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Sam Redlark's avatar

In a clip that recently went viral, Richard Osman delivers some depressing news that points to a significant cultural shift, and not a good one: So far in the 2020s, bands have collectively secured three weeks at Number One in the UK Singles Chart, with the lion's-share of the laurels going to solo artists. It gets worse: One of these bands is Little Mix, who were pieced together from members of rival vocal groups during the eighth season of The X Factor. I would argue that they aren't a band in the conventional sense of a gang of boys or girls, clad in unwashed leather trousers, falling out of the back of a clapped-out van with their instruments. Another of these so-called bands is an ensemble of predominately solo artists collaborating on a gelded cover version of the Foo Fighters 'Time Like These' that radiates an air of muso smugness. You can practically smell the camomile tea. The other band is a little known group of up and comers called The Beatles.

Bands, as a cultural phenomenon, seem to be racing the black rhino to extinction. There are several reasons for this: A dearth of venues where they can cut their teeth; the expense of maintaining a group while also balancing the delicate web of human relationships that are essential to its continuance; advances in technology that favour solo home-recording; and the rise of song-writer / producer who feeds material, mostly to solo artists.

What is slipping through our fingers is a dynamic element that is the exclusive hallmark of bands, both good and bad; successful or unsuccessful. A solo artist; Beyonce, for example, can surround themselves with the best musicians they can lay their hands on, but ultimately what transpires will be a choreographed performance. There is no danger to it. It's an on the rails roller-coaster experience vs a traffic-baiting street luge through San Francisco.

In a band there is a creative tension that fuels collaboration, elevating a group to something that is greater than the sum of its individual parts, while at the same time threatening to wreck the whole enterprise. It can yield unexpected moments during a live performance when musicians suddenly realise that they are meeting on common ground and there follows a desperate, doomed to fail, collective attempt at keeping the ball in the air. I went to see Johnette Napolitano from Concrete Blonde at the Borderline Club, just off Charing Cross Road. Her support was Steve Wynn, who is better known as the frontman for The Dream Syndicate. He had a female drummer with him. During an instrumental break in one of the songs her head was tilted back as she played. She was beaming radiantly at one of the other band members with an expression that seemed to say 'look at me' and he was looking at her, and it was this perfect moment of collaborative musicianship and human connection. I don't remember the song but I remember that part of the performance.

While a solo artist will draw focus and the spotlight, the best bands know that every member has to stand out in some regard. I watched a TV broadcast of Queens of The Stone Age, at Glastonbury, I think. Every performer in that group looked cool as fuck; not just Josh Homme, who has lost the red from his hair and now resembles an elderly Luke Skywalker.

An example of a individuals who achieved more creatively in a group than they did on their own: In 1993, I was walking north along Poland Street in London, Soho. As the window of HMV came into view, I saw that it was dominated by the blown-up cover for the self-titled debut album by Suede – a soft glow image of two androgynous women kissing (cropped from a book titled 'Stolen Glances: Lesbians Take Photographs'). I went in and purchased the record.

Suede, whose bass player, Matt Osman, is the older brother of the aforementioned Richard Osman, emerged on a wave of creativity that was fuelled by an increasingly tense creative partnership between the frontman, Brett Anderson, and the guitar player, Bernard Butler. This was seasoned with a dash of sexual intrigue courtesy of Justine Frischmann – the Helen of Troy of Britpop – who fronted the band Elastica. Animal Lover, perhaps the most makeweight song on Suede's debut, documents a period where Frischmann's dying relationship with Anderson overlapped with her burgeoning romance with Damon Albarn – the lead singer of Blur – during which time she would return to Anderson's bed with scratches down her back.

The band were so dialled-in to their vision that they were throwing excess masterpieces onto the b-sides of their singles. It is incredible now, listening to the likes of 'High Rising', 'Whipsnade', and 'The Big Time' to think that these songs weren't considered for inclusion on an album, though they have since been anthologised.

After Bernard Butler acrimoniously left Suede He released a couple of anodyne solo records that proved beyond doubt that, while he was an exceptional guitar player, he lacked the elan and the charisma that is required of a frontman. He needed somebody else to fill that role. These days he mostly collaborates with other artists, mostly to good effect.

Similarly, following the dissolution of Suede, Brett Anderson attempted a solo career. Absent the musical weight of a band, his songs were bloodless and lacking in energy. He needed a gang. Suede have since reformed and the urgency has returned to his song-writing, though the impetus of those early years, that fuelled the first two albums, was lightning in a bottle. Once something like that's gone, it's gone for good.

The Counterfeiters was published in 1925. Whoever it was in the book who claimed “No masterpiece was ever produced by several people together,” can be forgiven for thinking this, having never heard Suede's second album 'Dog Man Star', or its lead single 'We Are The Pigs', that will add a foot to your height, and put a dangerous swagger in your step, if you hear it playing in public.

Nonetheless, they are wrong.

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Doe KAN's avatar

... for me, this is a masterpiece piece of writing about the Beatles... exquisite. Thank you SO much. Sending gratitude and love to you

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