It’s been
5 years since any manner of recorded noise has seeped from the Mortal Records
orifice. The interim has seen the REPLICAS anniversary tour in all its
nostalgic recapitalisation fanfare, but now that the “classic album” binge has
been and gone, (I can’t imagine that he’ll be giving I, ASSASSIN, or anything
subsequent, the same treatment), the only direction for Gary Numan to go is
either forward with a vengeance, or away completely. Apparently this album was
initially spawned out of leftovers and reheated ideas that didn’t make the cut
the last time - some manner of surrogate release for the next “proper” album.
As it was tweaked and brewed and dismantled and rebuilt, ignored for a long
time and finally returned to, something worthy emerged. This is no doubt an
unorthodox and time draining method of creating, but it has provided Numan with
a strikingly individual trajectory – at this stage there’s little to be gained
in continuing to chase the young guns that cite him as influential. So, what we’re
left with is an inventive, restructured and reassured Gary Numan, neither in
the shadow of Nine Inch Nails, or indeed Gary Numan anymore. This long sought
detachment from the 80s pop star tag-line can only be a good thing and DEAD
SON RISING (his 16th album) certainly follows it’s own compass.
RESURRECTION
slowly breaches the surface, evolving from electronic desolation into
unsettling stabs of distortion and a signature evoking a collision of ancient
and modern. A dark and tense journey ahead is immediately apparent. The next
track contorts to a grainy synth bass line and a voice alternating between a
low rant and a whispered vocal - “ Did I ever tell you what happened before? I
was followed by the vision of my god, did I ever tell you what happened before?
I was hiding in a dead soul ” - But it’s when the chorus kicks in on BIG NOISE
TRANSMISSION that the utterly unique and instantly recognisable vocal tones of
Numan really engulf everything. If there’s one track that carries the album
thematically, it’s DEAD SUN RISING. This is where deism and atheism clash to
the chorus of “ I've seen gods bleeding, I've seen worlds burn, I've seen stars
falling, and I've seen a dead sun rising ”. There’s something vague here
reaching right back to the infancy of Numan’s recorded output that I can’t
quite pin-point... perhaps he’s re-entering that same creative slipstream for
the first time in decades. WHEN THE SKY BLEEDS, HE WILL COME straddles a
fragmented rhythm and like much of the album has that creepy ambiguity about it,
walking a knife edge between one thematic dystopia and another - “ Falling from
heaven, looks like a nightmare, coming to save me, I don’t believe it ”. FOR
THE REST OF MY LIFE is a driving, industrial slow burner with textures of
shrill synths that could be from any part of Numan’s career. With much of this
album based on very definite song structure, avoiding mindless electronic
chugging, what’s remarkably obvious about Numan’s vocals is that they have
retained their distinctive quality – part vocoded whine, part snarl, residing
somewhere between Bowie and the wonderful Fad Gadget. In fact, the later
springs to mind on NOT THE LOVE WE DREAM OF, a piano ballad trapped inside an
electronic membrane. One of the most prominent tracks on the album, THE FALL,
stomps along at a grinding pace with merciless walls of noise. This is the very
thing I imagine when I hear the phrase “ electronic punk ” being casually
bandied about, mostly by people who quite simply shouldn’t speak or write about
music - ever. A surprisingly acoustic drum sound is the backbone to WE ARE THE
LOST, providing a jagged rhythmic frame around which whispers of vocals and a
sparsity of synthesised noise seem to be draped. An Eno styled ambient piano
and assortment of distant drones revisit the melody of FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE
( reprise ) giving the album a soundtrack quality and strange equilibrium where
it should probably appear disjointed. This metamorphosis continues through the
final two tracks - INTO BATTLE and a further piano version of NOT THE LOVE WE
DREAM OF, which sounds like a Hans-Joachim Roedelius creation - A subtle and
unorthodox ending.
Gary
Numan is on firmer ground now than he has been for a long time. Although his
output post-‘82 was increasingly shocking in it’s pandering futility, and his
industrial years in the late 90s until recently were not quite as industrious
as proclaimed, the ears of the world are now at a comfortable watershed. It’s a
time when the strange anomalies of his catalogue will shine – when records like
DANCE (’81) sound good and can openly be remembered with fondness. Previously
you might have been given a dead leg or disowned for admitting such things.
Ultimately, if the likes of John Foxx can frequently reconstitute himself with
glorious strides of credibility, then there’s plenty of shelf life left for
Gary Numan. A lifetime’s worth of mistakes have already been made so as long as
he never again duets with members of Shakatak, or attempts to convince us that
he is glass or an eater of dust, then he has a good chance of remaining on an
even keel. - BOZ








Wow Boz.......you're one those clever types, aren't you? Great writeup
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