Bear With Me, We Zig-Zag A Bit On This One
What or where is 'Angry Orchard'? O I thought you'd never ask! Conrad was looking for an urban location in New York that rhymed with or sounded like 'Anger', all the better to subvert the saying 'Don't look back in anger', hence today's title. Art!
They make cider
Actually, the orchard being angry fits right in with what comes later in our Intro. You'll see.
ANYWAY casting our minds back to November 18th, what happened on this day? Well, in 1953 the arch-grump Alan Moore was born, kicking and screaming one imagines. Yes, that Alan Moore, the creative force behind 'The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen' and 'Watchmen', not to mention 'The Ballad Of Halo Jones' and 'Skizz' in '2000AD'. Art!
No, I shan't put up an illo of the Cassandra Of Comics, just to spite him. Ha!
Interesting enough as this titbit is, it's not what the Intro is about.
People who jitterbugged off this mortal coil as of 18th November include the Danish physicist Niels Bohr, and the much less deeply missed Jim Jones, him of the Koolaid meme.
Whilst either of these might be worth following - well, the former, rather than the bottomhole latter - neither are today's Intro core.
So, what else happened on 18th November 1974? Art!
Obviously - of course! - Genesis released 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway', their double-album concept platter, with all lyrics by Peter Gabriel, so blame him if you must apportion blame. This album is either the zenith or nadir of prog rock, depending on how you look at it, and must surely have given a few punk rock incipients food for thought.
Going off on a tangent for a moment, you ought to remember that, every so often, BOOJUM! does an hilarious HILARIOUS I TELL YOU 'musical critique' where we look at the lyrics to a song and mercilessly deconstruct and analyse them. 'Hips Don't Lie' might fall under this rubric at some point but it would need to be the whole blog as it's tremendously long. Art!
The very, very confusing inner sleeve notes.
Ol' Gabby seems to have been determined to be as obtuse and oblique with the lyrics as possible, making it very, very difficult to interpret, which is why people are still arguing about them over fifty years later. O yes they are!
ANYWAY I wanted to do a critique on the album's very first song, 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway'. Before we do, a little background. Art!
That's Broadway in red; it runs the length of Manhattan Island, a total of 33 miles, so there's plenty of room for the lamb to gambol or lie down in. Broadway and Manhattan are both in New York, hence the Angry Orchard title. I told you we'd be zig-zagging.
ANYWAY ANYWAY to the lyrics -
"And the lamb lies down on Broadway"
Told you.
"Ocean winds blow on the land"
Technically, no. On Manhattan Island, the prevailing winds blow from the land to sea, thanks to the surrounding waters and the enormous skyscraper geography of the island. Mark Gabby down one point.
"The Movie Palace is now undone"
I think, from a later line, that this means the cinema - possibly the RKO Palace Theatre 1564 Broadway - has finished it's showing pictures long past midnight. Art!
"The all night watchmen have had their fun"
I've read responses from people doing overnight security work. It's the most boring, tedious job imaginable. No fun involved. Ol' Gabby has to be propounding a sense of irony here.
"Sleeping cheaply on the midnight show"
Back to the cinema. If you're poverty-stricken, buying a cinema ticket for shows that don't finish until the small hours of the morning is a lot cheaper than a hotel, although this is usually safer if done in pairs, as one can keep watch for the wierdoes into Seventies Italian zombie-slasher trilogies. Art!
"Get out!"
The heartfelt plea from the cinema staff, who by 02:30 in the morning just want to go home.
"It seems they cannot leave their dream"
Another reference to those cinemaphiles dozing off in the upper stalls, surviving on a diet of stale popcorn and desiccated hotdogs. In fact, thinking about this line, the rest of TLLDOB might merely be one of these people recalling their dream for the rest of the album. Hmmm. Food for thought. "They woke up and it was all a dream ..."
"There's something moving in the sidewalk steam"
Ah, that classic NY screen shot! Art?
Whatever might have been moving mysteriously in the miasmic mist of morning is never mentioned again. Talk about an anti-climax!
We now move into Verse 2.
"Night-time's flyers feel their pain"
No idea whom these chronic sufferers are, except they fly by night. Passengers on a red-eye flight into JFK?
"Drugstore takes down the chains"
Quite prosaic - the chains that kept said shop secure overnight, because there's no telling what those triple-feature Fulci fans might do after being released from durance cinephile.
"Metal motion comes in bursts"
Hmmm Ol' Gabby waxing poetic about morning traffic.
"But the gas station can quench that thirst"
NOT IN MORDORVIA IT CAN'T!
"Suspension cracked on unmade road"
You're going to get NY citizens erupting in justified fury that their city's roads and motorways are not being kept up to spec, because what else do they pay their taxes for?
"The trucker's eyes read "Overload""
THIS is why This Sceptred Ise insisted on the use of tachographs in the cabs of 18-wheelers, to prevent dangerously over-tired drivers nursing 30 tons of cargo and leaden eyelids. Art!
Tachograph, Seventies iteration
NOT THE SANDWICH FRANCHISE! Which did not exist in 1974 <checks> actually it did, having begun in 1965 BUT STILL! No, we are talking the underground railway system that underlies and underpins New York.
"Rael imperial aerosol kid"
At last! Our protagonist arrives, for this is the dude we will accompany for the rest of the albums. 'Rael' is indeed an anagram of 'Real', but it's also one for 'Earl', although I don't think the world was quite ready for a protagonist called Earl. I could be wrong. Art?
O my, Rael, have you been using industrial paint sprays in confined spaces with no breathing mask? For hours on end? Hmmmmm. No wonder what follows doesn't make sense, if it's the dream of a cinema slacker about a man off his box on paint fumes. Plus, he's well aware that he's been committing acts of criminal vandalism on the New York transit system or he wouldn't be hiding his spraygun. Art!
Does it need batteries or compressed air to work?
OKAY! That's the whole of an entire blog consumed by an Intro. We've got more verses to cover. I bet you can hardly wait.