The most elevated of these will even cite some of his more peculiar lyrics ("I’d better get a penny farthing and Marvelous Marvin, slam dunk with a concrete record deal" - McFlurry, "Burnt you Puff Daddy, it maced you bastards. Good. I fucking laugh like fuck at your wannabe labels" - Bronx in a Six) as if to prove he's merely an addled tramp or a poseur of the highest order rather than WB Yeats or William Wordsworth.
Some would say that a bloke shouting in an East Midlands accent over pre-recorded repetitive, brutal, and minimal beats is anything but that (and I also know of longtime fans who have gone off them of late) but I'm still waving the flag for bands like Sleaford Mods and those that came before them. Be it numerous punk, hip-hop, and grime artists or their more obvious forebears like The Streets and Renegade Soundwave.
In Shakespeare's Sister, The Smiths joked that protest singers should come with an acoustic guitar in hand but protest music takes many shapes and forms. The acid house revolution proved words weren't even necessary so Williamson's surreal, sometimes bordering on pure gibberish, turns of phrase shouldn't really be a stumbling block for people. His views on politics, the record industry, and the dire state of Britain today are pretty clear at all times. He just abstracts them to give them menace and edge. Its protest music, but in a highly prismatic form.
Fizzy's talk of "warm bottles of Smirnoff", Subtraction's nod to LinkedIn, and the "pub dickheads" in Top It Up all paint a picture of an all too familiar Britain. A place that can be wonderfully heartwarming and utterly frustrating at the same time. When their sights aren't set on the political classes their ire is often directed towards their musical peers. There's an aside about Brit Awards in McFlurry and, in Flipside, Williamson gives it to Blur with both barrels with the hilarious couplet "Graham Coxon looks like a left wing Boris Johnson". Bang Someone Out even has a reference to Donkey Kong which leaves us in no doubt that Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn are men who have been around a bit. Men who have seen a few things.
But it's not about individual songs. Rather the whole package. Ninety minutes of assault probably shouldn't be so damned pleasurable. When I wrote about Sleaford Mods in May this year I praised the "working class anger refracted through the broken lens of the experience of living in the UK in 2019 to reflect a country where the people who sleep in piss stained alley ways are far more worthy of our love and protection than those that hold high office" and when I wrote about them in September 2017 I eulogised about how they could "weave it all together into a diorama of dystopia, disillusion, and drink and drugs fuelled escapism".
But the main support, for me, as ever, came from friends, beer, and my unshaking faith in the power of music to create a fairer, more joyful, and more beautiful society. Sleaford Mods ain't full of hate. They're full of love.
Great stuff, nailed it as usual.
ReplyDeleteNice work Dave! I’ve not actually caught them live since 2015 and would love to hear Eton Alive face to faces.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ben and 'unknown'.
ReplyDeleteFantastic stuff as usual
ReplyDeleteTa
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