Source: SPIN,
February 1995, Vol. 10, No. 11
EXPOSURE: Uneasy Listening
Portishead's black-hearted soul stirs up a whole new genre:
disque noir.
A GOOD SCARY movie score can screw up your emotions so tight that
you're reduced to peering at the screen between the
cracks of your fingers and flying off your seat when the psycho
finally slashes the shower curtain. Portishead's music serves the
same function; its debut album, Dummy (Go! Discs/London), is the
sound of something horrible about to happen. Singer Beth
Gibbons gasps her claustrophobic vocals amid a stillness so
ominous it brings to mind Julie Harris gradually losing her
marbles
in The Haunting. Gibbons's grim musical environs are supplied by
band members Dave McDonald, Adrian Utley, and
lank-haired sound sculptor Geoff Barrow, who understates,"I
don't like happy, chirpy rhythms." Even the group's most
wistful
song, "Sour Times," is fraught with anticipation of
impending calamity, in part due to the employment of a theremin,
the device
the Beach Boys used to make "Good Vibrations" sound so
spooky. "I'm not so keen on modern technology," remarks
Barrow,
"that's why a lot of our stuff sounds rough. If you polish
everything up too much, it sounds stale. Like plastic
music." Though
Barrow claims few cinematic influences, the group has dabbled in
noir via a disorienting ten-minute short called To Kill a Dead
Man. "It's got us in it wandering around like cardboard
cutouts," he says of the film, which is plotless and moody
and still
makes more sense than Stargate. "I just want people to say
it's interesting, I don't want them to see it as us trying to
make
Pulp Fiction." The name Portishead is derived from the
band's hometown outside of Bristol, England, the base of close
kin
Massive Attack and Neneh Cherry (whose Homebrew album Barrow
engineered). "I really don't like the place," reflects
Barrow. "It's a place you can go to and die."
"And that's why we named ourselves after it," says
Gibbons brightly.
By: JONATHAN BERNSTEIN