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Maybe it’s the lush climate, maybe it’s the protective isolation,
but something about the Scottish Highlands yields a hearty
strain of rock band. Idlewild, which sprung from these volcanic hills,
formed at
an Edinborough art school in 1995, thrashed around on pub
stages for a year or two, then underwent a classic evolution: from distortion-wielding
punk scrappers to commanding, elegant songwriters and absolutely
enthralling
performers -- with the edge retained, following the same
path greats like the Replacements did over the course of a decade. But
they did it
in two albums.
After a debut single and EP that drew the immediate
attention of influential Radio One DJ Steve Lamacq, Idlewild’s
first proper album, 1999’s Hope Is Important, was a document of
their raucous live shows, amassing as much pointed riffage as four Scottish
art students
could muster. "We sounded like an American indie-rock band," sums
up singer Roddy Woomble, an admitted devotee of Minor Threat,
Sonic Youth, Nirvana, and other U.S. greats. While Hope’s positive
reception was enough to rank Idlewild among the brightest of new, punk-inflected
Scottish bands, the group exhausted this concept naturally
and quickly. “We
had the advantage of being able to develop the old fashioned
way,” says
Woomble. “Playing concerts until you understand that you’ve
played too many concerts like that and you want to change
it into something else.” Unbound by scene fascism or London hype,
they decided they'd been "the best version of an American indie-rock
band a Scottish band could be," per Woomble, and began to explore
a new direction: songs.
“
I’d always been very interested in the written word,” says
Woomble, whose school teacher mother is a poet. “But when I was
into indie-rock and punk-rock, I never cared too much about
lyrics. Then I realized that all the books I'd been reading and all the
things I'd
been thinking about could make their way into songs." He also tried
his hand at another new challenge: singing notes. “I never thought
of myself as a singer, really,” says Woomble. “I just thought
of myself as the guy in the band that didn ’t play any instruments.”
This
changed on with the release of 100 Broken Mirrors, a cult
hit in the U.S that made the four fetchingly collegiate
Scotsmen the alt-rock find of 2001. Named the “Number One Record
You Didn’t
Hear” by Spin magazine, Windows bristled with the kind of pointed
riffs and post-punk intensity few associated with the band’s region
-- then a center of languid British balladry a la Travis.
But it also revealed a sure knack for vocal harmonies and
Woomble's distinctive lyricism:
a keening voice that suggested a Gaelic Michael Stipe, with
oblique verses that rose up into haunting, enigmatic refrains
-- "All
I need is a little dis -- courage," "Don’t be real/Be
postmodern. ”
Drawing listeners in with insistent tugs against language
and meaning, Woomble’s canny references and elliptical style recalled
Pavement phrasemaker Stephen Malkmus -- and earned the band
the suprising (to them) epithet, ‘literary.” "Suddenly,
we had this fanbase that was fifty-percent people that wanted
to push their friends
and throw beer around and fifty percent people who were actually
really interested in the words, " says Roddy.
Emboldened by this
giddy, if two-fold reception, the group continued touring
America and began work on their next album.
Having recorded seven songs over Christmas of 2001, they
returned home five
months later feeling those songs already “sounded a little out
of date,” says Woomble. “So we started again.” They
spent a week in New York with the perfect soundingboard for
a bunch of American rockophiles: Patti Smith guitarist and
encyclopedic rock guru
Lenny Kaye. “It was kind of amazing really,” says Woomble. “He
just had such different instincts about our songs. He’d say, ‘Oh
you should build this up more,’ or ‘Why hold back here?’ It
really changed our attitude. ”
Inspired, they marshalled forces,
made some personnel changes -- hired touring guitarist Allan
Stewart full-time (later
replacing bassist Bob Fairfoulll with Gavin Fox, from the
Irish band Turn), and retreated
to the solitude of a friend’s Highlands “croft,” an
old sheep-herding farm. There, they spent three weeks tweaking
and refining 20-odd songs, returning to Glasgow [right?]
to record them with 100 Broken
Windows producer Dave Ellinger.
The result is The Remote
Part, a magnificent, 12-song LP that synthesizes elements
of its two predecessors into an
expansive, strikingly assured new vision of the band. It
charges from the gate with “You
Held the World in Your Arms,” the first single in the U.K., which
features an indelible chorus that glistens with a New Orderish
synth line. The ferocious “A Modern Way of Letting Go” comes
next, maintaining the impression of five wired, gifted Husker Du acolytes
before
the third track comes along and utterly upends it.
“
American English” is epic balladry with the sort of trembling beauty
you might expect from U2 or Coldplay –-until you listened through
the first verse. A slow, chiming guitar arpeggio sets an
altar for Woomble’s
sweet, courtly dedication: “Songs when they’re truth/Are
all dedicated to you…” But then he follows this by singing,
no less sweetly, “And if you believe that/Then now I understand/Why
words mean so much to you/They’ll never be about you.” Here,
Idlewild manages the kind of musical bait-and-switch perfected
by Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, and few others: a song that explicitly
pushes
you away while its gorgeous melody pulls you in, that tempts
your urge to inhabit the song with your life even as it says such ownership
is
an illusion.
On a brief recent tour with Coldplay, Idlewild
were surprised by the response the song got. “At first there were
a lot of people with their fingers in their ears,” he remembers. “But
with ‘American
English’ suddenly seemed to reunite all the couples, with their
matching jumpers, singing along.” Woomble laughs when he realizes
the inevitable comparisons to Coldplay and their countrymen,
Travis. “I
don’t criticize them or what they do,” he says. “But
I think we’ve just listened to too many punk-rock records when
we were younger so that [guitarist] Rod [Jones] can’t really play
guitar like that without having some sort of inane smirk
on his face. ”
But like the album, this song takes on larger dimensions
as it continues, rising to an elegy for someone who is “young without
youth,” who “contracted American dreams” and is walking
through life in a haze of fatal illusions. Among the non-musical
inspirations for songs like this, Woomble cites Alan Warner’s novel
Movern Callar, which he calls “almost a Scottish Catcher in the
Rye,” with
its rootless female protagonist. “I took a lot from just in the
sense of the character, cause I know so many people like
that,” says
Woomble, who also cites the poetry of John Burnside and Edwin
Morgan as companions to the making of this record -– the latter
more literally.
Near the end of the stately closer, “In Remote
Part/Scottish Fiction,” the
voice of the octogenarian Scottish bard utters his brief
poem “Scottish
Fiction” atop the rising tide of guitars, piano, and drums. Woombly
taped him in Morgan’s flat, after a years-long correspondence he
began with Morgan since becoming a fan in school. “I taped him
reading this poem about Scottish identity,” Woomble says. “But
really about how one feels about the place they grew up.
I thought it sounded so good that we had to use it for something. ”
This
is hardly Idlewild’s bid for poetic legitimacy “I definitely
don't consider myself a poet,” says Woomble. “I consider
myself..." He trails off in thought. "I don't know what I consider
myself to be. That’s the point of being in a band.” Nor is
The Remote Part a proud declaration of Scottish identity –- although
the interpretation is tempting. It features Scotland’s poet laureate,
its title evokes homeland geography, and it’s the first Idlewild
album whose singer has a recognizably Scottish accent. “As I got
more natural, the accent came through more,” Woomble admits. “A
lot of Scottish bands go through that, though. You see a
band in Glasgow there’s an 80-percent chance the singer will have
an American accent even though he ’s from, like, Greenock.”
What
The Remote Part is, on the other hand, is a passionately-
and expertly-made rock album, by a group of artisans coming
into their own at a ripe, old average age of 25. The album
swings from metallic
ferocity (“(I Am) What I Am Not,” “Out of Routine,” “Stay
The Same”) to elegant songcraft (“I Never Wanted,” “Live
In a Hiding Place,” “Tell Me Ten Words”) so convincingly
and with such assurance that it would verge on schizophrenia,
if the voice and sensibility weren’t so distinct. “If people
like idlewild they’ll love the Remote Part,” says Woomble,
26. “And
if they don’t know us, this is the best starting point.”
With its breadth of style and mood, The Remote Part –- already
gold in Great Britain –- threatens to make Idlewild a new, national
rallying point: a Next Big Thing from the British Isles. But Woomble,
for one, doesn’t see it. “In Scotland, you know, Travis is
seen as the kind of band that grannies sing along with,” he says. “I
think we always seemed a bit more like cynical, indie-losers.” Still,
he admits to a certain confidence in this chapter of Idlewild. Or at
least a lack of total humiliation. “I suppose we’re more
comfortable being ourselves,” he concedes. “I mean, the record’s
not about Scottish pride, like, ‘Oh, it’s great to be from
Scotland.’ You know, Edwin Morgan isn’t writing verses about
thistle and shortbread.
“
It’s more like ‘We’re from Scotland and this is what
we think about, you know, everything. ”
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