|
|
|
"Second album by this
intellectual minded English ensemble is filled with the same kind of quality
music that graced its debut last year. Writer / guitarist / vocalist /
painter Paul Roberts is at the forefront, writing songs that are both
heady in content and poignantly melodic. His songs have an eerie kind
of esoteric quality to them, touching upon subjects identifiable to a
mass audience. Guitars play a dominant role in forging the group sound
with some riffs still reminiscent of Dire Straits. Yet the band manages
to carve out a unique fusion of rock, folk and pop."
BILLBOARD'S
TOP ALBUM PICKS, week ending 6/14/80
|
|
|
THE MUSICIANS
Paul Roberts - vocals, rhythm guitar
Loz Netto - guitars, backing vocals
Mick Dyche - guitars, backing vocals
Mike Taylor - keyboards
Nick South - bass
Noel McCalla - backing vocals
Paul Robinson - drums & percussion
Richard Bailey - drums
Richard Marcangelo - drums
PRODUCED by Steve Lipson
|
|
|
|
Fickle Heart was recorded
in 1977 and released a year later. So it wasn't until late into '79, after
our American Tour, that we went into Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire
to record The Game's Up. The second Sniff album was delayed for the usual
reasons following the success of the first. The band tours and promotes
on the back of its success and then is expected to come up with a new
batch of great songs. Realistically the new songs should be even better
than the first lot which may have been culled from years of songwriting.
On top of this the stakes are increased and the world is your friend,
everyone wants a piece of you, and expert advice arrives from all directions,
not all of it welcome.
We had followed the new manager
Bud Prager's advice on the US tour, he had felt it was better to play
to a lot of people who might not be your natural audience, than to a small
number who were. We now had to decide on whether we took his advice on
how to follow up Fickle Heart. To Bud the all important factor was the
producer. In those days there was a belief in the record industry that
producers created hit records, that artists could not be left to their
own devices. The fact that we had made the first album without one seemed
irrelevant. There are undoubtedly great producers out there but a wrong
choice could be disastrous. I wanted to give the job to Steve Lipson who
was keen to make the step up from engineering, Bud wanted the guy who
was later to have huge success producing Bon Jovi. Bud felt that a big
glossy rock sound with big choruses was what was required. It didn't occur
to him that poodle rock might not be our natural constituency. For Bud
there was only one way to do it and that was the way Foreigner had done
it. There were other bands from England that did not fit the tenplate.
I remember him saying "The Police will never make it in the States
because Americans don't like reggae". We held out for Steve Lipson.
|
|
|
We used three different drummers,
Paul Robinson from the tour, Richard Bailey the drummer from Gonzales
who played a combination of funk and reggae with superb touch and feel,
and Richard Marcangelo. Steve and I elected to mix in Paris to circumvent
anxious musicians worrying about their parts. We took the band's live
sound man Nick Tomory to help out. By the end of the two weeks mixing
we hadn't seen much of Paris but we had a record which I for one was pretty
excited about.
Chiswick Records threw a bash
to launch the album inviting the main European licensees to a playback
in the recording studio, followed by a meal in a restaurant. At the studio
the reaction to the album was fantastic and certain light-headed feelings
of vindication were beginning to set in. Until Bud Prager took me to one
side in the restaurant. He said, "enjoy this evening Paul while you
can, everybody is telling you you made a great album, but I've got to
tell you it's a disaster. There is no hit single, no Driver's Seat".
According to Bud you didn't need one hit single you needed at least two
if not more. He went on to say he would work towards the next one but
for him this one was dead in the water. Steve Lipson, as he had already
told me, was no producer and next time we would do it his way. So as I
soaked up the ecstatic praise of the German record company guy and just
about everybody else I was left wondering, what price America? What price
anything? The Game's Up is still my favourite album from that era. For
me it has the magic of music made on a high, it still sounds fresh.
For the American release I
changed the sleeve as it was too controversial for the Americans. The
use of my paintings for the sleeves has always been considered a good
marketing ploy. I had reservations, in that the paintings I was doing
could create the wrong image for us, or at the very least act as a distraction
from what really mattered which was the music. The German record company
Metronome had been very enthusiastic about the painting which was chosen
and as Germany was our biggest European market Chiswick thought it politic
to keep them sweet so we went with it. EMI launched a big campaign to
promote the album and we were up to our necks in controversy. One idiot
journalist went as far as to say that he loved the album until he saw
the sleeve, etc etc. What had started out as an ironic pastiche of a dime
store detective novel illustration was seen by the po-faced guardians
of political correctness as a rapist's fantasy. Which I think says more
about their problems than mine. Anyway I was happy to provide Atlantic
with a less controversial image. (run pointer over image at top of page)
Although I think Bud did,
in the end, try to some extent to get Atlantic behind the album, there
was no single released in the USA and no tour. Over the water in Europe
things were more positive with One Love and Poison Pen Mail picking up
good play, some great reviews and our position consolidated.
|
|