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标 题: Catchers - Shake The Age
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2001年11月26日18:49:19 星期一), 站内信件
Raygun Aug.'95
Catchers - Shake The Age
"It's a lovely place," says Catchers' singer Alice Lemon, "but you're not go
ing to get much done here in the way of becoming successful or anything."
The "here" at issue is the almost painfully picturesque Northern Irish town
of Portstewart, a tiny coastal village where sightseeing and even pub crawli
ng beg the word "quaint". A nice place to visit, or live, but the Catchers,
en route to becoming successful or something, are about to head off to the N
ew World. If all goes well, right-thinking American indiepopheads will fall
in love with their charming nature and their very wonderful evocative sound.
Powered by the energetic guitar of lead singer/songwriter Dale Grundle and t
he strong, supple rhythm section of drummer Peter Kelly and bassist Ger Fitz
gerald, the ultramelodic songs of the bands' debut Mute have a hooky sweetne
ss that stands in stark contrast to the dark lyricism. As they traverse thro
ugh shimmering acoustic folk (Beauty No.3 and Epitaph) and angular, edgier g
uitarpop (Hollowed and bittersweet single Shifting). Alice's angelic voice s
pins candyfloss around Dale's grim introspection, her self-described "la-la-
la innocent little girlie-thing" intermingling with his rich lead vocals and
romantic, disturbing lyrics.
In all truth, Grundle hails from a nearby village even smaller than Portstew
art. So small, in fact, that for him, Portstewart was where the action was.
He grew up your average shy, smart kid, playing his artistic voice. Eventual
ly he came to the epiphanic realization that music would be his life's work,
and when the time came to record some demos, he invited Alice, whom he knew
through her older brother, to help out.
"I was thrilled about it of course," says Alice, "cause everyone knew Dale,
cause he had left school and was somebody really cool, 'cause he had this fl
at and he didn't have his parents around and stuff."
"She just blew the top of my head off," Dale remembers. "It just added this
completely different dimension to my songs. I just knew that she had to be t
here."
The cherubic Ms. Lemon found her voice singing along with Billie Holiday and
Kylie on her bedroom radio. Like the heroine of some British film from the
sixties, Alice's energy and talent and sheer personality were too big for th
e small-town constraints of Portstewart. If the soft-spoken Dale is the soul
of the Catchers, then the more effusive Alice is the band's heart, her crys
talline harmonies giving light to Grundle's darkness and in turn giving thei
r music that little something extra to make it special.
"The things that Dale writes about, I know exactly what he's saying without
him having to explain it to me," she says. "I can relate to it so easily, it
's like an instinctive reaction singing his lyrics, like singing something I
'd like to say myself but don't have the ability to do. I mean I've tried to
write poetry when I was in really deep depressions, but it was embarrassing
ly bad."
Equally influenced by Kerouac and both Dylans as it is by Spiritualized and
the Jesus and Mary Chain (whose sonic experimentalism is evinced in Catchers
' electrically vibrant live performances), Grundle's songwriting is fraught
with the dramatic intensity of Irish spiritual forebears like Van Morrison.
Asked how he sees himself, Dale takes the piss, calling himself "a sad alcoh
olic poet." Musing on his career, he adds, "It's a weird thing to do with yo
ur life. If I hear someone talking to me or I read it in print, you know, 'D
ale Grundle, blah-blah-blah songwriter,' just to see that, it sounds totally
weird. When did that happen? When did I get to that stage?"
It should be noted that for all intents and purposes, this is the blah-blah-
blah songwriter's first real interview, a process he usually avoids by allow
ing the more ebullient Alice to act as spokesperson. "I muttered a few words
on the radio once," he says softly, "but that's about it. I enjoy what I do
, and I feel I have to do what I do, but to be put in the position where I h
ave to explain what I do or give reason why I do it or how I do it just seem
s a bit too much."
"It's not like explaining a job,"says Alice. "It's like explaining your whol
e personality."
The Catchers' songs expose more of Dale's passion than any conversation over
coffee and cocktails ever could. "That's the way I express myself," he says
. "I don't tend to really talk that much. I wouldn't say I'm the most articu
late person, but given time to put things into lyric form, I can give a lot
more. It feels weird to keep on explaining."
Alice, of course, has no such trouble and is glad to discuss her friend's ar
t. As Dale sits beside her, she watches as he sips a pint and explains the c
entral theme of his songs: the passage into adulthood, the moment of childho
od's end when the world loses its candy-coloured glow and the blood and bone
become visible.
"Some of the lyrics were written when Dale was like, 14," Alice says, "and h
e would add them onto some lyrics he'd write now, looking back on experience
. So it is about a loss of innocence because half of the song he was innocen
t and young, and now he's more experienced. It's like reading an old diary a
nd commenting on what you experienced before."
From Portstewart to Dublin to London to a chateau in France (where Mute was
recorded with producer Mike Hedges), Catchers have been fortunate enough to
escape the isolated place where they came of age. As with pop bands since th
e dawn of time, the music has enabled them to live a life very different fro
m the work-pub-bed trap that is the future for most of their old friends.
"Coming into a situation where you find yourself involved with all this musi
c and culture that you never knew existed, especially coming from somewhere
that is so isolated, can be a real eye-opening experience," Alice explains.
"Through Dale's songs, which are saying 'We've got to leave, we've got to ge
t on with some kind of life,' we've been able to not be stuck. It's about be
ing able to do something that's from inside of you instead of some kind of l
ife that's forced on to you. And everyone can relate to that, 'cause everyon
e's felt stuck sometime."
Ever unstuck, Catchers have since taken up residence in the concrete Brookly
n wilderness, light years from Portstewart, geographically and spiritually.
It's an odd place to find the band, but they're used to being a bit out of t
he loop. "I don't think we fit in," Alice says, with no small pride, "especi
ally when you look at bands like Elastica and Oasis and all those. That's a
completely different ballgame from what we're trying to do. Maybe we're just
too honest."
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