"There's this band that I like called Cul De Sac - very ambient,
very cool". Lou Reed, Mojo, March 1996
Robin Amos - keyboards
Chris Fujiwara - bass
Glenn Jones - guitars
Jon Proudman - drums
Krautrock, space rock and especially post rock are the cool terms to drop at the
moment, often lazily applied to bands impossible to categorise. Cul De Sac are one of
these bands. China Gate is their third album.
When the band's second album I Don't Want To Go To Bed was released last year, Cul De
Sac were grouped in with all the other so-called post rock/Krautrock bands. Yet for all
their experimentalism and Germanic influences(Faust, Neu and of course Can), this powerful
and unique instrumental Boston four piece combine so many elements of different musical
genres (sixties psychedelia, Jazz and 20th Century American folk(!)) they are impossible
to catagorise as either. They have created a sound, which as English critic David Stubbs
explains, "isn't post or anti-rock, but one which opens up a whole index of
directions in which rock music could go right now".
As with their two previous albums I Don't Want To Go To Bed and Ecim (1992 - to be
re-released later this year) the 20th Century American folk influence remains an important
touchstone on China Gate, elevating the vocals and melodies from the deep krautrock
grooves and thus the band from the good to the very special. According to the band, the
basic concept of China Gate was to combine Glenn Jones's melodic sensitivity (he writes
most of the songs) with idiosyncratic guitar playing (Hendrix and Fahey influenced) and
Amos's orgy of electronic experiments, whilst making sure that a sharp, propulsive groove
generated the whole process.
From the furious excitement of 'Colomber', the heartbreak of 'Nepenthe' and the late
night driving grooves of 'Utopia Parkway' and the reworking of 'Doledrums' (first featured
on I Don't Want To Go To Bed) China Gate is Cul De Sac's most far-ranging musical
expedition yet.
China Gate hears Cul de Sac playing with a greater assurance than on previous
records, delivering all the components of a good diverse album. Whereas I Don't Want To Go
To Bed was recorded on one microphone a four track in a tiny practice space, China Gate
was treated to proper production and mixing, which, apparently had its problems. Bassist
Chris Fujiwara recalls the album as a 'post produciton nightmare, but yet worth it,
because without detriment to the spontaneity of the playing, we got these dense textures
in which sound move around in interesting ways - each instrument beautiful and hypnotic in
itself. Everyone played on the album at fever heat", he continues, "in fact we
were all quite delirious."
Albums listened to during the recording of China Gate were John
Coltrane's Ascension and the Breakfast At Tiffany's soundtrack.
Cul
De Sac on the web