My Friend Rachel: A Moment’s Silence (Big Red Sky)

A few of you may have read Bret Easton Ellis’s dystopic masterpiece, ‘American Psycho’, in which well-groomed yuppie Patrick Batemen spends half his time composing cheesy reviews of MOR dullards like Genesis, Whitney Houston and Huey Lewis and the News, and the other half brutally murdering beggars and prostitutes. One reviewer, while deploring the appalling levels of misogynistic violence, described it as effectively skewering ‘a society fatally addicted to blandness’.

After a couple of listens to ‘A Moment’s Silence’ by folk-pop duo My Friend Rachel, I was beginning to understand what that writer meant. It’s not good for the soul to listen to such mercilessly soothing music: one needs a bit of grit in the oyster, otherwise all you get is mush.

The pedigree of the group is unarguable. Martin Newton is a smart and sympathetic producer, while Katherine Hieronymus has the flawless grace and ease of Karen Carpenter, but the evidence from this album is that they really need to hire a songwriter. In the place of hooks we have gimmicks and in the place of tunes we have an eternal, unrippling smoothness.

Try listening to, say, ‘Put Me Right’, to see what I mean. It’s nominally a vaguely sinister piano ballad, but never reaches any emotional intensity, due to the tunelessness of the vocal line and the fiddly, fussy structure, containing time shifts, breakdowns, an annoying squeaky noise at the end, and a hackneyed ‘Mr Cholmondley-Warner Talks about Love and The Act of Beastliness’ section in the middle. Taken as a whole, this is the sound of intelligent artists trying desperately to chuck stuff onto a deadly dull song and hope we won’t notice its underlying morbidity.

A bit better is ‘Connected’, which has a pretty chorus, matched by Newton’s equally pleasant swirling, textured guitars. But boredom is never far away on this album. It oozes through the lyrics (“I get sick of it all”, “I got bored with it all”), and through the endless, mid-tempo drum-machined drudgery of lame ballads like ‘A Good Day’, which suddenly goes all African tribal on us at the end. As I said, gimmicks.

I think it is possible to get pleasure from this record, but the trick is to dip into it for a couple of minutes and then go somewhere else. I quite liked the accordion-drenched ‘Soured His Mood’, whose carnivalesque ‘Being For the Benefit of Mr Kite’ oddness was hinted at by the Fellini-ish cover photographs (in one there is a sexy girl in her underwear being ogled by a glum looking naked bloke- pure ‘Battle in Heaven’. In the other, there is another girl asleep on a park bench next to a clown and a large monkey). Sadly, the risqué playfulness of these images is not matched by the rest of the music, which is stolid, bordering on ultra-conservative.

But that’s enough about My Friend Rachel. Just before I go off to wipe down my axe, I have to inform you that Messrs Rutherford, Collins and Banks really hit their stride with progressive classic ‘The Lamb Lays Down on Broadway’……

My Friend Rachel Website

  • http://www.witchesband.com/ Dave B

    Obviously I’m biased, but I rather like it. Feel compelled to watch American Psycho again though :-)

    D.

  • http://www.myspace.com/MyFriendRachel Martin Newton

    Oh – what a shame.

    I was looking forward to reading this review – particularly after meeting Colin at Hanneyfest and having a nice long chat with him about Big Red Sky records and what a good idea it was – and him specifically saying how much he enjoyed this album.

    I guess something changed his mind. Maybe he wanted to listen to something a bit more ballsy when he came to write pen to paper and instead had to listen to this.

    Never mind – I”ve had much worse reviews and I can take it on the chin.

    The whole album (bar one track) is up on MySpace – so you can have a listen and decide for yourselves.

    http://www.myspace.com/MyFriendRachel

    Me – I think this is the best work and the most enjoyable project i have worked on to date.

    Martin

  • colinmackinnon

    Huh!

    I wonder if anyone minuted that conversation. I am a fan of Big Red Sky, but at the time of Hanneyfest I’d barely listened to ‘A Moment’s Silence’. Maybe I was mixing up that record and Les Clochards’ record. I was drunk as a lizard I (barely) recall.

    No doubt other reviewers will have a different take on the record- respect to Martin and Katherine- they are very talented artists, but I definitely preferred the Hieronymus album of a couple of years back.

  • Paul P

    Well – I think Colin should have taken a bit more time with this before putting pen to paper. I feel proud to have been involved on part of this project and I like the end-result. Katherine’s voice is as wonderful as it ever was and (like Hieronymus albums) this album definitely needs a few listens before making up your mind about the songs. Speaking as an ex-Hieronymus person and also as a hired gun for a few of these tracks – I think there are a few qualities here that you didn’t spot yet! Stop playing with your axe and give it another listen mate!

  • EDGE

    ‘Drunk as a lizard’ does not begin to describe how hammered you were at Hanneyfest, Colin!

  • http://www.gappytooth.com gappy

    One Buckfast & Irn Bru too many, eh, Jock?

  • Werthers Original

    I really like the MFR album though I agree some of the songs are a bit samey. I find it odd that one of the band members should come on here to whinge about the review – he should be trying to get some national exposure, this album would sound great in a thousand cafe bars and hairdressers (*not* meant as an insult).

  • colinmackinnon

    Hey Werther,

    I think ‘whinge’ is a little strong. ‘Express Mild Disappointment’ is probably too strong too. We’ve heard an awful lot worse on this website, and I’m happy for band members and supporters to give alternative viewpoints. The worst thing is when we slave away at reviews and get no feedback!

    I think you’re right about MFR’s place in the world- I can hear ‘Connected’ or ‘Give Me Love’ at Coco’s etc. Not that I’m in there much. No real ale!