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Soldier-Talk

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Soldier-Talk
Studio album by The Red Crayola
Released March 1979
Recorded
Studio


Label Radar
/

Track list

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."March No. 12"2:01
2."On the Brink"2:55
3."Letter-Bomb"2:03
4."Conspirators' Oath"2:41
5."March No. 14"1:22
6."Soldier-Talk"7:06
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."Discipline"3:25
2."X"3:13
3."An Opposition Spokesman"5:02
4."Uh, Knowledge Dance"2:57
5."Wonderland"3:00

Background

Mayo Thompson began working with drummer Jesse Chamberlain during the recording sessions for Art & Language's album Corrected Slogans around 1975. The duo also performed in two Art & Language 'Music-Language' video projects in 1976: Nine Gross and Conspicuous Errors with the UK branch and And Now for Something Completely Different with the New York branch. Both Art & Language branches were dissolved in early 1977.

In 1978, the recently founded British label Radar Records began to release the first reissues of the International Artists catalog from the 1960s, including the 13th Floor Elevators and the first two Red Crayola albums. Thompson took the opportunity to sign with Radar to release new Red Crayola recordings as a duo with Chamberlain. Thompson also became involved in Rough Trade Records as a producer.

In the fall of 1978, the Red Crayola released their first singles Wives in Orbit and a re-recording of "Hurricane Fighter Plane" and began touring with Pere Ubu in Europe. The two bands became close, with bassist Tony Maimone and synth player/saxophonist Allen Ravenstine joining the Red Crayola on stage for multiple songs each show.

After the two short Pere Ubu tours, the Red Crayola recorded Soldier-Talk with contributions from each member of Pere Ubu as well as saxophonist Lora Logic of Essential Logic, previously of X-Ray Spex.

Soldier-Talk was released in March 1979 on Radar Records. The Red Crayola toured as a trio (Thompson, Chamberlain, Logic) supported by Scritti Politti.

The band's next single Micro-Chips & Fish was passed on by Radar and eventually released through Rough Trade.

Personnel

The Red Crayola

Additional musicians

Pere Ubu

  • Tony Maimone - bass
  • Allen Ravenstine - synthesizer
  • David Thomas - additional vocals
  • Tom Herman - guitar
  • Scott Krauss - drums

Retrospectives

Mayo Thompson, 2015[1]

[...] Jesse Chamberlain, who drummed and sang some on Corrected Slogans, joined me when Radar gave us a deal. I reformed the band because Christine [Kozlov] and I fell out with Art & Language. I had to get something going, so got back in the music business. Radar was rereleasing the International Artists’ stuff, so it was a natural for all concerned. It made sense to restart the group rather than pursue a solo music career.

[...] Punk qua form wasn’t about making interesting music, rather about music as self-realization. Even poor punk was interesting, though, particularly if it sold. That’s what made the Crayola viable. Sales made it interesting in a broader sense. [...]

Jesse Chamberlain, 1980[2]

Mayo taught me a lot as far as 'just play - anything works in music, anything goes'. We had a great time, but as far as politics, I couldn't understand a lot of what he was talking about. Mayo had a grudge against the world. He was kind of an angry young man. I looked at it from a musical point of view - I got to play angry young man lyrics.

Mayo Thompson, 1986[3]

Jesse – there wasn't much for him to do, in a way, I think he wanted to say what he felt about the record, and he wanted it closer in the direction of pop, because Jesse, that's always been one of his gifts, and I was determined to make the record work, and thought that it could, and should, and working with Geoff Travis, using his insights into the way music works, there was no other way it could be… because those songs, they're all very schematic, not all of them, but... they don't have choruses all the way, maybe a motif is repeated but it's not repeated in exactly the same way... it's changed in terms of the time signatures, it's a complicated work.

Reviews

Melody Maker

April 28, 1979[4]

Jon Savage

Sounds

June 1979[5]

Hans Keller

Texas, 1967. Ein paar junge Leute probieren in einem Studio auf ungewöhnliche Art Musik zu machen. Die Zeiten sind "psychodelisch", es wird experimentiert, in Texas und anderswo. Die Leute um Mayo Thompson versuchen mit Hupen, Glocken, allen möglichen ungewöhnlichen Instrumenten, rückgeköppelten Gitarren, Endlos-Tonbandschleifen eine Musik zu machen, die die vorgegebenen Normen durchbricht. Zwei Platten entstehen, sie beinhalten lange, freie Improvisationen und Strukturmusik und sind schon lange nicht mehr als Original erhältlich.

Zwölf Jahre später. Was ist geschehen? Psychedetic und New Wave/Industrial Rock sind in eine Fusion eingegangen. THE PARABLE OF ARABLE LAND, die Platte von 1967, kommt wieder (auf Radar) raus. Und Red Crayola sind wieder da. Mayo Thompson und der Drummer Jesse Chamberlain sind der Kern, sie touren mit den seelenverwandten Pere Ubu (die auch auf SOLDIER TALK mitgeholfen haben). Was immer Thompson in der Zwischenzeit gemacht haben soll, SOLDIER TALK ist so überzeugend, als hätte er nie eine Sekunde aufgehört, seine Musik zu machen. Allerdings, einiges hat sich geändert, das Sphärische, frei Improvisierte ist fast ganz verschwunden. Charakteristisch für Thompsons heutige Musik sind vorallem eine archaisch-einfache vor allem eine archaisch-einfache Gitarrenarbeit. Denkbar einfache, aber ungewohnte Riffs mit einem metallischen Insekten-Sound sorgen für eine starke Prägnanz, dazu kommt der wilde, teilweise hektische Schlagzeug-Stil Chamberlains, atemlos-abrupte Taktwechsel hezten vorbei, es geht manchmal sogar in Richtung Free-Jazz. Der Gesang, oder besser Sprechgesang, ist oft ein exaltiert-üb erzogenes Schreien. Bestes Beispiel dafür bietet wohl "Soldier Talk", das Titelstück, eine wahre Schlacht sich überschneidender Stimmen. Die Texte sind, grob gesagt, eine ironische Betrachtung zeitgenössischer Umstände, z.B. des Militärs {das mit einem verhunzten Zapfenstreich gleich zu Anfang auf die Schippe genommen wird) , oder etwa der „ Disziplin ' (musikalisch schleicht sich in dem Song "Discipline" sogar Funk ein, natürlich so schräge, wie Red Crayola ihn verstehen), das jedenfalls läßt sich aus dem wenigen, was man von Texten verstehen kann, heraushören: Witz und Humor spielen bei Red Crayola eine wichtige Rolle, musikalisch und textlich. SOLDIER TALK ist hiermit zur Entdekkung freigegeben.

Slash

August 1979[6]

Z

Stretch a point, you got a line. Two lines, you got a lane. Drive a car, or a train of though through that lane, on the soundtrack on the most irritating, jangly guitar sound, the treble up to ten square, and the best drummer of the year playing a snare drum as sharp as a bullwhip crack. Poly-poly rhythm fragments. A hard dose of cranium salts, pushing against your frontal lobe with the humour of a psychotic — who else rhymes "Eastern Europe" and "pancakes with syrup". Yeah that voice has the same on-the-edge-of-psychosis as David Talking Head, but this guy has been around twice as long. He must have been, to put this concept together. But what is the concept? Stretch a point, make a line, these lines hold the instrumental and vocal sections together in such a cryptic graph you need a decoder to sort it out. All right, make the people understand, use the adjective: Avant Jazz Psychedelic Folk Rock. What, you don't understand? Albums like this and the Pop Group are creating a music that you can't passively use for background music — you must commit yourself, body and foggy brain. Not ready yet? All right, repeat after me — make a point. Till its pointless. Logic is logic unless it isn’t logic — my brother grew potatoes but you grew tomatoes-—starting to get it? That o.k., buy it now and five years when it assumes neglected masterpiece status you won't have to pay bloated prices for the reissue. Meanwhile if you're not quite ready for this, there's always the new Devo album — compared to this it’s a first grade reader. But at least it won't give you a headache. Now give me a beer, albums like this are too much hard work — ahh, that’s better. This is a pretty incredible you know — glurg, glurg, glurg.....

Nuvox

January 1985[7]

Walter Ziese

Unbeirrbarer, stampfender Rhythmus, im Gleichschritt. Sonst ist alles schräg. Trompete veranstalten Kriegsgeschrei. Das Sax ist alles andere als soft. Menschenkörper, eingezwängt in quadratische Soldatenpanzer, marschieren verzweifelt. Keiner hat irgendeine siegesbesessene Kampfeshymne auf den Lippen. Alle haben Angst. Einer singt verzweifelt eine Liedphase: »Civilisation is burning down, burning down«. Der Gitarrensound ist aus Stahlhelmblech gemacht, zerreißend verzerrt. Befehl- und Gehorsamsgeschrei »you made me a slave by hammer«. Soldier-Talks, Soldatengespräche handeln von samenbekleckerten Girls und meinen »verklebten Eiern«. Zerquetschte Sinnlichkeit. Die musikalische Disharmonie dieser Platte klingt nach Verzweiflung.

Scaruffi

Piero Scaruffi[8]

Pitchfork

April 2, 2007[9]

Douglas Wolk

Dusted

April 10, 2007[10]

Jon Dale

AllMusic

Thom Jurek[11]

Coffee-Table Notes

March 16, 2019[12]

Neil Cooper

References