Time warped
Revisiting the Psychedelic Furs
by Jonathan Perry
With his goatee and glasses, Richard Butler might be difficult to spot in the
crowd of New Yorkers he roams among these days. But the moment the former
Psychedelic Furs frontman took the stage at Mama Kin in Boston last month and opened his
mouth to sing a song from his new band Love Spit Love's second album,
Trysome Eatone, there was absolutely no question who he was. "I know
what Heaven knows," he crooned in the sandpapery sneer that was his former
band's signature during a dark decade defined by Reagan, Thatcher, and rays of
light like R.E.M., the Cure, and, yes, the Furs.
Unlike some of their peers, the Furs have never been granted the historical
importance or accorded the critical recognition of, say, the Smiths -- even
though they link Britain's glam, punk, and new-wave movements. Although they
arrived just after the Sex Pistols imploded, as artists they stood firmly in
the aesthetic void that separated Bryan Ferry from Johnny Rotten. Infatuated
with glamor and emboldened by possibility, Butler and his band managed to sound
both jaded and hungry when they burst on the scene in 1979.
Only now is that legacy beginning to be acknowledged, with modern rock titans
like Smashing Pumpkins, Live, and Counting Crows covering Furs tunes in concert
and on disc. Listening to the 33 tracks on Columbia/Legacy's new two-CD Furs
compilation, Should God Forget: A Retrospective, reconfirms the band's
rightful place in rock's post-Zeppelin history. The career-spanning set, which
includes a handful of unreleased tracks and live versions in addition to the
group's best-known material, chronicles the Furs from their early days of
beautiful chaos and corrosive allure ("Into You like a Train") to their
high-gloss years as a polished new-wave act ("The Ghost in You") to the latter
days of not-so-beautiful chaos that began to look like mere disarray ("There's
a World Outside"). Butler's limited but distinctive voice mirrored the band's
moves, ranging from a bilious, Rotten-esque drawl that leered over John
Ashton's flanged guitars to a very Ferry croon set against the nightlife
backdrop of singles-bar saxophones and synths.
Butler now describes the Furs' initial musical approach as "almost glam-punk
rock with good lyrics." The band sounded defiantly ambitious and
unapologetically untutored all at once -- a disposition Butler credits the punk
climate with encouraging. "Suddenly everything was different. It wasn't like
watching Yes on television and thinking, well, I could never do this in a
million years, it's like trying to win the lottery."
For his stream-of-consciousness sketches, Butler looked to the impressionistic
poetry of Bob Dylan and the gritty urban realism of the Velvet Underground. The
resultant lyrics approximated that remarkable capacity for visceral extremes
that marked both Dylan and Lou Reed: savage and sarcastic one minute,
introspective and melancholy the next. "I didn't care much for the punk-rock
lyric," Butler explains, "though I liked the energy of punk. It's not like I
sat back and said, I wanted the lyrics to sound like Dylan and the saxophones
like Roxy Music, but I wanted that kind of aesthetic. I wanted that sneer.
There was something about it that was a lot crueler and a lot more snide than
punk. Johnny Lydon was great for his time, but next to Bob Dylan he sounded
like a child throwing a tantrum."
Revisiting "Love My Way" and "President Gas" today makes it clear that the
Furs were, indeed, a product of another era. But listening to Butler's new
outfit at Mama Kin, one could almost recall those ancient days when
"alternative" wasn't just a marketing buzzword. "I'm feeling about the new
album the way I did about some of the early Furs stuff," he says. "I've been
playing it a lot, too, which is a good sign. Either that or I'm losing my
taste."
Butler's palate is just fine. Although Trysome Eatone is nowhere to be
found on the Billboard charts, it's a far better disc than his band's
1994 Love Spit Love debut, abounding with the singer's trademark
touches: imagistic lyrics, deftly skewed turns of phrase, and insidious
melodies that radiate bittersweet charm. And, of course, there's that voice.
You could argue that this disc is his strongest since the Furs' zenith of the
early 1980s. But, to paraphrase Lou Reed, those were different times.