Sunday, January 23, 2011

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - B-Side Babies


Some B Side issues are awful. Most of them, actually. I can remember torturously trying to get through Pisces Iscariot by Smashing Pumpkins. And the only redeeming feature of that was a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide”.
Adam Ant’s B Side collection is a very different animal. In the late 70s and early 80s Adam and his crew were at a creative peak. After punk but before the co-opting of all things New Wave, there were some really great experiments coupled with a sense that life was fun, making music was cool and it’s all about sex anyway. Later Adam would try and fail to be a hitmaker, but that’s always the way; you can’t get a hit when you are trying. Unless you’re Max Martin.
In the early days it almost seems like they had unlimited access to recording equipment and some of the really difficult stuff would find its way on to the Antbox collection. But the treats were the B-Sides. Like the almost Garage Metal version of “Physical” and the Garage Band Jam on “Red Scab” an ode to one of Adam’s Tattoos that ends with Marco’s “Dad” kicking the band out so he can put the car in. The trilogy of Antmusic as Garage Band culminates “B-Side Baby” a track from the Vive Le Rock time and it kicks. Even Adam’s harmonica playing is just great.
The Mexican flavored, “Juanito the Bandito” was probably the last time the world would get to hear how goofy these guys could be.
But my two favorite tracks are, first, the terrific “Human Bondage Den” as bouncy a number as Ant would ever put out. Also from the Vive era it shows, as a song that didn’t make the album’s final cut, just how creative these guys were at the time.
But, the piece de resistance is the B-Side that would come to have a longer shelf life than it’s A-Side. Covered by bands from Epoxies to Nine Inch Nails, “Beat My Guest” is simply great. A riff worthy of classic rock, a subject matter that, while it is ostensibly about S&M, when the chorus is hit, Marco’s gliss on the guitar suggests masturbation. “Beat” is simply on of my favorite tracks of all time.
There are only a couple blah numbers and they come from, obviously, the Strip era (well, there’s also a fucking remix of a Vive song as well) but, other than 2 or 3 tracks, this is a stellar event.

Grade: A

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Redux


Adam Ant – Remastered Redux

1.“Prick Up Your Ears” (Demo) – This would eventually become “The Magnificent Five”. It's fun to see how the song developed.
2.“Jolly Roger” (Demo) – the missing lyrics are equal or superior to the final version. I wish they had included them on what is one of my favorite Adam Ant songs.
3.“Making History” (Demo) – A sloppy version of an already lesser track.
4.“Don't Be Square (Be There)” (Demo) – I always like hearing unpolished tracks, with flubs and all. When I would record I would talk while waiting for my turn to sing. If not for that, I don't think I would care for any of these demos.
5.“Mowhok” (Demo) – Yay. What the world truly needed. ANOTHER version of this song.
6.“That Voodoo” (Demo) – I don't know. Why do we need these again, Marco? There's an expanded nonsense lyric section, but I didn't need to hear it.
7.“Five Guns West” (Demo) – If you thought they were having a grand time on the final version, this one is madcap!
8.“Ups and Downs” (Demo) – from that familiar bassline I was hoping that it was the original “Ant Rap”. No such luck. This is the first version of “Mile High Club”.
9.“Friend or Foe” comes off as some hybrid Kings era Antmusic sound and Kraftwerk.
10.“7 Up” (Demo) – is an instrumental reworking of “5 Guns West” while sounding almost completely different. Cute. Inessential.
11.“Desperate But Not Serious (Manzanera Mix) – I don't know if this means Phil Manzanera or what but it's bigger and acoustically heavy on the treble. And it's another fully instrumental track. The official version is far superior.
12.“Saigon” (Demo) – A demo for a track that never made it to the final track listings. I think they're trying to tell us something. I think they really wanted to include this on FoF. It can be found in better form on the Antbox.
13.“Scorpio Rising” (Demo) – Great. Another version of a vastly inferior song.
14.“Mohair Locker Room Pin-Up Boys” (Demo) – features Piano heavily, turning itself into a honky tonk. Not what the song should be. Curious, but I prefer the Vive Le Rock version.
15.“Dandy in the Underworld” (Demo) – A cover of a T. Rex track. Sounds like it was recorded for the Wonderful sessions. So, it's too smooth to be glam rock. Which is what T.Rex was all about.

In short. Skip the Redux. It's a waste of your time. And I just spent an hour on it.
For you.
Cause I love you.

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - The Remastered Box Set


Adam Ant – The Remastered Bonus Tracks

As I wrote earlier, the remastered reissues, which my late daughter bought me for a birthday present in 2005, is not only a comprehesive collection of Adam's Columbia years but they include bonus tracks, demos and curios not heard before.
Here's a peek at what you're missing:

From Dirk Wears White Sox:
Dirk immediately paints me as a a liar as it starts the additional material with some singles and doesn't have much to fofer in the way of “unheard music”. Ah, the late 70s, early 80s, when weird-ass songs could be released as singles and corporate record labels didn't have their fingers in every single decision.
“Zerox” was a well know Adam song that can be found in a lot places, b/w “Whip in My Valise”, which is included here. Adam was able to buy his original masters (from what I recall) for his debut after the sales of later records, rare for artists, so Marco was able to include that material here.
The next set are also singles from the Do It days. “Kick” is a post-punk exercise, “Physical” is the early version of “Physical (You're So)” which Adam had been playing for a while and would show up on Kings.
“Cartrouble (Parts 1 & 2)” is a slightly reworked version of the original album opener and “Friends” is a name dropping piece of piffle about an unctuous club goer who is trying to prove his importance so he can “get in free”.
The last are the single versions of “Cartrouble” which is more aggressive, powerful and is only the second half or Part 2 of that song. The same goes for “Kick”. Bigger, stronger and incorporating the “burundi beat” that Adam was about to make famous.

From Kings of the Wild Frontier:
An alternate mix of “Antmusic” is hardly worth hearing but then we get to the nuggets.
The demo for “Antmusic” shows different lyrics being tried out and, even in the early stage, they were concentrating harder on Adam's multi-layered vocals than just about anything else.
“Feed Me To The Lions” demo and the one for “The Human Beings” just show songs in an early development stage.
Interestingly, there is a very early version of “S.E.X.” which would, of course, be included on Prince Charming. I swear there are sounds of a bong being smoked in the background and I don't know if that's part of the song or if they were just high. I imagine since the song is just bass, guitar and vocals that the bass is being played by Adam. The song is actually slightly better on this version than it would turn out with big production.
Then there's the real treat: The original, demo version of “Ant Invasion” a seminal piece on the record started off very different from what it would become. Whereas the album version is a scary and dangerous b-movie horror show, the original is much more cheeky. The B-movie in the demo would more likely have been directed by Ed Wood. And it's not about an Ant invasion.
No. It's called “Omelette from Outer Space” and it's about someone who is “so frightened by the omelette from outer space”. Dig it.

From Prince Charming:
The “Prince Charming” demo is a stripped down 4 track version of the unlikely hit. The same for “Stand & Deliver”. I was so surprised not find “Beat My Guest” here but, if it were, why you buy other Adam reissues?
“Showbiz” is a an attempt at some salsa inspired craziness, the only part of it that would survive is the lyric, “I hope the day would never come when showbiz is a dirty word” which appears on Friend or Foe's “Cajun Twister” and is probably included here for that reason.
“Picasso Visits the Planet of the Apes” is in stripped down demo form, set to a drum machine.
“Who's a Goofy Bunny Then?” would be rewritten for Strip and become “Libertine”. Since that's one of the better songs on that disaster its hard for me to say that I wish the song had stayed in it's original form. But, have you ever heard a title that great?
“Scorpio Writing” is just what you would think and hope for: Adam talking about what to play while the tape is running and him, Marco and, I assume, Hughes, running through an acoustic version that sounds like a couple teenagers trying write a rock song with little or no knowledge of the form. You almost feel embarrassed for them. And then you remember that final version and realize they were geniuses.


From Friend or Foe:
This album is loaded with extras.
“Coup D'etat” is a bouncy piece decrying new technology and how the music of the day is taking over.
“Little Italy” is a wholly instrumental version of “Man Called Marco”. The original's vocals was just Pirroni introducing his guitar. That's not here.
“Maid of Money” is the demo version of “Made of Money” and it might only be included because of the different title except that it features Adam on drums as does the demo for “Place in the Country”, which is such a mess that it sort of proves why Adam shouldn't play the drums.
“And So You Shall”, while it sounds very familiar and might have been reworked as other songs, it's a fun song extolling Adam's prowess in various arenas. It's also a song I think could have had a life over something like “Hello, I Love You”.
“Yellowbeard” is a piano driven pirate march, a trifle at best.
“I Know They Know” is begging for a full production. It's traditional Antmusic but much more fun than some of FoF's tracks.
“Gargoyles Are Go” is reminiscent of “Five Guns West” and is the early progenitor for “Mowhok”. Part of it sounds like Oingo Boingo.
And we close with “Good Sex Rumples The Clothing”. A play on the famous Jackie Onassis quote “Sex is bad because it rumples the clothing”. It's great piffle and I'm glad I had a chance to hear it.

From Strip:
The demo for “Strip” is just an early sketch of the song.
“Dirty Harry” would turn into “Amazon”. I like it better as a theme song for a take no prisoners asshole cop than as an ode to big, strong women.
“Horse You Rode in On” would become, well, a few other songs, but it's the closes to the “Goody Two Shoes” feel and that's probably why it was never developed further.
“She Wins Zulus” is a trite lesser track. It fits perfectly in the idiom of Strip but, more importantly, it has the lyric “She wishes she could sing like Michael Jackson, no chance”, which was also found on “Showbiz” and would turn up on either “Cajun Twister” or “Crackpot History”, I can never remember and the lyric “She Likes Johnny, she like Joe but they both ignore her so” which would find it's way on “Playboy”.
The “Puss in Boots” demo proves that Phil Collins wasn't really needed after all and the bizarro feedback heavy solo is sorely missed from the final product.
They've included the rehearsal take for “Playboy”, which is a song I almost never imagined anyone playing live. I don't remember it from the Radio City Show I saw on that tour. It's massively uninspired. Adam's spoken word parts on the album are creepy, unctuous and bland. But, live he's cheeky and ironic. So, in that way, the song is preferable. By the time it's over, with the band references and all, you'll find you wish that this was the version they left on the cd.
“Navel to Neck” gets the rehearsal addition as well. I always kind of liked the minimalism in this song and it's here, too. But it's great to hear Adam actually singing. He had a pretty good voice. If only he knew what to do with it outside of the Antmusic bubble.
In both of these rehearsal takes it's obvious that the fun and humor was stripped out of strip. Whether that was by Adam & Marco's design or the producers, I don't know. But it's sad.
The alternate version of Strip includes a little banter between Collins and a german assistant talking about how to get the strings in the studio with Adam. Otherwise, the original's better.

From Vive Le Rock:
“Human Bondage Den” was probably left off because it sounds a little too much like Apollo 9. Too bad. It’s a great song. It can also be found on the Antbox and the B-Side collection. Well worth being included.
The Rico Conning remix of “Vive Le Rock”. This was the era of the remix. Every band from Madonna to Queen was remixing and putting out 12” singles. I hate remixes and this one is no exception. It’s boring at best. Redundant at worse.
The Francois Kevorkian remix of “Apollo 9” manages to make an exciting dance track boring. It actually borders on obnoxious.
“Doggy Style” (Demo) just makes me wonder how much studio time Adam was allowed. Not complaining but, wow, he just pumped out track after track. This is an early version of “Manners & Physique” and it’s superior in every way.
“Night they Vietcong” is maybe the ugliest and laziest song Adam’s ever recorded.
“Big Big Man” is the original template for Razor Keen and is actually a neat little jazzy beat number.
“Rip Down” (Demo) shows a song almost completed. Man I love this album (Vive, that is)
There is ANOTHER Kevorkian remix of “Apollo 9” and it’s as boring as the other. What separates them is this is the 12” version where the other was the 7”. And they both grate.
The fun ends with a Steve Thompson remix of “Vive” and not a moment too soon. The remix festival was killing.

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Wonderful

Now each and everyday, I realize the price I have to pay you. You’re Wonderful. - Wonderful




Adam Ant – Wonderful – 1995

There I was, prepping my radio show at the local station on a Saturday morning, about to go on for my one hour entertainment show, listening to the FM sister station play the Top Forty hits of the week. I had been given this time slot simply because I walked in to the station and asked the program director. I sold him on the idea and he gave me the show.
Simple.
I don't recall who my guest was that day.
But I'll never for get the moment that I heard a familiar voice seeping in over the speakers.
And Casey Kasem's voice.
“That was 'Wonderful' by Adam Ant.”
How does this happen? I hadn't heard note one from Stuart Goddard in half a decade.
If you haven't heard “Wonderful”, the song, then you haven't completed your Adam Ant discography because that song, in and of itself, was more of a comeback than the previous three four records combined.
“Wonderful” is lovely. It's honest. It sounds great. It has that great bridge where, when Adam sings “so deep I can't get under it” while his voice gets higher and higher...it's inspired.
The album is almost personal. It features more acoustic guitar than I've ever heard on and Ant record. The lush, pastoral opening of “Won't Take that Talk” obviously is inspired by Radiohead and the tropico-stylings of “Beautiful Dream” begs for a steel drum but thank god there isn't one. “Image of Yourself” is the sublime amalgam of Strip era sounds with a forward thinking Ant sound. It's what that album should have sounded like. “Alien” tries too hard to ape David Bowie and “Gotta Be a Sin” wants to be a single (although it almost succeeds).
“Vampires” is the most complete epic that Adam has ever achieved. One wonders why he hasn't touched on the dark children of Dracula to evoke sexuality in the past.
While songs like “Yin & Yang” are difficult at best, they also owe so much to Lennon and the great experimenters in pop-music that it's easy for me to forgive.
I like Wonderful a lot more than I thought I would, having avoided it for so long. I think it wears better as a record heard by an old Adam Fan entering his mid-life.
This is mid-life Adam. And the last we'd hear from him.
Come back, Adam. All is forgiven.

Grade: B
A-Side: Wonderful, Beautiful Dream
BlindSide: Won't Take that Talk, Image of Yourself, Vampires
DownSide: Very Long Ride

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Persuasion

Seems to me we’ve got a new aristocracy - Seems to Me.


Seems to me we’ve got a new aristocracy - Seems to Me.

Adam Ant – Persuasion – 1993

Finally, we get to the album that inspired this Reflecting Pool series in the first place. The Adam Ant Record you don't know about.

There is a book called “The Greatest Music Never Sold” written about a few of the great unknown or unreleased records. Juliana Hatfield's tragic story of her unheard masterpiece, God's Foot, is probably the impetus for the book, closing out the sad tales.
Mick Jagger's work with The Red Devils is in there. Ray Davies soundtrack for the aborted stage production of Around the World in 80 Day. Seal's attempt to break free from Trevor Horn. David Bowie's album of resurrected songs that he wrote and recorded prior to Space Oddity. Other.
But the reason I wanted to read the book is for the chapter on Adam Ant's Persuasion.
You didn't know there was an Adam Ant record called that, huh? Didn't even know there was an unreleased Adam album, right? It's hard to imaging that there is actually Adam Ant music that has not been marketed somewhere.
This is a guy who just a few years ago put out a box set called “Antbox” (which I have) that traces his career through demos, remixes, alternate versions, from his early days just after Bazooka Joe to the very last record which I will cover here next.
This is the New Wave icon who has been repackaged and remarketed so often it's hard to keep track. There's the Peel sessions. The B-side collection, B Side Babies. Then there is the granddaddy. The remastered, repackaged box set of the first albums, carefully and lovingly produced by Marco. Each of those discs contain MORE additional material PLUS one last CD called Redux, which has even MORE material.
HOW COULD THERE BE MORE ADAM ANT??? And if there was, why wouldn't someone put the damned thing out?
Labels. Marco has tried over and over to buy back, license, steal, the recordings of Adam's lost album.
So, what is it? And, moreover, how is it?

It's so hard to be objective about a treasure like this. Because who wants to slam someone's lost baby?
On the other hand, coming after the abortion that was Manners & Physique, it's hard to get excited and look forward to another dance oriented Adam Ant record.

The production: Adam & Marco were responsible for the song which was to be left off the album, “Seems to Me” as well as Survival of the Fetish, All Girl Action. Larry Blackmon; Little Devil, Brain Candy. Leigh Gorman (Ex-Ant!!!) did Persuasion & Headgear, while Bernard Edwards handled Charge of the Heavy Brigade, Sexatise You & Obsession and Don't Knock It.

The work with Blackmon did not include Pirroni. He was busy reigniting a relationship with the ex-ant Gorman.

So, how does the mishmash of production sound?

Let's just examine the songs:
Gorman was the bassist for the original Ants and Bow Wow Wow:
“Persuasion” is a grinding, sexy, wide sounding, piece of dank club dance rock.
“Headgear” is very reminiscent of what Vive or (even parts of Strip) would have sounded like if they were written in the era of Bobby Brown and the big R&B stage shows.
Larry Blackmon was the front man for Cameo:
“Brain Candy” is one of the most listless dance tracks Adam's ever recorded. He tries to overcome the “Word Up” sound but he's not up to it. “Little Devil” combines the big, glam sound of Adam's bigger successes with an uninspired song, with an unfocused rap in the middle that conjures up another Adam fixation, namely a Jim Morrison lyric.
Bernard Edwards was the bassist for Chic. Why Adam decided to use R&B producers after the failure of Manners speaks to the sound of the day.
“Obsession” is a trite, synth laden song wherein the subject matter is covered in the title and explores it no further. I will admit that I have a soft spot for “Charge of the Heavy Brigade” with its nonsense backing vox by Adam and the soulful backing vocals. It's an ego trip but it's fun. And “Sexatise You” could have been an attempt to reclaim a lost sound. But that sound was heard on Vive Le Rock and it wasn't exactly “lost”. No one wanted to hear it. Sadly.
Don't Knock It is more of that sound. Crunchy guitars. Pounding bass drum. Funky bass. Almost, anti-Antmusic. But the song itself is one of the better on the record. A track where Adam sounds as close to the Prince Charming narcissist we loved.
Now for the Ant/Marco songs:
All Girl Action is the first time I've heard an Ant song that at least tries to sound like an Ant song. There's no double drumming, no “antmusic” and it's still a little steeped in dance rhythms. But it works. “Survival of the Fetish”...hmm... I can't help but think, as Adam sings, “Going, round and round and round and round”, that that's just what we're doing here. Marking time. Going round and round. The record seems more like a job than an inspiration. While neither Adam nor Marco cared for “Seems to Me” it's actually one of my favorite songs on the record. It's the one where they seem to be less interested in the sounds of “the day” and are entertaining themselves. It was actually dropped from the original track list in favor of “Charge of the Heavy Brigade”. I don't know why. But I'm glad I have it. And now you can hear it, too.

I suppose I am being kinder to Persuasion than I might be if the record actually came out. It's not that great. While it's a vast improvement over Manners & Physique and in many ways preferable to Strip, it's ultimate just not that great.

Grade: C
A-Side: Persuasion, Headgear, Seems to Me
BlindSide: Charge of the Heavy Brigade, Sexatise You, All Girl Action
DownSide: Brain Candy

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Manners & Physique

There is always room at the top. Don't let them tell you that there is not.” - Room at the Top




Adam Ant – Manners & Physique – 1990

Okay. So, in 1990 I was trying to start my acting career and needed a day job. Not wanting to work in an office (actually, not being able, really...fucking cubicles) I decided to try my hand at wedding and bar mitzvah DJ-ing. Never mind how I ended up doing that, suffice to say that the guy who introduced me to it went on to a very VERY successful television sitcom career and is a millionaire.
I'm not.
But, at one of these Bar Mitzvahs I was shocked to hear the guest of honor ask for a special request: He wanted “Room at the Top” by Adam Ant.
He didn't have a clue who Adam was. In fact, why would he? Adam's last album would have come out when this kid was 8. His last hit was in 1982, that kid was 1. To him, and just about everyone else, Adam came out of left field.
I was shocked.
Of course I got Manners & Physique. I gave it the cursory listen and realized that whatever Adam had 10 years before when he was on the cutting edge of new music was, for all intents and purposes, gone.
Sure, his vocals are there, although they sort of border on sounding like the Tony Hadley from Spandau Ballet. And Marco's guitars pop up every once in a while. But all the rest of the instruments and the production is done by ex-Prince protege, Andre Cymone.
NOW Adam sounds anonymous on his own record.
It's dance pop at a time when that stuff was as innocuous and invasive and unctuous as it would be 20 years later.
This is the era of New Kids, you know?
One thing I realize as each song comes on is how much I wish the record would end. There are moments that work, “Rough Stuff”, “Room at the Top”, they sound like they could have worked on previous Adam records.
Of course, the title track harkens back in subject matter to the Adam of old: appearance and style trumps all. Too bad the song itself sucks hard. It's ugly. It's crass. It's tired.
The third single, “Can't Set Rules About Love” sounds half like it might have fallen off the plan for Vive's recordings and half like it wants to be on the Beverly Hills 90210 soundtrack. It smells of faded jeans, high tops and denim jackets. And just when you think it can't get any worse, “U.S.S.A.” rears its ugly, over produced, mess of a self and makes you want to hurl the record across the room. Or, in my case, toss my ipod across the airport, where I am currently listening and writing this entry.
I wonder what would happen if you went back in time and played Manners for the same Adam who was at the infamous Sex Pistols boat cruise. Or even grabbed him outside of the studio when he was booted from the Ants and said, “Please. I know you'll be rich. But you'll also be crazy. And you will put this music out.”
I think he would have gone back to art school.
As “Bright Lights, Black Leather” comes on I realize; I've never listened to this whole album. I must have decided at some point to just stop and never listen to it again. I was better off...
“Young, Dumb & Full of It” actually comes kind of close to approximating what “Antmusic” would sound like if it was twisted into modern dance pop. I don't know if I like it for real of if I just appreciate anything outside the canned mid-tempo crap that has come before. But the album doesn't let you down, you know. Sure there might have been that brief bright spot but the whole shebang comes crashing to a torpor with the sluggish “Anger, Inc”. Sure, Adam, yeah, you read Kerouac and all, but it doesn't mean you can write a song about it. Count this among “Scorpio Rising” as among his worst.
The demo version of Manners & Physique included on the Antbox box set actually shows that song would have rocked in a Vive le Rock fashion if they had decided to go with that kind of sound. So sad.


That bar mitzvah kid is 33 now. I wonder what he's doing now....

Grade: D-
A-Side: Room at the Top, Rough Stuff
BlindSide: Young Dumb & Full of It
DownSide: Manners & Physique, U.S.S.A., Picadilly

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Viva Le Rock

"Bang Bang, you're dead, stop diddy boppin' buddy, bouncing tty on you!" - Vive Le Rock




Adam Ant – 1985 – Vive Le Rock

You know, almost nobody knows this album. It should have been Adam's comeback record but I don't think it was even released in the states. At least not for a while. At least not in any big way.
Amazing. Just 3 years before Adam was soaring on the back of the “Goody Two Shoes” rocket. One terrible album later and he's not welcome at the table anymore.
Vive Le Rock was supposed to a back-to-basics Adam record. A lot of work went into it. The logos, the imagery (future rock, almost apocalyptic but more interested in cash) and the sound: A BIG guitar record. More so than ever before. We're still one drummer down from the original Antmusic sound but the muscle, and more importantly, the fun and silliness of Prince Charming and Kings of the Wild Frontier are actually back.
Adam isn't as happy as before but he's goofier than ever.
“Walla ba-loomba!” (from “Miss Thing”)
“Stop diddy boppin buddy, bouncin' betty on you” (“Vive le Rock)
“Whoopsin' a whoopsin, Jam jam jammamin', Yabba Yabba Ding Ding, Delta Hey Max 9” (“Apollo 9)
and so many more! Just what the hell is a “choocha laben dollylay”?

The subject matter is more objective than ever before. Like X's “I Must Not Think bad Thoughts”, Adam decries the synthetic sound that is so popular in the day and harkens back to the great raw power of rock. Fortunately he has Marco's power chords to support the theorem and they've enlisted David Bowie's big glam sheen producer Tony Visconti for the production chores.
Subsequently, it's Adam's best sounding record in years.
I disagree with Allmusic when they say that Adam is rendered Anonymous on his own record (Although I think that's an inspired description and have been known to use it often).
This should have been the next record after Friend of Foe. It builds on the swagger of that record. It's bouncy in places (“Rip Down”). It's nonsensical. It's a little sluggish and apprehensive, but I imagine Ant was a little gun shy by this time. If he wasn't then that's the sound they were going for.
Either way, I am always happy when I hear Vive or songs from it.
Except for “Scorpio Rising”. Ripping off a little Kenneth Anger, well, actually, paying homage to that movie and the filmmaker is as turgid a song as I've ever heard. And I've listened to R.E.M.'s Around the Sun.
I love the singles on this record, mostly “Apollo 9” a nonsensical space age rock song which, I guess you could say is the Antmusic/dance take on Bowie's “Space Oddity”. It's NOTHING like that song but I see the connection.
The biggest problem with Vive Le Rock is the running order. Side Two is much better, catchier, energetic, aggressive and exciting than Side One. Each time I hear “Hell's Eight Acres” I am surprised that it wasn't a hit and even more chagrined that I never thought of covering it with my own band.
Followed by “Mohair Locker Room Pin Up Boys” and the rockabilly twinged, “No Zap” Side Two closes with the political nuclear screed “P.O.E.” (Damn your eyes, Mr. Kruschev. Don't go droppin' bombs over here!”)
If you're gonna listen to Vive Le Rock and I hope you do, make a new playlist:
Side Two first all the way to the end of P.O.E. Then listen to Side One all the way through “Scorpio Rising” and finish up with the original side two closer, the a capella version of “Apollo 9”. I think you'll agree that the record is a lot better and that it is easily Adam's 3rd best. Just behind Kings and Prince.
I do wish the jaunty, S&M ditty, “Human Bondage Den” B-Side was included in the original release. It's so great.
But this was the final Adam Ant record for a while as he would try his hand at acting in the states. It would, it turn out, be the last album featuring any form of “Antmusic” that the public would be allowed to hear.

Grade: B+
A-Side: Vive Le Rock, Apollo 9, Hell's Eight Acres
BlindSide: Miss Thing, No Zap, P.O.E.
DownSide: Scorpio Rising

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Strip

"We're just following ancient history. If I strip for you, will you strip for me?” - Strip



Adam Ant – Strip – 1983

Every artist has one. The nadir. The bottom. A record so terrible that either they revive themselves in true comeback form or they never find their way to their previous glories.
In Adam's case it was by far the latter.
He doomed himself for many reasons. I like to blame Phil Collins. Because, well, why the fuck not? Collins was brought in as a star producer to work on the two singles from “Strip”: the title track and “Puss in Boots”. In and of themselves they are not awful. In fact, they're kind of fun. But...why? Because Adam's sound revolved around percussion did they bring in a superstar producer? What was wring with Hughes? He was a drummer?
And then Richard Burgess? Another drummer? For the rest of the record?
What we are left with is a serious misstep. Not the least of which is a come hither photo on the cover of Adam aping Jean Harlow.
I saw him at Radio City for this tour (as well as for Prince Charming). It was fun. But, something was missing. Adam was trying to hard to be relevant in a Michael Jackson world. He was never a dancer. But now he thought he had to be.
Pop had left him behind almost overnight. He would be playing catchup forever. And never quite making it.
How bad is Strip? Pretty bad.
The singles are catchy, I guess, but the rest of the album is atrocious. Partly, or mainly, depending on how you look at it, because the songs are stripped almost bare. (Pun intended). Gone is any sense of fun. All the elements are there, the vocal gymnastics, the excessive overdubbed backing vox, but it's all steeped in the unctuous, smarmy, faux sexualized semi-soul and dance music. It wants so badly to smolder in places but instead of working like it did on past records it fails so miserably that it should be experienced to understand.
“Baby let me scream at you. You can decline of course. I'm talking to you, girlfriend. Give me some chili sauce.” Presupposing that we all accept “chili sauce” as some erotic term is something Adam never did.
“What do you wear in bed? Some headphones on my head. What do you like to hold? My breath, she said.” This is a chorus. And they're all this bad.
Obviously Adam and Marco and the rest were going for some uniform theme here. Overt sexuality. But it comes across as pedestrian.
And sad.
Instead of building on the success of Friend or Foe Adam, ever the independent trailblazer tripped so far and hard that he would never be able to recover. Not fully.
Antmusic is gone. There's one drummer. There are too many violins. What an unpleasant record.
“Saw the couple lying there. Teach each other how to swear. Could this be a dirty night? It could be if they're doing it right.”
Atrocious.

Grade: D
A-Side: Strip, Puss In Boots
BlindSide: Navel to Neck
DownSide: The rest of it

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Friend or Foe

Reprinted at Allenlulu.com

When you get a number one the only way is down - Here Comes The Grump




Adam Ant – Friend of Foe – 1982

The “Ants” were always meant to be dispatched. After all, Adam wrote all the songs with Marco Pirroni, who would not leave. And “Merrick” was really Chris Hughes, the producer of the last two records and this one. So, it was really just the drummer and bassist that they could replace.
I'm sure that wasn't fun for those guys. But it was fine for the listener because Adam was about to fulfill the promise of the last 4 years.
From Art School post punk, to experimental New Wave to New Romantic, no one really knew what to expect from this “solo” record.
The horns warm up on the head of the first track “Friend or Foe” and then that double drum attack and it's obvious. Nothing has really changed. It's just streamlined, radio friendly and pop precision.
Addressing his detractors on this and the rockabilly super smash hit, “Goody Two Shoes” Adam cemented his place in rock history and became rich. It's still “Antmusic” and it's still great. But this time the aim is directly placed on teen girls and MTV. Two things that go hand in hand and were tailor made for the ex-Stuart Goddard and his “Pure Sex” ethic. Pure Sex, by way of caricature.
Gone are the ridiculous pirate/Indian/cowboy themes and tossaways. Adam is extolling the virtues of “every girl” (“Something Girls”), lamenting the pitfalls of fame (“Place in the Country”, “Here Comes the Grump”, “Desperate but Not Serious”, “Crackpot History & the Right to Lie”), he's got a score to settle with a gold digger (“Made of Money”) and desperately wants to be the heir to that sex-god lizard king, Jim Morrison (A botched cover of “Hello, I Love You”).
All of this amidst yodels, nonsense lyrics, hyper-frenetic drumming, click clacks and a controlled mayhem. Perhaps that's what “Antmusic” really is, after all.
If you haven't heard the song, “Goody Two Shoes” in a while...well, I'm over my anger that this was the song that made everyone fall in love with Adam. Where were all you posers last year!!? I'm over I because it just came on while I'm in a hotel room and I can't help but shake my hips and move my feet. It's just plain great.

Friend or Foe was designed to break Adam stateside and over the world. It did just that. To say that he is the face of New Wave or one of the primary faces of the 80s is dead on in its accuracy. But he would pay a heavy price for this. If one were to listen to Dirk Wears White Sox and Friend of Foe back to back the two would not stand well as brothers. The singer and songwriter might be the same but they couldn't be more different. The fact is, Dirk is an album of more integrity than Friend. Not to say FoF is bad. It isn't. It's piffle. Candy. A product.
But, I will give it this: When my late daughter, Lizzie, was 11 and she heard this album for the first time she responded with, “I like this, it's bouncy!”.
It sure is.

Grade B+
A-Side: Friend or Foe, Goody Two Shoes, Desperate But Not Serious
BlindSide: Something Girls, Here Comes the Grump, Try This for Sighs
DownSide: Hello I Love You, Crackpot History & the Right to Lie

Reflecting Pool: Adam Ant - Prince Charming

Reprinted from Allenlulu.com

"Liberte, elgalite, aujourdhuis c'est tres, tres, tres. Voici l'oppurtunite, nous encroyable!




Adam and the Ants – Prince Charming – 1981

I'll be honest. The main reasons for doing this Reflecting Pool is to (finally) listen to Wonderful, an album I've had since its release and never given more than 5 minutes to, a chance to examine the unreleased Persuasion, and as an excuse to really listen to this record again.
I love Prince Charming.
In many ways it's better, by far, than Kings. It's much more muscular. It builds on the sounds created for “antmusic”, while at the same time abandoning almost fully the minimalist art school posing of Dirk. Adam and his crew are fully vested in their mythos and image, Indian war paint meets Sgt Pepper Pirates traded in for Ornate Highwaymen and, well, okay, they're still pirates.
The opening number, “Scorpios” is easily one of Adam's best and often overlooked songs. A pompous, self-referential, self-aggrandizing song, it opens with a horn section attack (there's some woodwind in there, too!) and has one of the greatest drum breakdowns in the history of modern rock just before the end of the song.
It's a powerhouse.
Followed by a song that, when stripped down, probably would fit on Dirk, but thanks to the fun everyone seems to be having in the studio is just a fantastic curio that, unlike ANYTHING on Dirk, begs and cajoles and dares you to sing alon. I am talking about, of course, “Picasso Visitos Los Planetos de los Simios”. Yes. Pablo Picasso visits the Planet of the Apes.
Genius. And when Adam starts imitating monkeys you know that these people were just having a fucking blast in that studio.
I haven't even mentioned the Rap yet. Don't worry, we'll get there.
The last album had the unlikely hit single, “Kings of the Wild Frontier” and this one doesn't miss a step, the title track is a big pirate shanty march celebrating individualism and peacock of the walk style and goes on way too long and is like eating a piece of delicious taffy. Fully satisfying and full of flavor.
They're cheekier this time with even more songs that talk about how great they are (“5 Guns West” & “Ant Rap”) and it's impossible to get annoyed by this because when Adam sings in that overwrought American South drawl, “I'm a big tough man, with a big tough plan, Gonna spend my day in a big tough way.” it's hysterical and stoopid and fun.
Rap had barely registered a blip in the states where it originated by 1981. It's massive success was still a few years away. But some artists, most notably the New Wavers, loved it. Blondie had already incorporated it (Eat to the Beat) and the Waitresses used it on their perennial holiday favorite, “Christmas Wrapping”. But for my money no New Wave artist “got” rap and had more fun with it than Adam. Ant Rap is sung partially in french. Why? I have no idea. It's more than passingly interested in puffing out it's chest and singing about how amazing “Marco! Merrick! Terry Lee! Gary Tibbs! And Yours Tru-ly!” are.
And it was a hit. Ha!
As was the brilliant “Stand & Deliver” with the equally terrific ode to S&M B-Side, “Beat My Guest”.
In fact, S&D can be looked at as the epitome of all things “Antmusic”. Lyrically it's inspired. Hughes and Marco and Adam take full advantage of Adam's vocal gymnastics. The drums pound, the guitar is huge, that signature click-clack ant sound is all over the place. The song was ready made for a video and it's beyond silly with it's “fa-diddly-qua-qua” backing vox.
It's perfection.

Prince Charming slips all over the place but even when it does the band is still having a blast. Recognizing the disposability of their music on songs like “That Voodoo” and “S.E.X.” and “Mowhok”, it's impossible not to notice that they aren't very good (well, I kinda dig “Mowhok”) but they fit with the theme and the production is just top notch.
Only “Mile High Club” is kind of terrible, but it bleeds so well into “Ant Rap” that it's almost worth listening to. Almost. But, “Mashed Potato, rocksteady rub”? What the hell is that?

Grade A-
A-Side: Prince Charming, Stand & Deliver, Ant Rap
BlindSide: Scorpios, Picasso Visitos Los Planetos de los Simios, Mowhok
DownSide: That Voodoo, Mile High Club