Saturday 5 May 2012

FULL REVIEW - 'Signing Off' by UB40 (1980, Graduate)


LP - Side One

1. Tyler
2. King
3. 12 Bar
4. Burden of Shame

LP - Side Two

1. Adella
2. It's Going to Rain Today
3. 25%
4. Food for Thought
5. Little by Little
6. Signing Off

EP - Side One

1. Madam Medusa

EP - Side Two

1. Strange Fruit
2. Reefer Madness


Finding UB40’s debut LP ‘Signing Off’ in near mint condition (Italian import) at a flea market was the reward of months & months of hunting for that elusive great vinyl record.  Over the years I was intrigued by this British reggae band with the odd name.  The album cover is strikingly iconic, representing the front and back portion of the UK Unemployment Benefit form 40 or ‘Ubby.’  I have followed UB40’s career over the years, and casual music fans likely associate the band with ‘Red Red Wine,’ their break-out hit from ‘Labor of Love’ in 1983.

It was with eagerness that I listened to this entire LP for the FIRST time ever! What a GEM of a record!  I had heard of a few ‘singles’ from this LP, but nothing prepared me for the aural assault and accomplished musicianship of this band, unsigned to any major label at the time. This LP is an excellent example of what fuels my passion for vinyl, with the entire record being greater than the sum of the individual songs

This eight member multi-cultural band was formed in Birmingham UK in 1978, while they were struggling with unemployment, learning to play their instruments and performing local gigs.  It was at such a pub that Chrissie Hynde saw UB40 perform and invited them to be an opening act for her band, the Pretenders. 

Original Vinyl LP Recording
‘Signing Off’ was recorded on local independent label ‘Graduate records’ in three sessions (21-24Dec 79, 31Mar-10Apr 80 & 16June-1July 80).  A bonus three song 12’ EP record was included and recorded 18-19-20 July 80.  Musically the band incorporated a sophisticated combination of synthesizer, dub, reggae, psychedelic guitar and saxophone stylings to create a unique sound. Lyrically the songs are topical, political and reflective of the tough angry times the young band members grew up in.

Side 1 Song 1 Tyler opens with a bang (and reverb), setting the tone for the rest of the LP.  The rhythm is pronounced, with abrupt false stops and the lyrics confront racial injustice. The song was written about a young black American Gary Tyler, who was convicted of murdering a 13-year-old white boy. Tyler is guilty, the white judge has said so / They show him no mercy, they won't let him go”

King was the band’s first single and a hit, cracking the UK Top 10 without backing of a major label. The music is dream-like and hypnotic, with chorus spoken as in a fog. The song was written about Martin Luther King, Jr., questioning the direction of his followers. ”King, where are your people now? / Chained and pacified”

12 Bar is a rocking, upbeat infectious dub instrumental with some vocal toasting from Astro. I dare anyone to sit still through this purely joyous tune. 

Burden of Shame is a stunning admission of British guilt for past sins (ie colonization/imperialism). "I'm a British subject, not proud of it / While I carry the burden of shame". The music is downbeat and somber until the last several minutes where it kicks up in a frenzy of emotion.  So ends Side 1, just as it began, with a bang!

Side 2 continues with Adella, a sweet sunny instrumental (homage to a girlfriend perhaps?) featuring smooth saxophone. One can hear birds at beginning of song, as it was recorded outdoors!!

I Think It’s Going to Rain Today written by Randy Newman was included as a second single. The tone is somewhat somber and the lyrics ironic; ”Human kindness is overflowing / And I think it's going to rain today“

25% is yet another instrumental, but more morose this time. Could the 25% refer to the high unemployment rate amongst the youth in the UK at that turbulent time?  Recent fiscal measures in UK have led to highest youth unemployment rate not seen since 1977 when punk rock exploded!

Food for Thought was an attempt to raise awareness of the Ethiopian famine and criticize politicians for their role in allowing it to happen: “Ivory Madonna, dying in the dust / Waiting for the manna, coming from the west.”   Remember this was four years before Band-Aids “Do They Know It’s Christmas.”  Released as a double A-side single with King.

Little by Little is a direct affront on the inequality of the socio-economic class system, like other good reggae rebel music such as ‘Them Belly Full, But We Hungry’ by Bob Marley. The lyrics leave little to the imagination:

“Little by little by little
And stone by stone
Rich man’s mountain
Comes crumbling down

Poor boy sleeps on straw
The rich boy sleeps in bed
That fat boy fills his belly
My poor boy’s a dead”

Signing Off is a fourth instrumental, a fitting closing, with an incredible upbeat rhythm that punctuates the song. Each of the band musicians is cleverly given 10-25 sec solos to ‘sign off’ from the LP, in following sequence: dub/bass, drum, guitar, sax, synthesizer/keyboards. The tongue-in-cheek title may also refer to the band members no longer requiring unemployment benefits, or signing off on the UB40 form.

Extended Play 45 rpm Bonus Vinyl Record
After recording the 10 tracks for the LP, the band still had more material that they were anxious to record.  Within less than a month, a bonus three track 12’ EP was completed.

Madam Medusa is a most damning indictment on Margaret Thatcher’s unpopular economic and political policies. In my mind, this song is as subversive as “Stand Down Margaret’ by the English Beat or even ‘God Save the Queen’ by Sex Pistols. Musically, the 12 min song expresses anger/anguish with a relentless reggae beat and dub echo punctuated by a prominent sax.  The lyrics don’t mince words: “Run for your life before she eat you alive.”  The final 4-5mins shifts to dub with refrain “Run for life…mash up the place” repeated as if in a trance. Click Madam Medusa Link for full lyrics.
                                                   
Strange Fruit is a cover of the 1939 classic sung first by Billie Holiday about racism and lynching of African Americans.  The tone is slower and more somber: “Blood on the leaves and blood at the roots / Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze.”

Reefer Madness is a fifth and final instrumental, a joyous up tempo tune with a repeated hook. An effective use of alternating percussion, sax and drum as well as horn/synthesizer inflections.

Assessment
In conclusion, I am extremely impressed with the unique sound and assured musicianship of young unemployed men who felt they had a better chance at success through music.  The twist and turns, stops and starts and unrelenting trance-like groove of the music still sounds fresh and different today.  And the angry blunt attacks on politics, poverty, unemployment are still heard today from angry protesters against Greece austerity measures, US housing crisis or more generally against the 1% that control the world’s wealth. Thirty years after UB40’s ‘Signing Off’ send off stark message of concern/warning, sadly not much has changed at all!

LP Rating:                  5/5
Vinyl Rating:              NM


COMPLETE SONG LYRICS – Madame Medusa, UB40



    From the land of shadows
    Comes a dreadful sight
    Lady with the marble smile
    Spirit of the night

    See the scourge of innocence
    Swinging in her hand
    Hear the silent suffering
    Echoes through the land

    From the tombs of ignorance
    Hates and greed and lies
    Through the smoke of sacrifice
    Watch her figure rise

    Twinging in her shadow
    The sick, the poor, the old
    Basking in her radiance
    Men of blood and gold

    In her bloody footsteps
    Speculators prance
    Men of dreams are praying
    For that second chance

    Round her vacant features
    Gilded serpents dance
    Tree of evil knowledge
    Sprouts a special branch

    Madam Medusa
    Madam Medusa
    Madam Medusa

    Knock her right down
    And then she bounce right back
    Knock her right down
    And then she bounce right back

    She gone off her head
    And got to shoot her dead
    She gone off her head
    And got to shoot her dead

    Run for your life before she eat you alive
    Run for your life before she eat you alive
    Move out of the way 'cos you're blocking out the day
    Move out of the way 'cos you're blocking out the day


    Knock her right down
    And then she bounce right back
    She gone off her head
    And got to shoot her dead

    Run for your life before she eat you alive

    Move out of the way 'cos you're blocking out the day
    Move out of the way 'cos you're blocking out the day

    Run for your life before she eat you alive

    She gone off her head
    And got to shoot her dead

    Run for your life before she eat you alive



    RECENT LIVE MUSIC - Templarios (All Blacks Irish Pub, Sao Paulo/Brazil, April 13)



    At the end of a long but productive work week in Sao Paulo Brazil in early April, I was invited to hear live music with a work colleague, Silvo Favero.  I jumped on the opportunity to experience music in a new setting, Brazil!  I did not know what to expect but was assured the music was 70's and 80's rock music.  That was good enough for me. What made it further intriguing was that the lead singer was also a work colleague who supported the Legal department.  Intriguing to say the least!

    So on a Friday the 13th of April, I wait for Silvio and his wife to pick me up from the Mercure hotel at 10:00pm (told that nothing starts before this time).  At 10:45 they arrive and we do not find the pub until 11:30pm.  I’m thinking “what’s the point,” it will be over by 1:00am like in Canada.  How wrong I was!

    Even at 30 minute before the midnight hour, there is still a line-up to get into the All Black Irish Pub in the heart of Sao Paulo. Once inside, after charging the $40 Brazilian Real entry fee against an electronic tab card, I was stunned with the number of people packed tightly into this small pub. It was impossible not to brush into people.  More than half the audience was young Brazilian women. Making my way to the bar and back for draft Heineken beers was quite an ordeal. The beer was watered down and the band was playing 90s music.  What an initial letdown!  But as I was to discover, this was only the first of three sets by the band Templarios, eventually moving to the 70s/80s and finally 50s/60s. 

    In between sets, I finally recognized a new wave classic song (albeit in a modern cover version).  I was surprised that many were singing along to Talking Heads Psycho Killer “…fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa, better run, run, run, run, run away.”  I was now becoming a little more animated as the clock struck midnight.  I ordered a Guinness Hamburger and awaited Set two.

    In between mouthfuls of this most delicious hamburger, the Templarios kick into gear, playing the kind of high energy new wave music I was hoping for.  I hear the opening chords of “Message in the Bottle” by the Police, and can only make it to the edge of bar. I jump on a stool and start moving to the fantastic rhythm.  The waitress is concerned that I am a safety violation, so I eventually get down as the song concludes.  Man can the lead singer, Gustavo Correia, belt out the tunes.  I make it to the front of the band, rejoining my friends, and we groove to “Down Under” by Men at Work. This is followed by “Dancing with Myself” by Billy Idol and all heck breaks loose as we pogo and jump to this punk anthem. The band continues its charge and we are treated to “Boys Don’t Cry” by the Cure. What an interesting choice of music.  Not your typical fare!!  The band continues the new wave theme with more current songs “Last Night” by the Strokes, culminating in a fever pitch with one of my personal favourites “Take Me Out” by Franz Ferdinand. The kinetic stop-start and piercing guitar hook from this song were extremely well played by the Templarios.  Definitely the highlight of the night for me!!

    After a much needed rest between sets, the band moved farther into rock and roll past, performing faithful and energetic covers of early Beatles “I Saw Her Standing There”, Elvis “Suspicious Minds,” Doors “Love Me Two Times,” Pink Floyd “Another Brick in the Wall” and ended the night at 2:00am with “Easy” by the Commodores.

    What a fun night enjoying a versatile and eclectic song mix from accomplished part-time musicians who clearly are enthusiastic about rock music, playing selections that are fresh and exciting in a live setting.  The pub was hopping, beer was flowing, the band was rocking, the music was loud and the crowd was bopping!!!   What more could one ask for in a near perfect night in Sao Paulo, Brazil?  Only that more friends and family could have been here to share in this experience.








    For more information on the Templarios band, please click on this link to their website www.bandatemplarios.com.br.

    Formada em 2005, seus integrantes Artur Horta (Baixo), Emerson Inoguti (Teclado/Vocal), Felipe Horta (Bateria), Gustavo Correia (Vocal/Guitarra) e Rodrigo Gonçalves (Guitarra/Vocal)