M1-49 Etron Fou Leloublan

M1-49 Hep!

I first encountered (not "met" or "saw" or "heard" - far too tame words to use with THIS crackling, sizzling band) Etron Fou Leloublan at the same new music Festival where I first met Miniatures artiste Maggie Nicols. We hit (now that's a better word) it off straight away, and it was a no-brainer (perfect word) to invite them to join this project. Their witty, anarchic music (anti-Magma, contra-pomposity) - example: "The disastrous journey of the pitiful python" - grabbed my musical funny bone from the first note - they were an ideal band for Miniatures!

Based in Grenoble, this avant-garde power trio had just (or were just about to) release their third album, entitled "En Public Aux États-Unis D'Amérique" - evidently a live album recorded in the USA and described by one listener thus:
"One of the most baroque bands of the French underground, bringing together free jazz (ahhh, what a misused label), disoriented prog rock and popular French chanson - a salutary blend of sub-music and second-degree poetry! Albert Ayler meets Soft Machine / Gong meets Boby Lapointe and perhaps Colette Magny…?" (to which I would add two further influences, Beefheart and a Gallic punk rock attitude, resulting in their inclusion in Chris Cutler's groundbreaking yet unifying Rock in Opposition). Someone also wrote that they were a "viable, musical alternative to both French rock'n'roll and French free jazz", which apparently had been stagnating at the time.

The band was founded in 1973 by actor/singer/saxophonist Chris Chanet - who played on and co-wrote their first album Batelages - but quit in 1976 just before it was released. Over the thirteen years of their existence (1973-86), the trio were sometimes a quartet, with founder members Ferdinand Richard (bs) and Guigou Chenevier (dr) always present, two other sax players replacing Chanet, keyboardist/singer Jo Thirion joining in 1980, and Miniatures artiste Fred Frith (gtr) guesting and later producing.

They released eight albums in all, plus in 1991, a 43-song 3-CD compilation, wittily titled "43 Songs." Their final and most successful studio album "Face Aux Elements Dechaines" was produced by the mighty Frith - and then they broke up. Ha!

They played over 500 concerts in 17 countries and went down a storm every time. OK, that last comment was a guess, based on their brilliant performance that wowed me at Rheims. There are precious few live videos to be found, malheureusement. But thankfully, there is the live album.

A career high point was reported to be their electrifying performance in Zurich at the 1982 M.A.K. Festival (Musik ausser Kontrolle = Music out of Control).

All was not lost after they split, because Ferdinand (a really delightful, articulate man, with whom I communicated a lot when organising their Mins track) moved on to numerous other lively creative projects including...

👌 DROPERA - a "twisted rock opera" with Frith (they called themselves Fred & Ferd)
👌 An urban musical concept with Czech violinist Iva Bittová and Czech drummer Pavel Fajt.
👌 ARMINIUS, a concept album and performance with Japanese violinist Takumi Fukushima and others.
👌 E-POP by Ferdinand et les Diplomates, with drummer Gilles Campaux and hip-hop turn-tablist DJ Rebel - Richard's last recording (released 2007).
Even while he was still with Etron Fou, Ferdinand released two solo albums including En Avant, scored for two bass guitars and a cello (played by Tom Cora), with eight songs, each sung in a different language. Since basically quitting music, Ferdinand has spent his time in many significant capacities organising musical and cultural events and programs covering many genres. There must be a multitude of amateurs, artists and bands who are grateful for this profilic gentilhomme's generous efforts. Meanwhile, Guigou continues to play in many different bands - he's still the unstoppable Mad-Shit-White-Wolfman.
To know more (a lot more), THIS LONG INTERVIEW with Etron Fou Leloublan members in 2014 will plunge you deep into their amazing story.
Alors - Long Live the Wolf!!!

UPDATE 2022/5/4: GREAT NEWS FROM BLOG READER KAI WEBER: Just a few weeks ago, Guigou Chenevier published his memoir of the Etron Fou Leloublan years in a bilingual, French/English edition! Order it here (shipping very reasonable - for me, only 3 Euros to Japan!): 
http://www.lenkalente.com/product/une-histoire-d-etron-fou-leloublan-de-guigou-chenevier)

Next up: 1/1320 of 22 chaotic hours equals...

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Announcement: THE 3RD MINIATURES ALBUM!!!

Dear Friends and music lovers, a special announcement to let you know that MINIATURES 2020 - the THIRD Miniatures - has just been released!

This time, I had nothing to do with it except to give the project my blessing and provide encouragement and advice. It is in fact made as a 40th Anniversary tribute to the original 1980 Miniatures album. I am deeply touched by this huge, brilliant gesture. and heartily thank all the artists involved. Of course my very special thanks must go to the three stalwart men responsible: Alan Davies, Barry Lamb, and William Hayter, who have really outdone themselves and me, by creating a massive collection of no less than 124 miniature tracks, including several by artists from the first two Miniatures albums.

This amazing collection of 124 miniature masterpieces includes a huge array of incredible talent, including members of King Crimson, Caravan, Fairport Convention, Henry Cow, Global Village Trucking Company, Curved Air, The Damned and The Blockheads as well as Billy Bragg, Toyah, Tom Robinson, Terry Riley, the list goes on and on . . . It is released by a newly-formed label called The 62nd Record Company (get it?) and is being sold by Chris Cutler (Henry Cow drummer)'s long-established avant-rock company, Recommended Records. The list price is a very reasonable £20, for a deluxe double CD-plus-book set (downloads and vinyl versions are also planned).

HERE is the launch video for the project. In addition, many of the artists have created or are creating videos for their tracks (a kind of 21st-century equivalent to the original Miniatures poster). These can be viewed HERE.

For another description, and to purchase Miniatures 2020, please go HERE!

I was hoping to complete this Miniatures blog by the time MINIATURES 2020 was released, but I stumbled at the 48th hurdle and still have three more tracks to cover, which will be done just as soon as I can.

The story continues... Thank you all!

Morgan

M1-48 Kevin Coyne

JAMES, MARK & ME (IN THE MANNER OF TOM WAITS) by Kevin Coyne

These three faces were drawn by Kevin with remarkable fluency and spontaneity, for inclusion on the Miniatures poster. They really look alive, don't they - as if they could start speaking at any moment. Now I wonder: which one is Rothko, which one Joyce and which Coyne (or maybe Waits)??? Kevin gives nothing away, and with this vivid song trips laughingly into the afterlife leaving us to ponder. In his miniature declaration of independence AND empathy with three of the most startling figures of the twentieth century, he found time to call to the beckoning afterlife not once, but TEN times:

Oh Mark Rothko!
Or may I say - you're beautiful - beautiful
Oh, you're so beautiful!
And you and Jimmy Joyce

Are dancing with one voice
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
In Heaven
And I will be with you SOON - laughing....!

"Soon", as it turned out, was 24 years later, and it was too damn soon, for he was only 60 years old when lung fibrosis took him from us peacefully at home in Nuremberg. He'd spent his last two decades there, following a nervous breakdown and an exit from England. At that time he was able to quit his drink habit, and his creativity took off like a rocket, with book-writing and painting added to his prolific recording and touring activities. And I mean prolific - in 1992 he painted 1000 pictures, given away with a 1000-CD issue of his Burning Head album. Life really seemed to begin at forty (approx) for Kevin. This 3-part documentary beautifully shows Kevin in his happiest, final years, blooming in Nuremberg with his son Robert and his wife Helmi who is nothing less than an angel. If you don't watch any other videos linked to in this blog - watch this one. All three parts. Tissues may be needed 💛

(Oh, and then read this interview with Helmi. Bring more tissues) 💙

(Oh and then keep in touch via Kevin's Facebook page, where Helmi posts from time to time) 💚

I had some heartwarming yet brief experiences of the peaceful side of Kevin, several times when I met him (usually by chance) in various pubs, or more often rock clubs in London in the year or two prior to Miniatures. Although a mere six years older than me, he had a welcoming, avuncular air about him with his bear hug greeting, and then frequent warm shoulder/arm squeezes to make a friendly point as we chatted. I didn't know then that as a young man he had worked for four years as a psychiatric nurse and drugs counsellor, but he did seem to me like the ideal therapist (who I've still not met yet, by the way) who heals by warmth, chatting, caring, touching, and smiling. In a word, camaraderie. Just a pleasure to be with for a slightly confused young fellow like wot I was then. Sometimes, after an hour or two's steady sipping, the demon drink would start to take hold. Then his voice would get louder and more strident as he increasingly barked out his pain and frustration with the world in general. In these darker moments he reminded me of Mott's mentor Guy Stevens, who had a similar mix of brilliant musical sensibility and raging anger. At times, sadly 'cos I couldn't seem to reason with him, I'd have to make my excuses, give him a hug and leave him to vent. It seemed dark clouds were looming on his horizon, the mindstorms that would drive him out of his own country and on to the sunnier fields of Bavaria.

But fuelled by this genuine passion, Kevin's musical career had been going ahead full steam, with a series of ten well-received, uncompromising albums on Virgin Records between 1972 and 1980. During that time he also co-wrote a musical referencing the Kray twins, and co-produced a documentary film on art activities in a high security psychiatric hospital. Such was the gritty honesty and emotional drive in his music (epitomised so beautifully in his miniature) that he was praised by Johnny Rotten (on Desert Island Discs, of all programmes) and his songs were covered by The Mekons, Ruts DC, Wreckless Eric and Will Oldham, among others.

He never seemed very comfortable with the idea of being a performer and a public figure and especially a popstar, but he did it anyway. He just had to. In this TV video from 1978 you can see he is driven, and he's really good at dancing his fears away, almost pogoing with the Devil. In this live clip he sings, alone, a cappella, his classic, very raw Marjory Razorblade, perhaps influenced by an inmate he met in a mental ward who had attempted to end their life with cold steel. Five years earlier he belted out this version which leads into a raucous jam showing what a fine, powerful blues voice he had. Someone left a poignant, poetic comment on this one:

Eastbourne Ladies flashing their knickers,
Jackie in his boarding house, paper hat on head,
pining for Edna, his love long gone.
Lives played out in the shadow of the mental hospital
on the hill where Coyne once worked.
Max Wall singing the blues.
A desolate, desperate, beautiful scrapbook of stories,
a scuffed blues bestiary spat out by England's Gogol,
the Bard of Derby, Kevin Coyne,
dead at 60, coughing his lungs up,
missed like mad.

The blues were in Kevin's blood from a young age. His first band Siren were championed by seminal UK DJ John Peel. In a review of their second album, noted US music writer Robert Christgau wrote in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies : "Like Fleetwood Mac, this is British blues that neither chokes on false roots nor enmires itself in boogie reductionism. Kevin Coyne's humorously belligerent drawl embodies the band's wit and its punk chauvinism."

Inevitably, Kevin with his fierce creative drive had to move away from blues covers and co-composing and onwards to a full-on solo career, after just two Siren albums. One of the last of his prolific Virgin Records output is of special interest: an album called "Babble" made in collaboration with Dagmar Krause, singer of Slapp Happy, Henry Cow, Art Bears and other brilliantly experimental combos. (Sidenote: Dagmar sang on this short Japanese TV ad for mineral water I composed in 2000):

Dydo Miu TV ad


On the Babble LP sleeve Kevin hand-wrote these words:
'Babble' is essentially a love story.
The lovers are shown struggling to communicate -
succeeding then failing.
The lovers are lost... does it really matter?
It's the late sixties...
He loves she and she loves him
his heart his blood and hers his soap
but love lusts on and they just mope
to find themselves together.

American artist Will Oldham (AKA Bonnie Prince Billy) claimed that Babble had "changed my life" and covered two songs from the album: Come Down Here and I Confess. He also formed a side project called The Babblers, to play only covers of songs from Babble.
Kevin staged Babble as a live musical dialogue in a stark stage setting at London's Oval Theatre, with Kevin and Dagmar standing on opposite sides of a table, as many couples do in their kitchens, painfully thrashing out their relationship. Here's a snippet of it in another setting, followed by some words from Kevin.

Some words from Kevin... I think now I should just hand you over to these videos and let him speak for himself, his amazing self...

🔴 STRANGE LOCOMOTION the 2nd single by Siren (released 1971 - not sure when this concert was). Followed by a brief, wry interview.

🔴 HOUSE ON THE HILL on The Old Grey Whistle Test, BBC TV, 1973. Written whilst working as an orderly in a mental hospital and suffering from depression himself.

🔴 SUNDAY MORNING SUNRISE in front of the bleak Berlin Wall, 1982 - yet it's a love song about a Sunday morning cuddle.

🔴 ENGLAND ENGLAND 1986. TV doc where Kevin discusses his musical England England depicting early 60s Britain under the threat of the Kray twins. Features musical extracts.

Eventually, Kevin did make it to heaven, I'm sure. After all, he did ask to come in, as shown in this last, overpowering video, which has a long German-language introduction. Even without understanding the words you can tell how much the guy loves Kevin. And when Kevin does come on... well, all I can say is, this is as real as it gets. Bless you, Kevin; I'm very, very proud and honoured to have your light shining on Miniatures 🙏

🔴 KNOCKING ON HEAVEN'S DOOR

Postscript: a song I found while trawling youtube, called "KC - in memory of Kevin Coyne," Beautifully elegiac. Performed in Finland in 2007, three years after he left us. I'll try to find the lyrics...

Next up: three cool (French hep) cats...

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M1-47 David Cunningham

INDEX OF ENDS by David Cunningham


My education ended at age 18 with me leaving grammar school with 8 O-levels and 4 A-levels, none of which I’ve used since (except in a general way, with my ongoing love for books and meticulousness). Grammar school seemed to be a place where we were driven hard down roads we didn’t want to take, and handed reams of homework with which to fill up our hours at home. I never experienced what I imagined to be the luxury of lolling about in a sleek modern college or university, picking and choosing which lectures to attend; having, at last, a proper active sex life; and creating whatever madcap projects I felt like.

David Cunningham, on the other hand, did. Or at least he did the last part of my little vent. It was in Maidstone College of Art that he first conceived of The Flying Lizards, and recorded their first single, “Summertime Blues” (see link below). This art college was the first to be founded in the Surrey/Kent area, in 1867. Among its staff in the 1950s was the great surrealist writer/artist Mervyn Peake. By the early 60s it had also attracted David Hockney, Elisabeth Frink and Ruskin Spear. Tracey Emin studied there in the mid-80s. And to put a cherry on the Maidstone cake, Ralph Steadman was living in the area at the time he explosively created his miniature - and the cover - for Miniatures (and still is).

As a record producer, Cunningham collaborated extensively, notably in the late 70s/early 80s with This Heat, Wayne County, Steve Beresford, General Strike, Palais Schaumburg and Miniatures artiste Michael Nyman. His way of creating so much music/sound with such minimal gear at that time inspired me to make my Hybrid Kids album on a 4-track recorder in a tiny Notting Hill Gate bedsit. A refreshing change, following my recent experiences working at The Virgin Manor with Hendrix/Zeppelin engineer Eddie Kramer and at George Martin’s AIR Studios with Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick, at no little cost. The DIY spirit was in the air for many of us that had felt, and not resisted, the wind of change blasted out by punk.

David, almost inevitably, moved into film music. One of his first scores was for a fascinating film titled Ghost Dance (Ken MacMullen,1983) and featured Jamie Muir and Michael Giles (both ex-King Crimson). He has maintained a relationship with MacMullen ever since, creating scores for at least six of his films. David’s extensive CV indicates that he has worked repeatedly with a number of other cutting edge film/TV directors including William Raban, Stephen Partridge, Jane Thorburn, and Geoff Dunlop, as well as creating music for installations in many countries.

Considering that MTV wasn’t launched until 1981, the Flying Lizards were quick off the mark making their own remarkably inventive music videos. And with the festive season nearly upon us, I hope David won’t mind if bring on a grand finale to this blog post by rolling out several of their fascinating, fun-filled, dada-frolic filmic feasts. Here we go...

🔴 SUMMERTIME BLUES with interesting Gilliam-esque visuals.

🔴 The definitive version of MONEY 
As seen later by a bewildered studio audience on Top of the Pops. David on drums and bits, his regular partner in crime, the six-foot Deborah Evans-Stickland on peevish vocals. Plus, I believe that’s Steve Beresford prodding a piano full of money and some musical toys.
Best youtube comments:
Sounds like my last wife.
These guys make Kraftwerk seem like Madness.
I only wish all the gold diggers I ran into were as upfront as this. At least there's a level of charm in blunt shallowness.
I am still the only person I know that bought their albums. Notice that I said albums......plural!
Weird how the snare is behind the beat at the start but seems to catch up later. Very avant garde.

🔴 A live version of MONEY performed some years later as part of The Steampunk Opium Wars, with “Rule Britannia” played by notorious rock critic/blues guitarist Charles Shaar Murray.
Best youtube comments:
Deborah is CLASS.
Brutal just awful.
She has literally zero talent.

🔴 1980 Interview on Australian TV 
Interviewer: Why did you choose to do the vocals like that?
Deborah Evans-Strickland: Can't sing. A lot of people in pop music can't sing.

🔴 David and Deborah comment in 2016
Best comments from David:
I just assumed that she’d probably sing like Tina Turner; this turned out to not be the case.
The Flying Lizards really, not being much of a group, and I’m not much of a musician, and the singer kind of couldn’t sing very well. I hesitate to use the term “get away with it” but - we got away with it!
Best comment from Deborah: 
People may wonder why I speak the songs instead of singing them. The answer is really very straightforward: singing is more difficult.

🔴 DIZZY MISS LIZZIE
Best youtube comments:
BEAUTIFUL!
Sounds like junk.
The people who don't like it, doesn't understand. You got to know to get it. Reply back if you need to know, I got the answer. It's European.
I think the Americans filmed the moon landing in the same studio.

🔴 THEN HE KISSED ME
No video but good strings and quite a nice comment:
Eye drops will clear that up.

🔴 SEX MACHINE, in 1984. Prepared piano meets da funk. 
Best youtube comments:
No drugs were harmed in the making of this film.
I love this song... James Brown did a much better version though.
Finally I can listen to James Brown without having to deal with all that pesky soul.
Not too many things make me proud to be English these days, but this does.
I think I came?

L

🔵 THIS VIDEO IS NOT RELATED

Next up: the Realm of the Coyne. 

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M1-46 Michael Nyman

M1-46 89-90-91-92

I’m getting near the end of this blog, so I’d like to mention what a pleasure it is to have the time and space to expand on the miniature sleeve notes I was able to provide on the original album cover. An LP cover is 12” square, so that’s 12 x 12 = 144 square inches. Divided by 51 tracks, that equals a hair over 2.8 square inches per track. Not a lot of space in which to include track title, artist name, and a descriptive blurb. So, if I may, and for the first time, in the spirit of Michael Nyman’s systems music I’ll systematically go through Michael’s 1980 mini-blurb and build on each line. As Michael once said: “I'm not a great inventor from scratch. What I do is to use, steal, acquire, reproduce or re-cycle music from other musicians.” Here goes...

The author of “Experimental Music - Cage and Beyond” (Studio Vista 1974)

Almost 50 years ago there was nowhere near as wide a choice of books on contemporary music as there are now, especially the experimental, minimal and modern music that started in the 60s. Michael’s book filled a distinct gap in the field and thus became highly influential. It covered areas and and figures such as indeterminacy, electronics, Fluxus, Feldman, Cage, Ichiyanagi, Scratch Orchestra, and in the final chapter, determinacy, new tonality, and minimal music. He is credited for being the first writer to use the term “minimal” in music, although it had been applied to visual art since the mid-60s. The decade prior to the book’s publication marked a new departure from what avant-garde music had become (bafflingly complex and elitist). Influenced by the global impact of rock music, many composers were turning towards more sensual music, using simpler means combined with fresh, new, invigorating ideas that could communicate with a wider audience. It was almost as if Stockhausen had acquired a sudden passion for Louie Louie. Michael’s book was perfectly timed and written from the eye of this balmy but revolutionary cultural hurricane. 46 years on, it still makes a great read - even more so with the added preface by Brian Eno.

Mike formed his own band in ‘77

Actually the Michael Nyman Band was formed in 1976 to provide music for a performance of “Il Campiello,” a comedy by the 18th century Venetian Carlo Goldoni. It would seem they were a kind of street band, but without the use of a P.A., because he chose the more raucous instruments such as rebecs, saxophones, and shawms. The band enjoyed the experience and decided to continue, so Michael started to compose more for them, and fairly soon they evolved into a fully amplified line-up of string quartet, double bass, clarinet, three saxophones, horn, trumpet, bass trombone, bass guitar, and piano. Concerts, then, had some of the quality of the loudness of a rock band rather than a genteel salon orchestra. Pounding rhythms were a feature, even without drums or percussion. His miniature, then, is fairly typical of his work at that time. That said, quieter moments of great beauty such as this were also to be had.

& also made a systems music LP, Decay Music (Obscure Records)

Also from 1976, this was Michael’s first album, and the sixth of ten albums released on Brian Eno’s Obscure Records label between 1975 and 1978. The label was distributed by Island Records, which was mainly a rock/reggae label, with acts such as Eno’s Roxy Music, Bob Marley, and the first version of my combo Mott the Hoople

Numbers certainly played a big part in Michael Nyman’s early music. There’s a numeric simplicity and repetitiveness in it, but less obviously “minimal” than say, Glass or Reich. Even his birthdate is numerically sequential: 23/3/44. The first side of Decay Music was piano music composed to accompany a film called “1-100” by Peter Greenaway which consisted simply of the numbers one to a hundred, shot in various locations. Greenaway asked Michael to come up with a score that would be a musical parallel to the visuals. Michael was at that time analysing the famous Blue Danube Waltz by Strauss. To his surprise, he discovered that the first section of that piece contains exactly 100 bars, so he constructed his own piece by picking one chord from each bar and playing them in sequence but on various parts of the piano, with gradually increasing complexity. He also recorded it 4 times while only listening to the track he was playing, so that the out-of-sync mix of the 4 superimposed tracks created “unforeseen, accidental concurrences and staggered sonorities.”

He’s now working on a new version of ‘The Ride of the Valkyries’ for the Graz Festival (Austria Nov. ‘81)

This sounds like a fine idea, but on doing some serious googling 40 years on, I can find no mention of it anywhere. Please feel free to comment if you know anything about this projected performance. For now, I hope this rather miniature version of the Wagner classic will suffice.

& has created several scores for films by Peter Greenaway

Michael was Greenway’s preferred composer, at least from 1978 to 1991, and with both of them having a strong interest in the baroque era, it was a lasting and creative collaboration, resulting in some extraordinarily rich, colourful, highly acclaimed films such as The Draughtsman's Contract (1982), A Zed & Two Noughts (1985), Drowning by Numbers (1988), The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989) and Prospero's Books (1991).

In 1994 Jane Campion’s film “The Piano” brought him to a much wider audience and massive success, with a score that was more emotional and warm than much of what he had composed till then. His career moved into a higher gear and he found himself scoring Hollywood movies such as Gattaca (1997), working with other leading directors such as Patrice Leconte and Michael Winterbottom, and garnering 11 major awards and 18 nominations - and a CBE - so far.

including ‘Vertical Features Remake’, ‘1-100’, & ‘A Walk Through H’

Vertical Features Remake (1978) is definitely on the experimental side of film-making. Quotes from IMDB user reviews include: The very essence of film / This is a complete masterpiece / made up documentary using random archive images of people and vertical objects like posts, poles, tree trunks etc in a domestic landscape / depicts four attempts by presumptuous analytical academics trying their own hands at attempting to reconstruct an artist’s vision / the amusingly foreboding piano key poundings that accompany and punctuate each scene are wildly different / leaving me in hysterics as the pianist is just assaulting the poor thing / The music reinforces the tediousness, and works as a spectacularly strange and minimal soundtrack, perfectly suiting the film. If you're a film appreciator like myself, you have to watch this film. REALLY, IT'S THAT GOOD!
Of course there was someone who felt the need to whine: I must say I was more bored than entertained with this one here. Maybe Greenaway is best at 20 minutes max (the film lasts 43 minutes).

A Walk Through H: The Reincarnation of an Ornithologist (1979, another short - 41mins). Although a thumbnail description seems to indicate that it could be a dry, minimal-style film (“a multilevel tour of a museum, of the 92 drawings displayed therein, and of the experiences in collecting the drawings”) it has engendered some passionate reviews:

Easily one of the most thrilling and totally enjoyable films I've ever seen / as complete and expansive in scope as any epic out there / I honestly do not know of a more engaging film / the maps, the avian companions, the music, and the narrated story meld perfectly / like moving to another country and realizing one has learnt a new language without trying / the distinctive minimalist music of Michael Nyman. I felt the film was at its strongest latterly when this impressive soundtrack took centre stage at the expense of the narration.

This track utilises the titles music for the last 4 of the 92 biographies that make up Greenaway’s 1980 film ‘The Fall’

My mistake - the title is actually The Falls. One reviewer says of the previously-mentioned film: “This early work was greatly expanded in vision and changed from birth to death in the later ‘The Falls.' But to plumb that film you must fight tedium.” Really? Let’s see some reviews of this 195-minute film, which was based on 92 BBC documentary-style shorts that record the lives of 92 unfortunate people, each a victim of a VUE (Violent Unexplained Event), and all with last names beginning with "Fall." 

“The musical score left me speechless, and after three hours of listening to it, I am sure it will be stuck in my head all day tomorrow at work. The way it progresses from one victim to the next is fascinating.”

“It [the film] is like minimalism, with a strict repetitive structure which builds towards a dramatic climax. Nyman's score helps immeasurably in this development, beginning as isolated notes and chords, and finishing as an oratorio. The theme he wrote for the opening credits, "The Boulder Orchard," is fabulous.”

Another passionate reviewer stated: “Greenaway's collaborations with Michael Nyman (8 films) is every bit as strong as the collaboration between Reggio and Glass. I believe that both teams have produced some of the greatest films of the century.” 

To conclude the commentary on the Greenaway/Nyman collaboration, here’s a quote from a review of Greenaway’s 1999 film "8 1/2 Women.” “Most damningly, this film suffers even more than ‘The Pillow Book’ or ‘The Baby of Macon’ from the absence of composer Michael Nyman. If the two men can't patch things up, Greenaway needs to find another composer, and quickly, to fill the strange aural void left within his recent films.”

Somewhere along the line it seems that Michael felt the need to breathe different air. Japanese culture seemed to attract him, in particular Okinawan bands like the folk-rock band Nēnēs who he asked me about when he came here in 1993 to perform. He ended up visiting them in their “Shima Uta” (Island Song) bar in Naha, the capital of Okinawa, and produced a recording of them singing, among other songs, a moving version of Bob Marley’s “No Woman No Cry” at a fund-raising concert he organised in Okinawa to benefit victims of the massive 1995 earthquake in Kobe. He used this recording in his film “Earthquakes” - a 5-screen multimedia creation which opens with a scene of an old Japanese woman crying. It goes on to show scenes from earthquakes around the world. From 7:15 in this video, Michael talks about “Earthquakes" at length (the preceding part is also well worth watching even in Spanish, as it is a fine visual digest of his career so far). The project included Eisenstein’s footage of Mexico, a country where, like yours truly in Japan, Michael has spent much of the latter half of his life.

In Japan in the 1990s, driven by the bubble economy, there was an unprecedented rush of construction when approximately 1,000 concert halls opened during a single decade. One of these was Tokyo Pan, built by Panasonic as a multi-channel surround-sound space with hundreds of speakers imbedded in the walls and ceiling. Numerous concerts of contemporary music were held there, including a Michael Nyman concert. I had invited two Japanese musician friends to come with me to the concert, thinking it would be the Michael Nyman Band we were to see. As it turned out, it was only Michael who walked out on stage, sat at the grand piano, and proceeded to play an intense 90-minute piece harking back to his Greenaway period, with its repetitive motorik rhythms . Afterwards, I asked him, “What was that piece?” He answered, modestly: “Oh, just something I jotted down on the plane during the flight from Australia.” Would that we were all capable of such remarkable jottings!

Coming up: Michael's erstwhile student, then producer...

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M1-45 Mark Perry

M1-45 Talking World War III Blues

Mark Perry aka Mark P, one of the most political and activist of the punks. A concert by him and his band Alternative TV was much more than just another a punk/reggae thrash, it was a call to arms, a challenge, a rally.

I just checked this website and found that ATV only played 3 times at the punk haven, the Roxy in Covent Garden (apparently - I could have sworn I'd seen them there more often; maybe it's just the power of their performances that still ring loud in my memory). Each time they played the Roxy (it says), they were opening for Wayne County (now Jayne County) and the Electric Chairs, with whom I played briefly, though not at these three shows (June 23 & 30, July 1, 1977). So, thanks to my friendship with Wayne and the Chairs, I discovered Mark's unique punk style.



ATV gigs often began with him literally standing on a soapbox and berating the crowd like it was Speaker's Corner, telling them to stop blindly following fashion, no matter how cool it currently was, and find their own bloody thing to do. Which was fair enough. And I'd bet a good percentage of those who attended Roxy gigs DID start their own band or organic farm or T-shirt shop or dub project or something.

Mark's own bloody thing was a hand-written, photocopied punk magazine called Sniffin' Glue. As grass roots as it gets, it covered the rise of punk, from the inside, and is now considered to be as valuable as something like the lost sea scrolls of the movement. I don't know if he named it in the same way I named my indie label, Pipe Records at that time (I was smoking a pipe while thinking of a name). Its full name was "Sniffin' Glue + Other Rock'n'Roll Habits for Punks!" It lasted just over a year: 12 issues from July '76 to August '77. Circulation started at 50 and quickly rose to 15,000. Not bad!



Currently a full original set of Sniffin’ Glue can be had for a mere £13,000. More than one paperback book version was published in 2000 and later, with additional texts by Perry. These can be had for a mere £50 to £200. The full display of these rare (only 14 items on sale worldwide, today) jewel-like items is here. I do hope Mark gets to benefit from these fantastic prices, but he may be like so many painters, who continue to scratch a living while canny galleries and dealers make big bucks.

In their first two years of existence, ATV made two studio albums, two live albums and six singles. Great work ethic!

For me their best song was the single Action Time Vision. Just the title made me sit up and pay attention - as does Mark's strong, direct portrait in this video. It has the urgency of other songs (e.g. by The Ramones or Jonathan Richman) that are belted out basically on one repeated note (in this case with some pretty nifty harmonies behind - how not-punk is that?). To me the lyrics are a statement of intent, a short, sharp manifesto: ACTION needs to happen; the TIME is now, and if you don't have VISION then you're just a bunch of pogoing tossers.

Action, Time and Vision • Action, Time and Vision

ATV equals three points in time
A equals action
T equals time
V equals vision and the four minds crack
In ATV, V, V, V, V

Action, Time and Vision • Action, Time and Vision

The chords and notes don’t mean a thing
Listen to the rhythm, listen to us sing
We're in action and the four minds crack
In ATV


Action, Time and Vision • Action, Time and Vision

Everything’s as clear as time
See the movement, see the mime
We're in vision and the four minds crack
In ATV, V, V, V, V, V


Action, Time and Vision • Action, Time and Vision

Mark's choice of song for his miniature dates back to 1963. It's probably unlikely in the 70's that he saw this video of Dylan singing it on a folk TV show. The song appeared on Dylan's 2nd album "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan" - his first album to be comprised mainly of original songs rather than covers.

Based on the "Talkin'" style of improvised songwriting developed by Woody Guthrie, it was created by Dylan in the studio, and after five takes, he nailed it. Its almost humourous mood belies the anti-nuclear sentiments in the lyrics.



During the same sessions Dylan also created "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues", "Talking Hava Negilah Blues", and "Talking Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues", none of which saw the light of day until they were issued on the "Bootleg" album series in 1991.

Over 40 years on, Mark keeps the flame alive, having released numerous solo recordings and performed with The Good Missionaries, The Reflections, The Door and the Window, Baby Ice Dog, and others. Alternative TV have played occasional gigs in recent years, both in the UK and USA. Mark's Facebook page seems to be issuing plenty of news, so stay in touch!

Coming up: Count Michael.

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M1-44 Simon Jeffes

M1-44 Arthur's TreatM1-44sm• • • P R E L U D E • • •Yes, there has been a bit of a gap since the last blog entry. I offer no excuses I'm afraid, other than sometimes it feels right to put some things on the back burner (an American phrase, I believe, which I quite like) and concentrate on more urgent or just more vivid, of-the moment work and play. Now that most of us are staying home to a greater or lesser extent (me greater), it seems a good time to pick up loose ends and re-organise and move forward. So the blog is back, and I thank you kindly for your patience.This also happens to be the date (May 1st. 2020) that Cherry Red Records are re-issuing/repromoting/repressing (that's re-pressing - pressing again - not quashing)  both Miniatures 1 (40th anniversary) and Miniatures 2 (20th anniv.) in a very reasonably priced double CD with extensive notes and photos of everyone. 106 artists, 113 tracks in all.Normal service will now be resumed to cover the last eight tracks of Miniatures 1. Whether I will write a similar blog for Miniatures 2 rather depends on how the world is in a few months from now. To use another favourite Americanism - it's a crap shoot.Music From The Penguin Cafe is 44 years old this year. Simon Jeffes' first album as the Penguin Cafe Orchestra was the 7th in a series of 10 albums of contemporary/experimental/minimal British music produced by Brian Eno for his own Obscure Records label. For me, Simon's album stands out in the series for its warmth, melody and humanity. I snapped it up on its release in 1976, was immediately captivated, and still am.Miniatures was a first, in its way. I like firsts. Simon's Miniature track was the first to use strings only (Michael Nyman followed close behind). The PCO were the first to collaborate with another Miniatures artist - something I had hoped might happen following the release of this album. It was The Phantom Captain, who added their dadaist theatrics to at least one PCO concert I saw happen in a record store in 1981 - at HMV in London’s Oxford Street.Also, Simon Jeffes, genial creator and leader of the PCO, was the first Miniatures artist to invite me into his own studio,  where he had recorded his miniature. Most of the other artists were either recorded in their homes on my trusty Revox (e.g., Cutler, Crisp, Steadman, Wyatt), in my tiny home studio on ditto (e.g., Bedford, Newman, Nichols) or made their contributions while recording a larger project of their own in a proper studio (e.g. Bryars, Chambers, Partridge).How I first met Simon has faded into the mists of time, although there was a definite connection bandwise. My 70’s band Mott the Hoople had Roxy Music’s sax man Andy Mackay play on some of our tracks, notably “All The Way From Memphis.” Brian Eno was a member of Roxy Music. Also Roxy's engineer from 1974-76, Steve Nye was heavily involved in the first PCO album as mixer, electric pianist, co-producer and co-writer.Anyway, one day in 1979 I found myself one day heading to Hippodrome Place, not far from my Notting Hill Gate flat, and entered a pleasant house which seemed to consist mainly of one large room with soundproofing, mike stands, etc., and a staircase going up to a kind of loft where there was an upright piano and a pot of tea. After pouring, Simon played me an eerily familiar tune (which I'd never heard before) on the piano, which he said he’d adapted from an African folk song. It was repetitive, hypnotic, and untitled, until finally when it appeared on the PCO's eponymous album in 1981, he'd anointed it with a beautifully evocative title, "Cutting Branches For A Temporary Shelter."I was delighted to receive Simon's beautiful miniature soon after, and when I sequenced the album, the delicacy of his string quartet seemed the perfect palate-cleanser to follow the distorted maelstrom of the Half Japanese track. He then invited me to a birthday party at his home, where I presented him with a large bag of Cadbury’s Miniatures.I last met Simon in 1982 in a pub over some Guinnesses, to tell him about my recent meditative experiences in India. I got the feeling that he was a complete man, one who had absolutely no need of meditation, therapy, psychology or any of the other explorations I was into at that time. I was devastated to get the news, far away in Japan where I now live, that he had died in 1997 aged just 48, of a brain tumour. He led an all-too-short, but very full, rich life, and his music, also used in numerous films and ballets, resonates down the years, bringing pleasure to listeners of all ages and all stripes. Enjoy this 75-minute PCO/Jeffes video collection!Simon is one of six Miniatures 1 artists who also contributed to Miniatures 2. His son Arthur, the dedicatee of his Miniatures track, would have been 2 years old when Miniatures was released.Arthur is now leading a completely new band simply called Penguin Cafe, who kicked off in 2009 with a highly successful concert at the Royal Albert Hall, largely consisting of pieces by the original PCO, plus a few of Arthur's own compositions. He has flourished since then, producing several albums of his own compositions in the same vein as Simon's, and touring the world. I met Arthur in Tokyo on his band's first Japanese tour. It felt like a much-loved circle had been completed.mf+arthurjeffes_smSeveral members of the original PCO formed a band called The Orchestra That Fell To Earth, in order to continue playing some of the original repertoire. In this way too, Simon's dream endures...Coming up: Dylan sniffs glue?Read/Leave Comment

M1-43 1/2 Japanese

M1-43 Paint it BlackM1-43smm1-43BACK after a long unforeseen break, your Miniatures blog revives itself just in time for Jad Fair's 61st birthday (give or take a few hours) so congratulations to you, sir! Also, his band Half Japanese (formed with brother David Fair)  have been blowing minds and eardrums for 40 years on and off, so congratulations to them too.The brothers started as a duo in 1975, and within a couple of years they released their first single, on the aforementioned 50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Watts record label - whose name alone was obviously a big attraction to yours truly (it's now been shortened to 50 Skidillion Watts - but you get the image - broadcast over as wide an area as possible and fucking loud!).They were perhaps unique in that Jad was never really interested in tuning his guitar. A video released in 1993 starts off with David Fair explaining their marvellously simple DIY concept of music, and especially guitar playing (does Jad's comment right after that really indicate that he doesn't know the difference between a chord and a cord...?). It's part of a gripping 90-minute documentary available from Amazon.The uniqueness continued when they released their first album - a triple LP set. Probably the only band known to have done that. It was called "Half Gentlemen / Not Beasts" and the cover was very impressive, with its half african / not picasso style of facemasks and body paint. It was released the same year as "Miniatures", but a bit  later. But by the time I started organising this project I had already heard one or two singles and had read enough about them to really want them to be involved; even in that pre-internet era, the essential news travelled pretty fast. When I received Jad Fair's letter of acceptance to the invitation to become a miniaturist, I knew right away that here was a multi-talented artist(click to enlarge): m1-43halfjapletter His letter looked like his music sounded. Their version of the Stones' classic showed me one thing clearly - you don't need to get the melody exactly right to put across a song. As long as you go up when the melody rises, and go down when it falls, people will get it. The size of each step taken can be approximate. I expect some neuroscientist or musicologist somewhere has done a whole thesis on the subject.From the 1980's on, various members have joined and left Half Japanese, and one particularly long-serving semi-oriental is multi-instrumentalist (especially bass) Jason Willett. It is he that is chiefly behind the recent vinyl reissue of Miniatures; he has been running the True Vine record shop, and the Megaphone Records indie label for quite some time, in Baltimore. Jason plays on the band's latest album "Overjoyed" (released in marbled blue vinyl!).31 years on - in 2011, Jad and I finally met when he came to play in Tokyo, and we had not one but two jam sessions. Totally unrehearsed, of course - the way we both like it. The first was in the small but tasty Hiromart Gallery, where Jad was exhibiting his marvellous, witty paper cutouts. Evidently he had moved on quite a way (but not too much) from the simple childlike style of the letter he first wrote to me. His cutouts were getting quite complex and even quite symmetrical - but not too much. m1-43-jadfair_hiromart Jad sang and clapped adlib and acappella while I tooted around him, and somehow it was not chaos, it was rhyming raps and rhythmic patterns; we literally pulled a few songs out of thin air. No wonder he's a happy performer, he never has to rehearse. As Neil Innes says in the DVD of the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band's 40th Anniversary show - "if you don't rehearse, what can go wrong?" Or to quote another Miniaturist, Robert Fripp: “In strange and uncertain times such as those we are living in,  sometimes a reasonable person might despair. But hope is unreasonable and love is greater even than this. May we trust the inexpressible benevolence of the creative impulse.”(click to enlarge):m1-43-jadfair+mf_hiromart Jam #2 was a proper concert in a proper club in Shibuya. This time we had serious artillery: Jad had his folding guitar, handmade to be easy to carry on planes. He sometimes folds it while playing, producing some amazing bent notes. Naturally, he rarely, maybe never, tunes it. I, in addition to my fancy red-and-black Hohner Melodica, was equipped with a marching band kazoo and my ipad on which I could write big-font messages and comments via a (sadly no longer available) app called Hey! At one point he asked me to start off a number, so I had a go at singing (badly) King Pleasure's "Moody's Mood for Love" - a song I had (almost) memorised since Georgie Fame's version had thrilled me in 1964.Jad teamed up with his Japanese friend Nao plus some hand puppets for another part of this fine show.He is a wonderfully prolific artist both visual and aural, and loves collaborating - his Wiki page is full of info and lists of recordings - as is the one for Half Japanese. It would seem to have been the most obvious time to ask him - why the band name? - while he was here in Tokyo. But I never did. Another time. Thanks Jad thanks David thanks all half-Japanesers. Till the next time, Sayo-bye ! Or Good-nara.Coming up: Simon we miss youRead/Leave Comment

Announcement - MINIATURES REISSUES!

Dear Friends and  music lovers,Just a brief announcement to let you know that MINIATURES still has plenty of life in it!It has received its FIRST VINYL REISSUE on 180gm vinyl (limited edition of 800) and can be ordered from Forced Exposure. The cover is beautifully printed and the 24" x 24" poster (with mini-artworks by all the artists) is also included, both better quality than the original!RED VINYL version (limited edition of 200) is also available from Knock 'Em Dead Records!Clips can be listened to at both the above sites, which also include excellent - and different - descriptions of the album.mins-redMINIATURES has also been reissued as a replica CD, in a cardboard  sleeve, just like a miniature version of the 1980 LP. It has a small version of the original poster folded inside! You may need a magnifying glass to read some of the sleeve notes, but it makes for a fascinatingly detailed musical object. At the moment this is only available in Japan, from Amazon.co.jp and Diskunion.Imports to other countries of both the above will doubtless appear soon.The Miniatures 1+2 double CD is always available at a very reasonable price from Cherry Red Records as well as Amazon and other good quality sellers.Thank you!Morgan

M1-42 Gavin Bryars

M1-42 After Mendelssohn (137 Years) M1-42sm m1-42 A slim, spry Gavin Bryars nipped up the five flights of stairs at Pipe Studios in Notting Hill Gate and presented himself at my door fresh, alert and breathing normally - unlike most folk (me included) who needed a quiet sit and a cuppa tea to regain their breath. Impressive. His miniature had already been presented to me and added to the fast-growing stack of small reels of tape in my cupboard.He was here this time to ask me if I knew of any good record labels who might be able to release his work. Unfortunately my knowledge of such labels was not so deep, but I gave him a couple of suggestions, including of course Cherry Red Records, who released Miniatures (and soon after released an LP of glowing minimal orchestral music by the late and wonderfully talented Piero Milesi).Gavin’s work had first been brought to my adoring and transfixed attention by his masterpiece “Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet.” This extraordinary work, based on a loop of an old tramp singing a sentimental religious song, had seen the light of day via Brian Eno’s Obscure Records label (which had also alerted me to the wonders of The Penguin Cafe Orchestra, Michael Nyman, and John White - all of whom participated in Miniatures). For Miniatures 2, Gavin kindly allowed me to use one minute of this modest 25-minute epic (which was later extended to a full 75 minutes for a version featuring Tom Waits). This work never fails to bring tears to my eyes. (By the way, the previous link, to an interview with Bryars and Waits, features uncredited footage from the amazing film "The Body" which was scored by Miniatures artist Ron Geesin along with Pink Floyd's Roger Waters).In his typically bright, generous letter to me, Gavin mentioned that Obscure Records had made a plan to create a Miniatures-style project, but apparently it became unfeasible due to the complexities of copyrights and legal issues involved. I have a feeling that my project's success was largely due to the fact that it was a one-man operation and I kept all paperwork and musical restrictions to an absolute minimum (and contacted the artists directly, rather than through their managers!).(click to enlarge)M1-42-Gavin-letterThe same year Miniatures was released, Gavin released his marvellous "Hommages" album, featuring his friend John White (the review which can be seen in the previous Amazon link sums up his music, and my feelings about it, brilliantly). The lush yet minimal piano/vibraphone textures on this album are utterly alluring and quietly, deeply emotional. Works of this calibre (as with Milesi) move me far, far more than the more successful Reich and Glass, I have to say.Soon after I moved to Japan, in '86 or '87, Gavin came to conduct a concert of his music. I went to meet him in his hotel, and took a seat in the smart lobby. I was expecting to see the usual slim, chic, all-black figure, and while I waited in the crowded lobby my eyes fell upon a largeish man in a fabulously colourful T-shirt, walking, nay, sliding as if wearing diving fins, slowly through the suited Japanese multitude. Then I realised it was Gavin who had, as many of us do, filled out a bit. I said hello and do you remember me, and he at once responded, "Yes of course, Morgan Fisher, aka Swami Veetdharm!" I had no idea he knew the Indian spiritual name I had been using for a while. Such is the keen, meticulous mind of this prolific man, a man who may sometimes appear academic, but can fill my heart to the brim with his serene, evolving compositions, written for luminaries such as Charlie Haden and Julian Lloyd Webber. I have said that in his early years he played with the voluptuous Kathy Kirby, whose busty figure and Marilyn-esque charm was probably my first real turn-on when I was 13 and glued to all the music programs available on our small black-and-white television. However, I may have been thinking of Gavin's bandmate (they formed a trio in 1963), avant-garde guitarist supremo Derek Bailey. Whatever, it is always a pleasure for me to imagine the musical pioneers of today starting their careers humbly in nightclubs behind some sequin-festooned pop goddess.At the Miniatures launch party in 1980, Gavin (along with John White and Dave Smith) performed as the Nordic Reverie Trio behind some potted palms while permed ladies served tea and cake. In this modest way do such musical legends carry out their lives in the service of true beauty. I thank him, from the bottom of my heart, once again.m1#c3gavin+smithComing up: Murder the black...Read/Leave Comment