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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Tilt by Scott Walker: A remarkable album by a serious
musician
By Tony Cornwell
4 June 2002
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Corporate mergers in television, radio and record industries
have resulted in the coordination of play lists around
demographics. Pop or Popular music therefore
has become overwhelmingly self-referential, genre specific and
backwards looking.
In this atmosphere it is unsurprising that a remarkable album
released in 1995Tiltwritten, arranged and sung
by the notoriously reclusive Scott Walker should have slipped
by like a ship in the night. While Walker has only recorded three
albums in the last 20 years and is barely known to the wider public,
he is praised and imitated by many musicians including David Bowie,
Brian Eno, Nick Cave, Marc Almond and others.
Tilt, is original, confronting and evocative and anyone
interested in musicclassical, modern or whatevershould
take the time to listen. By itself the level of musicianship is
never less than stunning. Instrumentation ranges from the London
Sinfonia strings, Central Methodist Hall Pipe Organ, electric
guitar bass, drums, chitarrones and hand cymbals, to name a few,
with outstanding orchestrations and organ playing by Brian Gascoyne.
Even more remarkable, the album was recorded without sampling,
click tracks or guide vocals. Normally, to keep constant tempo
and show chord changes musicians record listening to a click
track and a guide vocal through headphones. Each part
is then stitched together like a quilt, sometimes almost a note
at a time. More insidiously, using a sampler means bum
notes can be bent to pitch. While technically exact,
interactions in timing and emphasis that we call feel
or soul are lost. These techniques tend to homogenise
the music making nearly every contemporary pop song seem familiara
product of the domination of recorded music over the recording
of music. Walker rejects this approach, bringing spontaneous
musical ideas from musicians.
I like to do things live with the musicians... so were
discovering together as we go along, he explained in a rare
interview. The way I work, the top line of the song is notated,
with the chords. A lot of musicians say, what am I doing?
Why am I making this sound? Against what? Its against nothing.
I cant hear a vocal. Im playing against nothing, and
youre asking me to do this.
Its hard for musicians that way, but it keeps them
from grooving. I dont want anyone playing licks or grooving;
thats not my interest... it tends to characterise the track,
which is not what Im after. I want each piece to have an
intensity of its own. So it has a kind of febrile quality. Like
Gil Evansearly producer of Miles DavisI want the orchestra
to breathe and to use space.
To capture honesty in his own performance Walker records after
the musicians have left and only sings each song once: I
feel its part of the process of living with the words so
long: you should be ready. I want it fresh and tense as possible.
I also dont tend to do vocals more than once or twice, because
Im basically terrified of singing and I want my own terror
to come across on the records.
Another significant difference is in Walkers use of lyrics.
With beat and bass over all being the best practise
in contemporary pop, lyrics function less as means
of communicating thought or feeling and more as rhythmic measures.
Tilt, by contrast, is so driven by lyric that some critics
have described it as a rock lieder.
Walker has never written sharper, more imagistic and resonant
lyrics attempting to deal with issues as diverse as South American
refugees, the death of Italian filmmaker Paolo Pasolini, cockfighting,
the bombing of Iraq and other questions.
My background isnt Dylan and folk, but the chanson
singers and theyre grounded in drama. I felt Id take
the time with the words. I figured if I did that, the words would
lead me, theyd tell me what to do.... If you get into their
world far enough, theyll take you where you want to go.
Whatever happens in any part of the album is led by the lyric.
Early musical success
Born Scott Engel in California in 1943, Walker was the only
child of a wealthy oil family. His parents marriage broke
up while he was still in high school and he moved to Hollywood
with his mother. Surrounded by art, drama and music Walker explored
a number of artistic fields and at the age of 15 was playing bass
in pickup bands and recording with Jack Nitzche.
At 20, with Gary Leeds and John Maus, he formed the Walker
Brothers and moved to the UK where his brooding baritone voice,
married to lush string arrangements by Wally Stott and Reg Guest,
proved very successful. The group, which had a popular soul sound,
recorded top 10 singles Make It Easy On Yourself and
Sun Aint Gonna Shine and several important albums,
including Take It Easy With The Walker Brothers, Portrait
and Images but Walker found the fan hysteria, interviews,
touring, and performing intolerable. When asked what his personal
ambition was by a journalist in the mid-1960s, he replied, To
become a human being. Unable to cope with the stress he
began drinking excessively and even attempted suicide.
The band split in the late 60s and Walker embarked on a solo
career translating and recording songs by Jacques Brel and some
of his own material. John Franz, the house producer at Philips
provided a backdrop of orchestral splendour for Walker to deliver
big belters, intelligent readings and gentle grace notes with
technical ease and emotional conviction in collaboration with
top arrangers Wally Stott, Peter Knight and Reg Guest.
Scott, Scott 2 and Scott 3 albums were
released between 1967 and 1969, to much critical acclaim, but
Walkers increasing hatred of live performance made him miserable
and fuelled his alcoholism. Unwilling to tour, the fourth album,
logically enough titled Scott 4, was a critical success
but a sales disaster.
Walkers manager tried to encouraged a straightforward
show business career with regular television appearances and cabaret
but Walker would not let Brels music or his own be treated
like a commodity. Unable to resolve this contradiction he retreated
into semi-retirement to concentrate on recording. A series of
albums were released, including Til The Band Comes
(1970) and The Moviegoer (1972) and a brief Walker Brothers
reunion in 1975 with a top selling single No Regrets.
Three Walker Brothers albums No Regrets, Lines
and Nite Flites followed but these were not successful
and the band broke up again.
Walker declined offers for musical collaboration from Brian
Eno and David Bowie at this time and virtually disappeared from
public view until the critically acclaimed Climate of Hunger
in 1984, which included Blanket Roll Blues, from the
Tennessee Williams-scripted movie The Fugitive Kind. Walkers
next album, Tilt, was produced only after another 11 years.
Tilt
The opening track on TiltFarmer in the City
(Remembering Pasolini)is the most accessible song
on the album. Against a backdrop of grim horrors, wry humour,
beauty and grief, it lights the last hours of Pasolinis
life with musical and lyrical strobe.
The lyrics are fragmentary and presented as images on a moving
pathway. You barely focus and the next lot of images close in:
fragments of voices, Pasolinis and his killers; neighbourhood
cries and noise. Pasolini is seen from a distancegeographically
and biographicallybut the overall effect is a portrait that
words alone cant sufficiently express. Walkers disquieting
and restless tenor sobs and surges, bringing colour and movement
to the scene but without offering any explanation. A high point
is where Walker cries:
And I used to be a citizen
I never felt the pressure
I knew nothing of the horses
nothing of the thresher.
And the string section of the London Sinfonia heaves upward
in a monstrous crescendo to echo and cradle the lyric. It is a
most moving and unsettling moment.
The emotional intensity created in this extraordinary song
is not eased by the next track, entitled The Cockfighter.
In fact, some admirers have described this song as a nightmarish
piece. It begins with two minutes of psychotic ambience
before a series of clanking, metallic rhythmsreminiscent
of Nine Inch Nails, one of Walkers favourite bandsexplodes.
Over this Walker describes a cockfight, interposing transcripts
of trials involving Queen Caroline of England and Nazi Adolph
Eichmann. Walker creates a resonant horror from seemingly banal
statements:
Do you swear that the breastbone was bare?
I saw it, and made my escape.
Do you remember what happened to most of the children?
You were in charge of the rolling stock.
For many listeners this is new ground but if one is prepared
to listen with both heart and mind, there is a feast of sounds
and rhythms to enjoy: the haunting show theme, minor/major
chords played by David Rhodes on guitar, swelling rich tones from
the Central Methodist Hall Pipe Organ and much more.
While Walker is able create some real emotional intensity,
the album does have some weaknesses. The lyrics at times become
too obscure and in some places descend into gnomic utterance.
That is, lines or couplets, which, while frequently sounding profound,
function as separate parts and arent part of a united structure.
Some of this is connected to Walkers adaptation to a
post-modernist vision of a fragmented, alienated and unchangeable
world. A world run by unalterable armies of law, as
he sings at one point, controlled by hidden preordainment and
without much sense or joy in human connection.
Walker elaborated on this approach in one of his rare interviews.
If Im using politics, Ill use it to talk about
an inner state rather than a political state. Theyre related.
Its a way to break out of the [traditional] songwriting
format. Im looking inwardthats why you get a
solitary feel from the music. Im composing something of
myself through fragments, he said.
While theres a lot to differ with here the main point
is this. It is impossible to understand human society without
looking outwardsto find ones historical/political
longitude and latitude. Without this approach it is impossible
for anyonelet alone a serious artistto be orientated:
let alone be giving others directions. I feel this lack to be
behind Walkers obscuration, overly neat phrases and catchy
paradoxes.
The importance of Tilt lies, however, not in Walkers
artistic confusion but in the world of musical possibility he
has revealed. His attempt to convey emotion and sense through
pure sound makes most of the music dominating the todays
airwaves rather redundant. Those prepared to embrace this beautiful
and confronting work will be rewarded.
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