Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Captain Sensible - This Is Your Captain Speaking

CAPTAIN SENSIBLE - 
THIS IS YOUR CAPTAIN SPEAKING

Many individuals hitherto unassociated with politics and protest were also coming forward and joining the ranks of anti-war demonstrators in a bid to voice objection, a good example of this being Captain Sensible from seminal Punk pranksters The Damned.
Famously known as the guitarist who when not dressed in a variety of fancy dress costumes would often be naked on stage save for a guitar held by a strap adorned with the slogan 'Sod the whale', the Captain was not thought of as being the most serious of people. It was a surprise then, to see him appear on the Crass label with the EP This Is Your Captain Speaking, railing against the notion that 'the Russians are coming'.


Apparently very taken by the lyrics of Crass, the Captain felt, however, that their music was rubbish so had approached them with the idea of a collaboration. Flush with the success of their previous releases the offer was taken up, resulting in a Crass/Damned hybrid that unfortunately didn't really do justice to either band.
Driven by Captain Sensible's melodic, almost traditional rock'n'roll-style guitar playing over the drumming of Penny Rimbaud, the first track on the EP, entitled The Russians Are Coming, had the Captain declaring "I feel so bored with hate, so tired of hate, want peace but I can't wait. I feel so tired of war, so bored with war, can't be what life is for? Don't I have the right to live? Hate and war is all they give. Want to live my life, be free, but they stole my world from me. The Russians are coming - I don't believe a word. The Russians are coming - it's all I've ever heard. The Russians are coming - I don't wanna hear it any more. The Russians are coming - I won't sit by and take their bloody war."
Accompanied by girl band Dolly Mixture on backing vocals it was hardly typical Damned subject matter.

On the track (What D'Ya Give) The Man Who's Gotten Everything, the Captain sings of the emptiness of a rags to riches life: "From racing pigeons I'm a self-made chap, I bought everything I can but it's a load of crap. Something failed in my masterplan cos I'm bored if I can't spend, I'm bored if I can." This being a neat echo of the Crass stencil slogan 'Wealth is a ghetto'.
The final track, Our Souls To You, was a hymn-like play on the similarity between the words 'our souls' and 'arseholes', that unfortunately wasn't actually as amusing as it might have seemed at the time of recording: "Lord, we've sinned against Thee, worked and schemed against Thee and now You're free to punish us. We've worked and schemed against Thee, punish us and teach us and we'll give our souls to You. Arseholes to You."

Years later, Captain Sensible would say he was very proud of the record and would consider it the best thing he ever did. This Is Your Captain Speaking, however, would turn out to be a financial loss for Crass Records though there wasn't any one particular reason for this.
As a record it was perfectly adequate and being by a member of The Damned should have widened its receptive audience beyond the traditional Crass base. The fact that it was neither really a Crass-type record nor a Damned record seemed instead to work against it, causing it to fall between two stools.
As a piece of polemic it also didn't really work. Whilst it was interesting to hear Captain Sensible displaying his political sensibilities, it may well have been more effective if he had done so under the Damned banner rather than joining the Crass camp to do it? As a Crass Records release it lacked also a certain energy, an invigoration, a strangeness; a cutting edge that other releases on the label all possessed.
On the other hand, it was good to see a display of unity between Captain Sensible and Crass. For Crass themselves, it was gratifying to be given the thumbs-up from one of Punk's old guard instead of the usual (and incessant) jibes from the like of Garry Bushell. And for Captain Sensible, after six days in the studio with Crass he turned vegetarian.

If only Happy Talk by Captain Sensible had been released on Crass Records? It could have given the label a Number One hit record? It could have changed the world! Or at least confounded absolutely everyone's expectations of what Crass were about? And what more fitting lyrics could there be for a Crass/Anarcho Punk anthem: "Happy talk keep talking happy talk, talk about things you'd like to do. You got to have a dream. If you don't have a dream how you gonna make a dream come true?"

Monday, 28 December 2015

The War Game

THE WAR GAME

Far away from the world of records (and other commodities), if only Thatcher had not made the decision to refuse political status to the Irish Republican 'H-Block' prisoners and to refuse to be moved by their hunger strikes, then perhaps Bobby Sands MP would still be alive?
If Thatcher had not made that decision then perhaps an IRA bomb would not have subsequently been let off outside Chelsea Barracks in London that summer, killing one by-stander and injuring many soldiers?

This was the age of tension and quarrel where it was becoming increasingly difficult to escape from the results and effects of the political decisions being made by the Thatcher government. Clearly, war was very much on the agenda be it home-grown war between the Irish Republican Army and the British State or impending global nuclear war, with everyone being sucked into it and being forced to take sides whether you wanted to or not.
You either supported Thatcher's political decisions or you didn't but as silence was being interpreted as consent, the only way to register disagreement was to demonstrate it in whatever way able. So, whilst hundreds were taking to the streets in protest marches calling for Troops Out of Northern Ireland, thousands were attending mass demonstrations called for by CND as well as attending public meetings where the Cruise missile question would be addressed.

Often at these meetings a copy of the banned BBC docu-drama The War Game would be shown, which though being a work of fiction was still the truest depiction there was available at the time of a what a nuclear attack upon Britain would look like. The fact that The War Game had never been shown on British television since being made in 1965 only added to its power as an effective propaganda tool for CND, helping to convince a huge number of people that Thatcher's nuclear sabre rattling was seriously insane.


Apart from depicting the horror of a nuclear bomb being dropped upon the south of England, it was incredibly realistic scenes such as looters being lined up against walls and being shot by British policemen armed with rifles that made The War Game so effectively shocking.
Incorporating vox-pop style interviews, scientific reports, official Civil Defence documents and dramatic 'pre-constructions' shot in newsreel-style black and white, the film was fully reminiscent of old World War Two footage; in particular scenes of cities such as Dresden, Nagasaki and Hiroshima after being destroyed.
Whilst it was a total flashback to the horrors of WW2, the film also served to catapult the viewer into the future where the idea that there might be survivors of a nuclear war seemed to be an even more terrifying prospect than total annihilation.

Condemnation of and objection to the nuclear arms race being waged was coming from all sections and all levels of society: from clergy and retired army generals to middle class housewives; from academics, Trade Unionists, and the unemployed, to teenage (increasingly black-clad) Punk Rockers and beyond. Or as Poison Girls had put it: "Housewives and prostitutes, plumbers in boiler suits, wild girls and criminals, liggers and layabouts, accountants in nylon shirts, feminists in floral skirts, astronauts and celibates, deejays and hypocrites, liars and lunatics, pimps and economists, royalty and communists, rioters and pacifists, visionaries with coloured hair, leather boys who just don't care, garter girls with time to spare, judges with prejudice, dissidents and anarchists, strikers and pickets, collectors of tickets, beggars and bankers, perjurers and men of law, smokers with heart disease, cleaners of lavatories, the old with their memories." Persons unknown, essentially.


That summer's Glastonbury Festival featuring among many others New Order, Hawkwind, Gong, Ginger Baker and Aswad had been organised primarily so as to be a benefit for CND, subsequently raising over £20,000 for the cause - the largest single contribution CND had ever received.
In London, a demonstration called for by CND attracted around 250,000 protesters whilst from Cardiff, in Wales, a relatively small group of 36 people calling themselves Women For Life On Earth set off on a protest march to Greenham Common with the intention of delivering a letter expressing their opposition to the site being used as a Cruise missile base.
After having their request for a meeting with the Base Commander ignored, the women set themselves down just outside the perimeter fence and set up camp. The women's camp immediately became a Peace Camp that unbeknown to the Base Commander and even to the women themselves would remain there for the next 19 years, becoming an extraordinarily powerful and extremely provocative symbol of resistance.

Thursday, 10 December 2015

Zounds - The Curse of Zounds

ZOUNDS - THE CURSE OF ZOUNDS

It was obvious even by the cover of their Rough Trade label released début album, The Curse Of Zounds - the front depicting firemen aiming their hose at the Houses of Parliament as smoke engulfs Big Ben; to the back revealing their hose is not attached to a fire engine but to a petrol tanker - that there was much more to Zounds than at first met the eye.
Here was a band who were unique in a very subtle and very understated way, their apparent ordinariness masking a radicalism born of a very English imagination. With Crass, they shared a hope and a desire for a better world but whilst the forte of Crass was anger, the forte of Zounds was fear, as the first track on the album - with its cover designed by Clifford Harper (anarchist, illustrator, anarchist illustrator) - depicted perfectly:
"I'm frightened of the humans, I'm frightened of the stares, frightened of the poisons they pump into the air. Frightened of the chemicals they spray upon the land, frightened of the power they hold within their hands. I'm frightened of bureaucracy, I'm frightened of the law, frightened of the government and who it's working for. Frightened of the children who won't know how to cope with a world in rack and ruin from their technocratic dope."


Given the state of the nation and the political climate at the time, it was perfectly reasonable to be afraid. Very afraid. Who in their right mind wasn't frightened of nuclear war and scared of what politicians might be capable of? The Home Office on behalf of the government were, after all, responsible for the most bizarre public information pamphlets offering advice on how to survive a nuclear attack. Their instructions being to stockpile a bit of food, water and some warm clothing, then to build a makeshift shelter in the cupboard under the stairs. Just stay there for two weeks until the all-clear is given by the local council and then presumably emerge and be greeted with a cup of tea and a biscuit at the local community hall or other such building to be used as a gathering point. Services such as buses and trains may be disrupted.
Fright and anger were quite rational responses to this kind of delusory but very dangerous thinking. Anger, as demonstrated by Crass and later to be proclaimed by John Rotten/Lydon was an energy but fear as stated by Zounds was "a bum thing, a silly and a dumb thing. Fear can be the one thing that keeps us all apart."

What they were saying made sense. Fear was a form of social control. A tried and tested method of dividing and ruling a population. Fear of unemployment, of homelessness, hunger, crime, violence, damnation, nuclear Armageddon, etc, etc. Fear of 'the other'. Fear of one and other.
Fear was a weapon used to keep people in line and in place but to simply be aware of this was a step in the right direction toward further awareness and freedom. Highlighting this in a trilogy of songs linked together to form a mini opus, Zounds called out to the world: "The unfree child is full of woe, into the unfree adult he will grow. Have unfree children of his own, on and on and so it goes."
Caught in a perpetual cycle of repression, vocalist Steve Lake understood that his parents were actually his first oppressors but held no malice toward them as he also understood that they too were caught in the same cycle, as explained in the track My Mummy's Gone: "Now that I am older I know that you scarred me but I don't hold it against you though it damaged me sorely. I know that you're a victim just like me, you can feel the pressure just like me."

In the track Did He Jump Or Was He Pushed, a repressed upbringing be it socially or emotionally is taken to a possible logical conclusion where Steve sings: "Who was that on the window ledge? Did he jump or was he pushed? He left a note which no-one read, in desperate hand the note just said: Never turned my back on society, society turned its back on me. Never tried once to drop out, I just couldn't get in from the very start." Then in an echo of the Crass dictum that reality is an asylum, the track ends with the refrain: "All the world cannot be wrong, it must be me - I don't belong."

Could it be that there were more people feeling alienated than might actually care to admit it? Could it be that society was truly atomised, separated by degrees of fear?
According to Thatcher in her analysis of the summer's riots, all sense of community was lost - particularly within the inner cities - due to a culture of welfare arrangements which encouraged dependency and discouraged responsibility. Displaying her prejudices, Thatcher laid the blame firmly and unequivocally upon socialism for the demoralisation of communities by offering dependency instead of independence. The kind of independence promoted by Thatcher, however, simply meant a culture of selfishness and dog eat dog, pandering to some of the worst aspects of human nature.
Profit and profiteering was all. Anything without a monetary value was of no worth and merely surplus to requirement. To the conservative mind, wealth and ownership defined an individual and a society so deserved therefore to be protected by law, insurance, the gun, and ultimately The Bomb.
Those who could not achieve were simply 'the poor' and be they deserving or undeserving, they really had no-one to blame for their position but themselves. It was not the world that was wrong but the individual self.

The world as depicted by Zounds, however, was a world of ambiguity and dissatisfaction. A world where the "rain is flooding, the pavement cracks, headlines screaming 'Pay more tax'." A world where the news is "stranger than fiction," and where "the music is crap, that the radio plays." A world "choking with wires and plugs, strangled with fences and stuck with knives," where "everybody's looking for a little bit more."

This yearning for something other is explored to good effect in the track Dirty Squatters, where Steve Lake sings the song from the viewpoint of someone who has lived in the same street "for nearly fifteen years, lived here with my hopes, lived here with my fears. Paid my taxes, paid my bills, watched my money vanish in the council tills."
One day "some dirty squatters" move into his street "with their non-sexist haircuts, dirty feet. Their dogs, cats, political elite; they may have beds but they don't use sheets. Furnishing their houses from the contents of skips, things that decent people put on rubbish skips." He observes them as looking "quite harmless sitting out in the sun but I wouldn't let my daughter marry one. Oh my god, they're moving in next door! Is it for people like this that Winston won the war?"
Bemoaning his personal situation, he comes to see the squatters as being representative of some kind of an alternative: "Along come these scruffs with their education, their grand ideas and talk of corruption. My rent keeps rising, my job gets boring. If things get worse then I'm gonna have to join them."
The song ends with him doing just that: "Bought myself a lock and late tonight, under the cover of darkness if the moon's not bright. Getting out of here, moving next door, don't think I can take much more. Oh my god, I'm moving in next door!"


An alternative of any kind can very often and very easily be merely a different version of the same old thing with just a new set of different problems - as anyone who has had any experience of squatting, for example, would know. These contradictions are looked at in what is arguably the best song on the album - New Band - in which a yearning for something other is once again expressed:
"Been searching for something but I don't know what, been searching for a long, long time. Someone comes along and says 'this is it' but it will cost you, realise. Pay your money, try your luck, think you'll trust them one more time. But how long does it take to feel you're being ripped off? There's always something new to buy."
According to Zounds, alternatives of any kind within a capitalist system, particularly as promoted by the mainstream media are nothing more than new ways to make you spend. At the end of the day everything is a commodity to be either bought or sold. Be it good, bad, ethical or unethical, everything is a business and as Zounds point out in a more honest way than most, this even applies to music and bands:
"There's a new band every week, new ways to move your feet. New sounds to thrill your ears, same old chords dressed up weird. New attitudes, brand new stance, different steps but the same old dance. New ways but in the end it's just a new way to make you spend."

So did this mean that Zounds too were just another "new band" who in the end were "just a new way to make you spend"? By aligning themselves with Stonehenge and the free festival scene, along with supporting a variety of worthy causes through playing benefit gigs, it was apparent that Zounds weren't exactly going all out to court mainstream commercial success. Just like any other band, however, they were still releasing records that no matter how subversive they might be could still clearly be defined as 'product'.
Be it Abba or Crass, Boney M or Poison Girls, St Winifred Girls School Choir or Zounds, the exchange between producer and consumer remained the same no matter how expensive or how cheap the product might be. This was the bitter truth that Zounds were wrestling with and apart from not making records at all or making them and giving them away for free, there seemed to be no escape from it.

Caught in such a trap, the least any band could do in their songs was to impart something of worth or of value, or something they deemed to be of importance; which is exactly what Zounds do in the track Target: "The Americans are coming, they're bringing us their bombs to aim them at their enemies from our island home. Well, I don't want to die because of some mad President's whim. I don't want to be part of a war no-one can win."
The bombs being referred to, of course, were America's Cruise missiles, still bound for their bases in England and Europe despite an ever-growing opposition to which Zounds were adding their voice: "You're welcome here, Americans. We love you but not your bombs. And not your lies..."

The album ends with a track entitled Mr Disney, which itself ends with the words "radiation green!" being howled out, before the music morphs seamlessly into the guitar riff from the track War, the introductory song on Zounds' début EP Can't Cheat Karma, on Crass Records. The last words from Steve Lake on the album are indeed "War! War! War! War!", again taken directly from their début Can't Cheat Karma record.

The circle was complete.

From a hash-fuelled, post-hippy shambling band before being shaken down and fine-tuned by Crass, before setting off on their own trajectory; Zounds had ended up carving out an irrefutably, absolute classic album that would prove to be a milestone in the history of Anarcho Punk.
With Steve Lake's distinctive vocals backed by chorus-line-type chants, blown along by melodious, booming bass lines scribbled and skated over by electric guitar; all knitted together by the brilliant drumming of one Joseph Porter - The Curse Of Zounds would stand the test of time far, far better than most other albums of that same period.
The decision made by Crass to release on their label only one record by any given band and to then let them go their own way had proved to be a right one. If Zounds had stayed on Crass Records and not moved to Rough Trade then the resulting album would have been produced by Penny Rimbaud and come with a fold-out, black and white sleeve.

The result may well have been extremely interesting but it most certainly would not have been The Curse Of Zounds.

Saturday, 5 December 2015

Discharge - Never Again

DISCHARGE - NEVER AGAIN

And then there was Never Again, the fourth single from Discharge, ripping through anything that might dare stand in its way. Built around an incredibly good guitar riff of Motorhead-sized proportions, fluid bass and frenzied drumming; vocalist Cal was once again serving up a vision of the horror of nuclear war along with a chorus so simple yet none more appropriate: "A blinding light, winds and firestorms, agonised crying. Unanswered cries of help, panic and desperation. Dazed and stricken survivors search for lost families. Choking dust, crazy with thirst, drinking from poisoned pools and streams. Never, never, never again. Never, never, never again."
Discharge, it seemed, could do no wrong.