The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

London falling

Damon Albarn’s The Good, the Bad & the Queen
By JAMES PARKER  |  February 21, 2007

070223_gbq_main
A DOOM OF HIS OWN: The brokenhearted London-ness is amplified by Albarn’s wandering, Parisian sense of melody.

Damon Albarn — Blur frontman, Gorillaz supremo, and now millennial minstrel to the drowning city of London — is that eerie modern specimen, the pop star who talks like a critic. I’m sure he doesn’t think like a critic; it’s quite impossible to move millions of units while thinking like a critic. But he certainly does talk like one. In 1995, when the BBC was making a program called Britpop Now, Albarn “suggested to the show’s producers,” as John Harris writes in his book The Last Party, “that he might take the role of presenter.” The producers were delighted with the idea, and Albarn duly wrote and performed an introduction that — apart from a single, intrusive “we” — could have been taken verbatim from a moderately insightful potboiler band biography: “Three years ago in the spring of 1992 Blur had embarked on their second tour of America. We’d been there the previous autumn and had been very well received, but this time it was very different. In short, Nirvana, Nirvana — everywhere Nirvana.”

Pop stars, unless they’re David Bowie, do not talk like that. The great Blur/Oasis showdown that was in full swing even as Albarn rehearsed his lines for Britpop Now was a battle, when you got right down to it, between a man happy to contemplate his band in the third person and another man — Liam Gallagher — who seemed incapable of escaping the first, who didn’t use phrases like “in short” but stood on tables in pubs and shouted about getting into a fight with the Beatles. As he famously boasted, “I had a dream where I drop-kicked him in the throat, George, and smashed McCartney from here to Jupiter and back. He didn’t have his seatbelt on. My name is disturbance!” It was Liam’s devouring, one-eyed ego, teetering over the huge rehashed chords and the rhythm section that sounded as if it would fall off the edge of the world if it stopped playing in 4/4, that drove Oasis into pop greatness. Albarn, condemned to be self-aware, would have to work a little harder.

And work he did, prodigiously. He swerved, dabbled, collaborated, brainstormed. He magpied and gadfly’d. He went to Africa and made Mali Music (Astralwerks) with Afel Bocoum, Toumani Diabate, and Ko Kan Ko Sata Doumbia. He wrote a film score (Ravenous) with Michael Nyman. In a mind meld with fellow conceptualizer Jamie Hewlett he dreamed up a virtual pop act — Gorillaz — and had some huge non-virtual hits. He is currently working on a “circus opera” that takes its theme from a Chinese legend. (Forty-five acrobats and a Shaolin choir are said to be involved in its performance.) And now he gives us The Good, the Bad & the Queen (Virgin), a project in which the various talents of Fela Kuti drummer Tony Allen, former Clash bassist Paul Simonon, Gnarls Barkley’s DJ Danger Mouse, and the Verve’s Simon Tong are unified under the sign of a falling-to-bits kingdom, England in her waning. Gasworks, dark canals. Songs about pub dread and whales dying in the Thames, all performed in the arch, resigned croon of an end-times Ray Davies.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Gorillaz in the midst, DARE, Gorillaz at the Apollo, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Celebrity News, Entertainment, George Orwell,  More more >
| More

[ 02/18 ]   "48 Hour Music Festival 4"  @ SPACE Gallery
[ 02/18 ]   Inspectah Deck + Colt Seavers  @ Port City Music Hall
[ 02/18 ]   Jeff Beam + Tanner Smith + John Nels  @ The Hive
ARTICLES BY JAMES PARKER
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BLACK SABBATH ARE BACK — IN PRINT AND ON FILM  |  November 14, 2011
    The literature on Black Sabbath — already extensive — will continue to grow, as we try, try, try again to wrap our poor noggins around the irreducibly cosmic fact of this band.
  •   REDISCOVERING METALLICA WITH A NEW BIO  |  August 26, 2011
    Write the Lightning
  •   REDISCOVERING METALLICA WITH A NEW BIO  |  August 24, 2011
    That the biggest metal band in metal history should be called METALLICA — it's just so frigging metal .
  •   REMEMBERING HÜSKER DÜ WITH TWO NEW BOOKS  |  June 09, 2011
    "Readers of this book will be disappointed," declares Andrew Earles, rather sternly, in the introduction to his Hüsker Dü: The Story of the Noise-Pop Pioneers Who Launched Modern Rock (Voyageur Press), "if they hope to be rewarded with the gritty details of any band member's drug use."  
  •   A POET FACES THE ABYSS  |  June 08, 2011
    Depression: the mind grapples — the culture grapples — to frame it. Serotonin hiccup? Existential banana-skin? Anger blow-back? Fall from grace?

 See all articles by: JAMES PARKER



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group