* Through the arch window *
Never before have a group been so hermetically sealed from the
outside world as suede. Their true origins, relationships and drug
habits have always been hidden under a shield of wry cool - until now.
Welcome to the private life of the band under glass. . .
*She's shaking obscene to a fucking machine. . .* Amid the racks of
flickering LED's at West
London's Townhouse recording studios, Brett Anderson's effects laquered
vocla leaps
suggestivly from the speakers. The tracks called *savoir faire* and
its bumping along in
twitchingly lavish style. The five members of suede sit around, listening
intently as their new
album is tweaked and EQ'd at this final pre-manufacturing cut. The
song of the moment
sluttishly wends its way, oblivious to the dustless, pristine environment
that its currently
contaminating.
*She cooking crack, giving us 'eart attack. * it goes, in a winner combination
of gurning drug
fun, questionable grammar and pro-am West-Indiam patois. As suede listen
for th desired mix
of bottom-end woof, and upper-mid bite, the speakers keep up a steady
flow of narcotic
allusion: *She make love and swalloed a dove. . .* Then, in a moment
of euphoria, *I believe in
ecstasy, yeah, yeah, yeah!* coos Brett in a tone that suggests he's
considering this notion for
the first time ever.
Drugs, cities, *shaking obscene* - as in *shaking obscene like a killing
machine* on 1994
B-side, killing of a flashboy* - anyone familiar with the suede lexicon
with be unsuprised by
this frame of reference. Brett has, of course, long since secured this
particular niche - an
enticingly blighted land of cocaine, council estates and chic carnality.
And now suede return, different but the same. *Head music*, their fourth
album, brings a new
machine drilled sound, but the heart of the band is fixed eternally.
*Head music* is suede, but
more so. Swamped in cold futuristic processed noise, the album moves
still further into the
tensed, claustrophobic heart of the millenial citadel.
This time the bands self declared reference points are *A Clockwork
Orange*, Cocaine,
Prince, the Sex Pistols and The London Underground. Beyond this, compared
with the usual
serial reinvention of British poo culture, Suede stand as unchanging
as grannit. Not for them
the recently vogue-ish ways of avant-guard introspection or the inventing
quick fix of remic
culture. Round here, wardrobes remain untouchabled by balooning combat
pants, and
strange new space-age footwear.
In a medium normally riven by cultural cross-polination, suede cannibalise
only themselves.
So, *Head music* is stocked with gasoline, teenage toughs, violent
homes and brutish
androgyne, *walking like a woman, and talking like a stone age man*.
As ever, suede want to
blow their own trumpet because everybody else has got their spit on
it.
"I think this album is both alien and familiar", says suede bassman
Mat Osman after the cut
has been successfully negotiated. "you'll certainly recognise things,
but it *sounds* new. This
time we took the songs into the studio, and they just seemed *taller.*"
Coming the autumn of 1998 it was time for Simon Gilbert, urbane rhythmatist,
to begin
thinking abuot taking Geaorge away for a spell in the counrt. George
is Simons Labrador, and
whenever suede activity gets intense, this valued canine, is driven
out to the berkshire
kennels he shares with the celebrity hounds of Shane Richie and Terry
Wogan.
"I know its ridiculous" Simon smiles, "but George does get looked after
in some style. I think
all the dogs have their own TV set."
Georges evactuation was pressing because suede were about to enter the
studio for a weks
trial production with Steve Osborne, A man best known for his work
on Happy Monday's *Pills,
Thrills and Bellyaches*, and along Paul Oakenfold in the perfceto team.
The week went well,
and by th end of August, Band and Producer had moved into Notting Hill's
Sarm West Studio to
begin work in earnest.
Suede came to the studio with around a dozen songs, the oldest of which
was *He's Gone*, a
piece originally destined for the B-side of the lazy single but pit
aside when its quality
became apparent. With a chord progression similar to *My Way*, it had
been stockpiled
alongside the new songs Suede had begun demo-ing after their 1997 headline
performance
at Reading.
As work progressed, the first song had began to realise the blue print
the band had in their
head was *Savoir Faire*. Recorded at Fulham's Mayfair studio and riding
on an immortal
opening couplet *She live in a haouse, She stupis as a mouse*, It developed
into a piece of
clipped, FX-laden machine funk, like Prince somehow being persueded
to produce Placebo.
"It was a new version of Suede," Brett now recalls, sitting in a secluded
bolthole in Master
Rock Studios off Kilburn High Road
"It was an evolution, but not a wholesale reinvention There's always
been a lot of emotion, a
lot of heart in our songs, and I like that 'Savoir Faire' pushes Suede
forward, but it still keeps
what Suede were about"
The new model Suede placed a novel emphasis on groove and tight two
chord structures,
looking for inspiration to the late '80s Prince of 'Alphabet Street'
and 'Girls And Boys' as well
as the David Bowie of 'TVC 15' (from 1976's 'Station To Station') The
lyrics were designed as
naturalistic snapshots, often dictated more by their sounds than their
meaning It was
intended to be, in Brett's words, "taut and pretty funky" Sitting on
the sofa, alongside a blank
TV screen, todays Brett is lucid, attentive, courteous, sips coffee
and smokes the occasional
B&H Clad in silver army-issue parka, slinky Carhartt top, nondescript
jeans and Reef trainers,
he glows with health (he's just back from a fortnight in Barbados -
he goes there every year)
He also litters his conversation with a library of deeply Suede esque
words and phrases
"loonies", "proper drug fiends", "heavy metal" In a '70s Grange Hill
style, he refers to
deodorant as "BO basher"
In conversation, Brett's sentences habitually end with a strange, warbling,
Mick lagger esque
modulation and a quick "D'y'know what I mean?" And, as with Jagger,
he can also discuss his
art with a wilful glibness, talking about new songs like a man off-handedly
hailing a cab
"Funny one, that A bit of a singalong, that one "
Gone, however, are the series of theatrical sniffs that punctuated his
last major interview with
Select, in November 1997 Such furious sniffing might have indicated
a troublesome head cold
or troublesome drug habit, depending on your disposition. The inference,
of course, was the
latter But there's no sniffing today Brett has discovered other interests.
"I'm really into food at the moment. Food's great," he declares with
the delinously bewildered
tone of Paul Whitehouse's *'Brilliant* character "I've been very healthy
recently and I've been
reading loads, which I never used to do I've just realised that books
are excellent I'm not
doing any drugs at the moment, and I'm doing a lot of exercise - sit
ups, press ups, any thing to
keep me in shape "
Right now, Brett might be a shining advert for better living through
biology, but Suede's new
album does bring with it some signs of opiated tomfoolery The album's
title was, initially,
announced one letter at a time With the first two letters being 'H'
and 'E', there is a theory that
this was Suede playing on their previous heroin infamy Was Brett, a
man who told Select in
1997 that he had "tried some smack-o-gram teaser?
"Oh, no," he frowns resignedly, brow creasing in concern. "1 really
wish it hadn't gone like
that. What actually happened was that I was playing pool, right here
in this studio with Saul
Galpern (Nude Records boss) and he was nagging me for the album title,
Just to piss about
with him I said, 'Saul, I'm going to tell you the name a letter at
a time. On Monday morning, I'll
fax you the first letter.' From there it went to the fan club and then
into the press. It really wasn't
meant to be this big highly questionable scam, with us maybe spelling
out the word 'heroin'. It
was a joke that got out of hand. That is the God's honest truth."
Brett may be drug-free at the moment, but 'Head Music' strikes a different
tone.
Pharmacological reportage is, of course, a long-standing tradition
with Suede. The first album
includes gurning nods to amyl nitrate alongside invocations to "chase
the dragon". Second
album 'Dog Man Star' featured the impenetrable double entendre of 'Heroine'
and a girl whom
the narrator would "supply with ecstasy". Then 1996's 'Coming Up' escalated
into a cavalcade
of Class A's, injectable mari-joo-arna and doved-up, sex-and-Bostik
aficionados.
Predictably enough, it's a tradition now revisited on 'Head Music'.
Alongside 'Savoir Faire' and
its E, crack and speed, the album also sings heartily of blown minds
and "Love from the white,
white line". What exactly is going on here?
"Well," Brett volunteers, quite convincingly, "I'm not doing anything
at the moment, but that
doesn't mean drugs don't exist. When I was writing the album I was
doing loads of crap. We've
been writing the album for a year and a half now, and for the first
half of that I was flying on the
ceiling. Lots of the people I know are proper fiends, you know what
I mean? Serious fiends.
This album was a combination of either no drugs or a lot of drugs."
It sounds like a variety-packed regime. But, as Brett tucks his legs
up on the chair and flicks
his lighter, he puts his current lifestyle in perspective."Gnnnnn,"
he says by way of
introduction.
"The thing is, the first two albums were constant, full-on drugs. All
of the albums were framed
in a lot of narcotics really, but 'Dog Man Star' really stands out.
With that one, I was just out of
it pretty much all the time. I did lose perspective there, and if anyone
is put off that album,
that's probably why. Too many drugs. Cocaine psychosis. I became really
put off by the way
cocaine is such a horrible extension of the music industry. 1 don't
go to industry events, it's
not my scene. If I'm going to snort Cocaine, I'd rather not do it in
toilets, which is aways the
abiding memory of those events. I'd rather do it at home."
Swivelling animatedly in his seat, he continues. "I've now found that
being completely
abstinent can be just as much of a high as taking shitloads of drugs.
Lots of the songs on the
new album were written when I was suddenly clean and getting a real
high off that - 'Savoir
Faire', 'Crack In The Union Jack', 'Can't Get Enough' were like that.
'Can't Get Enough' was about
having given it up and seeing the monster I'd been - this snarling,
greedy, grabbing character.
In fact, it's almost a celebration of that, but I was able to write
it because I was removed from
that scenario."
Sitting back, he scrunches his face into a contented grin.
"Real life can be great. It really can, which is something you can't
really see when you're
scurrying from house to house worrying where you're going to get your
next hit. Being here
today and not needing anything more than a cup of coffee really is
wonderful."
"Hmm, yes, *goodie goodie yum yum, funky Gibbon', and not forgetting
'Black Pudding Bertha'.
All the greats."
In an Islington pub, senatorial Suede bassist Mat Osman reflects on
The Goodies, the '70s
comedic TV trio responsible for the suggestion that we "Do, do, do,
the funky gibbon" - as well
as a host of other equally irremovable novelty hit singles. Mat's brother
Richard, as well as
producing recent boy-band TV spoof Boyz Unlimited, is the man behind
BBC2 quiz show If I
Ruled The World. Consequently, Mat has been able to consort with Graeme
Garden, one of the
team captains on the quiz and formerly one third of The Goodies.
"It was good to meet Graeme Garden," says Mat over his lager and fags.
"All my mates were
much more impressed by that than by my meeting any musician. You say,
'Oh, I met David
Bowie at the weekend', and they're like, 'Oh, yeah...' Tell them that
you've met Graeme Garden
and they all go, 'No! Blimey, go on, what's he really like?'"
Truth be told, Suede don't meet a lot of musicians. Of all the big league
bands in Britain today,
they're probably the most self-sealed. With all five band members living
amid the quietly
bohemian streets of West London's boroughs of Westbourne Park, Netting
Hill and
White City, their social circle is restricted to the group and the three
or four close friends that
they each maintain.
"We don't really go out," says Mat. "It's not a pose, but I don't go
to many showbiz parties. I
went to Eddie Izzard's thing at the London Planetarium, that's the
only one I can remember. I
don't want to be part of today's music industry and compare what we're
doing with
contemporary bands. I want to compare what we do with Prince and David
Bowie and Kate
Bush.
Plus, I don't do drugs. I take less drugs than virtually any human
being I know. If taking drugs
was an Olympic event, I wouldn't get in the team. I've got to an age
where I realise my favourite
drug is booze. I like Irish whiskey and I like gin, but I'll drink
any fucking thing. I do love a
drink, but the thing that people might not realise about us is that
there is a puritan streak to us
sometimes. I would never have a drink before playing a gig, or in the
studio."
The band's two newer members have now also taken up residence in the
West London
environs of Suedeworld - a place where the attentive observer will
be able to spot Brett sitting
eating a curry with the hood of his parka pulled fully up. Such onlookers
will also be able to
observe keyboardist Neil Codling shopping for records 'incognito' in
four-inch-diameter
shades.
Striding precisely across the bare boards of an East London photo studio,
flares flapping,
ectomorph rib-cage thrust out, Neil now seems an intrinsic part of
the Suede landscape.
Without any apparent hint of self-consciousness, he removes Underworld's
'Beaucoup Fish'
from the studio CD machine and keys up one of his instrumental happy-house
demos.
His current listening includes Mercury Rev, the Super Furries, Serge
Gainsbourg's imperious
'Histoire De Melody Nelson' album, Belle & Sebastian's 'Seymour
Stein' and "various bang ing
techno". To complement this, the current Suede fanclub maga/.ine includes
an ebullient
handwritten greeting from Codling.
"Sell your television," it goes. "Secure all removable objects and lock
up Fluffy.
Suede are back. Love, Neil X."
Neil's initial interviews included reports of nervousness. It's difficult
to imagine this today.
Almost comically self-assured, he talks very earnestly of his distrust
of television, treats silly
questions with quiet disdain and outlines his chemical regime during
the recording of 'Head
Music': "No drugs at all, just salt and pepper."
The album not only features such Anderson/Codling credits as 'Elephant
Man', but also an
image of Neil (alongside Brett's girlfriend, Sam) on the album's front
cover. Comeback single
'Electricity' features a further example of Codling expansionism -
his hesitant lead vocals
feature on the self-written B-side 'Waterloo'.
"'Waterloo' is part of our covert Abba theme," he explains.
"The other B-side on the CD is called 'See That Girl',
which is a line from 'Dancing Queen'. For the album, all my demos were
named after the
London Underground. *Waterloo' was one that stuck. It's a good song,
because people say to
me, 'Is that Abba's 'Waterloo'?' and I say, 'No. it's my Waterloo'
- as in my Waterloo, my final
battle."
Taking his seat at the table, Richard Oakes returns his round John Lennon
glasses to his nose.
"Can't be wearing those in photos now," he explains with mild self-deprecation.
Currently in his 23rd year, Richard is now some way from the novelty
teen role he was
assigned when he joined Suede - he was nicknamed 'Little Dick' and
'Mad Dog' by media and
bandmates respectively. Radiating an understated, sober solidity, he
still looks slightly like
he's been dressed by Suede Central Casting, but these days he's taking
no shit.
"Yeah, right," he snarls when it's suggested that a proposed domestic
move to North London
will take him deep into the homeland of his predecessor in Suede, Bernard
Butler. "I'm sure a
few other people might live there as well."
Denying interest in any exotic gunk ("I don't take any drugs. I do like
a drink, but I once played
a show in Canada drunk and never again"), he's recently been listening
to Audioweb, Sneaker
Pimps and a Prince tape that Brett made for him. According to Mat,
of all the Suede contrast
between Brett's origins and the metropolitan blade of today. Lindfield
- as opposed to the
adjoining town of Haywards Heath that Suede are identified with - is
a world of duck ponds
and Tudor beams. It's a place pretty enough to have made itself "The
best kept village in all of
Sussex, 1993-95".
Not that we should seek to infer eternal shame with this contrast -
after all, it took
London-born Rod Stewart to become the ultimate professional Scotsman.
Whatever, in
keeping with such rock manifestations of Eddie Murphy's Trading Places,
Suede are about to
release an album that takes Brett even further from the scenic delights
of his past. There
seems little danger that he'll soon be returning to the tree-lined
expanses of Hast Sussex -
whether those trees are being attended to by great teenagers or not.
"I can't see myself ever going back to live in Lindfield," Brett affirms
back at Master Rock. "It
is a bit greener than Haywards Heath, but all I can remember from living
there is wanting to
leave. I go back once a year at Christmas and stay with my Dad and
we have an argument
about what's best, pop or classical music."
Taking acid in the park, vainly attempting to get high by smoking banana
skins... Brett's
pre-pubescent eco-warrior bent would soon be replaced by more nefarious
activities. Then
there was the move up to London to study first Town And Country Planning
and then
Architecture at UCL. It was here that he first met Justine Frischmann.
There is one particular bridge between this period and the Suede of
today. 'Implement Yeah!'
was written with Justine when she was a member of the nascent Suede.
It's both a Fall
pastiche and a tribute to Mark F Smith, and goes "That boy Smith's
got lard for a tongue,He
looks like a gun or a bun or a bung,He's a basket-case,He's siren fodder,His
face is odd and
his voice is odder." It's now being released as a B-side to 'Electricity'
- its only previous public
airing was at the Reading 1997 appearance which led to rumours of a
rekindled romance
between Brett and Justine. These rumours have persisted ever since,
refusing to die down in
spite of Brett's long-term relationship with Sam Cunningham.
"It does feel strange to have a record coming out recorded with Justine
after all these years,"
smiles Bretl. "It was originally recorded as a B-side for 'Filmstar'
and then we were thinking
about putting it on the new album. I mean, I'm good friends with Justine,
so it's good fun. We a
lot of time together, she's a good laugh. Heard most of the Elastica
album - including a track she's done with Mark E Smith, which is great.
It has Mark spelling out Elastica's name into barking Smith impression]:
'E-L... breaks down class barriers down the class barriers...' I do listen
to Justine's opinion when I play her my music, but I listen to everyone's
opinion, so I probably don't listen to her any more than I do to my friend
Alan who works in a chip shop.
Justine likes the more electronic stuff on the on the album - 'Hi-fi'
is her favourite, that and
Elephant Man'. 'Hi-fi' is this long thing based around a drum loop
and a filtered keyboard. It's a
good one."
Justine's departure from Brett and her taking up with Damon Albarn was
documented on
Suede's debut album - particularly 'Animal Lover'. Now of course, Blur's
new album deals with
Justine's split with Damon. Has Brett heard it?
"Hmm, " he pauses, for the first time becoming guarded. "I've heard
the single on the radio. I
do keep my ears open to what people are doing. Apart from that, I don't
have a huge opinion
about it. It sounds alright, nice enough record."
What about the themes of the album?
"I don't really know what the themes of the album are. Oh, it's about
Justine, is it? Yeah, I read a
bit about that. That's a personal thing, isn't it? Nothing to do with
me, really. It's something
between two people, so it's irrelevant to me."
He's clearly happier talking about his own single. 'Electricity' began
to take its fully formed
shape around Christmas last year, in the process shaking off its working
title 'Stompy'. A
clinical yet exultant burst of future-glam, it sounds like T-Rex thrown
naked onto the set of
Bladerunner. Brett sees it in more prosaic terms. "Yeah, just a simple
singalong," he demurs, slipping into hilariously blase jagger/barrow-boy
mode. "Funny one, really," he then decides, like a man finding a pound
coin down the back of the sofa. "Nothing clever. Simple metaphor. Equates
love and electricity."
Then he relents, entering into more considered analysis. "There is a
bit of a karmic theme to
the album," he says. "It deals with the connection between the flow
of things between people,
so electricity is a metaphor for that. The original idea for the album
sleeve, which got a bit
distorted, was to have two people sitting cross-legged looking at each
other with
head-phones on. The headphones are connected to each other, so they're
listening to each
other's brains. 'Electricity', yeah, it's alright. You can shake a
hip to it."
Do you ever shake a hip yourself? When was the last time you went out
dancing?
"I go to clubs a hell of a lot, actually. I go to Heaven quite a bit.
Yeah, I do dance. I like
old-school hip hop, Run DMC, that sort of stuff. I do dance, but I
don't jump up and down like a
dick-head. I can't really move to hardcore rave, cos you've either
got to go insane or not
bother at all. I go clubbing and E it, but I've never found it makes
me want to jump around in a cage somewhere. I can't remember how many E's
I've done in my life, but I've never combined them with
painting my face purple and waving my arms about on the podium."
Head Music was completed on 26February this year, the concluding mix
being completed at
the Mayfair studio. The final cut was made a week later, leaving Suede
to then divide their
time between promotional engagements and their beloved West London.
Sipping his pint, Mat
considers the view.
"I just love London," he exhales. "The Westway has to be the most beautiful
road in Britain. I do
think that is the best thing, just driving over the Westway at three
in the morning. You have all
those blocks of houses that border onto it where you can see into all
the rooms as you zoom
by. A very Suede-esque vista. Fulfils all the cliches."
And from there it's out for a series of fan-club shows, from London
to Oslo. A long way from
Lindfield. Or maybe not.
"Adulation of stage stars is nothing new," ventured Brett's dad in the
Brighton Argus all those
years ago. "It goes back to Franz Liszt. He had people taking his used
cigar butts. That's no
different from girls ripping the shirt off Brett's back."
Well put, Mr Anderson. History is plainly on Suede's side.