Jump to content

Metal Box

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Poptones (song))

Metal Box
Original metal canister packaging released in 1979.
Studio album by
Released23 November 1979 (1979-11-23)
RecordedMarch – October 1979
Studio
Genre
Length60:29
LabelVirgin
ProducerPublic Image Ltd
Public Image Ltd chronology
Public Image: First Issue
(1978)
Metal Box
(1979)
Paris au Printemps
(1980)
Second Edition Cover
Singles from Metal Box
  1. "Death Disco (Swan Lake)"
    Released: 29 June 1979 (1979-06-29)
  2. "Memories"
    Released: October 1979 (1979-10)

Metal Box is the second studio album by Public Image Ltd, released by Virgin Records on 23 November 1979.[4] The album takes its name from the round metal canister which contained the initial pressings of the record. It was later reissued in standard vinyl packaging as Second Edition in February 1980 by Virgin Records in the United Kingdom, and by Warner Bros. Records and Island Records in the United States.

The album was a departure from PiL's 1978 debut First Issue, with the band moving into a more avant-garde sound characterised by John Lydon's cryptic lyrics, propulsive dub-inspired rhythms led by bassist Jah Wobble, and an abrasive, "metallic" guitar sound developed by guitarist Keith Levene.

Metal Box is widely regarded as a landmark of post-punk.[1] In 2012, the album was ranked number 461 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.[5]

Background

[edit]

The first studio album recorded following the departure of founding member, drummer Jim Walker. Metal Box was recorded in several sessions with several drummers, none of whom were credited on the original release. "Albatross" and "Swan Lake"/"Death Disco" were recorded with new drummer David Humphrey at The Manor Studio in Shipton-on-Cherwell. "Poptones" was recorded with Levene on drums. During this time, additional tracks were recorded at The Town House Studios in London, namely "Beat the Drum for Me" (which later turned up on Wobble's first solo album), and a new version of "Fodderstompf" (which became the B-side of PiL's "Death Disco" 12" single). Humphrey left the band around mid-May 1979. "Memories", "No Birds", "Socialist" and "Chant" were recorded with new drummer, Richard Dudanski, previously of Joe Strummer's R&B pub rock outfit, The 101ers, at Townhouse Studios in London. The instrumental "Graveyard" was recorded with Dudanski on drums. Dudanski left the band around mid-September 1979. "The Suit" was recorded as a solo track by Jah Wobble at Gooseberry Sound Studios in London. Vocals and some overdubs were added at The Manor. "Careering" was recorded at Town House Studios with Wobble on drums. "Bad Baby" was recorded with new drummer Martin Atkins at Town House Studios. Except for a brief period during 1980, Atkins remained with the band until 1985. "Radio 4" was recorded as a solo piece by Keith Levene at Advision Studios and an unknown second studio. According to Levene, this was the last recorded track. Levene utilised aluminium Veleno guitars throughout the recording sessions to achieve a distinctively sharp and metallic guitar sound.[6]

Recording and music

[edit]

According to John Lydon, opener "Albatross'" was recorded live at The Manor Studio in Oxfordshire, with the singer free-forming his lyrics. Guitarist Keith Levene, bassist Jah Wobble, and drummer David Humphrey made the song up as they went along, and recorded the song in one take.[7][8] PiL also recorded at Townhouse Studios in West London with session drummer Richard Dudanski and produced the songs "Memories", "No Birds", "Socialist", and "Chant";[9] Levene recalls that "Memories" features him playing "this normal Spanish guitar thing that goes dun-da-da-dun da-da-dun... it's one of the first things I learned to play on guitar, very simple. I was very fond of that [...] I just had the guitar going through an Electric Mistress."[8]

"Death Disco" – released as a single in late June 1979 – was remixed and retitled "Swan Lake" for Metal Box. "I realised," said Levene, "that this tune that I was bastardising by mistake was 'Swan Lake', so I started playing it on purpose but I was doing it from memory. You can hear that I'm not playing it exactly right. It just worked. [...] There's a few versions of that. The one on Metal Box is version two, which is very different from the simpler, original 12-inch version."[8] The lyrics are based on Lydon's mother dying of cancer: "When I had to deal with my mother's death, which upset the fuck out of me, I did it partly through music. I had to watch her die slowly of cancer for a whole year. I wrote 'Death Disco' about that. I played it to her just before she died and she was very happy. That's the Irish in her, nothing drearily sympathetic or weak."[10] PiL recorded the song at an empty hall in Brixton to test a three-bass sound system and worked with drummer Jim Walker but didn't record with him.[8]

"Poptones" was one of the first songs recorded for the album, according to Levene, who stated that he inadvertently played "Starship Trooper" during the song.[11] According to Lydon, "Poptones" was based on a story "straight out of the Daily Mirror" about a girl who was kidnapped and "bundled, blindfolded, into the back of a car by a couple of bad men and driven off into a forest, where they eventually dumped her. The men had a cassette machine with an unusual tune on the cassette, which they kept playing over and over. The girl remembered the song, and that, along with her recollection of the car and the men's voices, is how the police identified them. The police eventually stopped the car and found the cassette was still in the machine, with the same distinctive song on the tape."[12] In his 2009 autobiography Memoirs of a Geezer, Jah Wobble says that Poptones refers to "a journey we took in Joe the roadie's Japanese car [..] and Joe had one of his dodgy cassettes playing.". He highlighted the song as "the jewel in the PiL crown. [...] That [bass] line is as symmetrical as a snowflake. [..] We had a drummer with us who was pretty good [...] but the bloke just couldn't get the right feel for 'Poptones'. [...] In the end Levene put the drums down on that track, his drums are a bit loose, but that is actually a good thing."[13]

Wobble cited "Careering" as his "second-favourite track from Metal Box, and probably my favourite John Lydon vocal performance."[14] Lyrically, the song is "basically about a gunman [in Northern Ireland] who is careering as a professional businessman in London."[15] The song was recorded at the Townhouse during a quick nighttime session helmed by Wobble; he told journalist Simon Reynolds in an interview: "If you listen to the drum rhythm it is very similar to the sort of rhythm a drum and fife band would create. [...] By now Keith had got hold of a Prophet synth, he used that on 'Careering'."[14] Wobble created the drum track and bassline, while Levene played synth. Levene explained his synth playing in the song was an attempt to replicate the sound of ambient machine noise heard from a downstairs toilet, achieved by dropping an item on one of the synth keys to keep it going.[8]

"No Birds Do Sing" (also listed as just "No Birds") features a line from "La Belle Dame sans Merci", a poem by John Keats, which Lydon "just borrowed a bit of because it suited this particular rant about suburbia."[12] The song was recorded at the Townhouse with drummer Richard Dudanski, whom Keith Levene knew during his tenure with The 101ers. Wobble said that Dudanski made extensive and imaginative use of the tom-tom drums,[9][13] and Levene told Simon Reynolds that "No Birds" is one of his favourite songs on the album.[8] "All that it is is me playing the guitar part and duplicating it, but feeding the second one through this effect I'd set up on the harmoniser. Meanwhile John is lying under the piano and singing that weird feedback voice, while twinkling the keys at the same time, just to be annoying. You can hear the piano on the record," said Levene.[11]

"Graveyard" features a guitar part that was "made up on the spot," according to Levene. "I was in a very Clint Eastwood mood. I didn't know what I was going to play. Wobble's playing the bassline and drums are playing so I had to do something."[8] The album version is an instrumental, a version with lyrics and vocals was retitled "Another" and released as the B-side to "Memories" in October 1979.

"The Suit"—described by Lydon as being about "people of low origins trying to be posh"—is one of Levene's least favourite tracks.[16] Levene said, "It was never one of my favourite pieces because of what it was really about. [...] There was this guy that was an old mate of John's who lived in this apartment. At some point John decided he hated his guts. He just wrote this really nasty, finger-pointing, over-exaggerated, ripping parody of what the guy was – 'Society boy.' [...] This guy, [fashion designer] Kenny MacDonald, made his suit and all of ours and it made him look good to have the guys from PiL wearing his stuff. We'd wear it wrong and it looked even better, we didn't want the black leather jacket look like these punk bands. So John just decided to hate this guy, that's what happens and there's nothing you can do. He wouldn't be his lapdog and John thought he was a star and wanted that."[8] Wobble played and recorded the backing track of drums and piano for "The Suit" at Gooseberry Studios with Mark Lusardi, which started out as a cover of "Blueberry Hill".[13] He brought the backing track to the band at The Manor, to which Lydon "freaked out when he heard that... He was galvanised into action and within a few hours 'The Suit' existed."[13]

"Bad Baby"—its title a nickname of Levene's[8]—was recorded at the Townhouse. Wobble (whose playing in the song was inspired by bassist Cecil McBee) and drummer Martin Atkins recorded the song together.[13]

Levene recalled that "Socialist" featured cheap synthesizers he had purchased: "Me and Wobble were really having fun fucking around with these things, whilst submerged in the mix was this huge soaring sound, rising upwards from the drum and the bass, like a whale's cry. Later on I dubbed up the cymbals, so you have that spiralling metallic sound. Dubwise!" Wobble told Simon Reynolds, "At the time I was a bit of a socialist. [...] I hated Thatcher, I hated everything Reagan stood for to be quite honest, you know, and at that time I just wanted that old-style, left-wing socialism."[14]

Lydon called "Chant" an "old English ditty with a string synthesizer".[17] Drummer Richard Dudanski cited it as one of his favourites.

Album closer "Radio 4" was named after the BBC radio station. "I called it 'Radio 4' because in England, you got Radio 1, 2, 3...," said Levene. "Radio 1 played pop tunes. Before that, the BBC was so boring! It took until about 1985 before we had FM radio."[8] "Radio 4" was recorded and performed by Levene, initially with Ken Lockie from Cowboys International on drums, at Advision Studios. Levene played the bassline "as if it was Wobble playing," and played a Yamaha String Ensemble to create the layered synth sounds. "I was using this thing and I start building it up, all I'm doing is taking different sounds from this thing and layering it. When I heard it, I pulled the drums out. I got on the idea of trying to make it sound orchestrated with the long chords played shorter. To get round the other stuff, I just used what was at hand. I played bass like I imagined Wobble would play bass to it, I wanted a Wobble feel to it. But basically, it's all me – that's when I realised I can completely do everything. You just hear the drums at the end. [...] With 'Radio 4', I was just alone in the studio one night, and I was overwhelmed with the sense of space. I just took everything out of the studio, moved the drum kit out and played everything myself, reproducing this sense of cold spaciousness I felt around me."[8]

"Many people don't understand that [the album] was improvisation," Lydon recalled. "It had to be, because we'd spent most of the money on the container [see below] – and so what we had to do was quite literally sneak into studios when bands had gone home for the night. And these were pretty rough monitor mixes – no actual production."[18]

Metal box packaging

[edit]

The title of the album refers to its original packaging, which consisted of a metal case in the style of a 16mm film canister embossed with the band's logo and containing three 12" 45rpm records. It was designed by Dennis Morris[19] and was innovative and inexpensive, costing little more to the label than the cost of standard printed sleeves for equivalent 12" releases (although Virgin did ask for a refund of a third of the band's advance due to the cost).[20] Before the metal tin was finalised, there was discussion of the album being released in a sandpaper package that would effectively ruin the sleeve art of any records shelved next to it. That idea would later be realised by the Durutti Column for their 1980 Factory Records debut, The Return of the Durutti Column.

Metal Box opened

The album's lack of accessibility extended to the discs themselves. Packed tightly inside the canister and separated by paper sheets, they were difficult to remove, and were prone to being nicked and scratched in the process. Since each side only contained about ten minutes of music, the listener was required to frequently change sides to hear the complete album.[21]

Deleted from the catalogue on 23 November 1979 after an initial release of 60,000 units, the album was re-issued on 22 February 1980[22] as Second Edition, a double LP packaged in a more conventional gatefold. The sleeve art of Second Edition consists of distorted photographs of the band members, achieving a funhouse mirror effect. (The front cover is a composite photo of Keith Levene and John Lydon.) The lyrics are printed on the rear cover. These were originally printed in a magazine advertisement and not included with Metal Box. The band initially wanted the album released with a lyric sheet but no track titles. The United Kingdom version of Second Edition appears as the band intended, with lyrics on the back cover, but no titles, and "PiL" logo labels on all four sides of the vinyl. The US edition of Second Edition has track titles both on the back cover and the labels.

The original metal canister idea was used a few years later during the compact disc era. By the late 1980s, a number of CDs were packaged in metal canisters. In 1990 the concept came full circle, with the compact disc release of Metal Box employing a smaller version of the original metal canister, containing a single disc and a small paper insert.

Tape with the PiL logo was created with the intent of sealing each metal box. However, labor costs were deemed too expensive and the tape went unused. Martin Atkins has some of this tape and has put some pieces of it up on auctions to benefit The Museum Of Post Punk and Industrial Music.

PiL tape
PiL tape intended to seal Metal Box

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Mojo[23]
NME9/10[24]
Pitchfork10/10[25]
Q[26]
Rolling Stone[27]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[28]
Spin Alternative Record Guide10/10[29]
Uncut[30]
The Village VoiceA−[3]

Metal Box is now considered a post-punk classic, and is highly acclaimed. Andy Kellman of AllMusic said that "PIL managed to avoid boundaries for the first four years of their existence, and Metal Box is undoubtedly the apex", noting that the album "hardly [sounds] like anything of the past, present, or future". He also compared it to the works of Captain Beefheart and Can.[1] Drowned in Sound reviewer Mark Ward wrote that the album "tears away from Lydon's sweaty punk roots and into the cold chambers of dub evoked by Can, the more outré electronics of Bowie's Berlin years and the coruscating post-punk sound that guitarist Levene was in the process of pioneering" and that "if you don't yet have a copy, you really should".[31] Village Voice critic Robert Christgau described the album's sound as "a full-bodied superaware white dub with disorienting European echoes."[3]

The album was ranked at No. 2 among the top "Albums of the Year" for 1979 by NME, with "Death Disco" ranked at No. 11 among the year's top tracks.[32] Robert Palmer placed the album at third place in his best of 1980 list for the New York Times, proclaiming the album to be the "definitive album of postpunk rock and the year's most compelling slice of metal machine music."[33]

In 2003, the album was included in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list at No. 469, the magazine calling it "eerie, futuristic art punk with dub bass and slashing guitar".[34] Rolling Stone also included it in their 100 Best Albums of the Eighties, ranking it at No. 76.[35] In 2002, Pitchfork ranked Metal Box at No. 19 on its "Top 100 Albums of the 1980s".[36] It was also, along with their debut album, included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, with the reviewer Stevie Chick saying "the abrasive textures and powerful sounds they discovered...would influence all manner of experimental music for decades to come", while describing it as "cold dank, unforgiving, subterranean." The songs "Albatross", "Poptones", "Careering", "Chant" and "Radio 4" were selected as "key tracks".[37] In 2020, Rolling Stone included it in their "80 Greatest albums of 1980" list, praising the band for pushing "beyond post-punk into a fractured space between demented abstraction and cranky freedom".[38]

Bassist Jah Wobble recorded and released a new version of the album in 2021, titled Metal Box - Rebuilt in Dub.

Track listing

[edit]

All words, music and production credited to Public Image Ltd.[39]

Original release

[edit]

The original release of Metal Box comprised six sides of 12-inch vinyl, played at 45rpm.

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Albatross"10:34
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."Memories"5:05
2."Swan Lake"4:11
Side C
No.TitleLength
1."Poptones"7:46
2."Careering"4:32
Side D
No.TitleLength
1."No Birds"4:41
2."Graveyard"3:07
Side E
No.TitleLength
1."The Suit"3:29
2."Bad Baby"4:30
Side F
No.TitleLength
1."Socialist/Chant/Radio 4"12:34

Second Edition

[edit]

Second Edition fits the album onto four 33rpm sides and features a slightly different song order ("Socialist/Chant/Radio 4" is split into its component parts, with "Socialist" and "No Birds" swapping places).[40]

Side One
No.TitleLength
1."Albatross"10:34
2."Memories"5:05
Side Two
No.TitleLength
1."Swan Lake"4:11
2."Poptones"7:46
3."Careering"4:32
Side Three
No.TitleLength
1."Socialist"3:09
2."Graveyard"3:07
3."The Suit"3:29
Side Four
No.TitleLength
1."Bad Baby"4:30
2."No Birds"4:41
3."Chant"5:01
4."Radio 4"4:24

Personnel

[edit]
Public Image Limited
  • John Lydon – vocals, piano ("No Birds" and "Bad Baby")
  • Keith Levene – guitar, synthesizers, drums ("Poptones" and "Radio 4"), bass guitar ("Radio 4")
  • Jah Wobble – bass guitar (except "Radio 4"), drums ("Careering" and "The Suit"), piano ("The Suit")
  • David Humphrey – drums ("Albatross" and "Swan Lake")[41]
  • Richard Dudanski – drums ("Memories", "No Birds", "Graveyard", "Socialist" and "Chant")
  • Martin Atkins – drums ("Bad Baby")

Note: Levene played all instruments on "Radio 4".

Technical

Charts

[edit]

United Kingdom

[edit]
  • The original limited edition of Metal Box entered the UK albums chart, where it stayed for 8 weeks and reached No. 18 on 8 December 1979.[42]
  • The re-release edition of Second Edition briefly entered the UK albums chart, where it stayed for 2 weeks and reached No. 46 on 8 March 1980.[42]
  • The single "Death Disco" entered the UK Top 75, where it stayed for 7 weeks and reached No. 20 on 7 July 1979.[42]
  • The single "Memories" briefly entered the UK Top 75, where it stayed for 2 weeks and reached No. 60 on 20 October 1979.[42]

United States

[edit]
  • The album Second Edition did not enter the Billboard 200 album charts.
  • No singles were released from the album in the USA.

Other countries

[edit]
  • In New Zealand, both Metal Box and Second Edition briefly entered the Top 50 Albums Chart. Metal Box entered the chart for 1 week at No. 21 on 23 March 1980, Second Edition stayed in the chart for 2 weeks and reached No. 28 on 30 March 1980.[43]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Kellman, Andy. "Metal Box – Public Image Ltd". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
  2. ^ Reynolds, Simon (2006). Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978–1984. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-21570-6.
  3. ^ a b c Christgau, Robert (28 April 1980). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Record News". NME. London, England: IPC Media: 4. 10 November 1979.
  5. ^ "500 Greatest Albums of All Time Rolling Stone's definitive list of the 500 greatest albums of all time". Rolling Stone. 2012. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  6. ^ Keith Levene: His Metal Box, By Paul Barrel, 2013-11-04, Innocent Words
  7. ^ Murphy, Scott (January 2004). "Fodderstompf - PiL Interviews - John Lydon interview". Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Gross, Jason (May 2001). "Keith Levene interview - Part 2 of 4". Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  9. ^ a b Clinton Heylin: "Babylon's Burning – From Punk to Grunge", Canongate 2007, page 466
  10. ^ Jack Barron: "I Cry Alone", New Musical Express, printed 10 October 1987
  11. ^ a b Simon Reynolds: "Albatross Soup", printed in The Wire, December 2002
  12. ^ a b John Lydon's liner notes in Public Image Ltd.'s Plastic Box compilation, Virgin Records, 1999)
  13. ^ a b c d e Jah Wobble: Memoirs of a Geezer (Serpent's Tail, 2009, pages 108–109)
  14. ^ a b c Simon Reynolds: "Totally Wired: Postpunk Interviews and Overviews", Soft Skull Press, 2009, page 20
  15. ^ Peter Noble: "Jah Wobble of PIL", Impulse magazine, Toronto, May 1980)
  16. ^ Gross, Jason (September 2001). "Keith Levene interview - Part 4 of 4". Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  17. ^ Alfred Hilsberg: "Public Image Ltd. – Wir sind keine Rock 'n' Roll Band!", Sounds magazine, Germany, April 1980
  18. ^ Fortnam, Ian: "Behind the Public Image"; Classic Rock #148, August 2010, p61
  19. ^ Metal Box Stories from John Lydon's Public Image Limited, book by Phil Strongman, published by Helter Skelter, ISBN 978-1-900924-66-5
  20. ^ Reynolds, Simon: "Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978–1984", page 216. Penguin Press, 2005.
  21. ^ Marcus, Greil (29 May 1980). "PiL box". Rolling Stone. No. 318. Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. p. 53.
  22. ^ "PiL Chronology 1980". Fodderstompf. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  23. ^ Gilbert, Pat (November 2016). "The sound and the fury". Mojo. No. 276. p. 100.
  24. ^ Cameron, Keith (7 September 1996). "Public Image Ltd – Metal Box". NME. Archived from the original on 15 October 2000. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  25. ^ Reynolds, Simon (1 November 2016). "Public Image Ltd: Metal Box". Pitchfork. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  26. ^ Doherty, Niall (December 2016). "PiL: Metal Box". Q. No. 366. p. 117.
  27. ^ Sheffield, Rob (15 November 2006). "Metal Box". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  28. ^ Coleman, Mark; Matos, Michaelangelo (2004). "Public Image Ltd.". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. pp. 662–63. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
  29. ^ Reynolds, Simon (1995). "Public Image Ltd.". In Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig (eds.). Spin Alternative Record Guide. Vintage Books. pp. 315–16. ISBN 0-679-75574-8.
  30. ^ Spencer, Neil (8 February 2010). "PiL – Metal Box/Plastic Box". Uncut. Archived from the original on 6 December 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
  31. ^ Ward, Mark (8 December 2009). "Album Review: Public Image Ltd – Metal Box (Remastered)". Drowned in Sound. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  32. ^ "Albums and Tracks of the Year". NME. 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2016.
  33. ^ Palmer 1980.
  34. ^ "Rolling Stone 500 Best Albums Entry". Rollingstone.com. Archived from the original on 8 September 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  35. ^ "Public Image Ltd., 'Second Edition' - 100 Best Albums of the Eighties". rollingstone.com. 16 November 1989. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  36. ^ "Pitchfork Feature: Top 100 Albums of the 1980s". Pitchfork.com. 20 November 2002. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  37. ^ 1001 albums you must hear before you die (2008 edition) Dimery, Robert page 442
  38. ^ "The 80 Greatest Albums of 1980 What came out of all this was, arguably, the greatest year for great albums ever". Rolling Stone. 11 November 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  39. ^ "Original Release + Credits". Discogs.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  40. ^ "second edition tracklisting". Discogs.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  41. ^ "Humphrey Blue Drums". Archived from the original on 30 April 2006. Retrieved 5 February 2007. David Humphrey
  42. ^ a b c d Theofficialcharts.com website
  43. ^ Charts.org.nz website

Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]