66. ROXY MUSIC- FOR YOUR PLEASURE (1973) Guest Contributor – Paul Haig (Josef K)


I remember seeing a billboard in Edinburgh for something called Roxy Music, it was 1972. The blown up image was a 1950s-style album cover featuring a stunning female model (photographer Karl Stoecker shot the cover with model Kari-Ann Mullerand) and I thought to myself, what is Roxy Music? It didn’t take me long to find out in the music press that it was the debut album by an English art school band who dressed in totally out-there glam gear and got shouted at when they played live for being somewhat effeminate looking. The first ‘Roxy’ music I heard was the single ‘Virginia Plain’ then I bought the album which was amazing in every way. Unfortunately, I was a bit too young to be going to rock concerts so the closest I ever got to seeing early Roxy Music was when I was on the top deck of a bus going up Lothian Road and saw them get out of a black limousine to walk into the foyer of the Caledonian Hotel in Edinburgh’s West End. They were wearing all their glam clothes and looked amazing so it was a real bummer to miss the concert which I think was at the Odeon cinema.
I first saw the sleeve for the second album ‘For Your Pleasure’ at Bruce’s record shop in Rose Street. Due to lack of pocket money funds I was unable to buy it for what seemed like an eternity so I would go in just to ogle it and try to imagine what tracks like ‘The Bogus Man’ would sound like. It looked dark and sinister and featured model Amanda Lear (who also started a career as a disco singer in the mid-seventies) in a contorted pose, wearing a skin tight leather evening dress and tottering awkwardly on high healed stilettos while leading a black jaguar on a thin leash. The background seemed like a futuristic Las Vegas city skyline and if you opened out the gatefold Bryan Ferry was on the left dressed as a chauffeur beside a black stretch limo, grinning ambiguously from ear to ear.
FYP has always been slightly overlooked as the progressive and cutting edge follow up to the eponymous first album that it was. Released only eight months after the slightly more tuneful eponymous debut it takes things even further in terms of sonic experimentation and artiness. Eno was still in the band at this point and his contribution to the overall atmosphere and ambience was crucial to the depth and texture achieved. He left due to tensions in the band after they toured the album in 1973 and things were never quite the same. Amongst the highlights are the sound effects on the title track and his crazed synthesizer solo, which is pure Sci-Fi jumping out of ‘Editions of You’.

You can just imagine his ostrich feathers being ruffled as he was playing it. Like most great records the opening track demands attention, ‘Do the Strand’ is a precise and accurate introduction and a perfect album opener. Stabbing staccato electric piano chords jump straight in along with the lead vocal:
“There´s a new sensation, a fabulous creation, a danceable solution, to teenage revolution”

which is reminiscent of ‘dance craze’ records from the sixties like ‘The Twist’ and ‘The Loco-Motion’ except ‘Strand’ appears more sinister, as if it could be the clinical answer to placate and quell the rise of the troublesome teenager. However, it’s probably nothing to do with a fictional dance craze we never learn the moves to and more likely an overall present moment coolness encompassing music, fashion, lifestyle and image. If you did the Strand, you were ‘in’ the ‘in crowd.’

There are only eight tracks on the album possibly due to side two featuring the nine minute and twenty second progressive, psychedelic tinged uneasy sounding and weirdly wonderful epic ‘The Bogus Man’ which features saxophonist and oboe player Andy Mackay playing incongruous and a-tonal parts which somehow work in the context of the song. It easily could be the soundtrack to a horror b-movie or a cry in the dark at Halloween. Towards the end you get Bryan Ferry’s heavy exhausted breathing with the faint sound of the backing music track bleeding from his headphones.
‘In Every Dream Home a Heartache’ was one of the songs we covered in TV Art which was the band before Josef K. I have a vague memory of performing it in a cellar bar in Edinburgh and instead of attempting to emulate the flanged psychedelic finale of the original we stopped it dead after the famous climatic line “But you blew my mind”. Probably a wise move. It’s an amazing lyric for the time, a sinister monologue that portrays the dissatisfaction and ennui of the narrator over his self-indulgent living and vast wealth.
Phil Manzanera is an integral part of the sound on early Roxy albums and shows off the uncanny ability to throw really catchy and commercial guitar riffs into most of the songs, as well as punky rhythms and memorable solos. His rhythm part on ‘Editions of You’ really drives the track. The guest bass guitar player is John Porter who became a successful record producer as well as working at the BBC for a couple of years. I actually ended up working with him when I was doing a session for the BBC in 1983, which he produced. One of the tracks,’ On This Night of Decision’ appeared on the B-side of the ‘Justice’ 12-inch single released on Island records. I wish I’d realised that he’d played on FYP at the time!
Eno is again very present in the title track and final song on the album, it is testament to how his synthesizer doodling and taped echo/delays could weird out and enhance a Roxy track, something that was sorely missing in future productions as the band became more commercially orientated from the third album onwards. It’s a haunting kind of stop/start track with precise tom tom fills throughout, one of drummer Paul Thompson’s best recorded performances with Roxy. A Duane Eddy style guitar part follows the vocal melody and warped taped echo/delay piano/keyboards. Mellotron strings and choir (also used on The Bogus Man) build slowly with distant tortured distorted guitar, endless drum rolls and cymbals tumbling around everywhere. I still like the part around two minutes in just before the long finale where everything is stripped away to leave Ferry’s dry a cappella vocal:
“Old man, through every step a change, you watch me walk away, Ta-ra”.

“Ta Ra” repeats over and over until it slowly fades into a cacophony of dark sound then distant monk like chants, before it closes with the voice of Judie Dench sampled by Eno from a poem quietly saying ” You don’t ask why” in the background. What does it all mean..eh? (Paul Haig)

Click the link below for our review of Josef K’s wonderful ‘Sorry For Laughing’, featured earlier in the series:

36. JOSEF K – SORRY FOR LAUGHING (1981*)

 

8 thoughts on “66. ROXY MUSIC- FOR YOUR PLEASURE (1973) Guest Contributor – Paul Haig (Josef K)

  1. To fully appreciate the impact of Roxy Music you must take into account the prevailing musical tastes of 1972. At the time many people, including musical journalists( Bob Harris take a bow), dismissed Roxy Music as a novelty act. I can still recall the impact of hearing “Virginia Plain” and seeing them live. The first 3 albums are all gems and get played regularly here; fresh as ever.

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    1. Thanks again David. Yes, those first three albums are outstanding – with or without Eno. Roxy provided a perfect antidote to po-faced pseudo-intellectual prog rock and to those who refused to let the hippie dream die. Ironically, it was Roxy’s flippancy and glamour which would prove to be more enduring – and of course those killer tunes.

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  2. Yes, the first couple of albums are very special. I was lucky to see Roxy early on, while still at school; living in a university town meant good bands toured there. I caught bands I wasn’t ready for- seeing Captain Beefheart…!
    Roxy were dismissed by a few schoolmates who preferred heavy rock. Bob Harris & co were not shy about their dislikes on the OGWT (famously, the New York Dolls) but that was part of the charm. Now, we mainly have the oleaginous and frankly creepy Jools Holland….

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    1. Adrian, that’s something to be proud of: seeing Roxy and Beefheart in their prime. Lucky you! Yes, despite Whispering Bob, I feel the OGWT was a better show than Jools’ mishmash – but any good music on the TV back then was pretty rare.

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      1. Thanks! I was a bit more prepared a decade later, when I saw Frank Zappa. I do wish now that I had got to a Prince gig!!!!

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  3. A magnificent album.

    Roxy couldn’t put a foot wrong back in the very early 70s. They were so
    good, they even left the wonderful “Pyjamarama” off the album, such was
    their daring !
    The mixture of joy such as “Beauty Queen”, mixed with sheer horror with
    tracks like “The Bogus Man” and “In Every Dream Home, A Heartache”
    has rarely been matched. Eno was suitably inspired with the demented
    “Editions Of You”, with Andy MacKay in rip roaring form on tenor sax.
    As for Phil Manzanera, the most underrated guitarist of all time ?

    This is Ferry’s favourite Roxy album. Rightly so,after “Stranded” in the
    same year,Roxy became more conservative and restrained.
    By “Manifesto” in 1979, it was all over.

    Back in 1973, they were an exciting index of possibilities…

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  4. With the lyric to “In Every Dream Home A Heartache,” I always wondered if Ferry was subconsciously telegraphing the regard of women as objects. The song was an index of material possessions and plastic women slotted right in there. A daring song from a damaged narrator; I think it came from a very vulnerable place. I can’t imagine any other rock stars of the time going there.

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