Wednesday 13 June 2007

HUMOUR: Tony Blair - My Legacy

[Shuffles notes. Waits for make-up lady to apply sheen of moistness to the eyes. Clears throat] They say it’s raining. They say it’s pouring. They say Britain’s gone to bed and bumped its head, but I tell you this: it will get up in the morning. Just as it has got up on countless mornings before, and shall do again. And I’ve been there with you. We’ve seen fire and we’ve seen, y’know… rain. We’ve seen sunny days that we thought would never end and lonely times when we could not find a friend. Or so people would have you believe.
Because I look back to 2002. Those dark days when I felt as only Churchill had done before me: the one leader in Europe crying “Freedom!” Country on the brink of imminent destruction. Dark days… until the friend. For there, in the gardens of Camp David, I heard a voice. A voice that needs no introduction. “Say, Tony,” it said. “The hell with those French appetisers. If we’d appetised Hitler in that big war they had back then, they’d all be speaking Polish now anyhow. Whadya say we liberatiate a pack of Tangy Cheese Doritos?”
But this was no time for snack-bites; I could feel the hand of history on my shoulder. Though moved by this token of friendship, this common bond of understanding that has united our two great nations down through the ages, I declined. As Prime Minister of Great Britain, I felt under no compulsion to accept a Tangy Cheese Dorito unless I believed with all my heart that it was the only course of action to take based on the evidence available to me at the time. And when George accepted my tough, unilateral decision with good grace, in return I agreed to commit troops to Iraq. Such is the give-and-take of true friendship.
But now, I’m leaving. In a sense, the sun is setting. Tomorrow will bring a new dawn, with a new, radiant sun. Gordon. In the meantime, as shadows lengthen, I’ve begun to reflect on something I’ve never previously given much thought: my legacy. It isn’t Iraq, of course. I know I’ve freed its people from a tyrant, laid the foundations of democracy and brought hope to millions, but ‘legacy’ means the setting in place of something concrete. I simply began the healing process – it falls to someone else to complete it. Iraq, will be Gordon’s legacy.
My own lies elsewhere. Something I promised as long ago as 1996. Something often misquoted. So let me remind you of the time I stood up at conference and pledged that our three priorities in government would be “Reconciliation, reconciliation, reconciliation.” As you know, the changes in Northern Ireland have been staggering. I planned each charted course, each careful step along the byway. But more - much more than this – I did it. Finally. Now, barely a month later, the sight of Martin McGuinness and the Reverend Ian Paisley laughing together behind my back has become an iconic image. And mine is the first generation able to contemplate the possibility that we may live our entire lives without sending our children to Ulster.
[Glances up from notes] Look, do you mind if we skip this bit? This ‘quantum revolution in gay rights’ stuff is all very well and, y’know, I’m happy for them, but it’s just… we’ve never really spoken about it; doesn’t play too well on the doorsteps of Guildford, according to Peter. So, if you want to bung in a line about equality, go for ‘equality of opportunity’. Talk about tuition fees or something. Right, the big finish. [Returns to notes. Eye-moistening lady responds to beckoning. Brow readies an emotional-yet-stoic position. ] Now, as Gordon readies himself to move into Number Ten, I leave you with these words. Wherever you go, whatever you do, I will be right here praying for you. Whatever it takes, or how my heart breaks, I will be right here. Praying for you.
Tony Blair was practising his final farewell speech with Julian Owen.

TV Listings

As originally published in Venue magazine:

Darcey Bussell’s Farewell: Live

Friday, 9.00-10.30, BBC2
In which The People’s Ballerina does the dying swan thing one last time, and an elderly lady living at the top of The Mall dispatches her favourite chef before hungrily fastening a serviette. Possibly. More assuredly, the Royal Ballet's most famous toe-pointer will take her final, Kenneth MacMillan-choreographed steps to the tune of Mahler's Song Of The Earth, having first enjoyed a Martha Kearney-fronted career hagiography. Fans of drinking games might like to ready their glasses in anticipation for each utterance of the words ‘darling’, ‘simply’, and ‘marvellous’.


The Culture Show

Saturday, 7.20-8.10, BBC2
Verity Sharp examines the £100million refurbishment of the Royal Festival Hall as the arts venue prepares to reopen its doors, and it’s the beginning of this weekend’s feast of Cocker, as Jarvis talks about helming this year’s Meltdown Festival. And a curator’s egg of choices he’s made, too: Motorhead are all well and good, but he’s obviously not heard the new Iggy and The Stooges album. Still, nice to see a little exposure for SUNN O))), arguably the world’s finest exponents of drone. Sportingly, the programme also features an interview with one of their chief rivals for the title, Peter Mandelson.

George Michael: The Road To Wembley

Saturday, 9.10-10.15, C4
“… and a special helpline has been set up for anyone concerned that friends or family may have cars parked in the area.”

How We Built Britain

Sunday, 9.30-10.30, BBC1
Ah, hubris: so much to answer for. Building England’s largest private house, Holdenby Hall in Northamptonshire, wasn’t enough for Sir Christopher Hatton. Not when there was a monarch to impress and a troublesome blot on the landscape (or, in modern parlance, an entire village). So he had it moved. Alas, Elizabeth I never arrived, and he died penniless. So continues David Dimbleby’s entertaining exploration of the great country houses of the 16th century, when your claim to architectural greatness was gauged by the scale of your chimney crop - Burghley House in Lincolnshire had 76 – and Her Madge’s playful penchant for murdering Catholic clergy was countered by master builder, Nicholas Owen, who travelled the country devising ingenious ‘priest-holes’ to conceal them. Still, it’s hard not to wonder whether Mr Dimbleby’s adherence to the old journalistic maxim of ‘assume nothing’ might not be reaching its outer limits: “Elizabeth didn't build much herself,” he notes, helpfully.

Hollywood Greats

Monday, 10.35-11.15, BBC1
Typically inspired piece of programming from the Beeb, this. First up, Jonathan Ross gets to perform his ‘I wuv you’ routine for Helen Mirren, with the grating (Harrison Ford) and the good (Jeremy Irons) turning out to pay tribute. Then the schedulers opt to follow it not with one of her lesser-seen screen gems (Cal, Hamlet) - or even the higher profile Long Good Friday or Some Mother’s Son - but Last Orders, a so-so, bloke-centric ensemble piece in which she barely features.

Lenny’s Britain

Tuesday, 9.00-10.00, BBC1
Mr Henry travels the UK in a bid to find out ‘what makes people laugh and how humour is used in everyday life’. Forgive our cynicism, but isn’t this rather like sending a piece of chalk to report the goings on in a cheese factory?





Frank Skinner’s Tough Gig

Tuesday, 10.00-10.30, ITV1
Given his booze-guzzling past, perhaps ‘Frank Skinner’s Free Shot’ was considered too risqué a title. As it is, we’re supposed to believe that visiting a New Age retreat in Dorset – replete with programmes for ‘personal growth’ and spewing forth the mumbo-est of jumbo – represents some kind of comic challenge. On second thoughts, perhaps we’re being unfair: according to some poll we’re sure we saw somewhere, our friends in the allegedly ‘spiritual’ community recently pipped both Ian Paisley Jr and the entire population of Canada to the title of Least Likely To Laugh At Themselves.

Gilbert White: The Nature Man: BBC Four On BBC Two

Tuesday, 11.20-12.20, BBC2
Trust the BBC Four slot to contain the highlight of the week: a documentary wholly original in its subject matter, fronted by a proper historian rather than some clueless sleb with a bland script and pushy agent, confident enough in the strength of a compelling narrative not to opt for the ghastly, audience-underestimating ‘reconstruction’ approach. Michael Wood tells the tale of Gilbert White, widely regarded as the founding father of the ecology movement. Rejected by the both the objects of his desire and the church, in 1787 he went on to revolutionise the way we perceive the natural world by penning ‘The Natural History of Selborne’ (pre-Potter, the fourth most-published English language book in the world). Sir David Attenborough is among the contributors.

Britney: Off The Rails

Wednesday, 10.00-11.05, C4
Aptly leaping straight into the Desperate Housewives slot comes this Britney doc and, my, how she’s fallen since those halcyon St Trinian’s days. Type her name into Google’s predictive toolbar and here’s what you get: ‘no underwear’, ‘shaved head’, ‘crotch shot’, and ‘bald’. Hardly able to top what’s already been revealed come a fleet of money-grabbing, jilted acquaintances and several rent-a-quote no-marks to lob a fistful of salt into an open wound. Sorry, we’ll write that again. Hardly able, etc, come her first agent, childhood best friend, journalists and music industry professionals to offer a unique, insider’s perspective.

Mary, Queen Of Shops

Thursday, 9.00-10.00, BBC2
A classic example of title-before-content commissioning. Apparently, the titular Ms Portas is something of a retail guru. Like you give a shit. Instead, here are a few surefire winners of our own. Edward the Contessa: following the tribulations of a wealthy, pre-op transgender patient. Richard the Lionheart: life with an eco-unfriendly transplant beneficiary. William the Concubine: unfortunate ex-pat falls on hard times in China. Alfred the Grate: fireside-dwelling chap who… (Look, this has got to stop. Ed.)

Question Time

Thursday, 10.35-11.35, BBC1
So it’s come to this. In lieu of a Labour leadership contest, poor old Dimbers is reduced to interviewing the six snivelling excuses for democracy who refused to stand against Gordon, preferring instead to vie for the unenviable responsibility of wiping clean Prescott’s desk. We were going to suggest a continuation of Friday’s drinking game, whereby you’d award yourself a single shot for each time you heard the phrase ‘tough decisions’ or ‘time for a new politics’, and a double for every ‘going forward’. Sadly, our resident health expert ruled otherwise.

MUSIC: Michael Eavis Interview

The physicists might not have noticed, but – ever so slightly - the world shifted on its axis last week. Upon return from its regular pre-match briefing with Michael Eavis down at Worthy Farm, Rock Desk turned its attention to the music inbox. Having first reassured a number of concerned parties that, no, it really wasn’t in need of a 10” hammer to plesure its gril, it discovered an altogether more unlikely email from Mendip District Council.
Now, you’ll recall that MDC are the body responsible for licensing Glastonbury Festival. And that, not so long ago, Eavis was taking them to court, claiming that councillors were trying to block the event because he had “rattled a few right-wing cages” with his CND involvement. As recently as 2003 – despite no police objections – MDC rejected his license application, partly on the grounds of ‘the cost of the festival to the public purse’.
Après le lofty disdain… ‘The Glastonbury Festival helps put our wonderful district on the map’, beams the missive sent from the desk of MDC leader, Cllr Ken Maddock. ‘Wherever I go people don't usually know where Mendip is, but as soon as I tell them we are the district council responsible for licensing the Glastonbury Festival, then their eyes light up in recognition’. Indeed, so proud is Cllr Maddock of the event, that - with backing from a government tourism quango - he’s inviting fellow local bigwigs from across country to see first-hand just what a jolly good thing a festival on one’s doorstep can be. All of which means that the Friday line up is now set to include Arctic Monkeys, Rufus Wainwright, Amy Winehouse, Charlotte Meller from the Local Authorities Coordinators Of Regulatory Services, and councillors representing the City of York, Essex County Council and North Cornwall District Council.
Eavis has played his hand well, and played it long. Improvements in ticketing distribution and security have been key in assuaging villagers’ fears. Nobody mentions the fence anymore. Well, nobody save Eavis himself, who smiles as he notes it “snaking beautifully across the countryside” from his farmhouse base. Pilton residents have long been given free entry to the festival. This year, those not wishing to attend have been offered £150 for their ticket; one family of five has opted to take the £750 and head off for a summer break.
In return for his smoothing of both logistical operations and village relations, Eavis has been richly rewarded. Partly with the pleasure of hosting Cllr Maddock and chums, of course, but mainly by the passing of a four-year license – with annual renewal headaches now going the way of loitering touts and free milk – and a capacity extended to 177,500. Glastonbury, finally, is a respectable institution, even in the eyes of its nearest neighbours.
With the last corner of a long journey apparently turned, it’s perhaps little wonder that we find Eavis in a sentimental mood. “When I was a kid I used to build camps in the woods here. I was so excited. It’s exactly the same feeling I have now, and that was 60 years ago. Isn’t it strange? We used to generate electric with a bicycle, little light bulbs all over the place. It’s the same thing now, except the light bulbs are bigger. And 400 generators rather than just one bicycle dynamo.”
We’re sitting at a table in the site’s premier chill-out zone: a converted barn just across the back garden from the main house, all low sofas, high beams, and walls of deepened Suffolk pink. An anthology of Dylan lyrics and a print of John Peel bookend the neatly arranged line of bronzed, raised middle fingers denoting a succession of NME awards. A large, informal photographic collage of friends and family stands opposite a black-and-white print taken at the inaugural event in 1970. Still, not all is calm. Irish singer Lisa Hannigan dropped out this morning; Stephen Fretwell’s name stands bold on a sheet of paper next to Eavis’ phone. First, though, he needs to run the plan past the manager of the acoustic stage. “They won’t necessarily be pushed about by me, although I do try. That’ll be my first call when you’ve gone.”
Before we retired here, it was also the subject of the last call back in the office. Following last year’s time out, does the 71-year old Eavis really need to be throwing himself back into the festival maelstrom? “It’s a good thing to come back into, because the farm is very stagnant on its own. Certainly the farm staff appreciate the break, and so do the villagers. In an agricultural sense the fallow year charges up the soil and the land. And myself and the crew come back full of energy and it keeps the magic alive. Otherwise it’s just Reading or Castle Donington or something, which just isn’t the same. We don’t have to do it; the money that comes in is not essential to anyone. We’ve got another life here.”
On the drive down, there was a venture capitalist on the radio recommending that people should buy into festivals: high risk, but high return. “I suppose for some people maybe it would work,” says Eavis, sceptically, “but it’s not the way that we do it. There are no shares and no capital involved, and so we go from hand to mouth every year. We sell all the tickets, spend most of it back onsite, and give away 10% to charity. In theory that should give them £2m. Beyond that there are no real profits involved. We get paid for the land use, all the farmers get rent for the land. Shares and profit wouldn’t work at Glastonbury, they’d spoil the whole ethos. But then we’re different, aren’t we? We’ve got old fashioned principles. That’s why we’re so popular, I suppose. People trust us. I had four letters of complaint last time, after all that water round the railway line and people out in canoes. The public are so good to us, and we’re totally beholden to that trust.
“Although we earn a lot, it does go out so fast. Police are £1m, security is £1m, fence is £1m, flood stuff’s £1m – that’s £4m gone straight away on four items. That’s before you’ve even started paying for the infrastructure onsite. We’ve put in a new water main that’s four or five miles long, and extra flood relief. Altogether we’re talking about £1m extra expenditure, but it’s permanent stuff – it’ll certainly be there for 10 years, so it’s a good investment. And I still want to get £2m out of it at the end.”
Besides the free recycled toilet rolls and the campaign to sign up a 100,000 revellers to a 16-step method of reducing environmental impact, Eavis is keen to talk about bio-fuel. “Industrial fat, it’s called. Someone has made a business out of catching all that fat, refining it, and turning it into diesel fuel. So we’re buying everything and using it everywhere we can. I had the buyer here yesterday, and said ‘just buy it all – we need it’.”
Musically speaking, he’s also pretty darn keen on Joss Stone, set to play the relatively small environs of the Leftfield Tent backed by James Brown’s former band. “She’s gone all political now, dyed her hair purple. So I thought the tent would be the perfect place for her. She can whinge and complain as much as she likes, and they’ll love her for it.”
Eavis is, of course, as media-savvy as they come. His projected image of the farmer thrilled to have all of these wonderful musicians gathering on his land might be a fair one, but the machinations behind Stone’s confirmation – revealed in tones of apparent surprise – speak of someone altogether more knowing. “I read through the list of released names last week and asked ‘Where the hell is Joss Stone?’ So I said that to someone in the press yesterday, and this morning Joss Stone’s people said ‘because you lifted the embargo yourself we’ll have to go with it’. It was just a chatty piece on the radio but it got out, you see?”
400,000 people pre-registered for this year’s festival, on a system intended to limit buyers to a maximum of four tickets. In the event, says Eavis, “once they’d pre-registered they could just click and carry on, and I’m not sure whether that’s a good thing.” It is, though, just the one glitch waiting to be ironed out; the introduction of photo ID has, it seems, worked a treat. “There’s no re-sale going on, which is such a relief. It’s that profit thing again: it cuts out those buying cheap, selling dear, and being proud of it. It really annoyed me. People thought I was going too far with it, and said ‘it doesn’t matter because we’ve sold out’, but it went against the spirit of the festival.”
Back out near the farm’s perimeter, beneath a cloudless blue sky, stand a fleet of empty caravans. They’re temporary home to the hired hands now moving towards a most unusual crop: row upon row of the criss-crossed wire frames that will form the inner fencing; all laid out, ready for the planting. “Perfect weather,” says Eavis. “All the heavy stuff’s coming in, the generators and staging, all the big tops, so we really need the fields dry. Better now than during the festival for us, so we’re all jumping about and it’s all go.”

MUSIC: A Family Affair - The Sons and Daughters of World Music

Julian Lennon was never forbidden from playing music by his father and enrolled into the army against his will. If Arlo Guthrie was ever reduced to herding cattle for a living when Woody died, praying that drought would never return, history doesn’t record it. When Frank Zappa passed away, no one was asking whether his heavy metalling son, Dweezil, could assume the role of musical visionary. Instead, these stories belong, respectively, to Vieux Farka Touré, the Zawose Family, and CJ Chenier.
The WOMAD festival doesn’t simply shine a light into previously darkened corners of song, providing sharp relief from a UK music scene seemingly content to churn out inspiration-free facsimiles of all that has passed before; it introduces whole new chapters to the well-thumbed, learnt-by-rote Book of Musical Folklore. What follows is a brief overview of the one entitled ‘A Family Affair’.
It’s the one that tells the tale of how the son of Malian blues legend, Ali Farka Touré, was finally able to join his once disapproving father onstage: “It meant so much,” says Vieux, “that nobody, not the greatest writer in the world, NOBODY, could ever put into words what I felt. Not even me.” It also details the travails of the Zawose Family, famously joyous evocates of Tanzanian Wagogo music, whose lives were thrown into flux by the death of the man who – to Western eyes - personified the form: their father, Dr Hukwe. “My father had seven wives,” says his daughter, Pendo. “I have so many brothers and sisters it can be difficult now to decide how to share what little we have. To simply feed everyone is very difficult and sometimes we are hungry.” CJ Chenier’s inheritance from his father, the widely acknowledged ‘King of Zydeco’, Clifton Chenier, was a welter of expectation and an equally ubiquitous tag: ‘Heir to the Throne’. “I really don't look for the crown,” he admits, “because I don't think anyone can take my dad’s place.” And finally, also from across the Atlantic, Ben Taylor has had to come to terms with following in the multi-million selling footsteps of both pater and mater: sweet father James, and Carly Simon. “With most people they’ve played thousands of shows before you ever hear them; with people like me, the first time you’re onstage the press tends to be there. It’s weird.”
For musicians born into a song-making dynasty, such pressure can sometimes begin a little closer to home. Rufus Wainwright – son of singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III and folk ace Kate McGarrigle – once told me about the time when, aged 17, he first played some songs to his mother: “She told me they were all crap and that I really should have more respect for my listener.” He defended her remarks as “shooting an arrow of reality.” Was that your initial response, though, I asked? “No, I was devastated,” he admitted. “But I have a sense of not believing the bullshit, and my mom is responsible for that.”
Ali Farka Touré, as we have seen, took the ‘tough love’ approach a whole step further by forbidding his son from playing music altogether. Vieux openly defied his wishes by enrolling in the National Arts Institute in Bamako. It was there that the kora ace, Toumani Diabaté, brought him into his performing ensemble and entreatied that his father recognise a burgeoning talent. Like Wainwright, time has taught Touré to appreciate his parent’s hardline methods. “I am only now realising why my father didn’t want me to go into music professionally. He had already seen what I am seeing now: what hard work it is to survive in the world of music. He didn’t want me to take a fall, and just wanted to try to make sure I had an easier path than he did.”
Clifton Chenier was another insistent father, as his sax-playing, funk and jazz-loving son quickly discovered when he joined the accordion-centric family business. “At first I thought there could be a place for the accordion as a secondary instrument,” recalls CJ, “but my dad quickly ended that thought by saying, ‘It's got to be first - you either play it or leave it alone’. That helped me make up my mind. As time went on, my love for zydeco music grew. [Before he died] it was already in my and my father's mind that I would continue. The only pressure I ever felt came from inside myself, and that was the want to do my dad proud.”
When Pendo Zawose’s father passed away, the realities of life in desperately poor Tanzania brought forth pressures of another kind altogether. “He would earn a lot of money abroad and that money no longer comes to us. We cannot choose what we want to be here; we are musicians and that is what our family do. We also make money from herding cattle, but things have changed and we no longer can rely on such activities; when drought comes then the cattle can die.”
The Book of Musical Folklore adopts a mocking tone when describing how traditional folk grandee, Pete Seeger, threatened to cut Bob Dylan’s electrifying cables at the 1965 Newport Festival. In this new chapter, however, it becomes clear that the times-they-mustn’t-change dictum of the purist can, on occasion, be of critical importance. “Our father taught us to be true to our traditions and what our ancestors taught us,” explains Pendo. “We have tried hard to make money from our music here in Tanzania, but people are not so interested - it is too traditional and the people want to listen to Bongo Flava [East African hip hop], imported styles from Europe and America.”
All of which explains why she bursts into laughter when asked if she enjoys playing in the UK. “You do not understand! The audience there are so so so interested in traditional Tanzanian music and give us so much respect. We rely on our music and on people listening to it. When we played at WOMAD in 2003 the audience were crying at the front of the stage as we were displaying so much energy in our dance. I can’t wait to go back, really.”
Wondering whether the Zawose Family’s musicality should be attributed to nature or nurture draws a similarly bemused response. “It is funny, as for us this was never really a question: we just knew it, it is in our blood. Music is not just something that we listen to on tapes, it is a part of our everyday life. My mother sings as she works in the fields and we sing as we cook, it is natural for us. I could sing and dance before I could talk and walk.”
It’s an upbringing wholly understood by Vieux Farka Touré. “In Africa, it’s always like that, to follow in the steps of greater ones who have come before. I’ll continue to do as [my father] did, united with him, carrying on the tradition and everything he wanted, if God wills it. But now it is up to me to try to do even better…”
For Ben Taylor, the journey along a musical path wasn’t quite so pre-ordained. He didn’t take up the guitar until the age of 11 and was, perhaps surprisingly, self-taught (“Well, you could say my dad taught me, because I learnt to play all his songs”). Until well into his teens, he considered his likely career path to involve either farming or gardening. “I think a lot of kids who grow up in households with successful musicians understand very quickly that it’s not as glamorous as the illusion would have you believe,” he explains. “We tend to be witness to a lot of arguments with managers and A&R people over the phone, people complaining about booking, overheads – it seems a lot more blue-collar from the first-hand perspective.”
Nevertheless, it seems both nature and nurture eventually pulled him towards a life in music. “I’ve drawn from my folks in attitude and style, plus other things I wouldn’t even know. They’re my archetypal influences as human beings, more than just as musicians, so I think maybe it’s a deeper cellular level – my character, physical attributes, etc - that reflects itself musically as well.” Ultimately, he concludes, “I wouldn’t have gone into it if it hadn’t been the family business.”
Finally, even in the most traditional of forms, the new generation are mapping out their own distinct musical direction. The late Dr Hukwe Zawose, says Pendo, “was very strict with the music, and sometimes we would not be allowed to play certain instruments. Now we have a new amount of freedom, while still respecting what he taught us. My father was the first Wagogo musician to mix his music with Western instruments [in collaboration with Canadian guitarist/producer, Michael Brook, he recorded ‘Kuna Kunguni/The Bedbugs Bite’ for the Real World-released AIDS benefit album, ‘Spirit of Africa’]. So we will also add new things to our music, and our children will say ‘Ah yes, that was my mother's idea; that was her way to develop the music’. Each generation should adapt and change, should it not?”

Sunday 18 March 2007

MUSIC: Bryan Ferry

As originally published in Venue magazine:

It’s not cool to like Bryan Ferry. Roxy Music, sure, but not him. He was, afterall, carried through that group’s early years by the errant genius of Brian Eno. The point is proved by a solo career, covers-driven from the start, that has seen him come to resemble little more than a karaoke David Niven. Today he’s the brooding mannequin fronting an M&S clothing range, no mouth and all trousers. Worse yet, he bequeathed to the world Otis Ferry, poster boy of the Countryside Alliance, named after a soul singer and who spends his days – sing along if you know the words - sittin’ on the top of a horse, wastin’ foxes.
Well, the hell with that. Yes, Eno brought manic individualism to Roxy. But so did the freeform guitaring of Phil Manzanera, the wild sax and mournful oboe of Andy MacKay, and the skittish drumming of Paul Thompson. Few groups have harnessed such wilfully distinct elements into a sum still greater, and Ferry was the catalyst. The man looking like Comeback Special-era Elvis mugged by a girls’ high school make-up team, all black leather and glittery eyeshadow, provided focus. And his own contribution – musically an underrated pianist, vocally the jaded fop nevertheless convinced that the best party is just around the corner, affected disdain shielding the heart of a true romantic – is the most distinct of all. Roxy might never have recaptured the uniformly giddy heights enjoyed in the Eno years, but many are the later moments – ‘Mother Of Pearl’, ‘Out Of The Blue’ and ‘Street Life’ to name but three – that stand effortlessly alongside them.
The loucheness is a problem, I’ll grant you. Not stylistically, but in the way it’s apparently bled into a laissez-faire approach to quality control. Latterly, for every moment of AOR perfection (‘Oh Yeah’, ‘More Than This’) there’s been a ‘Taxi’, the mid-90s covers album so wretchedly uninspired that this unabashed Ferryhead has never made it to the end of side two. It’s even there on his new one, ‘Dylanesque’, a largely sleepwalking county-rock affair, and an illogical conclusion to the fandom originally highlighted with his urgent, piano-hammering take on His Bobness’ ‘A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall’ back in 1973. But yet, even here, there’s a gem to rival anything in the back catalogue. In the ghostly ‘Make You Feel My Love’ his voice is a mist rolling in across the moors, inflected with a new-found, Cash-echoing, pleading frailty. A voice he first mastered on two starkly haunting contributions to last year’s Warren Ellis-helmed collection of sea shanties, ‘Rogue’s Gallery’. And a voice highlighting a singer, well into his fourth decade of performing, for whom reinvention – despite too many inferences to the contrary - remains key.