems to have gone by the board with
the emergence of a generation seemingly devoid of self-respect and thus,
by trite but true extension, devoid of self-respect for others.
It is with this
defiantly oafish and thoughtlessly rebellious "attitude" that The
Stranglers, visitors from another generation which may have wavered into
complacency these past few years, choose to align themselves.
Not being a great
C&W fan, I'd have to think hard before I could name an album as grossly
sexist as this. If I've misunderstood, and someone can demonstrate
the underlying "subversiveness" of the insults that fly relentlessly at
the opposite sex on "Rattus Norvegicus", then I'll be overjoyed to
understand, and to take back my criticism.
But don't tell me
it's just The Rolling Stones and "Brown Sugar" however many years on,
because that was pretty pathetic too. Permanent immaturity is a heavy
price for rock to pay for permanent youth, and maybe we're the ones who
are afraid of change if we're prepared to pay that price.
This is an album
that can move people to tears - female people to tears of humiliation,
that is. I've seen it happen. Really. Bully for The Stranglers - hey, they
get a real response, those guys. They can make you feel sick, too. Take it
away, boys.
"Someday I'm gonna
smack your face/Somebody's gonna call your bluff/Somebody's gonna treat
you rough/You're way past your station/Beat you, honey, till you drop."
That's "Sometimes".
What is it? Realism? It's a godawful, vindictive reality in The
Stranglers' minds then. Documentary? If so, it fails. If they are role
playing then they're just a little too convincing...
"Little lady/With
Dingwalls bullshit/You're so stupid/Fetid brainwaves/Little lady/What
really happens/When you see mirrors/You get the shivers/Making love to/The
Mersey Tunnel/With a sausage/Have you ever been to Liverpool?/Please don't
talk much/It bugs my ears/Tonight you talked/For a thousand
years/Plastic's real when you're sick/Plastic's real when you're real
sick/Tell me what you've got to look so pleased about/London lady/Why did
you lay me?/Your head is crowded/With the names you've hounded/The rings
around your/Eyes they show me/You realise/The party's over/London lady."
Jean Jacques Burnel
once actually quoted those words at me in order to show me "London Lady"
wasn't sexist, which is pretty extraordinary as it's a nauseating putdown
of female promiscuity, with all the old, subliminal, reactionary
what's-all-right-for-the-man-is-wrong-for-the-woman dogma whose
destruction would prove a far more radical step than destroying tower
blocks - a "policy" which The Stranglers, who actually once claimed to be
"too political" for my taste, don't even advocate anyway.
Burnel's defence of
his putdown of the Dingwalls groupie is that "that's no way for a chick to
be". No way for a what to be?
Go on, JJ:"We were drawing
lots on who was going to screw this female column writer, and someone
said, 'But it'd be like chucking a sausage up the Mersey Tunnel.' Someone
else said, 'Dangling a piece of string in a bucket' - it's been done
before, so we decided it wasn't valid to do it.
"It's just about
some chicks in a very small scene. It's not a 'retrogressively sexist
song'," he concluded, quoting a phrase from a previous review of mine.
Well, you could
fool me. For a start, without announcing before playing it that it's only
about one person, not "London Ladies" in general, it's bound to be taken
as a generalisation - and how anyone who stands around sneering at a woman
in such gross chauvinist terms can deny regressive sexism is quite beyond
me.
"She's gone and
left me/I don't know why/She's the queen of the street/What a piece of
meat." And he doesn't know why she left him? That's "Princess Of The
Streets". The rest of it is a tribute to this "piece of meat's"
animalistic (read less than human) sexuality.
"Strolling along
minding my own business/Well there goes a girl and a half/She's got me
going up and down/Walking on the beaches looking at the peaches."
Etcetera. That's
"Peaches". The Stranglers patrol the beaches looking at the sex objects.
"Look over there/Is she trying to get out of that (obscured - presumably a
garment) /Liberation for women, that's what I preach/Preacher man."
Quite. Only a man
could preach that kind of "women's liberation". It's demeaning just
listening to it.
"I was there/She
was there/We did the only/Thing possible."
That's "Ugly". I
don't think they talked about Heidegger, do you? There's only one thing
"chicks" are good for, eh? (Yes, I know insults like "chick" and "yummies"
are horribly frequent in this paper - if I were you I'd write about it).
"I guess I
shouldn't have strangled her to death/But I had to go to work and she had
laced my coffee with acid."
Ah, the surrealist
bit. Actually, he strangles her because her acne assumes massive
proportions while she's tripping. The not unreasonable moral of the story,
which Burnel rather over stresses by bellowing it out all unaccompanied,
is:
"Only the children
of the fucking wealthy can afford to be good looking!"
For once the
grossness is in context as they end with JJ yelling "MUSCLE POWER MUSCLE
POWER..." But compared with The Clash's lyrics, this album is drivel.
There might be some kind of justification if it were mixed with a vestige
of the humanity which, as Nick Kent pointed out about The Clash,
identifying it as "a sense of morality", is conspicuous by its absence
from this scene. There might even be some justification if The Stranglers'
sexism were tempered with the least iota of political drive. But their
"political stance" is just that - a stance and nothing more, on the
evidence of the songs. And the only thing they are anti- is women.
Sad thing is, the
joke's on us because this album is just so damn brilliant musically. The
most playable record I've heard in ages, virtually every track is a little
masterpiece. There isn't another new wave band within several leagues.
Not that The
Stranglers are astounding technicians: (Tell me you aren't being serious-G.S.)
sure they are compared with their peers, but follow them with a Bobby
Womack LP (first in the pile, is all) and their efforts sound mighty
stilted. What The Stranglers have is the aggression that's today's
currency, particularly Burnel's snapping bass, and a knack of stringing
together great series of melodic, compelling riffs.
"Down In The Sewer"
is the archetype, launching from a glorious warm peak into the riff that
best conjures up Burnel and Hugh Cornwell's great patented sneakered
Groucho walk, seesawing like some inane grin, before building to that
weird sub-Ventures bubblegum psychedelic lick from Cornwell's twangy
guitar. As Cornwell (a far better singer than JJ) spits out his crazy tale
of life in the sewer, the band seethe monotonously behind him, Dave
Greenfield rippling off into genuine archaic strangeness on his organ. And
so on - an ever-shifting, disciplined, tough version of the danker
psychedelic days (the strange ones, sure), perfectly arranged in a blunt,
linear fashion - no coming back and finishing where you started for these
blokes, once you've hammered a riff forget it - that rings weird and very
refreshing: tangible music, with just the right immediacy on Martin
Rushent's production.
They may sound a
little like... But The Stranglers have somehow managed to find a place in
rock that hasn't been overkilled, that is instantly comprehensible, yet it
is totally absorbing.
The same claim
could possibly be made for a handful of other recent arrivals, here and in
the States, but for nobody can it be stated as strongly as for The
Stranglers.
And they do have
good songs, too - "Hanging Around" and "Goodbye Toulouse" and "Grip" all
have words that at least do not detract from (and with "Hanging Around"
positively enhance) the music which flows so splendidly throughout the
album.
The cloud nine
lizard propulsion of "Sometimes" drags you in, those twisty guitar/organ
lines cushioning it so well and the chords soaring and skydiving.
"Toulouse" is a
ridiculously thundering ¾, like an army running as they re-envision
Nostradamus' prophesy of the city's destruction; the subsequent Velvets
bludgeoning and less than inspired individual shots of "London Lady" are a
let-down.
"Princess Of The
Streets" is amazing, a deliberate (as in robotic) Scots
jig-meets-the-underworld, with sinuously wild-eyed, real lead guitar
played real good by Cornwell. As for "Hanging Around", well, it's just
truly wonderful.
"He's alright in
the city 'cause he's high above the ground/He's just hanging around.../I'm
moving in the Coleherne with the leather all around me/And the sweat is
getting steamy but their eyes are on the ground/They're just hanging
around."
Why can't they keep
up to that standard elsewhere? Anyway, it's a gas musically. Flipping, we
get "Peaches" - a real violent riff devalued by the wanky would-be Charles
Atlas lyrical posturing until finally a really good line comes up: "Oh
shit, there goes the charabanc/Looks like I'm gonna be stuck here the
whole summer/Well, what a bummer."
And for a few bars
the riff changes completely, vanishing and coming in backwards like
stubbing its toe. Great.
"Grip", the single
(next one's probably "Go Buddy Go", which explains its absence), chugs
along okay. "Ugly" is, I think, Burnel's only vocal apart from "London
Lady", and that's not the only reason they're the worst tracks - it's a
noise; and finally the ecstatic look-at-me-I'm-a-bad-guy West Side Story
underground saga of "Down In The Sewer".
A big tick for the
music, an emphatic cross for the words - but words don't sell records.
Perhaps sadly, they don't stop people buying either.
Nicked from this
Stranglers site
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