"50,000,000 Elvis fans can't be wrong, I guess
they knew it all along
If you want to be a star, go today - buy a suit of gold lamé."In 1956, Elvis
Presley burst upon the music scene. Within two years he had produced 14 consecutive
million-selling records. In the course of doing so he had changed the course of popular
music and culture forever. His spectacular success, popularity amongst music fans and
notorious sex appeal remain unparalleled in American entertainment history. Elvis's $2,500
gold lame suit was created by Nudie's of Hollywood, tailor to the stars. First worn by
Elvis on his 1957 tour performances, the gold suit is one of the most famous costumes in
rock'n'roll history.
Alec Bathgate's musical career hasn't exactly led him to buy a suit from Nudie's, but
19 years after The Enemy burst onto the unsuspecting Dunedin music scene in 1977 (a
spectacular and ground-breaking arrival in its own right, we might add) with young Alec on
guitar, it is about bloody time that we had an album full of his songs and voice.
Right from the moment that Alec formed The Enemy with fellow art
student Mick Dawson and talented misfit Chris
Knox, he's been involved with Chris in one of this country's
most enduring and original songwriting partnerships. Alec and Chris
were the Enemy's songwriting core and after the group evolved into
Toy Love in 1979, they were hammering out classic tunes for a band
who were rapidly becoming the most highly-rated act in the land.
Toy Love was over less than two years later, but Chris and Alec
were straight into a new project, Tall Dwarfs.
After one EP on the Furtive label, the Tall Dwarfs hooked up with Flying Nun and ten
records later they remain creative stalwarts of the label. The duo are now legends in the
world of four-track home-recording they were invited to headline the inaugural Fast
Forward home-recording festival in Holland where they were joined by the likes of Sebadoh.
Of course, since Chris bought an eight-track, they're practically a regular studio band
now....
Most Tall Dwarfs recordings occur in Chris Knox's Auckland home, with Alec travelling
up from Christchurch to work for a few days on songs which are built up from guitar riffs,
vocal melodies or rhythm loops made from whatever is at hand and sounds interesting
enough. Alec has brought that same attitude to the solo album that people have been
bugging him to make for years.
The 16 songs that make up Gold Lamé were recorded onto a four-track over the
space of a year by Alec alone in his garage. Away from Chris Knox, Alec still gives us
many of the great stylistic touches at the core of the Tall Dwarfs on his own album, from
crunching riffs over rhythm loop rumbles to fairground psychedelia. Gold Lamé is
stacked with good moods and undeniably sweet sixties melodies right from the moment its
first track, "Win Your Love", descends into something like a Beach Boys' Smile
out-take. Later we get Alec picking up the voice of Velvets-era Lou Reed on
"Ain't It Strange" and the Knox-Bathgate Beatles touchstone appears nicely-done
on "Slow Parade". As with the best of Tall Dwarfs' output, Gold Lamé so
often feels like a gem left out in the forest in 1969....
Alec's experienced recording hand is immediately evident in arrangements like
"Carl's Arrows", where the four-track recording is not necessarily
"lo-fi" and encompasses voice, guitars, toy xylophone and piano. There's
extensive use of casio keyboard tones and rhythms on many songs including a cover of
reggae classic, "Train To Skaville". Deft backwards sounds punctuate
"Run" alongside a nice electric guitar melody. Elsewhere, songs make room for
Alec's big guitaring his fantastic strumming on acoustic at the heart of tunes like
the title track and a burr of solid electrics on others like "Pet Hates".
The latter is one of two Gold Lamé songs released on a seven inch vinyl single
late last year by Flying Nun. "Pet Hates" and "Happy Hound" drew an
excellent critical response, no better than in Wellington's Salient, who said "This
sweet slab sounds exactly like the Tall Dwarfs without Chris Knox. Surprisingly. And some
would like that. His vox put him up as a chipper Bing Crosby to Knox's more croonful Frank
Sinatra."
For those of us who've loved the handful of tunes Alec has managed
to get his tonsils round in the Tall Dwarfs, Gold Lamé is
an album full of White Christmases. We should add that it also cost
less to make than Elvis's suit, which means that in recording craft
and creativity value, Alec Bathgate is a home-recorded rock'n'roll
king in our book. Gold Lamé is a long overdue item and all
us Tall Dwarfs fans can't be wrong Alec Bathgate is the star.