SUBWAY
SECT featuring VIC GODARD |
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Sansend
is yet another change of direction for Vic, being mainly a beats-and-samples-based
album. It's a very modern, urban sound, underpinned by Vic's legendary
songwriting talent, and it shows that the Mortlake maestro is not one
for standing still in his musical career. Recorded over the past two years
along with sample-meister Nick Brown, guest musicians include Chantelle
Lamond, a very promising young vocalist, and Bitter Springs stalwarts
Simon Rivers and The Wizard. Reggae veteran Larry Marshall adds an extra
dimension with a magnificent vocal performance on Heavy Heavy Heavy Load,
the album's closing track. Sansend- And how it was made. An old friend (and my best man) Nick Brown got himself embroiled in Wavelength Studios, Sands End, after he had finished the building work and wiring. When he presented his bill the other partners couldn’t pay it, and so asked him to become a partner too- they intended it to be a recording studio. Lack of demand determined otherwise and it evolved into rehearsal rooms with the odd demo or advert being done there. Nick phoned me a few times in the nineties and each time he quoted a price to me it was lower than the last time! Although we started the first two weeks on rehearsal rates of £45 a session we soon came to an agreement whereby he would waive the fee in return for a royalty cut- and so we proceed on that basis. We started the album in 1999 and worked nearly every Sunday afternoon until early 2002, with the odd early evening midweek session thrown in. We also did midweek daytime sessions when the studio was available, and when me and Nick both had the same day off. We had assistance from Ali Hakemi and Hamish Brown of Wavelength, and from Milo Ross, Phil Martin, Rob Simmonds and Chantelle Lamond. Also Si for Turn Your Back Vocal (first take) and lyrics. It was a song I had the melody of but wanted someone else to do the words! Thanks to Wiz for ‘At the Circus’ - looking forward to getting back on stage with yer mate!
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'The simple things in life are pleasantly strange' - Vic Godard |
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Sansend- |
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This album is available through normal retail outlets and from Motion Online Shopping
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Extracts from reviews: 'In
a year of comebacks from Punk's old guard, none was more welcome that
Vic Godard's- Sansend was hailed by Uncut as the album of
his career. Still 'opposing all rock'n'roll', the Sect of 2002 fuse hip
hop and even bhangra with Vic's usual lyrical drollness (and new-found
rapping skills!). 'A lyrically
inventive album posted over a number of themes, you know it shouldn't
work - but it does, with a style and panache all it's own. Brilliant! "I speak
nonsense fluently," Vic sings at a certain point on the album. I'm afraid
you're terribly mistaken Vic. You don't speak nonsense, you're a f*ck*ng
genius and this album proves it. 'Subway Sect have been going as long as I have been listening to music which is probably too long for either if us. Anyway, they’ve gone through various line up and musical direction changes intermittently over the years but here we are in 2002 with Sansend, with the Sect sounding more of a project or collective than a band, and a thoroughly mixed modern sounding record it is too. Generally, these are not so much songs (verse, chorus, middle 8) as tunes based around repetitive rhythms and raps of extended lyrics. Rock may form a basis for many tunes but this is mixed with various beats and sounds such as on Americana ?Fire which has a jaunty South American rhythm feel to it. Vic Godard, singer and the head of the sect, adopts a more vernacular estuary accent then previously, sounding on occasion like Phil Daniels or mockney rapping over hip-hop-rock beats and programmed rhythms. He sounds freed of any convention of having to ‘sing’ and it is invigorating and startling to hear. As always,
the lyrics are intelligent, observant and witty (“who smashed every mirror
in the place/so as not to see you losing face. Which one?” Turn your back
on everyone) and a treat for anyone who actually likes lyrics. And if
you think the Sect view is all internalised the demo indie rock of Drop
a bomb on ‘em is a timely observation – “So here comes another sequel/with
dollars soaked in blood/of millions of people/from one side of the globe
to the other/got to drop a bomb on ‘em” . What also surprises is that
on three of the songs others take lead vocals – Don’t take it all out
on me, Turn your back on everyone and the 70s reggae sounding Heavy Heavy
Heavy Load which ends the album. A genuine surprise. Not so much as a
return to form as a new direction for the Sect, and one well worth going
a journey with them.' |