Pop
music isn't made for eternity. But regularly, records manage to evade
the "best before" date.
They had
already made a standard album, "Sheet Music" (1974) and established their
name world-wide with a classic hit single, "I'm Not In Love" (1975), when
in 1976 the album was released that can be considered to be crucial in
their complete works. "How Dare You" is the creation in which Lol Creme,
Kevin Godley, Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman - together the British
pop group 10cc - didn't spare their talents.
10cc started
in 1972 with a march that would meet with a response mainly on the European
continent. What the pop loving audience held for the umpteenth hit group,
turned out to be a rare bunch of musical and artistical experience, compositional
quality, vocal strength and productional polish.
As a composer,
Gouldman already had a couple of hits to his credit - "No Milk Today,
Bus Stop" - when he still had to start writing "Wall Street Shuffle" and
"I'm Not In Love" with Stewart who had developed himself as guitarist
and singer in The Mindbenders. His productional and technical mastermind
was formed in Strawberry Studios in Manchester, which he had bought, of
which the name -not accidentally - refers to "Strawberry Fields Forever",
by the Beatles.
The
graphically educated Godley and Creme squared, with their input as songwriter,
instrumentalist, singer and cover designer the separate craftsmanship
of the tandem Stewart-Gouldman not just as makers of popmusic, but they
also added
another dimension, with their desire to stay off the straight and narrow.
As Stewart and Gouldman on the other side, appeared to be the contra weight
with which the experimental interest of Godley and Creme was kept in balance.
"How Dare
You" is the sampling of 10cc, in all respects. An intriguing, perfectly
produced, almost unreal record. With compositions in which peculiar leading
characters and events require quite a bit of the imagination of the listener
(you're welcome though).
A scapegoat
bent on revenge in "I Wanna Rule The World"; a saving angel in "I'm Mandy
Fly Me," psychopath in "Iceberg", a dumped husband in "Don't Hang Up."
Dreamed little universes, casted in a mould of music that perfectly combines
with the lyrics.
"How
Dare You" was no revision exercise but a new phase in the development
of 10cc. Or better put: de final phase. Because not long after the release
of the record, the band split up in two. The leisure activity of Godley
and Creme - the gizmo, a self-invented device with which an electric guitar
can be played as a string instrument - turned out to be disastrous for
the control over the centrifugal powers brought about by this unique quartet.
After which Stewart and Gouldman carried on under the same flag and made
other smash hits like "The Things We Do For Love" and "Dreadlock Holiday".
Godley and Creme eventually found a new hobby when the gizmo was no success:
the videoclip. Oh well, so much talent will find its way.
This
article was originally published in the Dutch newspaper "De Gelderlander",
3rd April 1999.
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