Part one of a terrific article over at THENEWPERFECTCOLLECTION, in which they also mention the Parabolically Yours PledgeMusic campaign:
The thrill of the chase is
something that’s been irretrievably lost in the you-want-it-we-got-it
internet. My curiosity, fuelled by Paul Morley’s characteristically
evangelical assertion that “their music will move you” and its number
one position in an NME Manchester top 10 (yus, above
NewJoyFallBuzzSmithMagColumn) drove a lengthy hunt for the Distractions’
1979 single Time Goes By So Slow. It ended at the magnificent Realistic
Records, near Glasgow’s Partick Cross, for the price of a packet of dry
roasted peanuts and what emerged was a brisk yet serene, sprightly yet
weary, sunny yet crushed tale of an inability to let go that topples
into delusion.
It’s a recurring theme on
Nobody’s Perfect – which I acquired a few months later and on which
TGBSS doesn’t feature – as Leave You To Dream sees her oblivious to his
attention on the warmest summer evening of the year and Stuck in A
Fantasy evokes another vanished detail while describing profound
obsession familiar from age to age: “On my TV when the station closes
down/Your ghostly face appears to me, laughing like a clown”.
Most hauntingly and
unforgettably, Looking For A Ghost is the sound of the guy who missed
his chance slipping into her wedding and sitting in the back row – then
staying silent as he accepts that the impediment he knows of is not
reasonable but, on the contrary, completely irrational, as he’s yet
again imagining she’s still with him, while Wilson and Spector conduct
the choir in harmonies so dense no laser could pierce them.
If this extraordinary song ever
found its way on to a film soundtrack, ubiquity would swiftly follow –
though considering this would inevitably entail karaoke pummellings,
tone-deaf whistled renditions and weak jokes about gaps in the lyric’s
logic (“One minute he’s saying she’s
floating by my side, the next she’s encased inside my head. Eh? Make up
y’mind hehehe”) I hope it never, ever happens.
[to be continued]
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