Tuesday, 11 June 2013

UNDERRATED ALBUMS # 13


sees [him] creatively channelling the ongoing trauma of his childhood relationship – or lack of one – with his father, through what were  the present trials and tribulations of his romantic life as a grown man in his mid-30s.’

Photograph Smile (1998)
by Julian Lennon

Following Father Into The Family Firm

Consider the names on the following list:-

Jeff Buckley    Adam Cohen   Jakob Dylan    Charlotte Gainsbourg

Chesney Hawkes     Enrique Iglesias    Jean Michel Jarre    Norah Jones   

Ziggy Marley    Liza Minelli     Randy Newman    Nancy Sinatra   

Chris Stills    Teddy Thompson    Rufus and Martha Wainwright    Kim Wilde

Carnie and Wendy Wilson with Chynna Phillips (as Wilson Phillips)

Hank Williams Jnr.   Dweezil Zappa

The list is not intended to be comprehensive, but it does at least show that, as in so many walks of life, family connections have opened doors for many a would-be pop star (showbiz is a particularly nepotistic world and a list of film and TV stars would be even longer). Markedly, it is the offspring of famous male musicians who seem most likely to follow in father’s footsteps – Liza Minelli and Chynna Phillips would be the exceptions above, unless we count the Wainwrights, whose mother was Kate McGarrigle but she, of course, was married to the more well-known Loudon Wainwright III.

A famous family name, however, is no guarantee of success, although some of the artists above have actually outsold their parents: Jean Michel Jarre’s Oxygene (1976) sold more than 12m copies, which is probably way more than his father, film composer, Maurice shifted in his entire career; meanwhile, the eponymous Wilson Phillips debut album knocked out over 10m sales in 1990, far above any single Beach Boys or Mamas & Papas LP; and Enrique Iglesias may yet overtake the sales of father Julio to become the most successful Latino singer of all time.

In terms of critical rather than commercial success, singer-songwriter, Randy Newman’s uniquely satirical albums are highly rated and he has also proved himself to be the equal of his film composer father and uncles by winning two Oscars amongst other awards for his own soundtrack work. The protean talents of Rufus Wainwright may have well have eclipsed those of his father Loudon, although he’s yet to achieve a US Top 20 single (Loudon did in 1972 with the fragrant ‘Dead , Skunk’). Although his recording career (only one finished album) was nowhere near as long or varied as that of Tim Buckley (dead at 28), Jeff (dead at 30) is also regarded - along with his father, who he barely knew - as one of the great voices of the late 20th century.

Sons Of The Beatles

As we see above, musical genes are inherited with varying levels of career-development. Musicians descending from The Beatles – or to put it another way, The Sons Of The Beatles – might be expected to have higher than normal chances of maximising the nature / nurture equation. It seems, however, that the heat from the torch passed on by senior Fabs can sometimes be a little too hot to handle.

Dhanni Harrison, at 34, the youngest of The Sons, has yet to make an album, despite being described as a working musician. Three years older, Sean Lennon, has made the most of his celebrity background, having been involved in numerous projects as well as having made three albums under his own name, but he has yet to register any high profile success. In terms of musicianship, 47 years old Zak Starkey not only has Ringo’s nose, but also his drumming ability, having worked considerable stints with prestigious bands like The Who and Oasis amongst others.

It is, however, Julian Lennon - now 50 years old, the first born of the Fab juniors, who has been the most successful in terms of a solo career. In the 1980s, he had several hits, but in a recording history now approaching thirty years, his tally of only six albums seems a meagre return. He regards the fifth of these, Photograph Smile as his best work, despite its failure on the charts and its current unavailability other than on import.

Now, I’m no expert on Julian and I can’t actually recall what made me buy Photograph Smile, the only record of his that I own, but I do know he’s had a relatively rough deal over the years as a character in the long-running saga of Post-Beatles World. I say ‘relatively rough deal’ because I’m not about to lose any sleep about a Poor Little Rich Boy who lives by Lake Como and is rumoured to be worth about $40m.

Having also been the 5 years old only child of a broken marriage, more or less estranged from his father, I have, however, sometimes empathised with his situation. One gets the impression that Julian has also had quite a tough time of it with Yoko, his extended family, and the snobbery of many Rock fans and the music press. He has, understandably, felt it keenly when, on various occasions he seems to have been snubbed by The Royal Family Of Pop. If this sounds rather lame, then let’s remind ourselves, that Julian was the direct source of no less than three Beatles  songs (‘Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds’, famously inspired by one his nursery school paintings; the lullabye, ‘Goodnight’, another song by John; and ‘Hey Jude’, McCartney’s song of solace for the small bewildered boy in the midst of his parents’ break-up).

To his credit, Julian has never appeared to directly milk his association with his father in the subject-matter of his material, although the genetic link in his phizog and vocal cords is sometimes undeniably apparent in his singing, as are various Beatles musical tropes in some songs (but hey, how many acts could that charge be levelled at?). As we shall see, however, any sensitive listener is likely to detect areas of metaphorical significance in the lyrics which may be entwined with the peculiar – and unavoidable – history of his background.
 

Songs For Lucy – Amongst Others…

As well as playing various guitar, sitar, keyboards and percussion, Julian also sings all the backing vocals, which he arranges as well as some of the strings – and he co-mixed and co-produced the record. Three of the songs are solo compositions, ‘Way To Your Heart’ is co-written with Canadian singer songwriter, Lisa Dal Bello, whilst the others are co-writes with either pianist, Greg Darling or top AOR songwriter, Mark Spiro.
 
First up is ‘Day After Day’, a love song for his then new fiancée, Lucy Bayliss*1. It’s a superior example of a rock ballad but, with its complex arrangement and Beatlesque guitars and drumming, not to mention the chip off the old block vocal, it was bound to provoke cries of ‘Beatles rip-off!’ (interestingly, no-one ever says that anymore about Badfinger, do they – one of whose hits was also titled ‘Day After Day’ and was equally Beatlesque? But then critical acceptance was inevitable for a band who had the integrity to feature double-suicide – if only Julian had strung himself up after this record, his kudos would now be assured.

The emotional weather turns ‘Cold’ though, on the next track, one of those ‘please don’t leave me’ songs, lifted here by its pleading melody, elegant acoustic guitar solo and an opening couplet which could easily refer to you-know-who (‘I’ve read the headlines covering your wall / A thousand lifetimes, you must have lived them all’).  A third ballad, ‘I Should Have Known’, finds the narrator ‘trapped in this lonely room’, by someone who, mark you, has cast him aside:-

                                 ‘Cos time and time again
                                  You’ve disappeared and then
                                  You’ve come home to me
                                  And played my emotions.’

The bitterness of the lyric, which also includes the line ‘You killed my inner heart’ and which is likely to strike a chord with many kids from broken families, is offset by the stately but unsentimental progress of the melody and cello-led sting arrangement.

The tempo picks up with ‘How Many Times’, a song reflecting the singer’s sincere, active and sustained interest in ecology*2 which compellingly observes:-

                   ‘Well, we’re always looking for something new,
                   But what difference does it make when there’s no point of view
                   Cos when you can’t even take care of the past.
                   How do you expect the future to last?’

‘I Don’t Wanna Know’, with its spirited time- to-move-on theme, is a beat song which might almost have been one of John Lennon’s up-tempo numbers from his group’s first four albums. Clearly an homage then but, listen if Oasis could do it over and again, then anybody is entitled! The originals, however, would have trimmed the all but four minutes of this by half…

‘Crucified’ – ‘on a cross of innuendo’ – appears to sum up how Julian may feel about his life and work being scrutinised and sneered at by gossip columnists and rock-critics. It canters along winningly, whipped up by swirls of Arabic strings, but loses out eventually by again being overlong.

The following trio of songs are attractive ruminations on the need for reconciliation. The piano-led ‘Walls’ resolves to empathise and keep on keeping on in the face of adversity; ‘Believe’ devoutly hopes for resolution only for that hope to ultimately founder; whilst ‘Good To Be Lonely’ rises above the doubtful rationalization of its title with a liltingly classical string section and some succinct imagery:-
                          ‘Wind through my window,
                          Come sing me a song,. 
                          Show me the way home,
                          I’ve been disconnected,
                          Loved and rejected,
                          Travelling inside of my soul.’

 ‘Kiss Beyond The Catcher’ is the sort of pleasant, sun-kissed shuffle that Jack Johnson would be selling vast amounts of a few years down the line. It’s a fairly simple tune about the pursuit of an elusive girl but, of course, we know that John Lennon’s murderer, Mark Chapman, was carrying a copy of J. D. Salinger’s famous novel of teenage angst, The Catcher In The Rye when he shot the star. Julian, who has admitted that he’s struggled with the pressures of adulthood and hasn’t so far had any children of his own, clearly identifies with Holden Caulfield*3, the book’s protagonist with a troubled hero-worship-relationship with his older brother who leaves the family home to make it big as a Hollywood screen-writer…

‘And She Cries’ is another mid-tempo ballad, this time with guitar-parts which recall George Harrison and The Searchers. About an obsessive, abandoned lover, it’s another above average cut, but what raises Photograph Smile above the level of a good album to one that is very good is the final sequence of three songs (it may not be a great album because, at more an hour, it is perhaps overlong and ballad-heavy – but it is certainly an underrated one.).

The title-track is a beautiful torch song by any standard and highlights what a fine singer Julian is at his best. On these last three songs he is backed by a melancholy piano and sharp, sweeping strings which never for a second descend into schmaltz – quite an achievement, considering that ‘Faithful’ is practically a marriage proposal in which the narrator offers to exchange vows of faith and declares himself ready ‘to sign upon the dotted line’.

‘Way To Your Heart’, the closer, is the killer track. Intensely moving, it begins with the sounds of studio noise, a clock ticking and a cigarette being lit. As the first drag is exhaled, the piano chimes and a dark undertow of strings lurches in like a heart coming up into a mouth. It’s as if the singer is needing to take a deep breath before taking on a song which will make testing demands on his emotions. The narrator, a besotted, desperate lover, pleads for acceptance, almost demented with the depth of his feeling: ‘I wanna leave you / So I can miss you.’ The clock is a constant presence, reminding us, between the verses, of time trickling indifferently away.

As the bridge begins though, time starts to go backwards as the narrator, his vocal now heavily reverbed, urges himself to waste no more time: ‘Open your eyes as you look to the skies / And you see her just floating by’. The strings, joined by synthesisers, then take off in a deft echo of the melody of ‘Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds’. The effect is magical and as soon as the verses return, one longs for it to be repeated. The fact that it isn’t only strengthens the emotional pull of the song and when it ends with that solitary clock ticking away into infinity, I always feel drained.

 If you’re thinking this sounds like Julian ripping off his old man, you couldn’t be more wrong. ‘Way To Your Heart’ works wonderfully well on its own terms, as a yearning love song and when it summons up the spirit of the Beatles song, it does so in a way which transcends quotation. In any case, if Julian doesn’t have the right to refer to that song, then outside of the remaining Beatles, I don’t know who does. Let’s not forget either, that the object of his romantic affections at the time was named Lucy 
                                 
If I’m right about this, then Photograph Smile sees Julian Lennon creatively channelling the ongoing childhood trauma of his earlier relationship – or lack of one - with his father through what were the present trials and tribulations of his romantic life as a grown man in his mid-30s. The album’s front and back covers feature sepia pictures of him as a lttle boy – probably taken around the time of his parents’ separation (on the front he is, indeed, producing a photograph smile).

The dedications in the sleeve-notes subtly caution us from viewing Julian’s every move through the prism – or should that be, from the prison – of you-know-who and co. ‘Crucified’ is dedicated to a friend ‘who tragically died last year’; ‘Faithful’ is for someone called Valeria; and ‘Kiss Beyond The Catcher’ is for Lucy (though teasingly, with no surname attached*4).

Most tellingly of all, the whole album is dedicated to his mother, Cynthia’s second husband, Roberto Bassanini*5, who is described as ‘my ‘Step’-Father (Julian’s inverted commas). Nowhere on this record will you find any mention of John Lennon.

 
N. B.

*1 -  Lucy Bayliss – usually described as a ‘socialite’ was engaged to Julian for some ten years, after which he was also engaged briefly to actress Olivia D’Abo (daughter of singer-songwriter, Mike d’Abo, who took over as vocalist in Manfred Mann from Paul Jones).

*2 -  Julian’s interest in ecological issues seems to be sincere, rather than just another celebrity’s publicity pose. He is actively involved with both the Whaledreamers Organisation and The White Feather Foundation (which he founded in 2009).

*3 - The second line of track 4, ‘How Many Times?’ goes, ‘How many times must I catch you from grace?’

*4 – The other Lucy, Lucy O’Donnell – the little girl who inspired Julian’s original ‘Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds’ painting, died in 2009 from the disease lupus. Julian wrote and released a song called ‘Lucy’ to raise money for lupus research.

*5 – Cynthia and Roberto were only married from 1970-73, but the Italian ‘Step’-Father’ must have made a very positive impression on Julian…

 

 

 

 

 

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