‘It
is a Rock record, but a very melodic one, given that it is dominated by
a scorchingly intense guitar sound.’
Life Is Sweet (1996)
by Maria McKee
Life Is Sweet (1996)
by Maria McKee
Maria McKee will probably end up being best known for the
song, ‘Show Me Heaven’ which featured in the film Days Of Thunder (1990)*1. The
single, which only scraped into the US Top 30, topped the charts in several
other countries including the UK
(as had her earlier song, ‘A Good Heart’, covered by ex-Undertone, Feargal
Sharkey in 1985).
A passable power ballad written by Eric Rackin and Jay
Rifkin (McKee only agreed to sing ‘Show Me Heaven’ on the proviso that she
rewrite the lyric), the song may, indeed, live longer in the memory than the
film, which was a feeble star-vehicle for Tom Cruise and a box-office clunker.
The vehicle in question was a stock car, raced by Cruise ‘around in circles
getting nowhere’, according to Halliwell’s Film Guide; or as the Time Out Guide
dismissed it, ‘stock cars and stock situations’. The single though, was bought
by Cruise’s teenage admirers and subsequently became a stock song played at
marriage ceremonies of that generation.
Life Is Sweet is the
third of only five studio sets released by McKee between 1989-2005 (as lead
singer with US
‘Cowpunk’ outfit, Lone Justice, there had been two previous albums during
1985-6). Despite the odd performance on songs of Christian praise, she never seemed
to much like ‘Show Me Heaven’, declining to sing it live for years. Life is Sweet, though, she declared to
be her favourite piece of work.
That is interesting because Life Is Sweet is a very different proposition to most of her catalogue which has a Country emphasis, as
well as excursions into Folk, Gospel and Soul territory. It is a Rock record, but a very melodic one, given that it is dominated by a scorchingly
intense guitar sound.
And the lead guitarist is McKee herself.
* * * * *
Life Is
Sweet, then is a Guitar Record. You won’t find many of those in this era,
which feature a woman heading up a rock band - not only writing and singing the
songs, but playing lead guitar too*2.
The album has been said to have been influenced by Prog Rock
and Grunge, and more particularly, by a record released a year earlier, Jagged Little Pill (1995) by Alanis
Morisette. These elements are evident in Life
Is Sweet, as well as that part of David Bowie’s career that might be termed
‘the Mick Ronson years’ (1970-73), during which the Ziggy Stardust persona
first propelled its maker to enduring stardom.
McKee was apparently interested in Nirvana*3 and it’s
possible to hear some of the then recently deceased Kurt Cobain’s self-loathing
on the album along with traces of the barely contained chaos of his band’s
recordings. McKee may also have been inspired by the caterwauling confessional
style of Jagged Little Pill’s songs,
but is far too good a singer and musician herself to have been much influenced
by the rather repetitive grunge-pop of Morissette. In any case, McKee, around
thirty-two at the time, seemed to be wrestling with problems rather more complex
than the romantic tribulations of the twenty-one years old Morisette. Not that
I mean to trivialise Jagged Little Pill*4 – Morissette was perfectly entitled to
dramatise her angst and a powerful job she makes of it too, as testified by the
well over thirty million sales of her
album; but Life Is Sweet comes from a
more mature and interesting place. That said, it almost torpedoed McKee’s
career and is an experiment she has never repeated.
As for Prog Rock, well, there are some unusual
song-structures and strings involved, but I’m more inclined to think that McKee
had become fascinated by the overall sound of early 1970s Glam Rock by the
likes of Alice Cooper, Bowie, Mott The Hoople and T. Rex (whose ‘bang a gong’
from ‘Get It On’*5 she quotes in the title-track). On Life
Is Sweet, her guitar-playing, though less virtuosic and more distorted,
certainly brings to mind the heroic style of Cooper’s Glen Buxton, Mott’s Mick
Ralphs and Ariel Bender and, most of all Bowie’s Mick Ronson. Marc Bolan, an
underrated guitarist in my estimation, though less accomplished than those above,
is also stirred into the McKee mix.
The record starts uncompromisingly with ‘Scarlover’, her
guitar slashing and clanging around a wordy lyric about a ‘painful, truthful
boy’ who ‘fell across my body like a shroud…ugly inside me taught me of
beauty’. Her voice, plaintive on the choruses, becomes more and more distraught
and the sado-masochistic imagery and barrelling four-piece band would
immediately have convinced McKee’s fan-base that they were a long way from
home. ‘Show Me Heaven’ this ain’t.
‘This Perfect Dress’*6 which follows, is another intensely
physical song swept along by billowing strings and an enormous guitar sound
drenched in tremolo and echo. The sexual union she describes is so close that
she appears to be wearing her lover
in a punning, paradoxical scenario: ‘this perfect room, this little death,
birth without womb’.
‘Absolutely Barking Stars’, the only track to have its lyric
printed on the sleeve*7, introduces the theme of the narrator’s identity-crisis
with an altar-ego ‘twin’ who ‘plays Pandora’ with her soul. This theme
dominates the rest of the album and you may, dear reader, at this point feel
yourself backing away a little – but please do hang in there because Life Is Sweet is a record which can
easily be listened to as sound and vocals without too much attention on the words. Having said
that, I do believe McKee’s rather messy poetics do actually enhance the overall
proceedings: listen to how (at 0.52) she sings ‘I’ve tried to trap her in my
head but she knows where the light comes in’ and how she blasts out the mighty
riff which follows, not to mention the other great riff in a higher key (at
3.20) which leads the song out…
…but only so far as ‘I’m Not Listening’, in which the
love-hate combat with her bullying ‘twin’ continues apace, the narrator
fighting, it seems, for her sanity, if not her very life. Beginning with solo
piano, the strings crash in on the chorus and never let up. When McKee cries
out: ‘You’ve nearly killed me once!’ you begin to think that maybe she needs an
exorcist rather than a psychoanalyst. Grimly inexorable cellos and viola
advance in a coda that might be out of a Michael Nyman score for a Horror film.
Fading over this, double-tracked and still locked in battle, two voices (both
McKee’s) scream at each other in the distance.
You might be in need of a breather after all this – if so,
fear not, for there is an intermission of sorts in the shape of ‘Everybody’, a
slight little pop song which, despite some spirited singing, could be about
well, almost anybody, as opposed to the demonically possessed twins with whom
we’ve so far been acquainted. The next track, ‘Smarter’ also feels like filler
in the overall context despite its Nirvana-like noise-rock and lyrical
encounters with a father-figure, a brother and Jesus. The pretty ‘What Else You
Wanna Know?’ with its key declaration, ‘I love what we are, but I hate what I
am’ is better, but still sounds a little too much like the sort of thing that
Morissette or Sheryl Crowe were doing at the time – until that is, McKee’s
guitar really starts to kick in about half-way through, pulling the record out
of its mid-album slump.
‘I’m Awake’, a song more about making love than having sex –
although a not altogether untroubled take on the situation, begins gently,
picking up soulful strings along the way until McKee, again using a dramatic
paradox: ‘It slays me - I die to live again in your arms’. At which point and
out of nowhere, another vast guitar solo turns the song – and the listener –
upside-down, roiling around and wrenched from some deep emotional core. It’s
one of the most affecting of the many highlights on this record.
As ‘I’m Awake’ drifts away with the strings, McKee repeats
the title-phrase whilst playing a guitar-figure eerily reminiscent of ‘The Red
Telephone’ by the legendary Love from their masterpiece Forever Changes (1967). I say ‘eerily’ because McKee’s older
half-brother, Bryan Maclean was Arthur Lee’s flaxen-haired second-in-command,
singer-songwriter in Love – and the next song on Life Is Sweet appears to be about him.
In ‘Human’, McKee refers to being ‘in awe’ of a ‘golden boy’
and struggling with the temptation to ‘mythologise this bond’ and make of him
‘a demigod’ who would ‘never die’. Not long after, MacLean died of a
heart-attack, aged fifty-two on Christmas Day, 1998.
Notwithstanding the inherent curiosity of its subject
matter, ‘Human’ is not the best song on the album, although it is, as usual,
lifted by the guitar-playing – as is ‘Carried’ which features perhaps McKee’s
most Ronsonesque riff. This time, the narrator is trying to find spiritual
salvation: ‘Jesus, I know you’re out there, in here, out there, somewhere, in
here, everywhere’*8 in order to rescue her from that ‘evil little twin’ who has
been haunting her ‘since my mother carried me.’
Life Is
Sweet borrows its title from a 1991 film by the innovative British
director, Mike Leigh (whose name appears in the acknowledgements on the inner
sleeve). It is amongst, other things, about the warring relationship between
twin teenage girls, played by Claire Skinner and Jane Horrocks (aaha…) As with
several of the songs, ‘Life Is Sweet / Afterlife’*9 begins with McKee singing
unaccompanied over her strummed electric guitar. It’s a song of hope for
outsider kids who feel neglected, bullied, unlucky or unloved (including a girl
who hears ‘voices in her head’). ‘Life is sweet, bittersweet / And the days
keep rollin’ along’ McKee sings until the simple tune is overtaken in the
‘Afterlife’ coda as the strings take off and a tambourine keeps time before a
tumult of drums crash in and the album fades out like a glorious vapour trail
in the sky.
A meticulously sequenced album with the songs all
thematically linked, Life Is Sweet is
an emotionally demanding, but rewarding experience. On ‘Human’, she may admit
to being ‘desperate-drained from all those tantrums’ but, as with much great
pop and rock music, the portrayal of psychosis and heartbreak can be an exciting and uplifting experience for the
listener. That word ‘bittersweet’ is the keynote to this record and its
connotations are conveyed with tremendous power by the band, with its leader’s
singing and playing always to the fore. This album not only underlined her
status as a fine singer, but took her out on an edge where she found greatness.
Similarly, her playing, as ferocious and distorted as the material frequently
demanded, transcended whatever technical limitations she may have had and
marked her out as a guitarist of considerable distinction.
N. B.
McKee wrote nine of the album’s twelve tracks, co-writing
the other three as well as co-arranging and co-producing with keyboardist Bruce
Brody (who, incidentally also produced ‘Show Me Heaven’, as well as working
with Patti Smith and U2, and on films like Diner
(1982) and Pulp Fiction (1994). He also wrote Sam Brown’s 1988 global smash
hit single, ‘Stop’).
*1 – The Days Of
Thunder OST also featured the dread Guns ‘N’ Roses demonstrating their
appetite for destruction by murdering Bob Dylan’s ‘Knocking On Heaven’s Door’.
*2 - Answers on a postcard – although the back of a stamp
would do - and no, the great Joni Mitchell won’t count because she’s
predominantly an acoustic player with little interest in Rock music. I’ll wager
you won’t get much further than Bonnie Raitt and Joan Jett…
*3 – Nirvana are one of my musical blind spots. I can
understand when critics mention them in the same breath as Black Sabbath
(another blind spot…), but I’m mystified when they also compare them to The
Beatles. I mean, I know there’s tunes in there, but apart from the odd track
and the MTV Unplugged In New York (1994) album,
I just hear them as a racket, I’m afraid – and, no, I’m not even moved by
‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’. Give me the psychedelic mini-masterpiece, ‘Rainbow
Chaser’ (1967) by the original English art-rock Nirvana anytime!
*4 – I quite like Jagged
Little Pill, especially the
raging, hell hath no fury angst of ‘You Oughta Know’, but many (predominantly
male) critics dismissed it as mere girly whining – which is a bit rich when you
consider some of the casual blokeish sexism and downright misogyny hailed as
classic rock down through the ages.
*5 – ‘Get It On’ by T. Rex was re-titled ‘Bang A Gong’ in
the US
to avoid confusion with another song by a band called Chase.
*6 – I can’t help but smile at the title ‘This Perfect
Dress’ because whenever I’ve seen clips of McKee, she always seems to be
wearing some godawful knee-length tent with heavy-looking boots…
*7 – The album cover features an uncredited fold-out B/W
shot of a circus troupe, probably from around the turn of the 20th
century – and for no particular reason that I can discern.
*8 – MacLean, who, in musical terms, seems to have been
something of a chronic underachiever following the handful of his songs which
appeared on the remarkable first three albums by Love, became a born-again
Christian, for a while attending the same Vineyard church as Bob Dylan. As well
as Bryan, both Maria and their mother, Elizabeth - originally a catholic family
- all ‘found Jesus’. ‘Lizzie & Bryan’ appear in the album’s
acknowledgements.
*9 – McKee revisited the song ‘Life Is Sweet / Afterlife’ on
her next album, High Dive (2003),
according it a more restrained, conventional treatment…
c. 2013
IGR
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