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ASH is back
British songwriter Daniel Ash breaks free of his Bauhaus/Love and
Rockets past
By David Robert
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The British singer-songwriter, who's now on tour performing music from a
new solo CD, could have found financial security riding the '80s
nostalgia wave with his former band, Bauhaus. After all, the band had
regrouped in 1998 after 15 years apart and embarked on a nearly sold-out
world tour. Or, Ash could have remained with his post-Bauhaus outfit,
Love and Rockets, which also had a loyal following. - But Ash wanted to
break clean of his Bauhaus past, the musician said in a recent phone
interview. In 1999, he ended his longtime collaboration with fellow
Bauhaus and Love and Rockets band mates David J and Kevin Haskins.
"I didn't want to be in a band any longer," Ash explained. "It was time
to move on and work with different people." So now, after more than 20
years playing off and on with these influential alternative bands, Ash
wants to go it alone. Listen to "Mastermind" off his new self-titled CD
on Psychobaby Records, and you'll hear the phrase, "To risk nothing is
to risk everything." Ash appears prepared to risk it all in order to
achieve commercial success. Love and Rockets experimented with
electronica on past albums, but Ash charges into techno territory with
his third and latest solo CD. His distinctive guitar work shaped the
brooding music of Bauhaus and the psychedelic-pop melodies of Love and
Rockets, but early in his career Ash was combining guitar with
electronic soundscapes, such as in his brief-but-brilliant intermediate
project Tones on Tail. In comparing the American and British music
scenes, Ash said that the U.S. has been slow in accepting techno music.
"England's had it for 15, 20 years, if not longer, and here it's just
clicked on in the past five years--thank God!" he said. "I just really
love what's going on now."
Ash spoke about a recent interview he did for a guitar magazine, during
which the interviewer told him that a lot of guitarists fear or despise
techno because they're not sure how they fit into it. But Ash said
musicians need to get over it.
"That's really the wrong way to look at it," he said. "It's almost like
when people were playing acoustic guitars and somebody invented the
electric guitar, and purists freaked out and said it was a bad thing.
Well, that's pathetic. That's hippie mentality, really." Not that Ash
abandoned his guitar for a sampler. Longtime fans will recognize his
distinctive, edgy guitar licks among the drum 'n' bass influences of the
new CD.
The first single is a cover of Classics IV's 1968 hit "Spooky," which
was also covered by the late Dusty Springfield. Ash said he made a lyric
change to give it "a sort of sexual ambiguity." Other noteworthy tracks
include "Kid 2000," a 21st-century Pink Floydian blues number in which
Ash's young nephew, Allister, reads a serendipitously found text of a
child's vision of the future. The child imagines a world where kids
don't go to school but "watch telly [television] all day," live in
bubbles and fly around with "little rocket shooty things fitted on their
ankles that shoot fire." Ash said he found this forecast of the future
in an unlikely place. "I found this flyer on the floor of a café in
Bristol [England], when I was working with Adrian [Utley of Portishead],
and I really loved it," he said. "I traced it back to an art school and
I made a few calls to the school, but they weren't returned and I never
found out who really wrote them."
"Trouble" also stands out with its disturbing tone and doubled-tracked
vocals of psychotic ramblings. Ash collaborated with Utley for a
different version that appeared on the American Psycho movie soundtrack,
but the CD version is the original one, the singer says. One song on the
new album even has a Nevada connection. Ash said the annual
counter-culture festival that takes place in the Black Rock Desert
inspired the title of the song "Burning Man." "I did actually go to the
festival about two years ago," he said. "A friend of mine and I took two
motorcycles from L.A. and we lived in cheap $50 tents for seven days. It
was a bit of a drag." The song, however, isn't about the festival but
about a friend's suicide and about burning the candle at both ends. The
title just seemed to fit the song, he says.
Ash said he's not averse to having a commercial hit off this album and
hopes to have one of his singles in the Top 10. When asked how longtime
fans might accept the record, he seemed optimistic. "It's not that far
from the latter Love and Rockets things," he said. "Some of it reminds
me of Tones on Tail. It's got that sort of vibe to it. It's exciting to
see how it's going to be perceived."
Note: Kelly Lang also contributed to this article-
Interview used permission courtesy of Reno News & Review
Copyright 2002, BallBuster, The Official Int'l Underground Hard Music Report |
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