Monday, June 25, 2018

Circle of Friendz: Pauline Black/The Selecter - Celebrate the Bullet

Before I begin, I will be reviewing the Now Now very soon here. Leaks have come and BOY I have some things to talk about! Aiming for a June 29 release date for that post. See you then, and let's get to the review.

Who is this? Pauline Black, lead singer of 80's two-tone ska group The Selecter
What did she do for Gorillaz? Sang on an alternate version of Charger found on the Super Deluxe version of Humanz (which unless you want to shell out hundreds of dollars for the vinyl set, can only be found through less official means.)
When did this come out? February 27, 1981
Where was this recorded? Horizon Studios
Why should you bother? So far, I have reviewed five different albums for this so-called Circle of Friendz project. In each of these five album reviews, I had talked in very general statements about the music involved and how they made me feel. When I made those past reviews, I had focused much more on the instrumentals and how the lyrics can blend in with them. With this particular album however, it was the opposite to an extent. I wasn't very concerned with the instrumentals on this album as much as I was the lyricism found within. That's not to say that the instrumentals were unimportant or bland. The darker take on ska presented here works wonders with its lyrics (I guess you could call it Dark Pop?) I was just utterly fascinated by the songwriting here. I believe that a few, if not all, of this LP takes on some kind of narrative. While I only started thinking about a narrative around track seven, I could see elements of one looking back at my notes from the start of the record. First, let's set the scene.

The setting is sometime on late 70's-early 80's Britain. Britain is going a recession, and naturally people feel... uneased with themselves. They're growing poor and it feels like the whole world is crashing down around them. It's here where we find our protagonist. They're a somewhat typical person, devoting their life to work and their relationship. On the news, however, they see stories of financial crisis, of homes getting taken away, and maybe they're wondering if or when the very same could happen to them. Let's just say that it did. Track one opens up with a song about a failing relationship, (Who Likes) Facing Situations. The relationship is one frought with communication problems or maybe just a lack of sympathy for what the other is going through. The next track, Deep Water, was originally a reflection from Pauline about her frustrations on an American tour, but I saw it as a fictional character study. This song dives in deep, alongside the third track Red Reflections, into a person finding themselves in a personal hell. Their house has been sold off, a relationship has been shattered and they find that they have dark thoughts inside in a moment of self-reflection. The next track, "Tell Me What's Wrong," could be the person trying to talk to a friend they go back years with before avoiding them and asking why they were abandoned. This encounter sets off a further spiral towards madness. The next track could be seen as an aftermath of this meeting. With many relationships broken and being in serious financial trouble, the protagonist goes insane. The next track involves the protagonist making a bombscare (it's literally called Bombscare!), possibly as a way to stick it to the former friend that they talked to. Washed Up and Left for Dead feels like this character's entire situation summed up, as "nobody told him he was just not wanted," one left out by friends and never fitting in, feeling washed away by the world but hungry for fame. After getting jumped by thugs and nobody helps out, he's left out in the cold at night, able to reflect on how everything has gone to shit, signaling a change in themselves towards anger. They're fed up, and ready to burst. Side one ends there.

Side two picks up on an explosive start, the title track single describing just how the anger felt throughout the album manifests itself. The protagonist turns violent, and the track acts as a warning from Pauline to the protagonist that using violence won't bring back everything that they had lost, their money, their friends or their relationship.  Selling Out Your Future shows the protagonist going into hiding after committing the crime, complacent in the fact that they're selling out their future for a peace that may never come. The narrative I find with this album seems to come to a pause with the next track, Cool Blue Lady... or does it? The character in that track is one who gives others everything despite never getting it in return, one who's shut out by society. This isn't exactly unlike our main character, and in fact I read Their Dream Goes On as an intersection of these two characters done from the main's perspective. I took the line "I look at you turn electric blue" as The Cool Blue Lady and the main character see each other on a street corner, if only for a quick glance. Maybe they could have found things to share in common, finding some strength in each other. The final track doesn't add to either character's narrative, but instead focusing on the world those two live in. Bristol and Miami tells a tale of two places on entirely different parts of the globe suffering the same thing. Both are in states of ruin, the people within them turning to music, possibly as a means of escape. To "listen to the echo of the street" is to hear out about the troubles people are facing, and to go help them at a time for need. Even if they're from different countries, they still go through many of the same struggles.

Celebrate the Bullet is a great representation of the troubles found not just within members of The Selecter themselves, but also within the world at large. It's got some fascinating stories to tell, with a moving way of doing so. I encourage anyone to give this disc a spin or six, just to see what they can take from it. It's just as relevant now as it was back in 1981, in my eyes.

I give Celebrate the Bullet an 8.5/10.

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