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“That’s When I Reach for My Revolver” – Mission of Burma 
(Words/music: Clint Conley, available on Signals, Calls, and Marches, Ace of Hearts 1981)

I saw Mission of Burma a few years ago shortly after they reunited.  I had been a fan of the records Rykodisc put out (all of which Matador has reissued over the last couple years and are probably worth some of my eMusic credits at some point) and it was around the time that wiry and spry post-punk caught my ear.  I can’t place it exactly, but I want to say that I saw them either right before or right after their first post-reunion album came out; in either case, I hoped that the balance of old and new would be decent enough so that I knew at least a handful of songs.

They played “That’s When I Reach for My Revolver” that night and a few others that I knew, but now when I look back and think about seeing Mission of Burma, I fixate on the surprisingly visceral sound.  I got the sense of their volume from the Horrible Truth About Burma live album (and from reading about Roger Miller’s tinnitus), but didn’t really expect the band to carry as much of a wallop a couple decades later.  I guess seeing the sound barriers set up around the drum set should have been the first tip for what was to come.  The guitars felt deeper, giving the song’s riff a lurching feeling and the bass and drums felt like gut punches.  Thankfully, this was also roughly the same time I started wearing earplugs to shows.  Otherwise, I might still be hearing “Revolver” rattle around in my brain today.

More on Mission of Burma: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: mission of burma | 1981 | 1980s | post-punk | ace of hearts |
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“I Found that Essence Rare” – Gang of Four
(Words/music: Gang of Four, available on Entertainment!, EMI 1979)

A lot of music, especially in the punk/post-punk vein, revolves around a cycle of tension and release.  Sometimes, the music creates the tension with fast, pounding rhythms that implore the audience to find release through relentless pogo-ing or slam dancing.  Sometimes, the music itself builds in tension throughout the song, waiting for that moment of release.  This isn’t unique to punk, though, as even my basic recollection of music theory remembers talking about resolving chords back to the tonic – the home base where the tones are exactly what the ear expects to hear.  Perhaps we’re drawn to tension-filled music because it makes us appreciate the resolution that much more.  Maybe we just like being wound up sometimes.

On “I Found that Essence Rare,” Gang of Four winds everything so tight that there’s little room for anything else.  The guitars forge ahead devoid of any reverb; rather than letting the notes ring out and dissolve, they quickly forge ahead like knives chipping away piece by piece.  Jon King’s words take a similar action, cutting into bourgeoisie culture of politics, tabloids, and fashion with direct, focused observations.  Something strange happens amidst this tension – a groove develops.  While funk musicians like to talk about getting “loose” when laying down a groove, Gang of Four achieves their unique groove as a sort of nervous twitch, like muscles that spasm slightly when held tense long enough.  It’s a sort of claustrophobic, paranoid trance that manages to have some spring in it.  There’s even a drum break in the bridge (granted, it’s more Mission of Burma than Parliament)

The only glimmer of release from this tightly-wound dissection of consumer culture comes in the chorus.  Appropriately, the chorus shifts from observations of the outside world to a first person statement – there’s refuge from the demonic outside world within oneself, but it’s fleeting at best.  Those same guitars come crashing through and bring back more images of hollow politicians and trash journalism.  Then, it’s back to the nerves.

Finally, the onslaught stops, but there’s no real resolution.  We’re wound up and dancing (twitching?) along, only to have the groove swept out from under our feet.  Granted, it seems appropriate from a song with such a skeptical view of the world.

More on Gang of Four: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 1970s | 1979 | emi | gang of four | post-punk | track analysis | mission of burma |
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