Friday, September 08, 2006

Arab Strap Split

Aw, bugger. Always a favourite band of mine ever since the first time i heard The First Big Weekened. Malcolm's solo work has been good though, and Aiden's Lucky Pierre stuff is nothing to complain about either, so hopefully we'll still get regular doses of solo work from them.
Until then, I'm just going to have to beg, borrow or steal a ticket to the last Glasgow gigs.

Chemikal Underground Press Release
ARAB STRAP | TEN YEARS OF TEARS

Farewell compilation album released 27th November 2006.

After six studio albums, three live albums and countless gigs, Arab Strap are to split up. A book-end compilation album and a celebratory farewell tour will mark the end of Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton's ten year relationship. The Last Romance, released in 2005, will remain their final studio offering.

"There's no animosity, no drama. We simply feel we've run our course," explains Aidan. "The Last Romance seems the most obvious and logical final act of the Arab Strap studio adventure. Everybody likes a happy ending."

Titled Ten Years Of Tears (a nod to the critics who frequently pegged Arab Strap as 'Falkirk miserablists'), the compilation is by no means a traditional 'Best Of' collection. Comprising B-sides, demos, remixes, new recordings, live tracks and Peel sessions, it's a handpicked selection designed to give a full picture of this unique band.

"The idea of the compilation is to capture the essence of the band over our ten year career," says Malcolm. "Sometimes the albums were a bit stifled because we were worrying too much about making a good album. I think that live versions of songs and b-sides etc show a truer, more relaxed side to the band. Ten Years Of Tears can serve both as an introduction to Arab Strap and also a fitting finale to those people who have followed us along the way."

Acquaintances on the Falkirk scene, Aidan and Malcolm became friends in 1995. They soon began making music together, telling twisted tales of messy sexual encounters, shit jobs, titanic drinking sessions and the twisted chemistries of human relationships. They called themselves Arab Strap after a sex toy Aidan spotted in a porn mag.

And it wouldn't be the same without a farewell tour, ending appropriately at the venue where the Strap played their first gig:


November
1st NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS
3rd NORWICH ARTS CENTRE
5th PORTSMOUTH WEDGEWOOD ROOMS
6th LIVERPOOL THEATRE
7th BRISTOL THEKLA
8th LONDON SCALA
29th MANCHESTER ACADEMY 3


December
1st EDINBURGH CABARET VOLTAIRE
2nd ABERDEEN TUNNELS
3rd GLASGOW KING TUTS
4th GLASGOW KING TUTS


Signing to Chemikal Underground, they released their debut single, The First Big Weekend, a tale of Aidan and Malcolm's adventures on the weekend Scotland were knocked out of Euro '96, in September of that year. A cult classic, it's included on this compilation along with a recording from their debut live performance. Over the years that followed, we were given countless glimpses into the intimately private lives of our two protagonists, whether they were pondering the risk of STDs (Packs Of Three) or wondering if they'd get to shag that friend of the cellist from Belle & Sebastian (I Saw You).

"No one really writes honest, hateful love songs," Aidan once said. "The kids never hear it like they should hear it. They should know of the farting, the fighting and the fucking. The pain and the pleasure."

Together, Aidan and Malcolm have created some of the most beautifully observed and brutally painful music of the last ten years. The album ends, appropriately enough, with the triumphal There Is No Ending. The story continues with Malcolm's solo career (he's currently recording his new album with Tony Dougan at The Castle Of Doom in Glasgow) and Aidan's recordings as his alter ego L. Pierre (new album 'Dip' released early 2007) and a spoken-word album and tour in late 2007. And then there's this album, which serves as a key to that astonishing back catalogue. Future generations who want to know about the farting, the fighting and the fucking will hopefully know where to look.

Chemikal Underground Statement....

So it's with a lump in our throats that we have to announce the impending dissolution of Arab Strap. After a career spanning ten years, Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton have decided to wind up a musical partnership that has rightly earned its place in musical folklore. It's rare nowadays for a band to stake any sort of legitimate claim on originality; with Arab Strap, it's a claim to which they can feel richly entitled; over the last decade they have pursued a musical vision so singular in its tone and inventive in its execution that they found themselves in a genre almost entirely of their own.

For Chemikal Underground, Arab Strap's decision to dissolve represents something far more significant than the ending of a band's career: it's the end of an era. When we received a demo cassette back in 1996, neatly packaged in a hand made green box (emblazoned with a leaping frog of all things), it marked the beginning of a relationship that would have all the hallmarks of the trysts recounted in Arab Strap's albums. Awkward courtships, alcohol-soaked mutual appreciations and alcohol-fuelled tirades of frustration and disappointment; messy break-ups, sanguine reunions and fraught disagreements over the conception of albums; Arab Strap and Chemikal Underground have been together longer than some marriages, so it's hardly surprising that we'll look back on their career with a heady concoction of love, regret, gratitude and, most importantly, admiration for a band that was, quite simply, one of a kind.

"So that was the first big weekend of the summer", Aidan drolly informed us 10 years ago this month when their debut single hit the airwaves. What followed was an intoxicating flurry of interest in a band that no-one had heard of; rumours abounded that they didn't exist and were actually another band in disguise; Steve Lamacq and Jo Whiley's Evening Session proceeded to play the track on 13 consecutive shows (a record that remains unbeaten today) and hailed The First Big Weekend as "the best single of the decade". The track would go on to feature in one of Guinness's flagship TV adverts; Arab Strap's first ever concert was to be aired live on Radio 1 for the Peel Show; their debut album The Week Never Starts Round Here was released to a cacophony of unanimous praise and they were drummed out of Falkirk by the Lord Provost for denigrating the town's image.

From auspicious beginnings Aidan and Malcolm went on to produce a flood of material that would articulately dissect and mournfully celebrate the human condition in a style that was as blunt as it was thrilling. Drum machines, squalling guitars, soaring strings and barber shop quartets were called upon to underscore tales of carnal design, chemically enhanced recreation and romantic aspirations (with all the attendant insecurities included) - names were not always changed to protect the innocent, unspeakable thoughts would form the spine of a chorus while vindictive rebukes would often adorn a middle eight. With Aidan and his (then) girlfriend posing nude for the portraits that would become the cover art for their second album Philophobia (an album which continues to rejoice in the immortal opening line "It was the biggest cock you'd ever seen, but you've no idea where that cock had been") it was patently obvious that Arab Strap were no ordinary pop group, and would not be getting su

cked into the Britpop wars that were currently raging, unchecked, in music tabloids across the UK.

Arab Strap's journey would see them depart Chemikal Underground after Philophobia and join Go! Beat for one studio album (Elephant Shoe) and one live album (Mad For Sadness) before returning to Chemikal for The Red Thread (2001), Monday At The Hug And Pint (2003) and The Last Romance (2005). All these stages are represented on their final collection, 10 Years Of Tears, as the band collate an assortment of rarities, live tracks, demos and b-sides for a final, comprehensive and hugely entertaining epilogue to the bands career. Their later albums displayed an increasingly mature take on the themes that had shaped their earlier sound, the music broader in scope; the narrative depictions of complex liaisons and vice-fuelled weekends (five years before Mike Skinner's rise to prominence), replaced with compellingly insightful commentaries that could be in turn reflective and vehement, while often being laugh-out-loud funny (despite persistent appraisals of miserablism in the music press).


What elevated Arab Strap's art way beyond the realms of the observational was the way in which Aidan's lyrics were more than matched by the intelligence of Malcolm's music. There can be no doubt that Malcolm Middleton has an uncanny grasp of all things melodic (as evidenced on his two solo albums) and it was often Malcolm's guitars that made Aidan's fury or disenchantment all the more palpable. As in the best partnerships there existed a constant friction; they were exacting perfectionists and stubbornly demanding in equal measure - meetings with Chemikal Underground were often battlefields of baleful stares, strafed with disagreements and saved by countless agreeable ceasefires.

From Malcolm's drowsy bass notes at the beginning of their debut album's opener, Coming Down, to the blithe, descending brass scale on The Last Romance's closer There Is No Ending, Arab Strap have navigated routes few bands would have dared to travel. Their albums were musically compelling and lyrically provocative; wholly unique and courageously honest - that they never broke into the mainstream is both hardly surprising and wholly irrelevant. It's not really the end of course, it's important to note that both Aidan and Malcolm will continue to make music with their own individual projects: Malcolm with his burgeoning solo career; Aidan with his L. Pierre incarnation and spoken word projects. Arab Strap will also be performing one last, farewell tour around the UK and Europe.

Bands split up all the time and it's all too easy to inflate the significance of their decision, mourning an incalculable loss to music and eulogising a legacy that may not have been bequeathed in the first place. This cannot be said for Arab Strap. They were one of UK music's most original acts and from our point of view, it has been an absolute honour to have worked with them.

No comments: