"Uh Huh Her." Thoughts on the new PJ Harvey?

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If we see feminism as 'a revolution' and a part of 'the project of Enlightenment', this reaction to it is distinctly counter-revolutionary. It's a 'tale of dark desire' which reminds us of 'shadows in the human heart' etc etc, and which therefore turns the clock back on the project of Enlightenment. Being ambivalent about rape and murder, as Polly is here, is actually very similar to being ambivalent about fox hunting. It is reactionary, as 'rock values' tend to be: by following the 'dark impulses of the human heart', rock values meet the libertarianism of laissez faire capitalists who are working with the same model of human beings as essentially immoral, individualistic, selfish and irrational.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:13 (nineteen years ago) link

Down By The Water may be related to g/s/s for you, but it isn't for me.

For me it is wonderful warm sub-bass, tricky rhythm claks on a wood block, clear, simple drums and a soft voice whose only words I remember are about 'blue eyed boy' and 'little fish'.

mei (mei), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:14 (nineteen years ago) link

Meanwhile the 'blood dark tide' anti-Enlightenment message swims in you like a fish in water. It swims through your sexuality, as deep as desire.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:18 (nineteen years ago) link

(BTW, there is no mention of 'boy' in the song.)

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:20 (nineteen years ago) link

So you're saying it's working on me at a sub-concious level, even when I don't know what the lyrics are?

Like all those metal songs with 'go suck Satan's cock' cunningly backwards-tracked in?

Er, yeah.

mei (mei), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:22 (nineteen years ago) link

(Me mis-remembering, even though I only heard it about 15 minutes ago. The lyrics aren't vey important to me.)

mei (mei), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:24 (nineteen years ago) link

The lyrics aren't very important to me is 100% pure rockism, though, mei! The full version is 'The lyrics aren't very important to me, as long as they're some reassuring old waffle about drugs, Satan, and the eternal dark heart of Man...'

In other words, you would notice (and probably object) if PJ Harvey's new single were a protest song calling for better conditions for women working on short-term contracts in a call centre.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:33 (nineteen years ago) link

The New York Times review of PJH's new album focuses on exactly the paradox I mentioned above and called 'the Fake Primal'. They do it by breaking down the meaning of 'raw' in Rock ideology:

'When you say P J Harvey's new album is raw, what are you really saying?

Are you saying it sounds as if she wrote all the songs and played all the instruments, except the drums? (This much we know for sure.) Are you saying the music sounds ragged, as if it had been bashed out in an afternoon? Are you saying the album is somehow pure and unfiltered? Are you saying she's singing the truth?

'Ms. Harvey has spent more than a decade brilliantly toying with inane assumptions like these. She understands the wild daydreams that a jagged guitar lick and an overaspirated syllable can inspire. She knows that a bent note in the right place conjures up expectations of bluesy authenticity, even in listeners who should know better. And she has figured out that in rock 'n' roll, plagiarism can be a form of honesty: songs often ring true because they remind us of other songs.

'...Sometimes the rawest lyrics are also the most overcooked... "Uh Huh Her" is full of songs that could be barbaric yawps or ironic poses, depending on how you hear them. Which brings us back to raw, back to that fraudulent (but seductive) idea that a wily rock veteran has simplified her music to show us her soul... She knows exactly what's she's doing and how she's doing it, and the album booklet makes sure we know she knows...'

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 11:58 (nineteen years ago) link

Metacritic collects reviews of 'Uh Huh Her'.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 12:10 (nineteen years ago) link

By the way, the press release seems to suggest that 'Who The Fuck' is about a trip to the hairdresser, which leads Petridis to conclude that 'going on her reaction to an unfortunate shampoo and set, she's a certifiable lunatic.' However, it seems blazingly obvious that 'Who The Fuck' is about her not-entirely-happy relationship with Vincent Gallo, and that they just put the bit about the hairdresser into the press release in a spirit of 'you're so vain, I bet you think this song is about you' deflation.

If my theory is right, the correct response to 'who the fuck do you think you are, trying to straighten my curly hair' is either 'Who the fuck did you think you were getting involved with, he's Vincent Gallo!' or else the Spinal-Tappish 'I don't know why they couldn't get along, they're sooooo similar really'.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 12:19 (nineteen years ago) link

it seems blazingly obvious that 'Who The Fuck' is about her not-entirely-happy relationship with Vincent Gallo

How so? Can P J only sing about her personal life? BTW, I didn't know she was ever in a relationship with him, it doesn't interest me that she was, it doesn't influence my listening experience now that I do.

JoB (JoB), Saturday, 12 June 2004 13:39 (nineteen years ago) link

When you get down to it, it seems like the people saying 'PJ Harvey is great' are saying it despite PJ Harvey, not because of her! She's great (but I don't listen to her lyrics)! She's great (but I don't care about her personal life)! So what's left? Rock and roll, I suppose. I don't like her because I don't like Rock and Roll. You like her because you do.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 13:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I've just found a plausible reading of the meaning of 'Down By The Water'; it's a song about abortion. So the elision of sex and murder that I mentioned makes perfect sense; the woman kills the 'blue-eyed girl' growing within her by aborting her foetus, though not without regret.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:02 (nineteen years ago) link

(I kind of wish someone defending PJ Harvey could have told me that, instead of 'She's great, but I have no idea what she's singing about, and it doesn't matter...' This thread is turning into a classic example of 'my enemies take me more seriously than my friends'.)

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:06 (nineteen years ago) link

Or is she killing a certain image of herself by having the abortion? I always thought that song could be read more than one way.

x-post

El Diablo Robotico (Nicole), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:07 (nineteen years ago) link

I kind of wish someone defending PJ Harvey could have told me that, instead of 'She's great, but I have no idea what she's singing about, and it doesn't matter...'

You mean you need a fan to say that it's the music and voice that matters the most in the end for that listener? Hi there!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:20 (nineteen years ago) link

But when Raggett says 'meaning means little', what does he really mean?

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:22 (nineteen years ago) link

That I'm the Alpha and the Omega. From there, extrapolate.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:23 (nineteen years ago) link

Right now I'm listening to George Formby singing 'I'd rather play noughts and crosses with you'. Now, I'm not really listening to the words very closely, but my pleasure is all tied up with the light and breezy superficiality of both words and music. What I like about this -- and it's written through words, music, production, artist imagery, biographical knowledge, everything -- is the feel, the friendliness, the humour. No extreme psuedo-satanic imagery, no Fake Primalism, no 'darkness' (try finding a PJ Harvey review without the word 'dark' in it: you can't). Formby is, weirdly enough, more modern than PJ Harvey. He comes from a world where people go on their holidays or visit the dry cleaners. A recognisable modern world. She comes from a world of 'dream - spell - snake - power - beg - pray - mother - night - water - dry - car'. Her world is pseudo-primal, like the world of so much rock which stalks a certain power. In fact, it would be a lot better, as writing, if it went a bit George Formby; rolled up its sleeves and got pitched into what's light and what's real and what's modern, instead of what's dark, heavy, primal and fake.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:34 (nineteen years ago) link

I don't think there's anyone who couldn't benefit from going a bit George Formby.

El Diablo Robotico (Nicole), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Yes! Plus no-one takes a ukelele solo like Our George. A deeply under-rated instrumentalist.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:37 (nineteen years ago) link

http://www.georgeformby.co.uk/no_limit.jpg

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 12 June 2004 14:39 (nineteen years ago) link

formby is hardly modern, what you're describing is a sort of humanistic progressiveness characteristic of realism, along the lines of zola or sinclair lewis. modernism was all about tearing that down. he's a throwback to a time before, doing weird al yankovic tamings of the blues and parodies of the sophistications of tin pan alley [the blues and tin pan alley are modernist].

pj harvey of course is a type of goth. i'm sure you'd think all goths should start singing about doing the dishes or even get a healthy interest in politics and parents of goth children would concur. what makes her relevant and most goths not is that a) she started out writing good catchy songs like "dress" and "sheilanagig" which have interesting lyrics, strong female perspective, good singing, nice rock arrangements that aren't too cliched - and she continues to do so; b) she varies her approach with each album in a classic rock way, trying to give each one a different feel and cohesion and yet staying true to an overall essence of her own style.

anyway in the arts a practitioner of the gothic style can do something in a very old-fashioned way or be very up to date - ann rice is pretty un-modern, but lars von trier's "the kingdom" was pretty "postmodern" if you will, and faulkner still seems cutting edge to us. so too someone doing social realism could be quite modern, could not be... i guess lots of hip hop is a pretty modern form of what you're talking about, momus.

but to attack pj harvey on grounds that she is conservative... just shows how snobbish one is. it's like an anarchist saying the socialists just don't go far enough; it's like a fan of merzbow thinking that my bloody valentine is too poppy. most girls in america and britain still could benefit from women artists giving them exhortations to empower them, and that's that.

mig, Saturday, 12 June 2004 16:12 (nineteen years ago) link

She comes from a world of 'dream - spell - snake - power - beg - pray - mother - night - water - dry - car'. Her world is pseudo-primal, like the world of so much rock which stalks a certain power.

I find, though, that her lyrics can be read differently. Fruits and liquids are connoted to female sexuality and reproduction, remember for example Lady Macbeth saying "unsex me here, and fill me from the crown to the toe top-full of direst cruelty! Make thick my blood […] Come to my woman's breasts, and take my milk for gall, you murdering ministers". And it seems to me that's how Harvey's using 'water' as opposed to 'dry'. Take the following examples from Dry, remembering its heavy use of biblical imagery: Mary Mary drank it soft (Water) – Send those angels down to woo me now (O Stella, Stella Maris also being "the star of the sea" and synonymous to the mother of God) – Pick the fruit / Realize / I'm naked […] So fruit flower myself inside out / I'm happy and bleeding for you (Happy and Bleeding for You. Compare to Genesis 3:6-7 and 3:16) – I'm swinging over like a heavy loaded fruit tree (Dress) – The sun doesn't shine down here (Plants and Rags) - This fruit was bruised / Dropped off and blue / Out of season (Happy and Bleeding). I would suggest that "Dry" thematically is about reproduction and having a hard time to concieve (and just to point out, this was a really quick analysis and I don't know wheather or not there's a biographical truth behind it) - things that are very real and very important to modern women. Granted, this is a pretty archaic imagery, and certainly one that could put Harvey in the 'pseudo primal' context. On the other hand, there aren't many 'modern', interchangeable metaphores around. Even though I am more than willing to criticize the discourse of rock men & women and the context of within PJ Harvey is placed, or even the metaphores being used – and their connotations – but I really can't criticize the use of them.

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Saturday, 12 June 2004 16:46 (nineteen years ago) link

Mig, I didn't say Formby was a Modernist, I said he made recognizable pictures of modern life in his songs. He doesn't attempt to be 'dark' or 'primal'. There is much more to relate to in the temperateness and sociability of his emotional register than in Harvey's hyped and asocial anger, brooding, or triumph. And yes, she is a goth, you hit the cross right on the nail.

most girls in america and britain still could benefit from women artists giving them exhortations to empower them

I find that incredibly wrongheaded. Does PJH 'empower' women by her dark brooding, or does she just lead them into a cul-de-sac where they can stew, neglected, with all the demons in Pandora's Box? Since we're social animals, what cures and 'empowers' us is to be lead in the direction of the social. Is PJH a living example of a woman with successful social relationships? A role model who's going to lead us to happiness?

I quoted these words by Richard Sennett on another thread, but I think they're relevant here: "Masses of people are concerned with their single life histories and particular emotion as never before; this concern has proved to be a trap rather than a liberation," he wrote. Given that each self is "in some measure a cabinet of horrors, civilised relations between selves can only proceed to the extent that nasty little secrets of desire, greed or envy are kept locked up".

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 16:58 (nineteen years ago) link

didn't say Formby was a Modernist

:) fair enough, though i didn't say you said he was... bear with...

you were saying he is of the modern world (ie pragmatic, concrete world of things) as opposed to being of some fantasy world, and i agreed with your disctinction implicitly inasmuch as i called harvey a goth. but it gets my dander up [as i am a science fiction writer] when people have this attitude that art which uses nonreal things as its subjects.

so i was trying to say, hey that's interesting that you think formby's modern, cos to me his meanings are grounded in a long-since marginalized and almost buried artistic viewpoint of realism, a sort of arch-naive pre-modernism. if we're talking about social value of an artist, to me, that's a pretty fecking conservative place to be.

so i think we still are talking about the same issues in a way. you are saying, and i do not quote, "she isn't relevant to me and my modern world, and i can barely imagine how she's relevant to anybody, she may even be deleterious," and you do say Does PJH 'empower' women by her dark brooding, or does she just lead them into a cul-de-sac where they can stew, neglected, with all the demons in Pandora's Box? to which i can neatly reply, i dunno, i'm not a psychologist who's seen the terrible effects listening to the music of angry women with guitars who act like men. i am not being snide but i am being sarcastic when i say you seem to know a lot about what women need.

Is PJH a living example of a woman with successful social relationships? A role model who's going to lead us to happiness?

now we're going beyond attacking her lyrical subject matter, and her retrogressive use of guitars, to going ad homenim? come on. i am not bound by some outdated view of human relations that says all our sexual relationships should be stable, cooperative, long-lasting, etc. apparently this rock star girl has screwed several famous men, and writes songs about it or whatever. yes, i think that is a good role model, i really do!

we're getting at some real fundamentals of life here - having painful relationships may in fact be not detrimental to human existence; many artists deliberately seek out damaging relationships; smart human beings use sex to further their careers; guitars may be modern.

finally, i am going to step back and more obviously state how funny it is that in a discussion about pj harvey, momus holds up george formby as a counterexample. your music certainly does have much more in common with his...

you may find it slightly interesting that as an american i was introduced to formby by richard thompson. try to find a review of his work that doesn't use the word dark... in a way thompson might be exactly halfway between pj harvey and george formby.

mig, Saturday, 12 June 2004 18:13 (nineteen years ago) link

sorry for the sloppy typos:

It gets my dander up [] when people have this attitude about art which uses nonreal things as its subjects.

...

I'm not a psychologist who's seen the terrible effects of listening to the music of angry women

mig, Saturday, 12 June 2004 18:20 (nineteen years ago) link

Well, it's interesting that you're a sci-fi writer and feel that my attitude is also an attack on sci-fi! I think there are some parallels -- I'm not a big fan of sci-fi or fantasy literature, mainly because, if the problem with literature in general is that life is stranger (and therefore more interesting) than fiction, the problem with sci-fi is that science and sci-fi are even further apart than life and fiction; science is weirder than life (which is weird enough), but sci-fi is even more stuffy and airtight than most fiction. I was going to say that one of the reasons I don't like PJH's American inflections is that the wholesale adoption of an American manner just increases this stuffy airless quality: 'America' feels like fiction to British people because so much significant 20th century narrative came out of the place that it began to seem like narrative itself. As a result, most British people's first impression of being in America is that it's like being in a film or a fiction. (And what then becomes surprising is that the 'plot' doesn't happen: no guns, no love interest...) Moving to America is wonderful if you like fiction and its formulas more than life and its essential oddness, but a bit boring otherwise. America is, for us, the known, not because it's real, but because it's 'the universal fiction', and any fiction which becomes universal becomes 'real'. I consider it an artist's job to smash this kind of consensus, not buy into it. But PJH is bolstered by a certain kind of knowing post-modernism, the kind mentioned in the New York Times review above, when they dwelt on the paradoxes in the word 'raw'. PJH is knowing about how the 'raw' is actually 'cooked', how the primal is contrived, how the 'real' is ultimately all about buying into familiar fictions. Her knowingness about this makes her a post-modern artist... just not a very interesting one.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 18:44 (nineteen years ago) link

(And yes, you're right, my work is much closer to Formby's than Harvey's: you're much more likely to find a Momus song called 'My Little Goat and Me' than one called 'Is This Desire?' One sounds like a story, the other a seminar in a humanities department.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 19:02 (nineteen years ago) link

a seminar in a humanities department.

yet you're one of those here who is constantly trying to ratchet up the tone and discuss recontextualization of the memes in the sociopolitical hypertrophy. eh?

of course if "my little goat and me" and "is this desire" are really about the same thing...

mig, Saturday, 12 June 2004 20:02 (nineteen years ago) link

earlier in the thread, momus claimed:

I've made the decision not to follow PJ Harvey's career closely. She's not my kind of artist.

yet he still fancies himself enough of an expert to lecture us on why she is not only a "bad artist" but a bad role model for women.

the arrogance is unbelievable, yet not surprising.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Saturday, 12 June 2004 20:21 (nineteen years ago) link

It was Mig who brought up this whole question of PJH as 'role model' with the line 'most girls in america and britain still could benefit from women artists giving them exhortations to empower them'. I was merely questioning that position, I think it's fairly silly to see artists as social role models of any kind.

Momus (Momus), Saturday, 12 June 2004 20:40 (nineteen years ago) link

look, you claimed she was "counterrevolutionary" and some sort of conservative antifeminist by doing this faky posing and what have you. in what sense is an artist's contribution to society to be judged as pernicious or laudatory if not by how they influence people?

how can you say it's silly to see singers as social role models? they are by and large stage performers, yes? their fans sing along, yes? if not they who, then, would be a role model? are only people one's met allowed? or people from good safe careers, honorable trades?

mig, Saturday, 12 June 2004 21:51 (nineteen years ago) link

good artist in having criticism unworthy of her shocker. momus in relating more to the criticism than the music shocker.

amateur!st (amateurist), Sunday, 13 June 2004 03:09 (nineteen years ago) link

Amateur!st's latest dark and primal comment clearly motivated by his less-than-happy relationship with Vincent Gallo...

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 13 June 2004 07:25 (nineteen years ago) link

There's so much in this thread to respond to, and enjoy. I may disagree with some of what Momus is saying (especially this: he asserts: this makes her a post-modern artist... just not a very interesting one in a thread approaching 400 posts, in which he has contributed a significant amount of highly engaged posts!), but I don't think Momus deserves the usual ILX kneejerk, either. He's saying some interesting stuff here.

I guess the part that ultimately confuses me is the following: as someone who loves the music of PJH, in general, I've never ever thought of her as someone particularly cutting edge or radical (sociopolitically, or whatever), so I don't really understand the "conservative" attacks against her here (uh huh here?). She has played around with the blues, and with old andro-centric rock'n'roll tropes, but I've never gotten the impression of someone who is precious about that, or has elevated herself to some kind of rarefied avant-garde plane. In fact, most interviews I've read having largely betrayed her very English ordinariness. the whole "conservative" thing seems to be a straw (wo)man.

Oh, and quickly, "Down by the Water" has always strongly reminded me of a traditional song most often associated with the Irish band Planxty, namely "The Well Below the Valley" (seriously, check those lyrics out). The fact that its a traditional folk song would certainly suggest "conservative"; but then again, its subject matter, flying in the face of what is usually acceptable within that genre, might suggest otherwise (reactionary, sure, but that doesn't negate its power). Or not. Really, this is more of an observation that parallels Momus's own reinterpretation than it is anything else, and now my head hurts, so...

(Last quick observation/question: why do people get so defensive about their tastes? And even more so when someone happens to attach some attitude or political label to them. I mean, I like Bob Dylan but I'm not a misogynist. I like P J Harvey, but I'm not a misandrist... or a misogynist, for that matter.)

David A. (Davant), Sunday, 13 June 2004 08:34 (nineteen years ago) link

Oh, and point taken re: the sexual abuse surviving and the Scrabble playing, by the way, haha.

David A. (Davant), Sunday, 13 June 2004 08:37 (nineteen years ago) link

The lyrics aren't very important to me is 100% pure rockism, though, mei! The full version is 'The lyrics aren't very important to me, as long as they're some reassuring old waffle about drugs, Satan, and the eternal dark heart of Man...'

-- Momus (nic...), June 12th, 2004.

I don't mean (and didn't say) that lyrics aren't very important to me. I said the lyrics aren't very important to me, the lyrics of this particular song.

I'm curious about being called 'rockist', because I don't know what it means, really, and I've yet to find an adequate explanation here.

Your way of looking at the world isn't universal Momus, not everyone thinks like you, or even thinks how you think they think.


Others to whom lyrics have been unimportant at various times:
Yoko Ono, Mendelsohn, Mogwai, Derrick May, Aphex Twin, Fugazi, Pink Floyd, Ugefutsu, Bjork, Lightning Bolt, Dexter Gordon.


Other songs whose lyrics are important to me:
Shellac - A Prayer To God
Team Dresch - Don't Try Suicide
Fugazi - Bed For The Scraping
PJ Harvey - You Said Something
Bjork - All Is Full of Love
Nicollette - Wholesome
The Chordettes - Mr Sandman.

mei (mei), Sunday, 13 June 2004 12:10 (nineteen years ago) link

In other words, you would notice (and probably object) if PJ Harvey's new single were a protest song calling for better conditions for women working on short-term contracts in a call centre.

-- Momus (nic...), June 12th, 2004.


Whether I noticed the lyrics or not would depend mostly on how they are sung and the music that goes with them, not the words themselves (although they do play a part). A song like that would probably be clearly presented, with the lyrics to the fore, so I probably would notice them.

A song calling for better conditions for women working on short-term contracts in a call centre would be out-of-character for PJ Harvey (rather, for the PJ Harvey she projects). For that reason it doesn't sound, on paper, like a particularly good idea. I think it (usually) detracts from a TV comedy when one of the characters looks at the screen and says something knowingly to the audience - a similar break with character that I don't like.

I wouldn't exactly say I'd object to it though, why should I?

Of the songs I've heard and know I like, TGIF by Le Tigre probably comes closest to that subject matter, but Le Tigre are not PJ Harvey. (TGIF is not one of the better songs on that album, but it is still very good).
Distinguishing, sometimes unfairly, between men and women is something Le Tigre often make a point of doing.

mei (mei), Sunday, 13 June 2004 12:23 (nineteen years ago) link

I'm a big fan of the 'Tones' section of the All Music Guide. Here are the 'tones' they've selected for PJ Harvey:

Distraught, Unsettling, Gutsy, Crunchy, Brittle, Intimate, Aggressive, Provocative, Passionate, Fiery, Intense, Sexy, Bleak, Brooding, Angst-Ridden, Cathartic, Eerie, Sexual, Theatrical, Tense/Anxious, Ominous, Confrontational

Nick Cave's 'tones', according to AMG, are almost identical:

Distraught, Bleak, Brooding, Angst-Ridden, Literate, Nihilistic, Ominous, Eerie, Theatrical, Gloomy

And here are the 'tones' for George Formby:

Witty, Playful, Plaintive, Joyous, Irreverent, Fun, Amiable/Good-Natured, Carefree, Happy, Cheerful

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Meanwhile, guess who this is?

Eccentric, Irreverent, Cynical/Sarcastic, Elegant, Sophisticated, Cerebral, Stylish, Sexual, Silly, Theatrical, Witty, Provocative, Refined/Mannered, Playful, Humorous, Sleazy, Literate, Ironic, Wry, Acerbic, Brash, Quirky, Rousing

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:37 (nineteen years ago) link

rousing? i wonder who else scores on that scale. pete seeger? carrot top?

mig, Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:43 (nineteen years ago) link

also, that confirms my feelings re: pjh's crunchiness

mig, Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:44 (nineteen years ago) link

"Formby is, weirdly enough, more modern than PJ Harvey."

Wierdly enough, Aristophanes is more modern than John Irving.
Wierdly enough, Bob Seger is more modern than Enrico Caruso.
Wierdly enough, Girls Aloud is more modern than the cave paintings of Altamira.
Wierdly enough, the the Telegraph pole is more modern than the dvd player.
WIERDLY ENOUGH, THE TERM "MODERN" IS COMPLETELY MEANINGLESS IN ANY
INTELLIGENT CRITICAL CONTEXT. YOU SHOW YOU ARE A FULE FOR USING IT.

..., Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:52 (nineteen years ago) link

It's rather mind-boggling to imagine what an evening with PJ Harvey and Nick Cave must have been like, when they were an item. I imagine it going something like this (with George Formby as the breezy butler):

Nick (Distraught): Hi Polly.
Polly (Distraught): Hello Nick.
Nick (Bleak): What's new?
Polly (Unsettling): Not much.
Nick (Brooding>: Oh.
George (Witty): That's a turn-up for the books, then, isn't it, sir?
Nick (Angst-ridden): Ha ha... ha.
Polly (Gutsy): Shut the fuck up, George.
George (Playful): Make me, M'Lady!
Polly (Crunchy): Okay, I will (crunches him on the head).
Nick (Literate): Hoist on your own petard, there, George!
George (Plaintive): Ouch!
Polly (Brittle): Serves you right. Now go out and get us a bag of heroin.
Nick (Nihilistic): Yes, heroin.
George (Joyous): Very well, sir!
Nick (Ominous): Shall we make love while he's out?
Polly (Intimate): Yes.
Nick (Eerie): Come 'ere.
Polly (Aggressive): Make me!
Nick (Theatrical): Bitch!
Polly (Provocative): Catch me first!
Nick (Gloomy): I can't be arsed.
Polly ( Passionate, Fiery, Intense, Sexy, Bleak, Brooding, Angst-Ridden, Cathartic, Eerie, Sexual, Theatrical, Tense/Anxious, Ominous): Oh, all right then.
George (Irreverent): I've brought the stuff, you blimmin' gothic junkies!
Polly (Confrontational): Give that to me!
George (Fun, Amiable/Good-Natured, Carefree, Happy, Cheerful): Catch me first!
Exeunt, chasing George

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 13 June 2004 15:59 (nineteen years ago) link

Um, is it still ok to talk about the album itself here? I just listened to it again and had some reactions but I don't want to interrupt this enriching discussion.

btw, the new album is probably her most Cave-y, though for none of the reasons implied by that charming little script there.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Sunday, 13 June 2004 16:10 (nineteen years ago) link

I've only seen a few Nick Cave songs on telly, and a few on a mix CD a friend made for me, and they all sound INCREDIBLY like Roger Water's early 90s solo album, Amused to Death. The voice, the instrumentation, the mood, the subjects.

Who's copying who?

mei (mei), Sunday, 13 June 2004 19:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Anthony, please do share your impressions. I'd like to see this thread go on forever, half of people actually talking about the album and the other half continuing this insane Momus dialogue.

PJ Harvey is crunchy? Mmm...PJ Harvey cereal...

Heard a song off the new album on the radio today. I had the volume turned down pretty low but something about it kept making me think "wow this is really cool I wonder who this is?" I was delighted to find it was her.

Bimble (bimble), Sunday, 13 June 2004 21:23 (nineteen years ago) link

more and more I'm finding ALL of her albums can usually be summed up in the best five or so tracks and this one's no exception. "Cat On A Wall," "Pocket Knife," "The Letter" "It's You," and "The Darker Days Of Me & Him" make my particular EP out of this one.

as far as the whole gender-bending thing, there really isn't much of that here (I guess some people could make a case for "Pocket Knife"). Just seems like the flipside of Stories From The Sea where she's reacting with horror to a strong outside influence rather than gratitude.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Sunday, 13 June 2004 21:28 (nineteen years ago) link

Actually I never thought of it that way but you're right about taking the best five from each of her albums. That makes a lot of sense.

Bimble (bimble), Monday, 14 June 2004 05:09 (nineteen years ago) link


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