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Artist Site: bethgibbons.com
"And the moments that I enjoy / a place of love and mystery
/ I'll be there anytime" ('Mysteries')
"The thing that I'm into is the philosophy of the music. I
love the surprise of things, the accidents
just the sound of
a word, to try to express them in the best way, so that the emotion
is totally revealed" (Beth Gibbons).
Seasons come, seasons go, but some things remain the same. The
feeling of being out of season and out of step with the times, the
surprise of first time experiences. All the things captured on Out
Of Season, the album by Beth Gibbons and Paul Webb, aka Rustin'
Man.
You'll know Beth from Portishead and Paul from Talk Talk. They've
been friends since before Beth joined Portishead when Beth had auditioned
for Paul's post-Talk Talk band, O'rang. The pair kept in contact
and at the end of the last Portishead tour a break for Beth arose
and a conversation sparked the collaboration.
On one level, Out Of Season is all you'd expect an album from the
duo's background: exquisitely melodic, haunting, both three-in-the-morning
air of calm and nape-hair-raising at the same time. With a spiritual
depth, but palpably human emotion. With a definite feeling of sadness,
but infused with the joy of nature ("God knows, how I adore
life / When the wind turns on the shores lies another day"
- 'Mysteries'). But then this is a different record to Portishead
or Talk Talk. For one, it's 'beats'-free, and has more of a timeless,
feel. Those who love Nick Drake, or Nina Simone, or even Radiohead's
'Exit Music (For a Film)' should unconditionally love Out Of Season.
For Paul, the project meant he could record the album he had always
wanted to make "With O'rang we always built tracks around drum
improvisations. By the time it came to recording vocals the mood
of the tracks was already fixed. With Beth's voice, however, it
was possible to build up the atmosphere of the songs around the
melody and the chords rather than being dictated to by a rhythm
track" whilst for Beth "It was the chance to explore songwriting,
to have another challenge. It was almost like a 'first time' vibe."
It was even more 'first time' because they brought very little
work with them. There were Beth's chords and melody for 'Mysteries',
and Paul's lyric to 'Rustin Man', which subsequently became his
alias "'Rustin Man' was one of the first tracks we finished,
and it just seemed appropriate. It's that feeling of decay when
the values you put on things have no relevance anymore because the
world's moved to another place. The basic arrangements of the songs
on the album could have been played in the 1940s and sounded pretty
much the same. We emphasised this by committing all the music to
tape." Paul says.
When they started, the 'tape' concept was about the only ground
rule. Beth: "I didn't want to imitate where I'd gone before
so we went with what came out. Obviously we can throw stuff out
and go with what you think you're after, but the only thing we were
after was something relatively honest."
There are guest contributions too, drawn from their immediate band
circles: Adrian Utley (guitar, and some co-producing) of Portishead
and drummer Clive Deamer and pianist John Baggott from Portishead's
live band alongside drummer and percussionist Lee Harris and Simon
Edwards from Talk Talk. The album was mixed by Phill Brown, whose
CV includes Talk Talk's Spirit Of Eden album alongside Jimi Hendrix
and Bob Marley.
Much of Out Of Season was written and conceived at their homes
in the countryside in Devon and Essex with tracklaying in London
studios Westside and Konk. The album's overriding mood is isolation
both in time and place. Other references to nature and seasons can
be found in 'Funny Time Of Year', 'Resolve') and 'Sand River': "Autumn
leaves / beauty's got a hold of me." But that melancholic undertow
isn't far away: "Autumn leaves / pretty as can be / everyone
can see / everyone except me." "I do like sad songs,"
Beth says in their defence. "I find it really hard to write
a happy song without it sounding somehow melancholic".
The album title was Paul's "but Beth loved it. I think we
both react against things around us, the feeling of isolation can
be quite comforting"."The title seemed appropriate because
Paul and I aren't youngsters, and for all the seasonal references,"
Beth contends. "The album's certainly not a fashion statement
or something contemporary. It just seemed right."
One inspiration for Beth, is that, while seasons stay the same,
we nevertheless grow with age. "There's stuff there about getting
older. I've only just realised my mortality. When you're younger,
inevitably you don't see it as a reality, but it seems to be looming,
and that's quite frightening - you realise how much you're going
to miss people. 'Resolve' is very much about that."
In case anyone thinks that a Beth/Paul project means that Portishead
have split, Beth can confirm that she is currently working on vocals
and melodies on tracks that Portishead's Geoff Barrow has recently
sent her.
Out Of Season, for now, is a one-off. A magnificent album, out
of season perhaps, but totally of its time.
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