1/The Dewey Decimal System is a system for classifying books. 2/Today, however, I would like to classify the English singer Simon Bookish, who has a new album out next week, his third, "Everything/Everything" (Tomlab), "a big band song cycle about science and information".
3/The Devo-ish sleeve (which is very good) is by Anthony Stephinson.
4/Before Bookish released Everything/Everything he released Unfair/Funfair (2006) and Trainwreck/Raincheck (2007). Generic titles containing consistently quirky punctuation are good.
5/Simon Bookish is the stage name of Leo Chadburn. Leo/Simon (as I expect he would enjoy being called) is very tall and always looks more interesting than anyone else in the room.
6/Pitchfork called him "the long-lost son of Jarvis Cocker".
7/Other people (I still love you, powpowpow!) have said "he thinks he's Momus" and "but Simon Bookish is quite a bit better than anything he's done in years". Grrr!
8/Tracks on the Simon Bookish Myspace page make it seem as if this new album -- played by a fifteen piece band rather than Bookish's usual digital synths -- is a great leap forward, a coming-of-age.
9/It is therefore time to say some things about Simon Bookish.
10/But first, let's watch him performing a song called Interview, from his previous album.
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11/ I like the way the backing track is almost Brian Eno's Golden Hours, which is probably my favourite Brian Eno song ever.
12/ The repeated refrain "Queen Victoria", and Bookish's outlandish garb, make me think of him as a futuristic "New Victorian Dandy" type.
13/A typical Bookish lyric: "the royal meteorologist's expression is pained". This is refreshing as a break from "let's hump and grind one more time", but not refreshing if you set your watch by Divine Comedy lyrics.
14/Reviewing Ocky Milk, Simon Bookish SLASH Leo Chadburn kindly called me "one of the most ingenious, pranksterishly self-aware musicians around". He criticized my Jamaican accent (correctly), though, and thought some of my friendly songs were mawkish.
15/If I might be allowed to criticize back, I would say that I find something emotionally attenuated (not mawkish enough) in Simon Bookish songs. Where, gentlemen, is the soul?
16/If Interview has the sound of Golden Hours, it certainly doesn't have the soulfulness of the Eno song.
17/People Simon Bookish has been compared to in reviews: Pulp, The Divine Comedy, Momus, Steve Reich, Marc Almond, David Bowie, Laurie Anderson.
18/People I would compare him to: David Cunningham, Wire, Penguin Cafe Orchestra, The Books, Dickon Edwards, Idle Tigers.
19/Artists I would not compare him to, but might compare to each other (because they're all out of control, dark, subconscious, soulful and fascinating to me): PiL, Tricky, No Bra.20/No Bra's Susanne Oberbeck might be the only person in the room more extraordinary-looking than Simon Bookish, if a room were to exist where they both were.
21/I don't know why, but No Bra songs like She Was A Butcher and Doherfuckher touch me in a way Simon Bookish songs don't. Perhaps because, as Susanne says, "for me music is about relating emotion". There's something vulnerable and dangerous there. No Bra songs are "bad", but in a good way.
22/Boomkat classifies the new Simon Bookish album as "laptop folk / americana", which is completely weird, especially since the American empire has this week officially fallen. Laptop folk / Americana is the category my Folktronic belongs in, but not his Everything/Everything.
23/Simon Bookish asked John Talaga -- Fashion Flesh -- to do a remix for him for a single called Leo Being Simon Bookish.
24/Simon attended the Guildhall School of Drama and Music in the Barbican.
25/In 2004 Simon presented Fear of Music, a deconstruction of the work of Talking Heads at Limehouse Town Hall.
26/David Byrne played a track from Everything/Everything on his podcast recently.
27/Not Wanting To Say Anything About John Cage is an art piece Simon Bookish has presented.
28/He has also made a new score for Bertolt Brecht's The Caucasian Chalk CIrcle at the National Theatre, and appeared in the production as The Singer.
29/I would like to inform you that I approve of Simon Bookish's new Tomlab release wholemindedly.
30/But perhaps not, alas, wholeheartedly.
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Date: 2008-10-02 02:13 am (UTC)Also, Bookish totally looks like James Spader in Mannequin on that cover.
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Date: 2008-10-02 08:12 am (UTC)ha!
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Date: 2008-10-02 08:52 am (UTC)The Divine Comedy comparisons are only encouraged by the Glass-Reich-Nyman arrangement here; DC actually worked with Nyman himself. (Divine Comedy are a band I have much more reservations about, by the way, though I can see Hannon's virtues.)
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Date: 2008-10-02 03:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-10-02 03:40 am (UTC)I would call him "charming", but that would make him sound like Gregory f*cking Peck.
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Date: 2008-10-02 09:00 am (UTC)Love the sleeve -- it's exactly what my house looks like!
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Date: 2008-10-02 11:36 am (UTC)For the record, Byrne has come to my live shows and enjoyed them, so I have no reason to be jealous on that score.
Really, what is the problem? Do we live in such an age of hype now that anything less than a rave is seen as character assassination?
And am I really supposed to crop myself out of the picture? Leo has been to many of my gigs and would be the first to admit a connection to my work. We can have mutual admiration combined with mutual reservations like the ones he expresses in the Playlouder review I link -- was that an "Oedipal subtext" too? And do parents really kill their children in your reading of the Oedipus myth?
It always interests me to mark ambivalence in my reactions to something, and it interests me when people feel comfortable marking their ambivalence to my own work -- I declared Leo's criticisms of Ocky Milk "correct", after all.
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Date: 2008-10-02 01:20 pm (UTC)That interview really confirms that Simon is a "pale young man" or "sacrificial dandy" in the classic British mode which goes back to Quentin Crisp (and no doubt much beyond). The intellectual and the aesthete, especially the "effete" one, hasn't really been tolerated in Britain over the last two hundred years. The "pink-faced British public" bullies the "pale young man" into a very specific corner. He thinks he's there of his own accord, painting his fingernails white or black and wearing funny hats. But he's been forced there, and if he makes art in that corner it will be all about his relationship with the pink-faced ones.
"It became clear to me," I wrote here last year, answering a question from Kumakouji about my feelings about Britain, "that, with my values, I could only survive in Britain as a "sacrificial dandy", an aesthete you kicked, an embittered satirist or a super-marginal eccentric. My values are at odds with the values of Britain, especially post-Thatcherite Britain. You just have to look at TV or the big-selling UK newspapers or magazines to see what those values are. I do retain some Britishness, though. I listen to Sherlock Holmes stories every day on Radio 7." (Ha, does Sherlock Holmes make me a neo-Victorian?)
The "sacrificial dandy" idea is investigated further in my piece about Sebastian Horsley (http://imomus.livejournal.com/329424.html), which also mentions Dickon Edwards.
Of course, it may be that Berlin has become "the corner" the pink-faced Britischers force their sacrificial dandies into. It may be that it's no escape at all; it's a district of London, for some of us. We've no more escaped London than Kafka escaped Prague: "The little mother has claws".
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Date: 2008-10-02 05:15 pm (UTC)Plus, he's not at all like Jarvis. For one thing, I don't think he's going to make any fangirls wet their seats. Moar eyeliner and longer hair and less hipster twattishness and maybe I'll think about it.
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Date: 2008-10-02 11:59 pm (UTC)bookish easter egg in the everythingeverything photo
Date: 2008-10-06 04:05 am (UTC)a la http://www.csn.ul.ie/~caolan/pub/xplanet/fuller_1280x640.jpg