10 November 2008
tell your friends...
Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Patrick Stolley and Brad Kopplin
It was the Sunday morning following Wire’s tour-ending show at Chicago’s Metro the night before, which drew radiant reviews from Sun-Times and Sound Opinions critic Jim DeRogatis and from the Tribune, similar to the likes of those that Barack Obama in his bulletproof case, Grant Park, an Indian summer of a night and the clear-headed American majority got last Tuesday. The legendary English punk band, from all accounts, had been as blissfully explosive and politically fascinating as ever before in its 32-year musical career, which has been the lesson plan for countless numbers of the new breed of post-punk bands who feel that they too can be edgy and insightful and educated, just like the originators – the three old men who remain their heroes and forefathers. … [Story Continues Below]
First song
Silk Skin Paws (Wire) [3.89MB] [3058 downloads]
– original version appears on A Bell Is A Cup…Until It Is Struck
Originally appeared on 1988’s “A Bell Is A Cup…Until It Is Struck” and was added to our live set specifically for the North American shows. This particular arrangement was influenced by the 7” version with its chiming guitars.
Second song
Mr. Marx's Table (Wire) [4.46MB] [2802 downloads]
– original version appears on Send
Originally appeared on Send from 2003. This song has been in our live set since 2002 and favoured because of its dynamic arrangement.
Third song
Mekon Headman (Wire) [2.70MB] [2792 downloads]
– original version appears on Object 47
From the current album Object 47 (2008) and featuring Graham on vocals. People might wonder why we didn’t choose only songs from our new album but we wanted to choose songs which represent our live set. The album is perfectly capable of standing for itself!
Fourth song
Boiling Boy (Wire) [5.83MB] [2798 downloads]
– original version appears on A Bell Is A Cup…Until It Is Struck
Originally on 1988’s A Bell Is A Cup…Until It Is Struck in a very different version. The genesis of this version dates from the set of 2000, although the 2008 version takes it further with the “song” section given greater beauty and the “sonic” section given greater sonicness!
An introduction from Wire’s Colin Newman:
In keeping with Daytrotter’s “played” feel we chose four songs from the set we have been touring throughout Europe & North America during 2008. We did this session the day after the last date of the North American tour (in Chicago), which was in fact our last date of 2008! We never attempt to “reproduce” album versions in our live sets, so each piece must find its expression as a live entity. In that way this studio recorded version of Wire playing live was a unique document. Falling at the end of our most extensive touring year since 1987 it became a unique document recorded at a unique time!
I’ll introduce each piece with a brief history and something about its place in the 2008 live set.
Colin Newman, Graham Lewis and Robert Grey are the wizened players in one of London’s most influential punk bands at a time when the city’s punk scene was establishing itself as something grimier and filthier – with rage and youth but no rivet gun to send the points into the floor joists, making them stick like claws and arched doorways. What Newman, Lewis, Grey and then guitarist Bruce Gilbert made was an even odder kind of punk rock that was artful and could have been leather-bound though it would have shook itself right out of those constricting books and back out onto the streets. Really, for the working lads and the toiling people, Wire were and are still more for the poly-sci and mathematical brains than for the safety pins, the mosh pits and the mohawks. It’s a pronounced difference that’s driven home in all of the group’s various works – that this was music that deserved introspection and investigation. It wasn’t just music for the sake of making a statement and it wasn’t just music for the sake of making millions. It was music that was its own testament and the songs that Wire wrote in the late 70s and early 80s don’t have a stale bone in their bodies. They stack up still as if we’re looking into the face of modernism, taut and gritty songs that cut to the quick and get serious before anyone’s had a chance to take their coats off and shag a drink. It’s not glamour music and it was never music meant to inspire an epidemic of likeminded individuals, and in some ways it didn’t for a long time, leaving Wire as the lions at the top of the hill, able to roar and find the effects to be how they wished them to be. The guitar sounds and trickeries are hunting and prowling, searing and silvery, like metal apocalyptically grating across concrete and making a luscious industrial forest. The bass acted as the palpitations of an urgent heart, pounding the clothes away from the chest and Grey’s drums are efficient, pounding and relentlessly moody. Even as these men have moved on in years, their relevancy has not wavered and in this session they demonstrate – along with touring auxiliary guitarist Margaret Fielder McGinnis – the everlasting vibrancy of their music. It has acquired no gray hairs and its ambitious exploration of atmospherics and sonic landscapes is as flashy as it always was, reflecting the short introduction made in the left-hand corner of the band’s official website, stating that the band is still active and they still get together to experiment, which still leads to “confounding expectations.” Confounding decades, confounding people and still chasing that angular muse no matter how many years it lasts is what Wire is at its utter core. It’s watching Grey slip off his comfortable travel/every day shoes and into the hybrid of old school basketball/prehistoric skater/military shoes as he stoically readies himself to do his work behind the kit. It’s seeing Newman scream into a microphone and thrash on a guitar and make it look like as thoughtful of a series of gestures as someone articulating the birth of their child and it’s seeing Lewis, who looks like he’s a man who takes his pancakes and eggs in black turtlenecks, coats and dapper black shoes and slacks and still would be the best person to ever take to a pub, live through his bass to know that there is no imitation.
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Awesome! But surely you mean “Bruce Gilbert” and “Margaret Fiedler McGinnis”…
I saw them here in NYC and then went to see them the next night in Philly. Unbelievable. As I tell my friends, two chords good, one chord best. Still one of the best bands around. The Read and Burn EPs are must haves. Like Mission of Burma they are better then ever.
Wire=God.
How to download the songs
Hit the big button that says Download, that will do the trick
It makes so much sense to do Silk Skin Paws with this much bite and drive — genius — fits perfectly with the contemporary Wire. Most bands become more bland as time goes on. Wire only become more ferocious. Wire are the well that never runs dry.
Awwww shit! Blessed signals for mankind. And cats who like good notes. A private jet is similar yet opposite to the analogy of an Outdoor Winer on the earth pickin’ them grapes.
I’m stoned.
I just wish you guys would stop using excessive compression/loudness when mastering your CDs. Get Steve Hoffman to master them instead—he’s the best. Or pick Barry Diament at Soundkeeper.com
thanks daytrotter and wire, but where’s the live dvd/cd from the tour? more is more!
Excellent session! But why 128 kbps? It kills the harmonics. I guess beggars can’t be choosers, though – any Wire is better than 99.9% of anyone else. Thank you Daytrotter!
Mr German, thanks for the tips. I’ve done 350+ sessions tracking and mastering for DT, and I can tell you that I compress each input, sometimes twice, there are stereo comps on the subs, a comp on the two buss, a little opto and a little FET on the mastering…and I want MORE! hahaha! But really, Robert G IS a compressor. Right foot=attack, left foot=release, left hand=knee (hard), and right hand ratio (10:1). Rock and ROll=compression.
Oh how I love to hear wire. Stick yr compression where the sun don’t shine. The beauty of the opening chords of Silk Skin Paws is retort enough. Grow up and enjoy them. Also, Mr Grey is an amazing drummer. I just love them.
Thank you! I appreciate receiving the excellent Wire Daytrotter Sessions. The deft lyrics of Graham Lewis and Colin Newman intrigue me to know end.
Pure and unadulterated class.
Thanks again Daytrotter. You never fail to please!!!
Wire sound really good this time in their life. I saw saw them around 15 times in the UK in the 70’s and sad though it is that they are no longer youthful like we all were then, I am glad they are still doing Wire. Backstage at Erics in Liverpool in 1978 I met Colin Newman for the first and last time. He beckoned me into their dressing room and we shook hands and that was it. 30 years ago. I was 50 this week.
I first saw Wire in 1977, memorably supporting The Saints at The Marquee Club in London. All these years later and the old gits can still produce the goods.
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Excellent. Concise, descriptive and reverent. These guys are the origin of most modern music. It’s all there…