Brit boy
band Busted busts up
LONDON-- British
boy band Busted are going their separate ways -- at least for now.
The London-based trio shot to fame in September 2002 with the
single What I Go to School For. Their hits also include Crashed
the Wedding and You Said No, and they appeared in a documentary
about their attempts to break into the U.S. market. Singer Charlie
Simpson has decided to concentrate on his new rock group,
Fightstar, and Matt Jay and James Bourne are taking a break from
music, a spokesman said this week. Simpson, 19, recently told rock
magazine Kerrang! that being in Busted "was a fun job but I'd
never claim Busted was anything other than a pop band." "Busted is
not the ideal band I'd like to be in by any stretch of the
imagination."
Stephin and
the risks of fame
NEW YORK- Stephin
Merritt usually has a song cycling through his head. Makes sense,
given that he's one of the more captivating and eclectic
singer-songwriters around, heading such bands as the Magnetic
Fields and the 6ths and creating music for movies, Chinese opera
adaptations and the Lemony Snicket audio books. But Merritt's
inner soundtrack doesn't always live up to his creative output.
During a recent interview, for example, it was Peter, Paul and
Mary's Lemon Tree. "So, you could see why I'd want to have other
music playing while I write," Merritt offered, explaining his
creative process with a sad little smile. "I certainly don't want
to write a song like Lemon Tree and then have to sing it. What if
it's really good and I have to sing it for decades? What if it's a
hit, and I have to sing it every day for decades?" Such are the
perils of popular music. Others include too much time in airports
and unsolicited demos from "pathetic but cute" teenagers. Having
just toured Europe and North America following the spring release
of the Fields' latest album, i, Merritt has had to confront plenty
of both. The album marks the band's first on Nonesuch, home to
such pop luminaries as Joni Mitchell, Brian Wilson and Wilco.
After more than a decade with Merge Records, the quartet (with Sam
Davol, Claudia Gonson and John Woo on a variety of hand-played
string instruments) has signed a two-album deal with Warner Bros.
Records. "I think of Stephin as one of the great songwriters of
his era," said David Bither, senior vice-president at Nonesuch.
"They have that singular voice we're always looking for. It was an
easy marriage." The synthesizer-free i is the followup to 1999's
69 Love Songs, a three-disc set that greatly expanded the band's
non-mainstream fan base and earned near-universal adoration from
critics for its blend of genres and for Merritt's ingenious
lyrics. A sample from I Don't Want to Get Over You, on the first
album: "I could dress in black and read Camus / smoke clove
cigarettes and drink vermouth / like I was 17 / that would be a
scream / but I don't want to get over you." Merritt enjoys
concepts and parodies, and i combines both. All 14 songs begin
with the letter i, a silly concept that gave Merritt writing
parameters and allowed him to poke fun at the ludicrous task he
set himself in writing 69 songs about love. The reviews were
favourable, but did not match the reception given 69 Love Songs.
"I was aware that every review was going to begin, 'It's no 69
Love Songs, but. . .' " Merritt said. "I was expecting a bigger
backlash - I didn't realize that the backlash was going to be
against me, rather than the music." Merritt has not had an easy
time of it in the press, with adjectives running the gamut from
"intimidating" to "rude."
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Some
of this Merritt blames on writers not wanting to be seen as gushing.
If they attack him, he reasons, they're free to wax rhapsodic about
his music. On this day, battling a pernicious cold picked up on tour,
Merritt was subdued but engaged. Swathed in baseball cap, puffy jacket
and lumpy brown scarf, he mused on topics ranging from how long one
could hang out in a hotel lobby before being thrown out to trying not
to appear original in popular music. "The quandary in popular music is
more about how to sound enough like other people that it is popular
music . . . while still making something identifiably new." A slight
man with dark, intense eyes, a winsome smile and wickedly low-key
sense of humour, Merritt is not so much ungenerous as transparently
weary of having to deal with the same silly questions ad nauseam (ask
"Why 69 Love Songs?" if you really want to ruin his day). "Stephin is
not socially gregarious," bandmate Gonson said. "His voice is very low
and his hearing is spotty and he doesn't suffer fools gladly. But he's
an absolutely lovely person."
That's
true when it comes to apologizing to the tape recorder after a
particularly loud cough or fondly remembering Fred Flintstone vitamins
- but ask Merritt if he considers himself a romantic, and you're in
for it. "What do you people mean when you ask me that?" came the
exasperated response after a longer-than-usual pause. "I don't know.
It's not part of my world view." OK, but it's everywhere in his songs,
for which Merritt writes all the parts. He favours singers and
musicians with "conversational" approaches - no pyrotechnics to
obscure his sophisticated blend of wit and emotion, as Merritt
manipulates pop music troupes and cliches to delicious effect. In I
Wish I Had an Evil Twin, he sets playfully nasty lyrics, delivered in
his deadpan voice, against a yearning melody: "My evil twin would lie
and steal / And he would stink of sex appeal / All men would writhe /
Beneath his scythe." "In theatre it's a cliche that the second song of
every musical is an I Wish song," Merritt explained. "I probably wrote
with that in mind, because I was thinking of doing a musical about
dopplegangers, an adaptation of Invasion of the Body Snatchers." At
another point in the conversation, while discussing Lemon Tree, he
pointed to the "war film cliche of a quiet, irrelevant song playing
during a scene of violence." Merritt embraces such off-the-wall
cliches. "Part of the advantage of being hideously, cripplingly
self-conscious is that I feel free to use cliches, rather than feeling
compelled to seek out original expression," he explained.-C. Larocca.
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