Source: Guitar
Player, May 1995
Author: Jason Fine
"This is not
a guitar thing, really," says Adrian Utley, producer and
guitarist for Portishead, leading exponents of
the"trip-hop"
wave. The Bristol, England-based group combines densely layered
acoustic and electric instrumentation, soulful crooning, and
the studio techniques of hip hop into one of the most richly
inventive sounds in modern pop. "It's about using guitar as
a source
rather than guitar for guitar's sake."
The haunting musical moods that fill Portishead's 1994 debut
Dummy contain nary a routine guitar solo or feedback-drenched
rhythm fill. The group--led by keyboardist/sampler Geoff Barrow
and enchanting vocalist Beth Gibbons, with supporting
members Utley and engineer Dave McDonald--recontextualizes the
instrument in innovative, often disorienting ways.
From the tortured Hendrix-like riff that creeps into the chorus
of "Glory Box" to the Link Wray-ish line that grinds
over a
sample from Lalo Schifrin's Mission: Impossible theme in
"Sour Times," Utley's guitar alternately bubbles in the
back-drop and
pokes to the surface in raging torrents. It's less a lead
instrument and more a tool for dramatic punctuation.
Plugging his favorite Gibson ES-335 into a cast of old Fender
amps and pawnshop fuzzboxes ("I like the Fuzz Face and Big
Muff"), many of Utley's parts were first recorded onto
vinyl, then sampled into the mix as needed. This technique was
used for
the woozy riff that gives "Wandering Star" its
fractured, eerie quality. In "Strangers," a similar
strategy resulted in the scratchy,
noodling guitar part that sounds like it was lifted off an old
jazz 78. "That was an absolute piece-of-shit acoustic we
found lying
around the studio," laughs Utley. "We tuned it up,
recorded it onto a dictaphone, and put it on `Strangers.'"
For a 37-year-old jazz-trained guitarist who's led numerous
British blues bands and recorded with his longtime idol Jeff Beck
on Crazy Legs, playing in Portishead is quite a departure.
"It's pretty weird stuff guitar-wise," Utley says.
"But it doesn't bother
me playing guitar not like a guitar. It's an adventure."