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Reformation Post T.L.C.

by

The Fall

 
Reformation Post T.L.C.
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New Fall record hits like a hammer to the back of the head-ah

  • We Say...

    The angriest Fall record in recent memory opens with the sound of Mark E. Smith cackling. It's not a happy laugh — instead it's wild and unhinged, a kind of foreshadowing of sinister times.

    That a person as stubborn and singular and willful as Smith has been making records for thirty years is itself a kind of weird miracle. Reformation, the twenty-sixth Fall record, arrives in the middle of a particularly verdant period. After suffering an uneven patch in the late '90s, Smith righted himself with The Real New Fall LP (also known as Country on the Click) a brawny comeback so utterly contemporary that PJ Harvey covered its "Janet & Johnny" on her 2005 US tour. Reformation continues Smith's late-game winning streak. It's a dank, filthy record, its basslines all mold-caked, its drumming just short of blunt-force trauma. But unlike The Real New Fall LP, this one dispenses with even the pretense of modernity, sounding like some grizzled leftover from 1978. The album was recorded in fragments; it was half-finished when — depending on whom you ask — Smith either sacked or was abandoned by the group's previous incarnation. The Fall's current lineup then re-recorded it, no doubt contributing to the music's frazzled, anarchic mood.

    Reformation is full of buzz and bile, from the two-chord throb that powers the title track to the wail of distortion that shoots up the center of the snide kiss-off "My Door Is Never." Smith seems fully wasted for the duration; his wry baritone is cracked and pickled, and his lyrics are more surreal and nonsensical than they've ever been. The few moments when logic emerges are all wryly self-referential; in "Over! Over!" Smith summarizes the group's constant turnover as "a seven-year cycle seems to happen every day" and verbally lacerates each of its current members in "Insult Song." While the record's title goes a long way to imply its contents (Post-TLC can — and probably should — be read as "post tender loving care"), its sheer nastiness, even for a noted misanthrope like Smith, is genuinely bracing.

  • They Say...

    Being a fan of Mark E. Smith's the Fall is without doubt nowhere near as frustrating as it must be to be in his band; with the way he fires people, it must go as far as demoralizing. Still, the fans were hit pretty hard on the way to Post-TLC Reformation! when commander Smith dumped the cracking Fall Heads Roll band in the middle of an American tour, save the keyboard-playing wife. They were just awful, he claimed, and while they certainly were not, the new Fall ("Fall #45" or something) and their new album (don't even try to count them) is filled with new life, new ideas, and every reason the cult needs to keep worshiping this fickle, inconsiderate, and ungracious band. Pulling another obscure idea out of an extremely eclectic record collection (Lee "Scratch" Perry, the Move, and the Monks have been covered before, Merle Haggard, Amon Düül, and Captain Beefheart are all referenced later on this album) the opening "Over! Over!" rips a bit of the United States of America's "Coming Down" and adds that Fall throb, that simple and that infectious Fall sense of melody. Typically literate and wandering Smith lyrics are in effect, plus a gravelly grumble from some backup singer imitating a Muppet. Smith joins said Muppet and starts grumbling right along towards the end as the drummer kicks it double time, working the hi-hat. The track is representative of so many other surprises on the album since "muso" moves Smith would normally balk at often mix with the leader's extremely loose and mischievous delivery, bringing to mind nothing they've done before. There may even be a whammy bar on this album and, for the first time, incidental chatter with bandmembers actually laughing clearly audible. The album's title is supposedly inspired by fellow Manchester bands that are "Totally Lecherous C-Words" reuniting and it's easy to see how Smith is flippantly using this half-American band -- another first -- to make sure he has no connection to legend, reverence, or anything else graying musicians receive from their graying fans. He's inspired, as are the band who are given more room to roam than previous editions and in turn offer more ideas. The sprawling Krautrock of "Das Boot" might scare away the meek with its ten minutes of slowly churning basses and Michael Karoli-inspired guitars, but if you can handle that the only problem left is the loose-to-a-fault "Insult Song." The track is unmistakably B-side material and while that won't ruin anything for fans it does speak to the album's inability to play nice and save the glib ideas for peripheral releases. Course the way Reformation fights importance with such enthusiasm and muscle is what makes it such a fascinating album. It also suggests Smith's firings aren't as arbitrary as they seem and even if he doesn't care about fans, in some strange way he cares about the Fall.

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