Source: ROLLING STONE, NOVEMBER
27, 1997
TRACK BY TRACK: Portishead "Portishead"
Three years ago, britain's Portishead released Dummy, a
groundbreaking mix of slo-mo hip-hop, sci-fi cinema soundtracks
and
Beth Gibbons' haunting vocals. Along with fellow Bristol-folk
Massive Attack and Tricky, the quartet begat what came to be
called trip-hop and inspired a horde of bum-rushing imitators.
Daunted by the task of repeating this success, Portishead
retreated to a country-house studio to record their second album.
This time, rather than sampling other artists, producer/DJ
Geoff Barrow and multi-instrumentalist Adrian Utley opted to
record their own performances, commit them to vinyl, then cut
and scratch them back into the mix. Similarly, an orchestra was
employed to perform some of the new album's brooding
arrangements, which were recorded live on a standard cassette
tape and fed back into the songs. Barrow and Utley shed some
light on the band's dark new opus, Portishead:
Half Day Closing Utley: "It took us two years to make this
album because we got into a really bad hole after our first album
and
tour. We were miserable and blocked about what we were doing. I
feel that 'Half Day Closing' got us out of that. We thought,
'Let's just do this; let's just finish something.'
"It was a departure for us, really, because there are no
samples on it -it's Geoff and me playing live. It was inspired by
an album
by the United States of America, from 1967 or '69. It's a
psychedelic band that people tell us is quite obscure. We tracked
up
loads of weird Moog stuff over the top - weird noises and odd
melodies. And we put Beth's vocals through a rotating organ
cabinet called a Leslie. We just sort of tripped out,
really."
Humming Barrow: "We worked on this beat for ages. Adrian and
[conductor] Nick [Ingman] put the strings together, and then
we put them on cassette and worked it like a normal sample. It's
a weird thing - it ended up sounding like a sample from a
record, but we know what we went through to get it right. It's
satisfying that it was actually our music and not somebody
else's."
Only You Utley: "Usually we give Beth the backing tracks to
lay vocals over, but she came to us with an almost-finished track
for this one -she's got a digital 8-track, a drum kit, a bass, a
guitar, a sampler and a small keyboard in her house. It was a
cool,
very French-soundtrack-style song with acoustic piano in a kind
of waltz time signature. We changed it around to make it fit
more with the other songs on the album. Geoff does these
completely inspirational scratches on this track - just
ferociously
difficult."
Over Barrow: "This was a song we wrote on the last tour. The
guitar riff came from a riff we did, like, a month before; the
drums came from a session three months before that - that's how
almost all of our songs are written."
All Mine Utley: "We had the hardest time finding a bridge
for this. We worked on it with Beth, which is rare for us. We
tried to
find notes that worked against the chords but weren't completely
crap - there's always a delicate balance. Obviously it's got to
be in tune, but we try to keep the vibe and make it fit. That's
what's so cool about a lot of hip-hop music: You turn the dial
until
it feels right."
By Anthony Bozza