Monday, October 09, 2006

Blue period

A recent article in the Grauniad collated readers' top literary songs. But writing one song that mentions, say, Thomas Hardy or Brendan Behan isn't really a stretch IMHO. Sustaining a literary theme over a whole album, though, is a talent that eludes most artistes.

Luckily Hector Zazou succeeded where Rick Wakeman and countless others have flunked. His Sahara Blue, released in 1992, is an eclectic take on the poetry of Rimbaud featuring an extremely diverse array of collaborators, including celebrity gourmand Gerard Depardieu, and Richard Bohringer, arguably best known for his role in Diva.

As well as roping in French acting talent , Zazou (crazy name, crazy guy!) also persuaded Barbara Gogan of The Passions, John Cale, David Sylvian (appearing pseudonymously as "Mr. X" on the European release, presumably due to contractual problems) , Anneli Drecker, Sussan Deyhim, Khaled and others to contribute vocal interpretations of Rimbaud's ramblings. A similarly starry corps of artists provide the backing music, which ranges from plangent guitar noodlings to Middle Eastern pop, via downtempo proto-trip-hop. Most of the 12 tracks, though, could be played at your next dinner party without making anyone spit out their soup; they're engaging and quirky without being overt.

The first track on the album, I'll Strangle You, is the exception. An all-out stomper, it's Rimbaud goes disco (discaud?). Even in their most absinthe-addled moments, Verlaine and Mallarme must surely never have imagined that at the turn of the 20th century their nihilistic buddy would be sharing a track with ex-members of the Sugarhill Gang (i.e. Keith LeBlanc), Bomb The Bass (Tim Simenon) and Bill Laswell (yes, him again). A Season In Hell for poetry purists, perhaps, but a post-modern heaven for the rest of us, it features M. Depardieu and Anneli Drecker sharing vocal duties.

Hunger is a moody Gallic take on Rimbaud's Delires with vocals courtesy of John Cale, while the album's closer, Lettre au Directeur... features Sussan Deyhim ululating "like Yoko Ono with PMT" (as a friend so charmingly put it once upon a time), bookended by Bohringer (in French) and Sylvian (in English). You may need to dust down your French GCSE before downloading these. Hey, who said this blog wasn't educational?

Download I'll Strangle You

Download Hunger

Download Lettre Au Directeur des Messageries Maritimes (all deleted Feb 2007--sorry!)

Buy Sahara Blue

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Could only download Hunger out of those for some reason - bit dark for me on a come down from the weekend...x c

Irk The Purists said...

Sorry 'bout that. All fixed now...

Anonymous said...

Oi

Do I need to sign up for your new file host or wat?

Irk The Purists said...

Pas du tout, monsieur. If you're talking about the downloads, just right click on the link and "save target as..." then save to your hard drive (if you're a PC user). If using a Mac, hold down cntrl while clicking and select "save link as.." or similar.

Jude Calvert-Toulmin said...

thanks for commenting on my blog entry about a certain ratio, irk.

even after glancing at this blog for only 30 seconds (i've scheduled a proper read through for tonight) i've made you my star blog of the month (woopsidoo!)on my blog and put a link up to you, because this blog ROCKS THE BIG ONE! :)

Irk The Purists said...

No, thank YOU. You're very kind. I've reciprocated, and now all three readers of Irk The Purists can visit your excellent blog too. Cheers!

Jude Calvert-Toulmin said...

ooooh thankyou! :) i've just edited the ACR article to include a bit about your blog at the end. this is a great blog, really, i'm well impressed :)