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AUDIENCE: AUDIENCE
(PSM unnumbered: a German quasi-boot) [1969] Audience
was a unique British band. Like a number of
British rock bands at the end of the 60s and in the early 70s Audience did not
fit neatly into any of the categories which hindsight has supplied us. Audience was not per se progressive,
but could be considered to have exhibited progressive attitudes and elements. Quirky
and individual, Audience was a quartet built around two of its members distinctive
talents. Howard
Werth was the singer (he also played guitar and banjo) and principal songwriter. His voice was malleable and capable of everything
from raucous rasps to sustained vibratos which sounded like a studio effect. He could belt them out, or whisper a song. He sounded like no one else. And
Keith Gemmell played flute, clarinet and tenor sax with extraordinary range and feeling. Using an octave-divider and a harmonizer he could
turn his tenor sax into a whole sax section. Using
an Echoplex (or something like it) he could turn his flute into a flute choir not
unlike the Echoplexed flute in the Blues Projects Flute Thing. Trevor
Williams on bass guitar and Tony Connor on drums rounded out the quartet. If their performances called less attention to
themselves they were nonetheless Werth and Gemmells equals in the realization of the
music. They also variously cowrote the pieces
with Werth and Gemmell. The
music was in the form of songs, not extended forms or suites. Most typically ran between three and five minutes
in length (although two pieces on their third album each ran over seven minutes). The songs drew upon European folk music and
British music hall (blues using whole-notes in major-key scales), and were
akin to what would later in the 70s be called pubrock but
catchier and quirkier. Mixed in were odd
instrumental excursions which might deploy Werths classical guitar or Gemmells
sax tripping over itself in cascades.
Its
not an unappealing album, however. The band
is in place and the elements which would distinguish it are audible, but its a bit
like a demo album: thinner and a bit tamer
than those which would follow. The
demo aspect is underlined by the appearance, as the albums last track,
of an early version of House on the Hill.
But its almost three minutes shorter than the version on the album of that
name.
That
album, a gatefold, was made and sold only in the U.K., but the next album, THE HOUSE ON
THE HILL, had a U.S. release, on the Elektra label (EKS-74100). This album was, like their final album, produced
by Gus Dudgeon who played maracas and cowbell on the album, becoming
Audiences first special guest star.
Hipgnosis the ultra-hip 70s art studio did the covers for this
gatefold album based on an original screenplay by Hipgnosis and Howard
Werth.
This
album was my first exposure to Audience; I received a copy of the album in the mail from
Elektra in a package which included several other Elektra albums, and on first playing it
grabbed me. Its a totally accomplished
album: everything on it works. It includes one of the few covers Audience
recorded, of Screaming Jay Hawkins I Put A Spell On You rather
subdued in comparison with others versions, but very effective. And once again House on the Hill
closes out the album. But this version of the
song is vastly superior to the earlier version: it has more instrumental guts to it and it
better produced as well. After the albums U.S. release the band toured America
opening for The Faces, and, according to Joynson, built up a good underground
following there. My copy of the Elektra
album came with an insert, a four-page booklet which featured a large photo of each band
member and a caption. The
captions are revealing: KEITH GEMMEL [sic], originally from East London, plays saxophone
and flute with psychopathic fury weaving madly around the mike with his sax,
forcing the most impossible notes through the P.A. TONY
CONNOR, also from East London, is as much a dancer as he is a drummer. Sometimes in a fit of rhythmic insanity, he
smashes his drum kit with his bare hands, throwing his body into his cymbals, building to
an orgiastic climax of percussive violence. Then
he will stop suddenly, pick up a small bell, walk to the front of the stage, and ring it
softly a few times. Through
all of this, HOWARD WERTH (the third East Londoner in the group) manages to sing with
clarity and expression, and accompany himself on guitar despite the manic
proceedings. Laying
down a solid bottom for the group is TREVOR WILLIAMS, High Wycombe bassist, who stands off
to the side, stamping around with the predatory instincts of the truly great rock and roll
star and of the criminally insane. Leaving
aside the hyperbole about psychopathic fury, rhythmic insanity,
manic proceedings and the criminally insane, those captions evoke
something of Audiences stage act. Im
sorry I missed their American tour it sounds like it was a lot of fun.
After
LUNCHs release personality rifts, particularly between Keith Gemmell and the
rest of the band, ripped them apart, according to Joynson. That was the end of Audience, although
Joynson says They also performed the score for the Bronco Bullfrog movie (also released under the
name Angel Lane) which was written by Howard
Werth. It was a film shot in the East End [of
London] with a team of kids from a theatre, none of whom were professional
actors. Following
the breakup of Audience, Keith Gemmell was involved in a variety of projects culminating
in his joining Stackridge and
participating in their last two albums of the 70s.
Howard Werth formed a new band (using members of Hookfoot) called Howard
Werth and The Moonbeams, and recorded one album, the 1975 Charisma album KING BRILLIANT
(CAS 11004), using Gus Dudgeon as producer. It
was critically acclaimed but its sales were disappointing.
It was released as a CD (CASCD 1104) in 1992. Earlier,
back in 1973, Charisma put out an Audience compilation album, YOU CANT BEAT THEM (CS
7) in the Charisma Perspective series. It
draws from all three of the Charisma albums, but includes one hitherto unreleased track,
Elixir of Youth. This LP has
never been issued on CD, but Charisma/Virgin did release a compilation CD by Audience,
UNCHAINED (CDVM 9007) in 1992. I have not
seen a copy and dont know which tracks are included on it, but Joynson credits it
with quite informative sleevenotes. Charisma/Virgin
(Virgin bought the label before it was itself taken over by EMI; the Charisma label was
revived for the release of 90s albums by groups like Jellyfish) released
FRIENDS FRIENDS FRIEND on CD in 1992, LUNCH in 1991 and THE HOUSE ON THE HILL
in 1990. While the latter two albums are
presented as musical duplicates of the original LP albums, FRIENDS FRIENDS
FRIEND has a bonus track. This is The
Big Spell, a three-minute piece which is presented in mono. I
recommend all three Charisma albums: they complement each other perfectly and make an
excellent matched set. The first album,
originally released on Polydor in 1969, is more of a curiosity and is necessary only for
die-hard collectors and those (like myself) who need yet more of Audience than the
Charisma albums provide. But even the CD may
be difficult to find. [02/18/01] Visit the Howard Werth - Audience website: Click Here. |
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