The Hipsters : Deacon Blue
Music Riot.co.uk 2nd September 2012
Did you hear the one about the radio presenter, the TV presenter, the actress
and the music performance teacher? Or, alternatively, Ricky Ross, Dougie Vipond,
Lorraine McIntosh and Jim Prime? The members of Deacon Blue have taken time out
from the day jobs to release a new album, 25 years after their first, “Raintown”,
in 1987. I first heard the band in that year; “When Will You (Make my Telephone
Ring)?” was released as a single and I was hooked from the first listen.
The current band are two-thirds of the original line-up; bass player Ewen Vernal
is now with Capercaillie (and guested with Love and Money” on their shows last
year) and, sadly, guitarist Graeme Kelling died in 2004. So, apart from the
obvious 25th anniversary, why release an album in 2012? Because they have a
bunch of great new songs and they still love playing together, and that’s good
enough for me.
If you bought “Raintown” in 1987 and managed to avoid listening to anything by
Deacon Blue since then, “The Hipsters” would sound like the logical next step.
The songs are just as strong, probably even stronger, than those on the
ground-breaking first album but the overall sound is more immediate and engaging
than the very 80s production of “Raintown”. There’s a reason for that, and I’ll
come back to it later.
The album opens with “Here I Am in London Town” which harks back to “Raintown”
in that the lead-off song on both albums has a stripped-back production, but
there’s more to it than that. The opening song on “The Hipsters” looks back to
the period just before the release of the debut album when all of the members of
the band were “waiting for the world to begin again”. The title track, “The
Hipsters” is one of the best singles I’ve heard this year and a great summer
song; it’s just a shame that we didn’t have a summer to do it justice. It’s also
ironic because Deacon Blue were never hipsters and no amount of sales would make
them hip; but that’s probably why we loved them so much. Just in case we missed
that particular bit of irony, the balance is redressed with “The Outsiders”
which is the position they were most always most comfortable with: “this world
seemed so much lighter, when we were the outsiders”.
It’s difficult to pick standout tracks from the album because the songs are all
superbly crafted and the arrangements work perfectly to bring the songs to life,
so all I can do is point you in the direction of some of my personal favourites.
“The Rest” is a feelgood barnstormer which sounds like the E Street Band at full
throttle with great piano lines and sus4 guitar chords driving the chorus along,
while “It’ll End in Tears” has a really bouncy feel but an ultimately downbeat
message. The final song “Is There No Back to You?” is a gorgeous lovelorn ballad
which brings the album to a melancholy but fitting close.
The songs in this collection are the work of a mature and confident songwriter
with nothing left to prove and a lifetime’s experience to draw on. The material
on “Raintown” was good by any standards but the relationship songs, apart from
“When Will You (Make my Telephone Ring?)”, were always at a slight distance from
the subject matter or in the third person. It felt like you were hearing a
snatch of a conversation from the flat next door or catching a glimpse of a
scene through a restaurant window. On “The Hipsters”, the narrative of the
relationship songs is in the first person and we’re drawn into the heart of the
situations, which gives the songs much more power.
The arrangements all work perfectly to enhance the songs and range from the
sheer power of “The Rest” through the ‘60s pop feel of “That’s What We Can Do”
to the minimal feel of “Here I Am in London Town” and “Is There No Way Back to
You?”. And it’s just possible that I’m over-interpreting, but is Ricky Ross
paying tribute to some of his songwriting heroes here? The production and/or
vocals on three of the songs have a familiar feel; “Here I Am in London Town” is
very Neil Young, “The Rest” is pure Springsteen (with a hint towards the end of
Big Country) and “Is There No Way Back to You?” has a feel of “Jealous Guy” era
John Lennon. Despite the usual stories of star-crossed lovers (“Turn”, “She’ll
Understand”, “Laura from Memory”, It’ll End in Tears” and “Is there No Way Back
to You?”) the overall feel of the album is still uplifting because of the
relationships in “Stars” and “The Rest” which, against all the odds, end
happily, and the sheer exuberance of “The Hipsters” and “The Outsiders”. This is
a great collection of songs, great arrangements, great performances and a great
production.
Going back to the immediate and engaging sound of the album; there’s a very good
reason for it. The songs were thoroughly rehearsed before the band went into the
studio and recorded them live; that’s quite a brave and unusual move these days
and it’s paid off because they’re good enough and confident enough to perform to
that level. Before The Beatles, that’s how everyone recorded and maybe there’s
still a place for that immediacy now; it was good enough for Joe Meek.
This album is the best, most moving collection of songs I’ve heard this year and
I’ll be listening to it for years to come. What more can I say? Allan McKay