[kj] Early Youth production effort is re-released: Executive Slacks
Rheinhold Squeegee
kjlist at live.com
Wed Sep 3 10:19:00 EDT 2014
I have some of their stuff on vinyl, and it's not half-bad. Worth seeking out.
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2014/09/executive-slacks-feel-the-noise.html
"When success eludes a band, more often than
not its missing component is easily detected. Amidst the thousands of
unoriginal acts and the handful of successful ones, a few, slightly
ahead of their time, manage to slip through the cracks. Post-punk act
Executive Slacks, whose first EP is reissued this month, may be one of
them.
The band was spawned in the early 1980s in Philadelphia by three art
students—Albert Ganss, Matt Marello and John Young. What began out of
boredom—Marello and Young found the string part to an old piano lying on
a street corner, dragged it inside and began making recordings—ended
with a major label contract and an acrimonious split. In between,
Executive Slacks nearly turned art-rock into crossover material and
pre-saged a number of later trends in techno and goth music.
>From the start, Executive Slacks was as much art project as it was
real band. Early performances were held at house parties, art
exhibitions in the subway and at local galleries. The trio once threw a
wine and cheese party, placing the refreshments off in a far corner,
where guests were subjected to a pathway of noise assaults before
imbibing. Regular club gigs soon followed.
The band found their moniker in a run-down bookstore on Robin Street,
where, looking at old magazines, an ad for polyester men’s pants—in
other words, executive slacks—offered the kind of triple entendre that
fit their jocular humor.
In short order, the Slacks played opening slots for the Stray Cats in
1982 and in ‘83 recorded four songs for a self-titled EP on local indie
label Red Records. Ignored in the U.S., the EP’s opener, “The Bus,”
became a pop hit in Belgium. James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem recently
said of it, “I always wanted to make a song that sounded like that.”
“The Bus” is compelling, not for its originality, as its twitchy
backbeat and buzzsaw guitar lines are a tissue of quotations drawn from
the innumerable centers of punk and new wave culture. What it has is
virility (a rarity in art-rock), which is matched by nightmarishly droll
lyrics such as, “Oh no! Our legs are touching on the bus/Well, I’m not
moving/My leg is stiff and shaking, but it doesn’t bother me.”
“In Belgium,” says vocalist Marello, “they didn’t understand the lyrics, so it was actually just a song they danced to.”
The rest of the EP roars out with similar obtuse urgency. Heavily
modified synths play off primitive noise machines, dramatic percussion
and white-hot shards of guitar, all of which earned the Slacks
comparison to punk-punk mainstays like Cabaret Voltaire and SPK. Red
Records owner Richard Jordan joined forces with Ding Dang Records in
Holland to organize the Slacks’ first European tour. A followup EP came
in ‘84. (Both EPs were eventually combined for the full-length LP, You Can’t Hum When You’re Dead.)
The latter material was produced by ex-Killing Joke bassist Youth,
whose work with Alien Sex Fiend convinced the Slacks that he alone could
move their sound forward. In fact, the second EP’s angular sensuality
sounds five years ahead of the New Beat/darkwave explosion that hit in
Belgium during the late ‘80s, and, in hindsight, may’ve had more than a
passing influence.
The band’s first album-proper—titled Nausea—came in 1985,
though this time Youth’s production emphasized the kind of stylistic
artifice that eventually killed off new wave completely. Where his
slick, bombastic style works best is the album’s instrumentals and
experimental sound collages, particularly the freakish “In and Out”—part
breakdance, industrial-rock. By the time the band self-produced Fire and Ice,
their sophomore LP, in 1986, instrumentals were a trademark. Even when
lyrics appeared, they were rarely poetic couplets, more like shouted
bursts of word art and surrealist slogans conceived inside a demented ad
agency.
A new percussionist—Bobbie Rae (who replaced Ganss after the Nausea
tour)—brought a propulsive backbeat to the album’s excessively
delightful cover of Gary Glitter’s “Rock + Roll,” which was used in an
episode of Miami Vice. The cooly tribal “Wide Fields” aped its
hook from the Spencer Davis Group’s “I’m a Man,” adding a fiery wall of
guitar pyrotechnics that sounds eerily like the Nine Inch Nails of Pretty Hate Machine, still two years away.
Fire and Ice got solid college airplay in the U.S. Soon Warner
Brothers came offering a record deal. That’s when Marello says things
fell apart.
“I was talking to my wife,” he remembers, “and I said to her, ‘This
is about to change a lot.’” Marello says the band had fought a lot on
the previous tour, and “the whole thing felt like it was more about
business and career,” he continues. “It wasn’t fun anymore.” Marello’s
decision to quit left keyboardist John Young as the sole original
member. The Warner Brothers deal off the table, Young continued on for a
few years, employing hard-rocker Athan Maroulis as the new frontman.
But by 1990, Executive Slacks was finished. Young and Marello didn’t
talk for years.
Both Young and original drummer Albert Ganss went on to successful
careers in advertising, which they’d studied in art school prior to the
Slacks’ formation back in ‘82. Maroulis went on to a career in record
production, with the occasional acting gig. Marello, by far the most
interesting post-Slacks artist, moved to New York City in 1987 and
established himself as a successful video and conceptual artist. More
recent forays into psychedelic, almost quasi-religious paintings have
been less financially successful, but in many ways are a continuation of
the tripped-out anarchy of the Slacks’ best work.
When Josh Cheon of Dark Entries Records contacted Young with the idea
to reissue the first Slacks EP, the original members say it came as
something of a surprise. Marello more recently found a bunch of old
cassettes in a box at his mother’s house, which he and Young nad made
and handed out to friends before the first EP. Cheon digitized them and
has since compiled the best for a forthcoming LP titled Seems Rough.
A few months back, a link to an early performance on Philly’s WXPN
appeared on the band’s Facebook page. An odd rendition of Bertolt
Brecht’s “Song of the Both” sits next to “Sugarhill,” which Young calls
“our first, but not best, song ever.” Then again, what Executive Slacks
did best was not write great songs. They pieced together sounds that
captured the growing paranoia of an age predicted by Orwell, which, as
it turns out, wasn’t marked by a single year, but by several decades.
The inequalities of the 1980s, in fact, never ended. Neither did
Executive Slacks’ relevance."
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