The Jarvis Cocker Record
Best song: I Will Kill Again
Worst song: Heavy Weather
Overall grade: 4
More than five years separate the final Pulp album and this,
Jarvis’ first solo effort, although to be fair he was working on other things
in that time too – most notably, a guest role in Harry Potter and the Goblet of
Fire, where he actually contributes three really good magically-themed songs
and performs at the Yule Ball, basically just making an already-great movie
even better. I’d guess that the songs here were written and recorded
sporadically between his other commitments, as the album as a whole does seem a
bit disjointed. Some of these sessions produced songs which are minor classics,
while others are less than inspired.
There are two excerpts from an unreleased song, at the very
beginning and near the end of the album, known as ‘Loss Adjuster’. They’re
pretty piano pieces. In my notes, I have ‘I like Loss Adjuster’ written as I
listened to the first one, and when I got to the second, ‘I still like Loss
Adjuster’. There’s little else to say about it.
First real song is ‘Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time’ and
lyrically it’s similar to Pulp, especially from the ‘His ‘N’ Hers’ era, but the
production is not as perfectly polished and it’s less poppy. It works well as
an opener with its mix of familiar and unfamiliar. Following on is ‘Black
Magic’ which is very, very different, quite a lot heavier with a jumpy backing
that reminds me a little of Talking Heads, only nowhere near as good, because
this song doesn’t stay with me and honestly, I have no idea what it’s about.
I really don’t understand why ‘Heavy Weather’ was included.
It has rain sound effects all the way through, which basically sums up
everything that’s wrong with it, and it’s just so dull, with no real substance.
Make a serious improvement to this album by removing this song and replacing with
‘Can You Dance Like A Hippogriff’ from Harry Potter.
Luckily, after its mostly inauspicious start, we get a real
winner: ‘I Will Kill Again’ is amazingly chilling; a very creepy song from the
point of view of a stalker observing his victim, and it’s a really interesting
and perceptive look at someone with such a messed up mind. At the start the
melody is slow and sinister, as you might expect, but later on, it takes more
the form of a traditional love ballad, which is actually even MORE disturbing.
‘Baby’s Coming Back To Me’ is justified in its existence, I
guess, by its delicate melody and good description of the feeling you get after
receiving good news, where everything else seems good too. However, it never
picks up any momentum and feels a bit lifeless throughout. That’s actually a
problem that persists throughout the record. The best Pulp songs work so well
because they masterfully build to a crescendo, while here many tunes remain
static. ‘Disney Time’ makes a weak attempt at such a build right at the end,
but it is, sadly, too little too late – a real shame, because the ideas behind
the song and the first verse are impressive.
‘Fat Children’ is pretty hilarious the first time you listen
to it, with its satirical lyrics and over the top cries of ‘Fat children took
my liiiiife!’ Musically it doesn’t hold up so well, it’s a little repetitive
and I like it less with each time I hear it. ‘Tonite’ also feels pretty stale,
but did so from the first time I heard it, because it’s basically just
recycling ideas from previous albums. Listenable, but adds nothing.
The other song I’m 100% in support of is ‘From Auschwitz to
Ipswich’. It’s hopeless and depressing with good, insightful social commentary
and a wonderful melody, so, in short, everything Jarvis is good at, and both
the musical theme and the lyrics are very memorable, almost haunting.
For the most part, the lyrics on this album are very good,
but they don’t do that nosy-neighbour, storytelling thing that I love about
Pulp songs. The only song that does continue that tradition is ‘Big Julie’, and
while it doesn’t reach the heights of ‘Wickerman’ or ‘Common People’, it’s a
worthy continuation of the tradition, with an interesting character and some of
the best lyrics on the album: see ‘Yeah, go and
chase your dreams/But if your
dreams are not your own/Then
wouldn't it be better/just to work
things out at home?’
‘Quantum Theory’ ends the
album proper on a good note. It’s beautifully sung with a lot of emotion and
quite cryptic in a way, not giving too much away about the story behind it, but
definitely relating to a lost, maybe-dead lover, and the narrator’s way of
coping; imagining them in a parallel universe where things worked out. It’s an
idiosyncratic take on a love song and in that way it reminds me of ‘Something
Changed’ from Different Class.
But there is a bonus track
after 25-odd minutes of silence, ‘Running the World’. Although I can’t disagree
with its message, it shouldn’t be there, and – dare I say it – someone with
such a talent for lyricism shouldn’t need to use so many swear words.
This album is worth owning if you like Pulp or quirky
singer-songwriters. Probably it’ll become the kind of thing that you rarely
play all the way through, but have a few songs that you listen to a lot. Its towering highs make it more
than worthy of a passing grade, but there’s enough I don’t like to guarantee
it’ll never be a favourite. Jarvis is talented on his own but his style is
dramatically different – and he’s allowed to change, but I’m still allowed to
prefer things the old way.
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