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.
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.
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)
The brilliance comment is so obviously a joke though.
― Tim F, Tuesday, 20 January 2009 03:06 (seventeen years ago)
For what it's worth, "dork" is hardly the most damning pejorative. . .
― Soundslike, Tuesday, 20 January 2009 04:21 (seventeen years ago)
i hate to drop the B word but "the colour of spring" = balearic
― cutty, Thursday, 22 January 2009 15:58 (seventeen years ago)
(the album, not the song off the hollis s/t)
Name some bands who'd love to sound like Talk Talk - latter day Shearwater, early Elbow, Reckoner by Radiohead, any odd song here and there that betrays the influence of Spirit of Eden etc; I'm making a playlist.
― Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Sunday, 19 April 2009 18:28 (seventeen years ago)
Catherine Wheel - "Thunderbird" is a fucking awesome power-ballad take on TT imo
― Young Chizzy (country matters), Sunday, 19 April 2009 18:36 (seventeen years ago)
Stars Like Fleas - The Ken Burns Effect
― Mark, Sunday, 19 April 2009 18:39 (seventeen years ago)
Hood show a TT influence, albeit manifested in a very different way.
― Young Chizzy (country matters), Sunday, 19 April 2009 19:16 (seventeen years ago)
Tortoise - TNT
― davek_00, Sunday, 19 April 2009 20:03 (seventeen years ago)
Blu Mar Ten - "Home Videos"
I'm pretty sure it actually samples Talk Talk. This is not a drum and bass track by the way. It's ambient/leftfield. Or something.
― viborg, Sunday, 19 April 2009 21:30 (seventeen years ago)
I think XTC should have a song on this mix but after watching youtubes of XTC songs I can't find any that really match Talk Talk.
― Mulvaney, Sunday, 19 April 2009 22:05 (seventeen years ago)
Something off of Skylarking maybe, but not really.
― Alex in NYC, Sunday, 19 April 2009 22:12 (seventeen years ago)
Sweet Billy Pilgrim - http://www.myspace.com/sweetbillypilgrimAutistic Daughters - http://www.myspace.com/autisticdaughtersThe Slow Life - http://www.myspace.com/theslowlife
― MaresNest, Monday, 20 April 2009 09:43 (seventeen years ago)
I love Reckoner, but I don't think it sounds anything like Talk Talk.
"Cheerleader" or "Dory" from the new Grizzly Bear?
― Turangalila, Monday, 20 April 2009 11:14 (seventeen years ago)
It's the drumbeat in reckoner; I've always thought it was going for a radio-friendly New Grass vibe.
― Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 20 April 2009 11:21 (seventeen years ago)
Bark Psychosis - "Scum"
― henry s, Monday, 20 April 2009 17:42 (seventeen years ago)
Oh Yeah, that first song from Pygmalion by Slowdive, the long one.
― MaresNest, Tuesday, 21 April 2009 09:46 (seventeen years ago)
Anything by the band Bed. The album 'The Newton Plum' is a beauty.......
― epic45, Sunday, 26 April 2009 12:37 (seventeen years ago)
a precursor would be japan. as a sideline: like mark hollis voice david sylvian's voice is an acquired taste. even more so actually.
slint maybe. but i only know their great cover of "cortez the killer".
tortoise's djed from "millions now living will never die" should be mentioned here. probably my favourite post-talk talk track in the vein of talk talk.
― alex in mainhattan, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 13:41 (sixteen years ago)
i don't know if i agree with any of those statements. and you've only heard slint's cover of cortez the killer? no desire to look any further into their catalog?
― cutty, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:15 (sixteen years ago)
a precursor would be japan.
Just heard "Ghosts" on shuffle this morning and now I'm on a huge Japan kick today.
― I just wish he hadn't adopted the "ilxor" moniker (ilxor), Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:20 (sixteen years ago)
probably i have listened to other slint songs from spiderland. but they didn't leave any impression.
i think it is extremely different to find bands sounding like talk talk. but i would really like to listen to one of them right now. talk talk should not have been allowed to finish with "laughing stock". how can a band get away with stopping at their peak? the mark hollis solo album doesn't really do it for me, it is a little to spare for my liking. and his voice is too much in the foreground.
― alex in mainhattan, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:24 (sixteen years ago)
"happiness is easy" dub mix killin it for me right now
― max, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:28 (sixteen years ago)
a precursor would be the first three sylvian solo albums, more precisely
― damo tsu tsuki (r1o natsume), Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:34 (sixteen years ago)
bark psychosis is very talk talk, if you are looking for stuff in the same vein
― cutty, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 14:45 (sixteen years ago)
bark psychosis comes close. and i like them. dustsucker more than hex. but there is something missing in the dynamics department. their stuff is usually quite slow and measured. again their singer's voice is an acquired taste.
― alex in mainhattan, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 15:58 (sixteen years ago)
i don't find anything weird about his voice at all
― akm, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 17:09 (sixteen years ago)
maybe that is the annoying thing about his voice. that it is too normal. too unremarkable. i mean he is a singer so there should be something special about his voice. otherwise there is no point in singing.
― alex in mainhattan, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 17:24 (sixteen years ago)
Totally concur with the Autistic Daughters suggestion upthread. Such a great band. Mostly just voice, double bass, guitar and some pretty free-range drumming so it obv. doesn't have the orchestrated feel of Talk Talk, but it does share the same sense of quiet drama conducted behind a gauzy veil. The Dean Roberts solo records are well worth picking up too.
― Joerg Hi Dere (NickB), Tuesday, 4 August 2009 21:08 (sixteen years ago)
Youtubes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOuN36Vg5DQ
― Joerg Hi Dere (NickB), Tuesday, 4 August 2009 21:10 (sixteen years ago)
hay guys, how is O.rang? been meaning to check them out lately
― jaxon, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 21:24 (sixteen years ago)
Pretty stellar, both albums excellent. It's a crude division but if Hollis solo is the restrained, fragile side of late TT, then O.rang is the free flowing experimentation and strangeness.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 21:28 (sixteen years ago)
I found the O.rang albums very dull and dated sounding (I think I said this elsewhere). they have a kind of 'electronic world music' feel to them that I don't care for. Or at least, that was my impression years ago.
― akm, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 22:14 (sixteen years ago)
I love both albums, particularly Fields and Waves as it beefs up the weaker elements of the first record
― Malcolm Money, Tuesday, 4 August 2009 22:30 (sixteen years ago)
what akm said. what i heard of o.rang was rather unconvincing. insipid world music. about three leagues below talk talk.
― alex in mainhattan, Wednesday, 5 August 2009 06:02 (sixteen years ago)
U.rong
― Joerg Hi Dere (NickB), Wednesday, 5 August 2009 08:16 (sixteen years ago)
I like the really dubby moments of Herd of Instinct, but I've never been totally bowled over by O.rang beyond that. Bed I found very sedate; far too sedate, really. Slint I don't hear as related to TT at all; I only heard them for the first time about 3 years ago, and to my ears they were just a bog-standard instrumental rock band.
Graham Sutton's voice is pretty nondescript, but I like how it works with BP's music; reminds me a bit of Bernard Sumner, and makes a nice steady / calming presence amid the sometimes unsteady, uncalm music. When Dustsucker came out and I interviewed GSD we talked about bands who were influenced by latter day TT and how most of them had ignored the noise elements - TT being "absolute calm to absolute chaos" - and how we were both really disappointed with that.
Shearwater have a big TT influence going on in their last two albums, and get somewhere towards the dynamics that TT managed, although in a folksier context.
Mainly though I just hear little echoes of TT in other bands, little snatches of abstract instrumental breaks or unusual string arrangements; The Notwist's last album being an example of that.
― Sickamous (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 5 August 2009 08:23 (sixteen years ago)
bog-standard instrumental rock band.
Try and hear Spiderland - not bog-standard, not instrumental. Not much like Talk Talk either though.
― Joerg Hi Dere (NickB), Wednesday, 5 August 2009 08:30 (sixteen years ago)
Spiderland's what I've got: true it's not instrumental; my bad. I'll listen again at some stage.
― Sickamous (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 5 August 2009 08:38 (sixteen years ago)
All the math rock bands that followed in the wake of that record have definitely diluted its strangeness. At the time though there was not a lot else quite like it, and I don't think that anything that could be described as Slinty has matched it since.
― Joerg Hi Dere (NickB), Wednesday, 5 August 2009 08:45 (sixteen years ago)