MASSIVE ATTACK were
part of Bristol's Wild Bunch crew, a posse who pioneered UK hip hop. In
1986 they helped put together "The Look Of Love", a Bacarach and David
cover version carried by a hard hip hop rhythm. This is quite rightly acknowledged
as the direct root of everything from Smith And Mighty to Soul II Soul
and any record company with half an ear to the ground would gladly have
waved goodbye to more than a few bob for their services Basically. the
three men who make up Massive Attack - musicians/ rappers 3D, Mushroom
and Daddy Gee - had to do nothing but turn up at the studio, turn the right
drum machine on and make sure their press officer made everyone aware of
this bankable history.
But instead of taking
the easy option, Massive Attack have tried - and it shows. Their first
big-label release, "Daydreaming". burned a large hole in my consciousness,
so much so that it made most of 1990's other releases seem like the work
of artless amateurs. Their forthcoming eponymous debut album, meanwhile,
should ensure that "Daydreaming" isn't seen as a flash in the creative
pan. Massive Attack have a lot to say. And despite the fact that their
roots are in club culture and club DJs are supporting them, they see themselves
as an album band.
In effect, Massive
Attack inject new meaning into this well-worn phrase. We're not talking
about an album band in the same way that someone in an army surplus greatcoat
would talk about Yes or ELP. We are talking about a kind of music which
demands an attention span longer than the longest mix on a 12-inch single.
Time and time again in talking to Massive Attack, the words Pink Floyd
keep cropping up. Massive Attack have a secret respect for the old rockers,
for the way in which their music just exists, forever outside any categories.
This is a frightening concept for people outside Liverpool who don't smoke
marijuana, and so Massive Attack are kind of shy about it. After telling
me how much he likes Pink Floyd's "Dark Side Of The Moon". Mushroom asks
me not to make too much of it, as if it was going to do him some harm.
But let's tell the truth. Massive Attack are Pink Floyd with bigger bass
sounds and better drum patterns. Sometimes they are that trippy, and most
of the time they are that good. A spaced out mix of dub tactics, ambient
effects and downright surreal rap. their forthcoming selection of non-dance
songs should be treated with the respect it deserves. "We want to make
good music," says Mushroom. a man who
"There is a school
of thought that reckons we need a club hit. Personally, I don't see it
that way. To me it's against everything we stand for"
applies thousands
of pounds worth of technology so that it all sounds as simple and as perfect
as a decent bread recipe. "We're not just interested in making something
for people to throw their arms and legs about to on a dancefloor." And
so the Massive Attack legend begins to crumble.
"People always ask us
about The Wild Bunch," says 3D. "The truth is it's just history to us now.
Nobody in Bristol chases us to get our autographs. I don't know why people
go on about it so much, telling us we started this and we started that,
like we were the only British musicians ever to have created anything of
value. When I look at what we actually did, it amounts to about three days
work in seven years.
Still, the name keeps
cropping up. Nellee Hooper, co-producer of Soul II Soul and the man behind
Sinead O'Connor's "Nothing Compares 2 U" also contributed to that three
days' work, as did Milo, who is now working with the much touted Japanese
crew Major Force, one of the many outfits to have been inspired by The
Wild Bunch collective vibe.
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Nellee Hooper has, in
fact, remixed "Unfinished Sympathy" from the LP, It's something that concerns
Mushroom. "There have been arguments over that. There is a school of thought
that reckons we need a club hit. Personally, I don't see it that way. To
me it's against everything we stand for. To me. music is like a clay pot.
When it's been baked, you can't smash it up and rebuild it. You don't hear
of people remixing Led Zeppelin or the Mahavishnu Orchestra."
Mushroom says this as
a member of the Massive Attack team that has provided us with some of the
most radical remixes in recent years. Perhaps it's different when it's
somebody else's pot. Massive Attack kicked Lisa Stansfield's pot all around
the room. They gave Neneh Cherry's pot a good seeing to, and when they'd
finished with Boy George's Jesus Loves You it didn't look like a pot at
all. 3D, the voice that whispers so persuasively over much of Mushroom
and Daddy Gee's new age dub, sees it a different way. Not quite the spiritual
astronaut he appears to be on album tracks like "Blue Lines". he's still
fairly oblique when he says this: "People steal your soul when you remix
for them. Whatever the price is, it can never be high enough."
Aside from the often
startling simplicity of the music, it's the polite West Country tones of
3D and longtime collaborator Tricky Kid that makes you see this music as
something very different. The things he talks about come across as inspired
stream-of-consciousness word- play. One minute they'll be worrying about
the environment or slagging off Thatcher, the next they'll be talking about
Studio One, Subbuteo, old Paper Lace records and The Beatles. 3D has no
explanations ready when I make it clear that all this amuses and impresses
me. "In a way I was just fired by the originality of the old school rappers.
The accent comes easy. I have to check myself sometimes before it gets
too Bristolian and we end up sounding like The Wurzels. It's really just
a bit of everything and a bit of nothing. I hope nobody's looking for guidance
in there because there isn't any. They're just thoughts about good things,
about nature and stuff."
In person and on record,
3D comes across as a deeply untroubled person, a reflective character who's
just watching the world go by. Inevitably. he doesn't listen to club music
much. Instead he likes to relax with ambient tapes of "streams and birds
chirping" on hits prized limited edition Sony Budokan Walkman. 3D mentions
`living' in his headphones during his rap on "Daydreaming" - "When he puts
that on," says Mushroom, "you know that the conversation has finished for
the day."
3D is also an ex-graffiti
artist who has graduated to one-man shows in posh London galleries. It's
almost expected when he says, "I'm colour-blind, though. I have a different
way of seeing things."
Like Mushroom, he
is concerned that Massive Attack will be perceived as another club act
with a couple of 12-inch singles up their sleeves. By the time you hear
their debut LP, I find it hard to believe that anyone will confuse them
with Adamski or any of the current crop of post-rave techno clones. "This
is a thinker's album. You can rock to it, you can nod your head to it,
and that's enough to stimulate the body," says 3D.
This I can confirm
to be true. The only thing I have to add is that 1991 without this record
will be like chips without salt and vinegar - useless. I was going to mention
the fact that Neneh Cherry and reggae legend Horace Andy are in there too,
but it seemed like icing on a near-perfect cake. Such impressive guest
names would, for any other group, be necessary. Massive Attack, however,
need help from nobody.
1. Bristol
Rising.
2. Massive
Attack website.
3. Portishead.
4. Island
Records [ Tricky ].
links to other pages........
-
10
years of house
-
Patrick
Adams
-
Bluffers
Guide to Dub
-
David
Bowie review
-
Bristol
Rising
-
British
Films
-
Dawn
of Detroit Techno
-
Depeche
Mode
-
Drawn
Slippy - 70's British comics
-
Bruce
Forrest
-
Guide
to 808,909,303
-
Hacienda
club
-
Jane's
Addiction
-
Marshall
Jefferson
-
Chaka
Kahn
-
Kingbee
Records
-
KLF
-
Kraftwerk
-
Krautrock
-
The
La's
-
Manic
Street Preachers
-
Massive
Attack
-
Joe
Meek
-
Miami
Bass
-
Moog
Synthesizer
-
Northern
Heroes
-
Paradise
Garage
-
The
Pet Shop Boys
-
Punk-Funk
-
Scallies
rally to Pink Floyd
-
Yes
-
Kenneth
Williams
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