The Chameleons are a frustrating band at times, mostly due
to their difficult discography. I say this because they've only ever released
four albums of original material, yet there are at least sixteen assorted
"other" full-length releases, some of which even span two discs. For
a fairly short-lived band that only released about 60 unique songs, that's
quite a feat. They've complicated their catalog with an endless stream of
compilations, live albums, acoustic re-recordings, and archival releases of
demos, outtakes, b-sides, and radio sessions. Plus, most of these extraneous
albums were printed in very limited quantities, making them hard to find and
expensive to purchase. The recent reissue campaign has only added more material
to the mix.
Last week they reissued their only album of original
material released during their reunion, Why Call It Anything, and an
apparently new collection of assorted rarities, Dreams in Celluloid. I
felt compelled to share my thoughts and analysis of these albums because there isn't
much information available anywhere else on what they actually contain. I'll
discuss Why Call It Anything first.
[Why Call It Anything (original release): not Reg Smithies' best album art.]
[Why Call It Anything (2013 reissue): not an improvement over the original artwork.]
Artist: The Chameleons
Album: Why Call It Anything
Release Date: July 2001, reissued June 2013
Label: Artful (original), Blue Apple (reissue)
Release Date: July 2001, reissued June 2013
Label: Artful (original), Blue Apple (reissue)
Producer: Dave M. Allen (original/disc 1 only), The
Chameleons (all)
Tracklisting:
Disc 1 (original album):
01. Shades
02. Anyone Alive?
03. Indiana
04. Lufthansa
05. Truth Isn't Truth Anymore
06. All Around
07. Dangerous Land
08. Music in the Womb
09. Miracles and Wonders
10. Are You Still There?
Disc 2 (Live at the Academy):
01. A Person Isn't Safe Anywhere These Days
02. Perfume Garden
03. Anyone Alive?
04. Indiana
05. Caution
06. Swamp Thing
07. Lufthansa
08. Dangerous Land
09. Up the Down Escalator
10. Miracles and Wonders
11. Shades
12. Monkeyland
13. Second Skin
03. Indiana
04. Lufthansa
05. Truth Isn't Truth Anymore
06. All Around
07. Dangerous Land
08. Music in the Womb
09. Miracles and Wonders
10. Are You Still There?
Disc 2 (Live at the Academy):
01. A Person Isn't Safe Anywhere These Days
02. Perfume Garden
03. Anyone Alive?
04. Indiana
05. Caution
06. Swamp Thing
07. Lufthansa
08. Dangerous Land
09. Up the Down Escalator
10. Miracles and Wonders
11. Shades
12. Monkeyland
13. Second Skin
Why Call It Anything is a strange album. It was
released in 2001, one year after the band reunited to release an album of
acoustic re-recordings of their old material (Strip). It clearly sounds
like the Chameleons, but it feels more direct, less dreamy and abstract. The
songs have simpler arrangements, less dynamic range, and less subtlety.
However, the album does pack some power, and the songs are surprisingly catchy.
It's not a great album, but certainly a good one, especially for a band
reunited after a 13-year hiatus.
This reissue is ever stranger. It claims to be remastered
but after examining the waveforms the only difference is slight compression and
amplification (see loudness
war). It also contains a second bonus disc supposedly containing the 2002
album Live at the Academy. However, that album was originally a two-disc
release totaling 18 tracks, whereas this single disc houses just 13 tracks. No
mention of these excisions is made. Supposedly, this disc is also remastered,
but it sounds nearly identical to the original release, barring the familiar
compression and amplification and the presence of less audience noise before
and after the songs. The live performances are good, but what happened to
"Pleasure and Pain", "Seriocity", "Soul in
Isolation", "Splitting in Two", and "Tears"? And why
does every live album released by a reunited band seem rather redundant after
listening to their original live tapes?
[Dreams in Celluloid.]
Artist: The Chameleons
Album: Dreams in Celluloid
Release Date: June 2013
Label: Blue Apple
Producer: The Chameleons (all but disc 1 tracks 1, 5, 11,
12), Steve Lillywhite (disc 1 tracks 1, 5, 11, 12), Colin Richardson (disc 1
track 13), CJ (aka Chris Jones) (disc 2)
Tracklisting:
Disc 1:
01. The Fan and the Bellows
02. Dali's Picture
03. Every Day I'm Crucified
04. Looking Inwardly
05. Nostalgia
06. Turn to the Vices
07. Love Is
08. Nathan's Phase
09. Dreams in Celluloid
10. Things I Wish I'd Said
11. Less Than Human
12. In Shreds
13. Prisoners of the Sun
Disc 2 (Tony Fletcher Walked on Water EP):
01. Is It Any Wonder
02. Free for All
03. The Healer
04. Denims and Curls
02. Free for All
03. The Healer
04. Denims and Curls
Anyone familiar with the Chameleons' back-catalog can't help
but notice that the first disc of Dreams in Celluloid looks a lot like The
Fan and the Bellows (1986) and Dali's Picture (1993), two previous
collections of early material. Any suspicions of redundancy will be immediately
confirmed by a simple listening test or waveform comparison. Of course, the
Chameleons have a long history of hiding their details, so it is extremely
difficult to know for sure exactly what is what. Nonetheless, I will do my best
to determine what exactly is to be found on Dreams in Celluloid. First,
I will examine these earlier releases by the band.
Supposedly, "Dali's Picture is the original demo
album the band cut and sent out to various labels" (source).
The recordings are somewhat raw and there are few overdubs, so this is easy to
believe. It is not easy to know exactly when these recordings where made or
even who drummed on them – Brian Schofield was the band's first drummer,
present for their first John Peel session in June 1981, but replaced by John
Lever sometime between then and the December 1981 recording sessions with Steve
Lillywhite for their first single ("In Shreds"). I suspect that Dali's Picture was recorded between
those two events, most likely with John Lever, for the following reasons. Peel
invited the band to his show on the strength of a demo, but that demo supposedly
was a rehearsal recording before the band had found a drummer (according to
George Gimarc's Post Punk Diary). Schofield's name appears only in the
credits for the Here Today, Gone Tomorrow and John Peel Sessions collections and nowhere
else in their catalog, and although that could just be revisionist history, the
drumming on Dali's Picture does sound
a lot like Lever's style. This is easy to hear by comparing the drumming
arrangements on the songs recorded for both the Dali's Picture demos and the Lillywhite sessions.
The Fan and the
Bellows was apparently originally an unauthorized release that was almost
immediately blocked by the band, but it was then released in several countries
on multiple labels anyway, so perhaps the band acquiesced in the end.
Thankfully, someone bothered to print the copyright years and production
details on the album sleeve (see here).
The first half of the album contains the four tracks recorded with Lillywhite
("In Shreds", "Less Than Human", "Nostalgia", and
"The Fan and the Bellows"), a 7" edit of "Nostalgia",
and "Prisoners of the Sun", the 1983 b-side of "Up the Down
Escalator". "In Shreds" would become the band's first single, released
in March 1982 and backed with "Less Than Human". "In
Shreds" would later be re-issued in 1985, backed by "Nostalgia";
both tracks were appended to the CD release of their second album, What Does Anything Mean? Basically (1985).
The second half of The
Fan and the Bellows appear to be demos from 1981, produced only by the band
themselves. A quick check identifies "Every Day I'm Crucified" and
"Love Is" as duplicates of the material on Dali's Picture, but mastered slightly differently. (The main difference
is just less tape hiss.) "Endlessly Falling", "Turn to the
Vices", and "Nathan's Phase" sound like they came from the same
sessions but have been otherwise unreleased.
["In Shreds" 1982 Epic single. Artwork later reused for The Fan and the Bellows.]
["In Shreds" 1985 Statik single.]
Why is any of this important? Well, Dreams in Celluloid contains next to nothing when it comes to liner
notes and details, so careful comparison with these past releases is necessary
to figure out what is actually present on this new collection. It turns out that
everything on the first disc of Dreams in
Celluloid was previously released on one of these two prior compilations,
and sometimes on both. Here's the breakdown:
01. The Fan and the Bellows – Steve Lillywhite session
outtake, released on The Fan and the Bellows.
02. Dali's Picture – demo, released on Dali's Picture.
03. Every Day I'm Crucified – demo, released on both The
Fan and the Bellows and Dali's Picture, but mastering sounds more
similar to the latter.
04. Looking Inwardly – demo, released on Dali's Picture.
05. Nostalgia – b-side of 1985 Statik "In Shreds"
single, from Steve Lillywhite session, also released on What Does Anything
Mean? Basically CD and The Fan and the Bellows.
06. Turn to the Vices – demo, released on The Fan and the
Bellows.
07. Love Is – demo, released on The Fan and the Bellows
and Dali's Picture, but mastering sounds more similar to the former.
08. Nathan's Phase – demo, released on The Fan and the
Bellows.
09. Dreams in Celluloid – demo (early version of
"Second Skin"), released on Dali's Picture.
10. Things I Wish I'd Said – demo, released on Dali's
Picture.
11. Less Than Human – b-side of 1982 Epic "In
Shreds" single, from Steve Lillywhite session, also released on The Fan
and the Bellows.
12. In Shreds – single, released 1982 by Epic and 1985 by
Statik, from Steve Lillywhite session, also released on The Fan and the
Bellows.
13. Prisoners of the Sun – b-side of 1983 Statik "Up
the Down Escalator" single, also released on The Fan and the Bellows.
However, don't get too optimistic: there are just a few
tracks from both The Fan and the Bellows and Dali's Picture that
are not to be found on Dreams in Celluloid and are otherwise difficult
to find. The Fan and the Bellows contains the only released version of
"Endlessly Falling" as well as the 7" edit of
"Nostalgia", originally released as the b-side of Statik's 1985
"In Shreds" 7" single. Dali's Picture contains otherwise
unavailable demos of "The Fan and the Bellows", "Less Than
Human", "Monkeyland", and "Nostalgia". Note that any
of these titles mentioned above that appear on Script of the Bridge
(1983) or the vinyl release of What Does Anything Mean? Basically (1985)
are later re-recordings.
Lest you think that this is all of the original studio
ephemera from the early days of the Chameleons, you would be wrong. A rare
early recording of "Here Today" (different than the version found on Script of the Bridge) can only be found on the 1982 Statik
compilation Your Secret's Safe with Us. Two other early recordings,
"Dear Dead Days" and "Things I Wish I'd Said", apparently
recorded in 1981 with early drummer Brian Schofield (source),
can only be found on the rare Here Today, Gone Tomorrow (1992) and the
2008 reissue of Script of the Bridge. Both albums also contain an
alternate version of "In Shreds", perhaps recorded in 1983. No
further information is available for these three rarities.
At any rate, the Lillywhite session tracks are quite good
("Nostalgia" is one of my favorite songs), "Prisoners of the
Sun" is a decent instrumental, and the rest of the demos are nothing
special but of some interest in terms of offering witness to the band's
development. Dreams in Celluloid does cover the best material from this
period, but it is sadly incomplete.
[Tony Fletcher Walked on Water EP. Good luck reading the text on the cover.]
Enough about the first disc of Dreams in Celluloid.
Thankfully, the second disc is pretty simple: it's just a reissue of the
treasured Tony Fletcher Walked on Water EP, recorded in 1987 right
before the band broke up, halfway released in 1990 by singer/bassist Mark
Burgess before being blocked by guitarist Dave Fielding. These four songs have
also been released on Northern Songs (1994) and some editions of Return
of the Roughnecks (1997). The EP has always been hard to find and it is
unclear to me why anyone in the band would want to hide it. Simply put, it's
amazing and stands up exceedingly well as a strong follow-up to Strange
Times (1986). Each of the four songs continues the dreamy, powerful,
melodic trend brought to the fore on the preceding album. There isn't a weak
second on the whole thing.
Conclusion:
Both of these new releases are frustrating due to their
incompleteness – they offer some good material, but at the cost of skipping
over a few tracks that somehow got left behind and thus remain obscure and
expensive to find. The remastering job on all the material is slight and
perhaps even a downgrade due to loss of dynamic range. I'm at least happy that
most of this material is finally in print again, especially the Tony
Fletcher EP, but I'm disappointed that these collections are incomplete and
offer nothing previously unreleased. (Even the cover art of Dreams in
Celluloid, which I originally assumed to be a new work by Dave Fielding,
was previously used in part for the "Singing Rule Britannia (While the
Walls Close In)" single.)
["Singing Rule Britannia (While the Walls Close In)" single.]
Scores:
Why Call It Anything
(original release): B
Live at the Academy
(original release): B
Why Call It Anything (2013 reissue): C
Why Call It Anything (2013 reissue): C
Dali's Picture: C
The Fan and the
Bellows: C+
Tony Fletcher Walked
on Water EP: A+
Dreams in Celluloid:
B
P.S. Both Here Today,
Gone Tomorrow and John Peel Sessions
remain mostly overlooked in the Chameleons reissue campaign over the past five
years. While the former is scattershot and only occasionally interesting, the
latter is a fantastic collection of very high-quality performances.
[Edit 2015.02.11: The John Peel Sessions album has been reissued and I reviewed it here!]
[Edit 2015.02.11: The John Peel Sessions album has been reissued and I reviewed it here!]