Bruce,
you are always doing something different. What are you up to now and how
has that lead on from where you've been? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
At
the moment, I seem to be doing mostly funny little remix projects
for people. It's really quite interesting and not necessarily to do
with music, more to do with the note and the practice of fiddling and
altering sounds--sometimes social documents, etc. Also, amusingly,
I'm working with people who think, "If I do a remix for them, it
will somehow enhance their careers." I find this slightly misguided. As
they found out, just because my name is on the remix, it doesn't necessarily
guarantee that they will claw their way out of their present obscurity.
You
say "amusingly," but half of the music-making business
or half of the people who are making music are functioning with
remixes and transmutations of material. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
This
seems to be the case. I mean--I do enjoy it. You find an awful lot
about your own techniques or certain approaches to mixing sound, which
you haven't fully explored in your own work. There are tricks you
find, and I don't feel I can use the same trick again. But, with
a remix situation, you can explore and take
it a little bit further. Or, if it is a more musical project,
then that's nice, as well. I don't really deal with my own work
anymore, and sometimes it can be engaging or refreshing to actually revisit
a musical approach to things.
With new
material?
With
material which is not your own. That makes it a little bit more fun. I
think one doesn't have a responsibility, the same kind of responsibility
that you find with your own material.
Losing
the responsibility: do you think that's a change that can happen in more
areas than just the remix area?
Possibly. Do
you mean in a general sense or in an industry sense?
In
the broader sense. We are halfway to questions about the
collaborative arts and collaborations between people taking somebody
else's material and transmuting it. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I
think I am quite good at collaborating when I can take a back seat
in the situation.
You have the advantage of being slightly more objective about certain
things when you are dealing with somebody else's material. You tend to
go with your instincts about the particular material or try to fathom
out what the person is trying to get at, even exploring the situation
a little bit further. It is always useful to have an external voice
for almost everybody, really. The collaborations, in general, I
find quite difficult when trying to find something that is genuinely the
product of two attitudes colliding. It's easy to work with people
like Panasonic, because this is a non-vocal, nonverbal situation.
There is no discussion. The noise starts and it is a question of
trust. There are no concepts and the work takes place in similar
areas, so it doesn't feel like a collaboration. It feels like something
very natural, organic, and there
is a tacit agreement that what sounds good, sounds good or sounds unusual
or we haven't heard that before. Surely, it's an interesting
thing to do. I've collaborated in other situations that have been
fairly tricky because its been verbalized too much. At times, the
concepts are not a useful thing to work from in terms of collaboration. It
is much better if the concept emerges from the activity.
You
always use the word, "activity," and also, "music
and art," almost to be interchangeable. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I
don't see a difference. It's something that occurred to me
before Wire.
I had a growing feeling even before Wire. I thought that sound,
and perhaps, even music was certainly something that should be considered
as a fine art activity. 'fine
art' in inverted commas is a very unfashionable phase, but it is useful.
There seemed to be a huge gap between modern, classical, experimental
music and pop art in its broadest sense. Pop art seems to be allowable. People
weren't classically trained, it seemed to me, but until Brian Eno, there
didn't seem to be a link at all between the people who had aspirations
or a desire to manipulate sounds and being considered part of the fine
art activity or practice.
Whether
in the fine arts, to use the unfashionable phrase, or in music,
there was always a popular access. It was always possible
to start and to do it yourself, which was the essence of the punk
era, and this
is something you used as a springboard. Do you think that's possible
at all, twenty years later? Do you think this is a constant of the society
we are in? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Well,
for all its faults, I think the punk era solidified the notion of
the crossover between the arts and music. Culture was something that could be
explored and was worthy, whether the audience was big or small. The
situation we are in at the moment could not have arrived, I'm fairly
sure, without the punk period. The notion of the "do
it yourself" aspect to these things, and the fact that people came
out of the closet with their artistic aspirations seems to be not as embarrassing
as it was in previous times. You know the concept how, all very
embarrassing, they always got a bit strange after the third album kind
of syndrome which was certainly part of the sixties mentality in terms
of the music industry.
It
is obvious to me that people from the dance world don't find it particularly
embarrassing to venture into slightly more esoteric areas or abstract
areas, and that's partly because everyone is using the same kind
of machinery, but also there's this notion that one should develop
and get more extreme rather than actually plow the same furrow. And for me, it is quite interesting
that people from the dance world think it is almost a duty to push the
limits. I think that seems to be a thread running through and it
is because of this thread that crosses over between the artist and the
more commercial aspects of music. Going weird now is not an embarrassment.
There
is a long tradition starting in the sixties with the art school
graduate who became a musician. Do you think there is a parallel
of the same thing happening today? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
It
is much more cohesive now. Partly because of the way these art schools are
run and the fact that media department in many schools are now being taken
seriously as a fine art activity that crosses over into more commercial
aspects. There isn't so much artistic resistance to this idea now.
In fact, I think almost every art school in this country has a sound studio.
Some of the music departments at some of the universities are almost lagging
behind in terms of the exploration of what can be considered to be music
or a musical activity. But, there is still an academic resistance
going on. That has to do with the obsession, it is still there.
I've come across it: you cannot possibly enter into the world of making
sound or exploring sound for its own sake without having completed these
certificates. I think it has become much more open and easy, and
because it is also mixed up with various media, there are opportunities
for people to express themselves in ways other than painting, drawing
and sculpture. And I've always believed, since the seventies, anyway,
there should be no delineation between various activities when it comes
to art.
You are
very optimistic about the new experimentation that's possible at the grass
roots level, so to speak, but in practice what's happening with commercial
art is that it is moving into larger and larger mass-market exercises
resulting in acts like The Spice Girls and the obsession with them. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
But
that's always going to be there; pop won't go away. The commercial aspect
of delivering the lowest common denominator to twelve-year-old kids will
not go away. That's a permanent feature and will always be one.
My optimism comes from living in a multi-genre situation. Twenty-five
years ago, nobody would have
dreamt of so many genres and the increasingly cheap technology that is
available for people who don't necessarily have musical talent in the
traditional way but have an attitude towards music. Even a distinctive
feel for things can actually be expressed through the technology we now
have today.
The
punk era was the prime example, possibly the best example, of a
simple technology assisting a very simple expression but a very
freshened new expression.
You are talking about other simple technologies also coming out and enabling
people. Do you think that a simple technique is an easier way to
a simple, clear expression of an idea? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Possibly,
that's more of a complicated question than it sounds. I think because
of technology, cultural pressures, and the proliferation of all these
genres, the situation has arrived where, really, in the end it is still
down to peoples' personal vision (or obsession, I should say). I
don't think a simple technique is the answer to everything, but it is
basically access. And, because the technology is available, a lot
of the techniques which in the past would have taken quite a few years
to master, now are at peoples' fingertips. They take it for granted,
and I don't think that is a bad thing. But the variety of
technology and machines, which, basically, are made to make things sound
convincing and commercial, can still be used and abused. I think
in the end the people will always gravitate to the simplest way of doing
things and respond to instruction manuals in the way they always have
done: 'that's all very well, but how can I make some noise very quickly,
please!' Of course, the other aspect is people who buy the technology
in order to sound like something which is in the Top Ten, but
we don't really count those.
Often,
what comes out of this new technology, is a priesthood of people
who are the so-called professionals and the so-called experts,
and rejecting the priesthood was an important facet of punk in
the seventies just as it was an important component of other artistic
movements and rebellions in earlier times. Do you think this is a cyclical process?
Could we expect one today? It seems a little quiet at the moment. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I
think it is quiet today because there are options because of technolog,
and because, as I said before, we have so many genres. The priesthood aspect,
I think, has changed a bit. I think people who are respected in
a lot of these genres are not so much to do with amazing technique or
talent with a big "T" I think it is more to do with their artistic integrity
or their willingness to take a chance. I may be completely
misguided about this, as another spin-off from the punk era when integrity
was something which was considered part of it--integrity, not in terms
of moral integrity, although it probably has a moral aspect, but in terms
of having a responsibility for one's own development and not sitting
on one's laurels or finding a star and churning it out until one gets
rich.
The paradox
often became, though, that having integrity meant it was worn like a haircut,
and people became more concerned with integrity than, perhaps, what it
was actually lying on. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Of
course, all these aspects of integrity, style, etc., can buy people
who have a superficial view of these things. Clearly an asset, they
perceive this as something which they could coopt to copy. It's the haircut syndrome,
the integrity haircut. But there is not a lot you can do about that. You
can trust; it's a question of trust--a leap of faith.
Do you
think the pretense of integrity or the imitation of integrity undermines
the impact of the real thing on the audience and the possibility of the
real thing being recognized by the audience? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
That's
a question about audiences, really, isn't it? There is a sense in which we
will always try and chase down the "real thing." It's
a question of which audiences. Who? Twelve-year-olds certainly
are not concerned with integrity. No reason why they should be.
That audience stops listening to music by the time they are nineteen,
anyway. They go to country and western, especially, when they get
married. Their evolvement as a music consumer stops, basically,
and they become a different kind of audience, but there is always a section
of "the audience" which carries on. Seems usually to be
male and recording train spotters. But those audiences are obviously
much smaller than the constant supply of twelve-year-old girls.
Don't you
think the twelve-year-old girl ideal music business target is a relatively
recent ideal? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
It
is only a recent ideal in that they are younger. I think in previous times
there was a similar kind of audience. They were just older and there
wasn't any TV. You had to go to the local palais for your entertainment.
It was just a different way of accessing entertainment. That's the
change. The perfect audience of twelve-year-old girls is more of
a sociological thing. I don't see an awful lot of differences except
that they're younger, they can access the music, and have purchasing
power.
But,
what happens to old codgers like us who still want a little intensity
from what they are seeing around them, but don't go into record
stores and, typically, as "baby boomers," have an awful lot of discretionary
income? What happens to their musical and artistic consumption? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Well,
there are still options. I think getting frustrated because it's not on
"Radio One" is a bit irrelevant. It's still there.
You can find it. Certainly, all over the world there is always that
funny little record shop that insists on vending unmentionable material.
Mail order things, etc. You don't have to be frustrated about the
availability of unusual or intense music. Also, it is possible to
see it live, as well. The fact that this kind of material is not
presented in the stadium, I think, is not a problem. It's proper
to experience it in a mundane, smaller space, anyway. You can say
that it parallels jazz or something. It's the closest I can come
to it. There's an avant-garde audience and there's a jazz audience.
What is quite strange is there being a crossover, which in this case is
improvised music. Now there are improvised music festivals, for instance,
which include electronic improvisation. People who do
remixes for the dance scene have this almost secret life forming improvised
music, or sound, or pure sonic assault. It's all available. I
don't think anyone should get frustrated, as I said, because it is not
popular.
What
might be popular among people thirty years old and up? Should it be any
different from the rest? Do you expect a growth of understanding
or perception as the audience ages? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Yes,
unfortunately, I do, but I think that is a false expectation. The mass audience
does not develop from the Spice Girls to, should we say, serious electronic
music. It just doesn't happen but, possibly, might happen with the
more extreme dance music. That's a possibility that they might explore
on their own÷you know, extreme sounds and presentations of sonic
assault.
You
talk about graduating to much more subtle forms. So, did
you start with the Spice Girls equivalent listening to popular
music? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
My
earliest experience with music was the popular music of the time,
which tended to be Ella Fitzgerald. My mother and her sisters had quite good
taste, I suppose, in terms of their pop music so I was slightly more sophisticated
about a lot of things going on in the forties and fifties. But,
the thing that really set me off was the first time I heard the Blues.
That's one of the first things I actually recognize as having something
to do with me and the way I would view music as exciting. It seemed
important, very direct and the noises were interesting. One doesn't
know why one responds to certain things as a child, but there was a dissonance,
which seemed attractive, and dangerous. It's surely something one
could connect with in a strange sort of way. I am not sure whether
appreciating that kind of dissonance or that kind of simplicity, was influenced
by my exposure to Ella Fitzgerald. Could well be.
It looks
like a very short step though to the chain saw guitar sound. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Yes,
possibly.
The chain saw guitar. I think it had to do with drones in the end.
The first time I actually played an amplified guitar, an over-amplified
guitar, I thought, 'This is a drone.' Although I am very interested
in the direct rhythmic stuff, I think what it boils down to is you create
a drone with an over-amplified guitar. It is something I always
found fascinating.
So
things got simpler and simpler with the Blues and with the chain
saw guitar drone. Why is it that the lyrics still provoke
arguments among the fans about the actual 'meaning' of the oblique
collision of a very simple sound with often very abstract images? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I
think that possibly leads to the idea of a collage. I think that is very important÷a
slightly pretentious word, but it is a way of viewing songs or music as
settings to poetry. It's an extremely
consciousness approach to music. Personally, I always
found that quite interesting because, to me, it's more like the way that
life is÷a constant bombardment of disparate images or imagery with
verbal associations. For me, a collage sometimes seems closer to
reality than the simple story. Also, looking at the way a rhyme
operates, we felt there weren't any rules concerning what a song was. Some
could be very simple stories and some could be a purely associative collage
of imagery or content.
Of the
Wire recordings of the last twenty-two years, which
ones persist for you and which come closest to the ideals you have just
talked about? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I still have
a soft spot for 12 X U, it came close to a sonic haiku, the perfect
small notion, object concept. I love complicated things set in very
limited means and very few syllables. I still have a soft spot for
that. I read what your questions might be, and I saw that. It
is one of those questions one always dreads because that kind of thing
changes all the time, and I don't listen to Wire. On occasion
I had to, a few recordings for technical purposes, and I've always been
confused. I thought well, that's quite good, really or that's slightly
embarrassing. I think it changes all the time. That's an
almost impossible question to answer.
Do you
ever get intimidated by what you did and hearing the distillation of hours,
days of effort whizzing by in two and a half minutes? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Not
intimidated.
On the very rare occasions when I have been exposed to Wire recordings,
I've been vaguely impressed. Possibly due to the way you couched
that question, I was reminded there was quite a lot of practicing that
went on to achieve very simple effects. At the same time, the only
way to achieve musical effects was to repeat them endlessly. And
that's going back to the fine art, I suppose. Sometimes one has
to learn a technique in order to achieve even one piece of art.
To do it properly you may be forced to learn a skill of some description.
Music is a sensory outlet where you get direct correlation between music
and modern art. Now, if you have an object you want to see in the
world, you get somebody who is very good at making those things to make
it for you. It is the idea which is important, not necessarily
the skill which is involved in creating that object.
The
idea has always been the essence of what you've done. At one point though
you became dangerously close to being pop stars. Would that have
been a contradiction? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
It
would have been very tricky if that had happened. When there's collaboration
between four people, each are dealing with three other peoples' personalities
all the time. I think I suffered from the "Jonah Syndrome."
When things become important or successful, I find myself retreating.
I think that if Wire had a hit single of some description, things would
have become extremely tricky. Certain members of the personnel might
have reacted in different ways and that might have shortened the career
of the collaboration. In the end, it would have depended which particular
item was successful. If it had been one of the more unusual songs,
that would have been perceived by the record company as a commercial approach.
Perhaps we would have been given a certain amount of freedom to actually
carry on doing slightly more unusual things, and still be perceived as
a commercial proposition. But, the danger is in the more throwaway,
more jovial. That would have been perceived as a star which could
be pursued for the benefit of all concerned. I could see that as
being very dangerous. Luckily for us there was no real pressure.
As an artist
whose job is communication, would you have valued the additional, broader
platform that a single would have given you to propagate your ideas? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Not
necessarily.
Sometimes that can be a huge disadvantage. I was just thinking while
I was in the toilet about the syndrome being stuck in time, or stylistically
stuck commercially, with the possibility of having a hit single and the
pursuit of that particular style. I was trying to think of a good
example. The history of pop music is littered with people who have
had a hit single but whose live act was quite different. (This is
terrible; I can't think of the name of the group. It is quite a
vulgar example. It was the guy who had the top hat with mirrors
on. Early to mid-seventies, Pre-Punk. Think of it from Woburn
Hampton, Birmingham. You do know them. This is terrible.)
[Slade.] Anyway, they had a series of hits÷three-hits-a-year
kind of situation, and they wore more and more ridiculous clothes. But,
basically, they were heavy metal type of group.
That's
a kind of a broad example. But, I suppose the difference between
groups like that and us was that they were not pursuing an idea--they were
pursuing a career. Sometimes a success in one field can narrow
your success in others. This country's notoriously unforgiving in
terms of being successful in one genre and attempting to crossover into
another. Although, I am fairly satisfied with the way it's turned
out, it would be nicer, I suppose, having nothing to interfere with my
artistic pursuits. A lack of expectation by potential audiences
is quite good. I've grown chronically lazy.
As
you said, different members of Wire might have had different approaches
to the larger platform that a hit would have given. There were
tensions within the group, everybody hating everybody at some point.
Do you think that was part of the dynamo that drove the group? Do
you think that was part of the reason the recordings came out so successfully? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
It's
possible, I suppose. I think the elements of, shall we say, competition between
Graham and Colin vying for the ultra-male position, might have added a
certain dynamic, but I am not sure it is particularly important, really.
I think Wire was its best when this element of competition wasn't really
there. We might have produced more material in terms of who could
get the most songs in. It is always a good thing, but I don't think
it was particularly, in terms of the way things were made. I don't
think that aspect, that kind of friction and tension, as particularly
valuable. It's something I felt was inevitable and had to be accepted
as part of the parcel of life.
Inevitably,
the collaboration between four people for any length of time, especially
since everyone had their own views, was: If we found out it worked,
it functioned. But then these other aspects of the situation started
to bubble up to the surface. Once confidence was established, they
felt, I suppose, that Wire wasn't enough. That's the cliché
thing; we have always said that about Wire. That was the pity about
the EMI situation. If the various projects which were bubbling around
individuals or different combinations of people in the group could have
been realized, then, perhaps, the Wire project would have carried on.
It could have hit eventually, broken the will of the audience into actually
buying the records. I don't know.
Well,
people still bought the records, and continue to do so. In fact, at one
time Wire were labeled the "Pink Floyd of the New Wave." This
seemed such a huge accolade, and all four of you seemed to appreciate
it at the time. hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
I
think everyone understood that it was a compliment but, being associated
with something like Pink Floyd, was not a comfortable idea however
one respects their music and the ground-breaking aspect of their
activities. I think
because we were very convinced about ourselves, we wanted to be the new
Wire not the new Pink Floyd.
Thinking
of the time before Robert (Gotobed) left, when you settled into
being Wire, what, in retrospect, do you think the roles were? Was
there a clear dynamic of who did what and to whom? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
It
seemed to swap around quite a lot. It has to be said that Robert's role
was fairly constant. As far as the other three, I think, the
kind of roles were interchangeable quite often. As people
develop their personalities, their skills at producing beautiful objects
also develops, and the aspirations obviously alter. We're getting
older all the time and the unspoken aspects of the collaboration eventually
deteriorates because peoples' ambitions become more and more obvious. At
the same time, the realization of responsibility for the other three
members possibly become almost a burden.
We
were talking about the roles and why. How did it change when
you became a three piece? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Basically,
the way I viewed it, when there were four of us, Colin was the most
musically experienced. He was always viewed as kind of the bandmaster
but not in terms of the concept or where it was going musically. There's got
to be somebody who says, 'we should do that again' or 'that's not quite
right.' It's better if the singer did that because they have to
be more secure
about what's happening behind them. I think because Colin
took on the technology aspect early on, his role was too much of a burden.
He was the person who had the computer and the early sequencing program,
etc. Somebody had to do it, and I think it somehow distorted the
organic nature of things.
As
a three piece we tried very, very hard and, just before Robert left,
the idea of still creating stuff from jams was recorded by the sequencing
program.
The sound was great and it was a very good idea, but sometimes the sounds
one develops, as one would in a normal jamming situation with guitars,
were not repeatable in terms of being sampled off. So, quite often,
I think Colin was put in a bit of an invidious situation. Not only
did he feel responsible for making sure this stuff went down complete,
but also tried to enjoy the jam aspect of rehearsals and the song writing
process.
Is Wire
in the past tense now or are you going to work together again? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
There have
been a few Wire scares recently. I also thought it would
be an interesting and amusing thing to see if Wire were actually
put in a position where we would have to play for a quarter of an hour
or something. What would it do now? The curiosity factor is
still there. I think for everybody, but, apparently, not for Robert.
I don't play guitar anymore, but I still have a curiosity about what would
happen if the four of us got back to basics. What would happen if
four people got into a room with limited means--limited musical ability--what
would they do? But, it's not practical. It could be practical.
The problem is, for it to be a practical proposition, the stakes would
have to be too high in order to get Graham over and rehearse. It
would have to be a fairly major project which means we would have to commit.
I think that would not be a natural situation. There would be too
much riding on it, and I think that would spoil the soufflé.
I still find it an intriguing idea that they might do something again,
but certainly not make an album as the first idea. To make some
noise in a room is the first idea I still find a fairly attractive.
So many
people have taken Wire's example now, and there are
so many people who have gain some knowledge and influence from Wire,
do you think they would dislike being called the Wire
of the late nineties? hear Bruce Gilbert in streaming mp3
Well,
if I was them, I would. Nobody with any integrity would want
to be called the something of something of the nineties.
Bruce
Gilbert installations:
BC
Gilbert at home
in
the
Golden Heart
Wire
at the Stereo Society (selected
links):
To
Wire Central (all
links)
To
Wire 1977-79 by Kevin Eden
To
The Roxy London WC2 (Jan-Apr 77)
To
Pink Flag
To
Chairs Missing
To 154
To
I Am The Fly
To
Outdoor Miner
To
full text of Robert Gotobed's interview
To
the full text of Bruce Gilbert's interview
To Thorne's
home page
To
a 1978 Wire nite out in Middlesborough
To
a the book: Wire, Everybody Loves A History
To
the poster for Notre Dame Hall, London, 1979
To Kevin Eden's 1996 interview
with Thorne for the Wire newsletter
To Wire's concert review in the
New York Times
To
Wire discography
To Wir discography
To radio sessions log
To
Wire songs covered by other artists
To Bruce Gilbert discography
To Bruce Gilbert/Graham Lewis discography
To Robert Gotobed discography
To Graham Lewis discography
To Colin Newman discography
To Swim discography
To
Wire's 2001 concert review in the New York Times
Click
to download Wire historical memorabilia, text or hi-res graphic.
All are encoded as zip files.
Thorne's
commentary on making four albums with Wire (24K Word file)
The
Roxy, London WC2, (Jan-Apr 77), hi-res cover art 648K jpg
Pink
Flag, hi-res cover art 568K jpg
Chairs
Missing, hi-res cover art 556K jpg
154,
hi-res cover art 188K jpg
Bruce
Gilbert's mid-80s letter to Thorne, 176K jpg
Concert
poster, Notre Dame Hall, London, 1979 796K jpg
|