THE
VOICE - May 1982
TOM ROBINSON'S DAMP DENIMS
'North by Northwest" Album Review by Don Shewey
Taxi Zum Klo and Nighthawks, two recent films from Europe about gay male
life, both concern schoolteachers who spend a lot of their time in the
car, driving to work, going to movies or meetings, looking for love. Tom
Robinson's new album North by Northwest could have been the soundtrack
for either film: it's first-rate cruising music. Robinson has put in his
own time as a teacher of sorts; after establishing himself as rock's gay
spokesman with the bitterly ironic "Glad To Be Gay," he spent two years
and two albums securing impeccable political credentials, preaching "Don't
Take No for an Answer" and seizing liner-note space to print names and
addresses of activist groups for abortion rights, save-the-whales, Puerto
Rican solidarity, and other causes. Admirable in theory, his message rocked,
too. On tour Robinson proved to be a gay Bob Marley, inspiring people
to get-up-stand-up and get down at the same time.
But as with teachers who taught me intellectual ideals and model behavior
in school, I always wondered about Tom Robinson's personal life. Did he
have one? Was he lucky in love? Did his boyfriend(s) treat him right?
Sector 27 started getting into it with "Can't Keep Away," a sardonic number
about the joyless excitement of cruising public toilets ("Door says welcome
when you're all alone/Come in, sit down make yourself at home"), but that
album was primarily a group effort, riff-heavy and emotionally anaemic.
By comparison, NxNW is an open diary replete with obsessions, anger,
and references so private that, they're at once cryptic (who's Claire
Rayner? what's Uncle Po?) and inviting (fill in your own). Like the identical
scenes Taxi zum Klo and Nighthawks where the teachers "come out" to their
students, NxNW is an act of confession that doesn't eradicate the noble
image of moral exemplar but gives it a human dimension of temperament
and need.
Robinson's LP tells a story of sorts about domestic bliss, loss, sexual
compulsiveness, fear of attachment, empty holidays, memories of the lost
lover, rejection, flight, connection, and (temporary) contentment. "Atmospherics,"
cowritten with Peter Gabriel, opens with a detailed shot of inate coupledom-brooding,
unflorid, vaguely punky; one works at "the bureau," the other catches
a double bill of "Bitter Tears and Taxi to the Klo," and later they scan
the dial from Moscow to Cologne listening to the radio and smoking in
bed. This equilibrium is quickly disrupted by a breakup or death (murder?)
as the singer wanders inconsolably from laundromat to Dial-a-Prayer crying
"Now Martin's Gone." (Same chap as TRB's "Martin" and Secret Policemen's
Ball's "1967"?) Grief sends him back zum Klo to fill the vacuum with anonymous
cock while "hating it all" in a reggaefied "Can't Keep Away"; reggae is
the punk blues, and this version is certainly more ... well, more oppressive
than Sector 27's, whose hyper B-52's guitar line is replaced by a dirgey
skating-rink organ.
NxNWs most haunting cut is "Looking for a Bonfire," in which our guy goes
trick-or-treating on Guy Fawkes' Day with a firecracker in his pants and
a thirst for- love? trouble? revenge? In a wonderful jumble of storyline
and erotic metaphor, he starts up a flame but then backs off, too recently
burned. Burping apocalyptic bad humor on "Merrily Up on high," eyeing
a shy guy on "In the Cold Again," Robinson reeks restlessness. But eventually
something seems to take, because the album ends with "Love Comes," Lewis
Furey's rather mournful ode to beating the odds: "Did you ever think you
and me/Would ever end up happy?" The cycle of loving, losing, and loving
again is often treated as tragedy in pop song, but to Robinson it's an
accepted reality. And it's this matter-of-factness that distinguishes
him from such gay romantics as Peter Allen, Sylvester, and David Lasley
- indeed, from romantics of every stripe.
Almost as exciting as the revolutionary candor of its lyrics is the
peculiar studio sound of NxNW. Recorded in Hamburg with just three musicians-producer/
guitarist Richard Mazda, drummer Steve Laurie, Robinson on bass and keyboards-
the album bristles with battered-machine sound effects, the swooning and
buzzing of sick synthesizers.
This eerie aural environment suggests the built-in dissonance and complicated
wiring of modern romance; it also reminds me of the droogy disco you hear
in gritty British films like Nighthawks and Bloody Kids. And particularly
on a cut like "Bonfire" - with its ominous synthesizer melody, cheesy
organ backbeat, and the incredibly rangy guitar solo that cuts through
the chorus like an excited heartbeat gone wild on the EKG- the disjunctive
interplay of instruments and intentional crudity of the sound perfectly
capture, to my mind, the butch lyricism and sullen masculinity of post-Stonewall
gay culture. So sinister yet so synthetic: all damp denim, flannel biceps,
inscrutable glances.
Glimpses of gayness in pop music usually tend toward camp or coyness or
emotional masochism, but I can't think of anyone who has evoked the day-to-day
life of Everygayman (right down to the mention of Fassbinder and Taxi
Zum Klo) as well as Tom Robinson. Even his most sodden harmonies and private
hieroglyphics draw me in deeper than better-made records I enjoy, like
Marshall Crenshaw or Mirage. I guess it's no big surprise. I take to Tom
Robinson for the same reason you'll find matrimonially inclined rock crits
embracing X, Human Switchboard, and lately Lou Reed on these pages: hey,
Mister, that's me up on the jukebox.
DON SHEWEY |