Friday, April 2, 2010

The Equators - Hot

I slipped into my favorite local record store one morning in 1981. I was on the hunt for something that would lift my spirits. The lone employee stood behind the counter reading a magazine and bopping his head to a piece of vinyl that was playing when I came in. He was bopping for good reason. It was getting to me as well. It was muscular, and melodic and damn if it wasn't utterly infectious. "What the hell is that," I asked. The counter guy held up the album cover. "Yeah, this is good," I said and went back to the racks. Song after song got to me until finally I asked, "Got any copies of it?"

"I got five in this morning," he smiled, "I put it on and now I have two left. One's mine. So, yeah, I got one - just one."

I snagged it and played it for most of that week.

I sometimes think those were the only five copies ever sold. It was out of print in a couple of years.

Long a namecheck for hip third-wave ska revivalists, the record developed a cult following as cassette copies - sometimes 3rd and 4th generation - made their way around. In 2002 the band reformed and in conjunction with some of those admiring third wavers actually re-recorded the album. They should have left it alone. The remake was dreadful and utterly self-concious. The original remains the best.

I have loved this record for almost three decades and fully expect my scratchy vinyl will carry me through another 30 years. I defy anyone to listen to it and not feel the groove.

amg:

Besides being one of the forgotten castoffs of the 2 Tone scene, the Equators were also one of the most neglected signings to the "oh so hip in its day" Stiff label. Listening to their music nowadays, one wonders just why they never hit big. Their Hot album seems to have it all, epitomizing the breadth of the early-'80s U.K. scene — ska, reggae, rock, and new wave all rolled into one big, ebullient sound. But back then, most Brits preferred their music pretty pure, and the band was blending too many disparate styles into its sound for comfort. This seems to have worked against them in the 2 Tone scene, where by rights they should have made their home, an all-black counterweight to the all-white Madness. But perhaps their biggest problem was simply that they were just too accomplished for their own good. Keyboardist Rocky Bailey obviously had classical training, and wasn't afraid to showboat it; lead guitarist Dennis Fletcher was proud he learned his licks listening to a blizzard of '70s hard rock; lead vocalist Donald Bailey hankered toward American soul; while guesting trumpeter Dick Hanson apparently studied at the feet of American jazzmen, not Jamaicans. So where were the Equators' true musical roots — Jamaica, the U.K., the U.S., the rock scene, the reggae sound systems, the jazz clubs, the U.K. discos, or beyond? So slick is their sound, it's impossible to tell. Everything is given equal weight in the arrangements: the new wave synths, Leo Bailey's frenetic ska beats and Cleveland Clarke's thumping bass, the searing guitar solos, the soul-styled vocals, the jazzy horns. "Where Did Johnny Go?" exemplifies their approach — it takes its musical inspiration from "Johnny B. Goode" (but served up in rollicking ska fashion), then kicks in the rockabilly guitar solo, then simmers into a long groove before fading into oblivion. The lyrics turn "Goode" on its head, as tough guy Johnny bows out of the competition and bolts for the hills. The infectious "Rescue Me" is even more of a musical smorgasbord, a ska-wave hybrid that stirs in both classical and proggy keyboards, with smooth-as-silk vocals from Fletcher, who takes the lead here. "Age of 5" is a skinhead stomp, but the group can't stop from tinkering, and tosses in smooth, lush sections that would have the skins calling for their heads. "If You Need Me" is a lush synth-love song delivered at a breakneck pace. If the Equators had seemed less sure of themselves, one would have forgiven them these sins, and assumed that next time around they'd sort out a specific style and stick with it. Unfortunately, so evolved was their sound that change seemed unlikely, and the British public rejected them out of hand. In 1981 they were out of step and out of time; a few years later they could have been wowing U.S. college crowds across the nation with their tight and startling hybrid musical style. And so, all that was left of Hot was a pile of ash, and this stunningly original and exciting album disappeared without a trace from the racks. It's so unique that decades later it still sounds fresh. Find it if you can, and try to convince your friends that it's not a hot new band, but rather a 20-plus-year-old dead one.

Hear

1 comment:

A. Balsalm said...

I like all the little biographical notes to each of these postings. The experience like this of discovering stuff in record stores is pretty much gone. I imagine in the future someone will reminisce about that day they stumbled onto a music blog that opened their ears to something new and memorable.

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