|
Some more notes on the Non Compliance
record….written by Vinny, 10th Sept 2004
Non Compliance was recorded at a time when I was between record
labels, which sounds like a big deal, it wasn’t, and
then it was, but for all the wrong reasons. Both labels did
their level best to support the release of Ironing the Soul
at different times but we’re talking indie dreamers
here with multiple agendas and impossible promises. Not a
lot happened. No advertising, no radio plugging and very little
press. Uglyman went bust despite having pressed up 1000 copies
of the album and HUG who released the record became nothing
but a front for the liquidation of assets [most of which were
mine]. It’s a cruel business and it really got me down.
I clung to the NHS as if my life depended on it [it did].
I locked myself away in my room and put some poems/unfinished
lyrics to music in the most minimal way I could using a four
track fostex machine, a Roland DX50 and an old cranky guitar
[my good ones sounded too nice]. It’s fair to say that
I was not very happy. Rob and I polished up the tracks some
six months later after the fog had lifted and the collection
of word-sound-scapes became Non Compliance, a perverse tribute
to those who refuse prescribed medication; a term that will
be familiar to anyone working in psychiatric services. It’s
a bit like hanging on to ones dignity and losing it at the
same time by going mad in the process.
I’ve not really listened to it very much
since. I initially pressed up150 copies which have long since
been dispatched to sources far and wide. The feedback has
been mixed. If you like poppy tunes and fancy arrangements
then you should avoid this record. If you dig a big rock sound
and some hardcore beat-a-tronics you should avoid this record.
If you're all for gentle melodic folk music or ambient techno
then do not entertain this record. But if you like to get
a little bit wasted and listen to the strangulated soul of
a broken man coming to terms with the plaster cast of his
life then there might just be something here that’s
worth a shot [all be it in the dark]. If you’re a milkman
there will be challenges in the humming department. Be warned,
it’s not pretty. But it is pretty true.
Despite what amounts to an overly macabre sales
pitch [see above] and very limited demand I’m currently
in the process of reissuing Non Compliance with new artwork
plus 3 extra tracks from the sessions not on the original.
This should see the light in time for Christmas and I’ll
be posting information to that effect as soon as. We need
a little sadness every now again. If you’re up for it
I sincerely hope you enjoy, VPx
|
New Review from Whisperin
and Hollerin Dec 04
'VINNY PECULIAR'
'NON-COMPLIANCE'
- Album: 'NON-COMPLIANCE' -
Label: -available from www.vinnypeculiar.com
- Genre: 'Indie' - Release Date: '2001'
Our Rating: ******* 7/10
Recorded in a "cathartic fit of despair" at home
on a four-track over the winter of 2000/ 2001, VINNY PECULIAR'S
second album "Non-Compliance" is something of a
departure and certainly a rugged route march away from the
sardonically catchy guitar pop he's moulded into his own image
over the past few years.
Alone, intimate and almost voyeuristically personal,
the 14 songs here are stark exercises in minimalism, delivered
by Vinny in monologue style, with usually only the sparest
of keyboard frills for company. Aside from a little textural
work on "God Spot", no guitars are detectable at
all and the early hours confessional style recalls the maverick
likes of John Cale, Julian Cope and Baby Bird's Steven Jones.
And, it must be said, it's wholly introverted
stuff. Indeed, if you're expecting the guitar hooks and pithy
wordplay you'd usually associate with one of Vinny's records
then my advice is to close the door quietly and slip out now.
However, if you're drawn to darker nights of the soul, you
should definitely stick around, for then there's plenty to
relate to.
Opener "Billy Fisher" gives you some
idea of the record's looming presence. Built around a nighmare-ish
ambient drone, it's the down side of the cheery Billy Liar-style
persona of someone who's based their life around deception
and is a strange, obsessive reminiscence. "I have created
so many lies to justify my weakness" mutters Vinny as
the hairs begin to stand to attention on your neck.
"War All The Time"s up next and it's
about as close to pop - albeit in a diseased, numbed-out form
- as "Non-Compliance" gets, with low-key beats entering
the equation. Actually, it recalls the kind of atmospheric
setting Martin Hannett used to create for John Cooper Clarke
and finds Vinny picking at the scabs of domestic disharmony.
"The Christmas crackers are exploding in your face, but
you were never here and I was never there in the first place",
he relates with both sadness and a tangible air of bitterness.
Domestic unhappiness also creeps into tracks
like "Evil Nature" and "Payback Time".
The former is very reminiscent of Baby Bird's home recorded
albums and finds Vinny suggesting "we buried each other
deep in resentment", while "Payback Time" is
an ultra-fatalistic mantra which ends in a swirl of electronic
locusts and is truly dislocated. Indeed, even when Vinny brightens
the corners musically (like on "Uncomfortable" which
has a tinge of Xmas and what I think could be a celeste) it's
usually in alliance with half-whispered, regret-fuelled musings.
The end results are often unsettling, but wholly captivating
all at once.
Typically, religion gets a look in on "God Spot"
and the kooked-out "Baby Jehovah", where Vinny indulges
in a Dylan/ Kerouac-esque stream of consciousness ("Word
salad crumbles in vacuum-cleaner cash cow"), while "The
Last Day Of Cool" is not a million miles away from the
semi-autobiographical set-pieces of the recent VP album "Growing
Up With...." Indeed, with its' school-bound scenario
("On the last day of school I set fire to the volleyball
nets with a borrowed cigarette lighter"), it's almost
the flipside of that album's "We Tried To Drown Our Music
Teacher In 1974" and could also be viewed as a blueprint
for "Growing Up"s similarly prank-filled "Egg
Incident."
So it's undeniable "Non-Compliance"
requires a leap of faith if you're expecting a further bout
of Vinny Peculiar's bittersweet songs about love, life and
loathing. However, the album's superficial miserablism can't
destroy the insight and inspiration that's become the hallmark
of all Vinny's releases and thus "Non-Compliance"
is another worthy addition to a fascinating canon of work.
author: TIM PEACOCK
|