JOHN MARTYN
AND Go! Discs
• Martyn's debut for Go! Discs, home of Paul Weller, Portishead and Gabrielle.
ONE OF THE GREAT maverick stylists of British music, John Martyn has been out on a limb in recent years, marooned first by some increasingly safe albums for Island in the mid '80s and then by a deal with Permanent, who appeared to hide everything he recorded. Latterly, he seemed doomed to play out his middle age on an endless circuit of Britain's town halls and arts centres, raging at his long-suffering fans and churning out increasingly perfunctory readings of the likes of May You Never. Fortunately, Martyn's finally been picked up by a label which fosters home-grown talent, and promptly returned his best work in many a moon.
Go! Discs seems an appropriate home for a man whose '70s work anticipated the sparse, spacey funk of the trip hop genre by a mere two decades. Although he started out in the late '60s folk scene, Martyn's love affair with black music stretches beyond country blues and there's traces of ska, dub, Coltrane, Stevie Wonder and hip hop all over And, with the sparse beat of the latter bringing Martyn's profoundly individual style instantly up to date.
Although Martyn's renowned as a guitarist, precious little sounds like a guitar here as keyboards float and swoon, the beats drift in and out of the gorgeously languid opener, Sunshine's Better, and Jerry Underwood's sax dances around those slurred, blue-eyed vocals. Martyn's in gorgeous and untamed voice throughout -impossibly plaintive on Suzanne as Phil Collins echoes him on the chorus, kicking up a storm on the funky Step It Up. The fresh rhythmic approach also seems to have invigorated Martyn's songwriting, which stretches for one of his most considered pieces in years, Downward Pull Of Human Nature. All that prevents And from being an instant classic are a couple of insubstantial songs and a sense that, occasionally, he's pulled back from the brink and employed his admittedly unique '80s AOR style rather than go all the way with the new beats.
Minor reservations aside, And is a timely reminder that Martyn is a stubbornly individual talent, still restlessly ploughing his own particular field, that he still sounds like no-one else and that, yes, he deserves to be both honoured and cherished.
Mark Cooper
sitenotes:
There was a mini interview attached to this review.