Talk Talk (RIP Mark Hollis)

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I had Talk Talk: The Collection on the other day. The song 'It's getting late in the evening' is awesome.

'everybody's laughing'

CaptainLorax, Thursday, 1 November 2007 21:32 (eighteen years ago)

The only Talk Talk albums you really need:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e9/Talktalkalbumcover.jpghttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/48/ItsMyLife.jpg

Geir Hongro, Friday, 2 November 2007 13:38 (eighteen years ago)

Tasteful sleeves!

The one I like best is "The Colour Of Spring" - the ideal blend of the poppier early TT with the more profound later stuff. I wish they'd stayed with that sound for one more LP before they went hush-hush.

Actually, with Spirit Of Eden, they should have renamed themselves Hush Hush really.

PhilK, Friday, 2 November 2007 14:29 (eighteen years ago)

one year passes...

jesus i believe in you is gorgeous

Dominique, Friday, 5 December 2008 03:22 (seventeen years ago)

that's always been my pick for "most beautiful song ever" kinda questions.

ryan, Friday, 5 December 2008 04:31 (seventeen years ago)

Hard to believe it's been TEN YEARS since Mark Hollis's solo album.

Mr. Snrub, Friday, 5 December 2008 04:54 (seventeen years ago)

besides the thom yorke/UNKLE track, have there been any other notable examples of people sampling Talk Talk?

♪☺♫☻ (gr8080), Friday, 5 December 2008 05:11 (seventeen years ago)

Girl Talk

granted, that's an answer to every sampling question

Gino-Vanellyville (Mackro Mackro), Friday, 5 December 2008 06:20 (seventeen years ago)

jesus i believe in you is gorgeous

― Dominique, viernes 5 de diciembre de 2008 3:22 (15 hours ago) Bookmark

yesssssssssssssss

Turangalila, Friday, 5 December 2008 19:06 (seventeen years ago)

quite possibly the only time a children's choir has been used in 'pop/rock' music to good effect

With a little bit of gold and a Peja (bernard snowy), Friday, 5 December 2008 19:36 (seventeen years ago)

oddly, Jay just e-mailed this to me:
http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=3423

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 5 December 2008 19:52 (seventeen years ago)

You mean your brother, Arthur founder/editor Jay Babcock?

jaymc, Friday, 5 December 2008 20:07 (seventeen years ago)

yes I call him Jay

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 5 December 2008 20:10 (seventeen years ago)

quite possibly the only time a children's choir has been used in 'pop/rock' music to good effect

― With a little bit of gold and a Peja (bernard snowy), Friday, December 5, 2008 7:36 PM (56 minutes ago)

I know this is a talk talk thread but if you're going to throw down the gauntlet like that: Tokyo Jihen live at Budokhan, February 19 2006

'I Believe In You' is an amazing song

Milton Parker, Friday, 5 December 2008 20:39 (seventeen years ago)

Something appropriately contrary on the IMDb search page:

Mark Hollis (II) (Soundtrack, White Chicks (2004))

Do you think there's ever a chance he'll return to music?

Huey in Bristol (Huey in Melbourne), Friday, 5 December 2008 21:30 (seventeen years ago)

quite possibly the only time a children's choir has been used in 'pop/rock' music to good effect

and what about panic?

alex in mainhattan, Friday, 5 December 2008 21:48 (seventeen years ago)

'You Can't Always Get What You Want'?

Oh, good effect.

Huey in Bristol (Huey in Melbourne), Friday, 5 December 2008 21:52 (seventeen years ago)

that wasnt kids

♪☺♫☻ (gr8080), Friday, 5 December 2008 21:54 (seventeen years ago)

Eunuchs?

Huey in Bristol (Huey in Melbourne), Friday, 5 December 2008 21:56 (seventeen years ago)

The song features the 60 children of the London Bach Choir powerfully opening the song (they were double-tracked to make it seem as if there were even more of them)

Huey in Bristol (Huey in Melbourne), Friday, 5 December 2008 21:59 (seventeen years ago)

We are all forgetting Take That's "Never Forget"...my word, the pathos!

Freedom, Friday, 5 December 2008 22:14 (seventeen years ago)

What, no mention of "Happiness is Easy"?

¡¡¡¡¡inverted exclamation!!!!! (unregistered), Friday, 5 December 2008 22:36 (seventeen years ago)

I don't think it's a kid's choir in I Believe In You, is it? Just a regular adult choir.

Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Friday, 5 December 2008 22:46 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

Does anyone else hear Heroin in the beginning of Eden and then the melody suddenly, streams sideways out of it in a way that sounds so wrong and then it slowly resolves itself back to the heroin bits again.

Plaxico (I know, right?), Sunday, 11 January 2009 18:25 (seventeen years ago)

yeah, I can see that. I assume by "the beginning" you mean that two-chord thing that it hangs on for a while after the first minute of scronks and squeaks?

georgeous gorge (bernard snowy), Sunday, 11 January 2009 18:35 (seventeen years ago)

yes that

Plaxico (I know, right?), Sunday, 11 January 2009 18:39 (seventeen years ago)

can't stop listening to talk talk this week. all the records, not just your coveted spirit of eden.

cutty, Friday, 16 January 2009 17:15 (seventeen years ago)

is the mark hollis solo record worth trying?

cutty, Friday, 16 January 2009 17:15 (seventeen years ago)

I think so but hearing it and then listening to the .O.rang albums gives you a sense of how the two aesthetic paths work best in collaboration rather than mutual exclusion. It's not a complete split but they are distinctly different.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 16 January 2009 17:17 (seventeen years ago)

and where is tim friese-green today?

cutty, Friday, 16 January 2009 17:20 (seventeen years ago)

i like the hollis album very much, maybe as much as i like SoE and LS (when i listen to it it's my favourite, put it that way). there's much more silence in it which is right up my street and it's beautifully recorded.

jed_, Friday, 16 January 2009 17:25 (seventeen years ago)

'Mark Hollis' is a much slower burn than 'Talk Talk,' and isn't the one to play for neophytes with headphones late at night to get the "holy shit" immediate effect like the last two Talk Talk albums.

But over the years, I've realised it pretty much completely captures the essence of a certain strain I'm seeking in music, and at this point I probably feel more in love with it than the Talk Talks. It's elemental, essential.

Soundslike, Friday, 16 January 2009 18:58 (seventeen years ago)

i agree to an extent. s/t is basically the pure distillation of everything that is core and central to what I like about talk talk. I have to say I don't care for the oranj records at all.

akm, Friday, 16 January 2009 19:22 (seventeen years ago)

no overt production / sudden rock moments / guitarscapes that grab your attention, but the songs are so much stronger than the ones on 'Laughing Stock'. and the pacing which builds up for the last four songs, each one slightly quieter.

Milton Parker, Friday, 16 January 2009 19:53 (seventeen years ago)

steve coogan to play mark hollis in my biopic

cutty, Friday, 16 January 2009 20:09 (seventeen years ago)

With both Laughing Stock and the Mark Hollis album I'm still liking both of them slightly more each time I play them - even after ten+ years or however long I've had them both.

"I think so but hearing it and then listening to the .O.rang albums gives you a sense of how the two aesthetic paths work best in collaboration rather than mutual exclusion. "

On the one hand I think this is right, but on the other both the Hollis album and Herd of Instinct follow their separate muses into such distinct territory (the absolute unblemished perfection of the Hollis album; the shimmering ethnodelic melange of the 'O'Rang album) that I think they gain almost as much as they lose.

I listen to Herd of Instinct more than any Talk Talk/Hollis actually, though that SOE/LS are more important to me.

One thing it always makes me wonder is the extent to which Harris and Webb actually had a shaping influence on the last two Talk Talk albums. The rhetoric around them always implies they were effectively Hollis/Friese-Green collab-os, but then, as you say Ned, 'O'Rang is so clearly the extension of the side of the late Talk Talk sound that Hollis moves away from on his own record that that version of events seems rather implausible.

Tim F, Saturday, 17 January 2009 12:17 (seventeen years ago)

"One thing it always makes me wonder is the extent to which Harris and Webb actually had a shaping influence on the last two Talk Talk albums. The rhetoric around them always implies they were effectively Hollis/Friese-Green collab-os"

That's what I always wondered as well, especially since Webb wasn't even on LS, and Harris was just a DRUMMER. The writing credits go to Hollis/Friese-Greene. But if the O.rang album - which I haven't heard - stimulates you to use the word "ethnodelic" then I guess that changes everything.

Freedom, Saturday, 17 January 2009 15:08 (seventeen years ago)

Mark Hollis album I would recommend highly, especially for the uniquely lovely "The Colour of Spring", which is probably the only song on it that would be accepted for use on a Diana memorial documentary, but the achievement of a mainstream idea of pathos is certainly not inherently a bad thing.

Freedom, Saturday, 17 January 2009 15:48 (seventeen years ago)

and where is tim friese-green today?

http://www.heligoland.co.uk/

Matt #2, Saturday, 17 January 2009 16:08 (seventeen years ago)

I don't see any mention here of Shearwater's cover of "The Rainbow". Way more plausible than I would have thought possible.

http://www.prefixmag.com/news/shearwater-the-rainbow-talk-talk-cover-mp3/18778/

glenn mcdonald, Sunday, 18 January 2009 01:43 (seventeen years ago)

I love this, from an interview with Tim Friese-Greene about a decade ago:

Interviewer: (fumbling) What sort of thing do you listen to at home?

Tim Friese-Greene: .....well not very much really. Serge Gainsbourg a bit I suppose......I like the ‘Primal Scream’ album....I mean.... the daytime radio in England is unlistenable; there are a couple of European alternative stations which you can get webcast, but in England where local calls aren’t free you can rack up a bit of a bill. Otherwise you have to spend your evenings listening to John Peel in the hope of latching on to something stimulating....

Int: (excitedly) I met John Peel once, really I did! - I bumped into him as he was posting a letter at the post office in Great Park...Great Pork...

Tim: Great Portland Street.

Int: Yes yes ...exactly!.............sorry, carry on....

Tim: ...and although I really like seeing bands live, you’re very limited out in the provinces. It’s the thing I miss most about London....Ultimately I’d have to say I’m just not really a fan of other people’s music much any more, probably because I don’t have access to the stuff that I might find diverting. It can’t bother me that much though, can it?.... or I would make more of an effort......

Int: Do you listen to your own, then?

Tim: Actually I do, I listen to it quite a lot, if only to remind myself of its brilliance.

ilxor, Sunday, 18 January 2009 04:43 (seventeen years ago)

Also:

Int: What do you think of Mark’s solo album?

Tim: I’ve never heard it, I’m afraid.

ilxor, Sunday, 18 January 2009 04:47 (seventeen years ago)

that shearwater cover is quite amazingly close to the original. the singer's voice is so similar to mark hollis', it's almost frightening. there is less pain in it though, i find. it's more restrained and less expressive.

alex in mainhattan, Sunday, 18 January 2009 09:42 (seventeen years ago)

Also:
Int: What do you think of Mark’s solo album?
Tim: I’ve never heard it, I’m afraid.

And as of November 2008, he still hadn't heard it.

t**t, Monday, 19 January 2009 15:13 (seventeen years ago)

What a dork. (Tim, that is.)

Soundslike, Monday, 19 January 2009 17:14 (seventeen years ago)

guys, there's an element to the breakup of Talk Talk that, while not acrimonious per se, wasn't quite amicable either. Under those meddling circumstances, would you be excited to hear your former bandmates' work? Just a POV rhetorical question...

Ashee Bolanalli (Mackro Mackro), Monday, 19 January 2009 17:29 (seventeen years ago)

What a dork. (Tim, that is.)
― Soundslike

I don't think that's a fair evaluation at all.

t**t, Monday, 19 January 2009 20:47 (seventeen years ago)

the problem is not that he didn't listen to mark hollis solo album. what makes him very dislikable is that he is so full of himself ("to remind myself of its brilliance"). what i have heard on his site was more bland than brilliant.

alex in mainhattan, Monday, 19 January 2009 22:02 (seventeen years ago)

I let the "remind myself of its brilliance" bit slide; but that egomania combined with (likely lying about) going out of ones way to avoid hearing an ex-bandmate's album for a decade is just plain dorky.

That said, I haven't heard Pitcher, Flask, & Foxy-Moxie, maybe it's secretly "brilliant".

I can only give dorkiness a pass for so long on the basis of having produced 'The Golden Age of Wireless'.

Soundslike, Tuesday, 20 January 2009 00:44 (seventeen years ago)

Whole helluvalotta projecting going on in this thread. Not that I need to know artists generally hate being interviewed, but this thread brings the point home.

I mean if Tim is a jerk, I'll keep the comment in mind, as I'd do for anyone whom I don't know, but Jesus feckin Christ...

Ashee Bolanalli (Mackro Mackro), Tuesday, 20 January 2009 01:36 (seventeen years ago)


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