Magazine:
Billboard, October 8, 1994
Section: Artists & Music
PORTISHEAD FINDS PLACE ON U.K. MAP
Self-Made Short Film Helps Market Go!Beat Act
LONDON--The obscure West Country town of Portishead is little
more than a dot on a very large-scale map of the British
Isles, but its namesake, a unique, left-of-center,
dance/pophybrid duo, is threatening to make its mark around the
world.
The group's album "Dummy" was released here by Go!Beat,
the dance arm of Go!Discs, Aug. 22 to a welter of acclaim from
all quarters of the press, including dance and rock magazines (Q
called it "perhaps the year's most stunning debut
album") and
daily newspapers such as The Observer and The Times. It had an
impressive debut at No. 32 on the U.K. album
chart--despite a predictable absence of daytime airplay--and,
according to Go!Beat, has sold some 20,000 units in the U.K.
so far.
Even though the 1994 Mercury Music Prize took place only a
fortnight ago, "Dummy" has become one of the earliest
tips for
the 1995 contest.
The album is already garnering good press and public response in
Europe, where the duo of Geoff Barrow and Beth Gibbons
has been on an extensive promotional tour. The set is due to be
released by London Records in the U.S. Oct. 18.
The key to Portishead's sound and success thus far has been an
ethereal and filmic feel, masterminded by Barrow and including
samples from such bands as Weather Report, Isaac Hayes, and War,
and prominent use of Fender Rhodes and synthesizer
sounds from the vintage hand-controlled theremin. The effect is
heightened by the intimate but unsettling lyrics and vocals of
Gibbons. Backing the duo throughout the album are Portishead's
unofficial third member, engineer Dave MacDonald, as well as
music director Adrian Utley and players Clive Deamer, Gary
Baldwin, and Tim Bishop.
Barrow, from Weston-Super-Mare (to the west of Bristol), and
Gibbons, from the city suburb Keynsham, met in a
government-funded musical training program in 1991. Barrow first
worked as a tape-op at the local Coach House studio,
where "Dummy" was recorded, and Gibbons has sung in
local bands for a decade.
The album has invited comparisons with other dance-flavored
Bristol-area acts, such as Circa/Virgin's Massive Attack and 4th
& Bway/Island's Tricky.
Two singles, "Numb" and "Sour Times," have
already been released from the album in Britain, with a third,
"Glory Box," due
Nov. 7.
Portishead is known not only for its unusual use of film as a
promotional medium, but for the duo's growing reputation as
remixers, namely for singles by Gabrielle, Depeche Mode, Primal
Scream, Paul Weller, and fellow Bristol band Federation.
However, Barrow and Gibbons plan to temporarily pull in their
remix shingle as they concentrate on their own recording career,
with plans for a follow-up album and selected live work.
Early reaction to "Dummy," says band manager Caroline
Killoury, "has been incredible." She cites Holland,
Belgium, and
Sweden as early European supporters. "Everyone's come on
board so quickly. Press have been calling us on it, and I think
its
because it's so fresh, but I don't think any of us expected it to
happen so quickly."
Prior to the album's release, Portishead completed a 10-minute
monochrome film, "To Kill A Dead Man," that was
premiered
by Go! Beat during a promotional night in June at the Prince
Charles cinema in London's Leicester Square (on a bill with the
specially selected 1971 British thriller "Get Carter,"
starring Michael Caine). The film was then released locally with
mainstream
release such as "Body Of Evidence" and "Reservoir
Dogs," and was featured at several domestic and European
film festivals.
Go! Discs press officer Tony Cream says plans are afoot for the
film to be used in a similar way at colleges in the U.S.
"A lot of interviews I've been doing ask about us being very
visually based," says Barrow. "But I never thought of
it like
multimedia thing. We just thought we'd make a film instead of the
normal pop video, then we could take stills from it and use
them as artwork for the album, but it meant we could also write a
soundtrack for 10 minutes, which we wouldn't otherwise
have got a chance to do. I don't like the way so much money is
spent on video when there's so many struggling film makers
around."
Barrow plays down the cinematic references in his music, but the
album holds a particular affinity with the soundtrack work of
John Barry. "I like films from the late '60s into the '70s,
and the way that [film music writers], if they wanted to create
suspense,
they didn't have synthesizers--they had an orchestra or band, and
would experiment with sound through old equipment. I'm
kind of anti-technology. We use a lot of old, mechanical
instruments. It's not just soundtracks [that influence me], but
all kinds
of music from the year dot. The only modern music I can get into
is hip-hop. That's a major influence."
The "To Kill A Dead Man" film has given Go! Beat an
extra option at the retail level. The HMV store in Barrow's home
base
of Bristol mounted a window display featuring a dummy sitting on
a red cinema seat, watching the film on a continual loop--a
visual which captured customers' imagination, says the store's
assistant manager, Robert Campkin.
"There was a lot of interest in the display. A lot of
customers stopped to look, because it was something out of the
ordinary. It
proved to be a very successful piece of promotion, and sales of
the album increased as a result."
The "Dummy" title also inspired an audacious
promotional campaign by Go! on the day of the album's U.K.
release when,
Cream says, he and the band bought a "team" of
mannequins, painted them blue, and planted them in a series of
highly visible
locations, such as the Eros statue in Piccadilly Circus and
Camden Lock in the north of the city.
The gambit was inspired by an episode of the classic British TV
scifi series "Dr. Who," in which dummies came too life
and
terrorized London. But Cream says the real-life experiment had
unexpected results. "Some of them were taken away by the
police because there was a bomb scare that day in Oxford Street.
But we had someone taking photographs of them --quite a
lot of them got seen -- and it ran as a story inn the New Musical
Express and the Observer. I know at least one person who's
got half of one of the dummies in his office."
Radio reaction to "Dummy" has largely been outside
daytime rotations, but this is no surprise, says Killoury.
"It's very mellow
and latenight, not the sort of thing that's going to be
playlisted during the day."
Supporters have included veteran broadcaster Bob Harris, who has
ben featuring the track "Strangers" from the album on
his
evening shows on Greater London Radio, the BBC's local London
station.
"The reaction has been fantastic, and I love it," says
Harris. "It's such an innovative album. The description
'present day urban
blues' fits it very well. Soul comes in so many forms--you don't
have to be Otis Redding to have soul--and the album's part of
an amazing surge of really good music coming out of the U.K.
right now, at last." Harris cites the current albums by
Massive
Attack and Ride as other examples.
By PAUL SEXTON