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The first thing that strikes you about any album by Stephen Coates (a.k.a The Real Tuesday Weld) is the fact that every element in his compositions seem to be drawn from sources many decades old. The second thing that strikes you is that his music sounds completely new.
For Coates, the breakthrough in his professional journey came in the form of a pair of surreal dreams in which he was visited by the legendary English music hall singer Al Bowlly and the late actress Tuesday Weld. These experiences convinced him to focus on a career in music and eventually led to the recording of an EP (The Valentine EP), which would be followed shortly by the full-length When Cupid Meets Psyche. The album is a conceived soundtrack to Glen Duncan’s (Coats’ friend and former flatmate) book of the same name about the Devil’s take on humanity. Coates’s follow-up release on Six Degrees, The Return of the Clerkenwell Kid, continued to develop what Coates has come to call his “antique beat” sound, putting modern technology to the task of creating new music out of a kaleidoscopic array of old sound sources. The sound of The Return of the Clerkenwell Kid was somewhat different from that of its predecessor, but the modus operandi remained basically the same and no one would ever mistake it for anything other than a Real Tuesday Weld album.
Which brings us to his latest, and anxiously awaited, album for the Six Degrees label. The London Book of the Dead may sound at first like a startlingly morose title, but in fact it’s more whimsically humorous than morbid. It refers to the Bardo Thodol (or Tibetan Book of the Dead), which describes the passage of the soul from the end of one life to the beginning of another. “I thought it would be funny if there were a book like that for the English,” says Coates. “The album felt like that to me – a way of moving from one state to another, and all set against the backdrop of this city.”
Amongst the whimsy and humor are lyrical concerns drifting between such weighty topics as death, religious faith, honesty, drugs, and disease. The songs are informed in part by Coate’s own recent passage through several significant events: “Last year I became a father, and then two weeks later my own father died,” he says. “So I was in this kind of psychic spin between birth and death, and this album came out of that in some way.”
But even when the going gets dark and introspective, there’s an element of musical whimsy that is never far from the surface. Consider, for example, “Kix” – a gently humorous expression of romantic realism (“I don’t get my kicks out of you/I don’t feel the way I used to”) in which he praises the object of his affection for her qualities but acknowledges that drugs and drink now offer him more of a charge than she does. It’s ultimately a rather bitter song, but it’s also an explicitly funny send up of the Cole Porter standard “I Get a Kick Out of You,” an American Songbook classic that expresses just the opposite sentiment. Coates juxtaposes his lyrical inversion of Porter’s original with a similarly inverted musical accompaniment – one that takes swinging clarinet and gypsy-jazz violin and pairs them with the kind of gently thumping beat (and subtly elegant turntable flourishes).
In fact, sly juxtaposition is the rule everywhere on this fascinating album: “The Decline and Fall of the Clerkenwell Kid” starts out with bluegrass banjo, which then segues into a section featuring a melancholy clarinet; the two are later joined and combined with a fragmentary spoken word section. On “It’s a Wonderful Li(f)e,” a jazzy instrumental setting is provided for the decidedly dour lines “You say it’s a wonderful life” and “You know that’s a wonderful lie.” On “I Believe,” Coates takes a leaf from U2’s lyric book and offers a litany of things in which he believes – but typically, the list is complicated and at times self-contradictory (it includes monogamy, lust, technique, sarcomas, and opiates). The last item on each list is “love,” of course, but he manages to give even that obvious entry a twist that may or may not be ironic: “I believe in people who I believe believe in love.”
The London Book of the Dead is just one more example of how a wildly open attitude and a slightly mystical bent can result in a distinctly personal and wonderfully warm musical personality – one that uses technology enthusiastically and happily turns it against itself to create something that sounds more deeply human than most of the music made by analog means elsewhere.
Artist Myspace | Artist Website | The Real Tuesday Weld - Over the Hillsides.mp3
Check out The Real Tuesday Weld's 'Last Words', named Video of the Day this week by Spinner.com here!
The Real Tuesday Weld - 'Last Words'