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Re-make/Re-model: Becoming Roxy Music

av Michael Bracewell

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A new edition as part of the Faber Social Greatest Hits - books that have taken writing about music in new and exciting directions for the twenty-first century.
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Roxy Music appeared to arrive out of nowhere or, possibly, outer space. Their electrifying 1972 debut album presented a fully formed vision which offered a new form of art pop. Or, if you prefer, a new form of pop art.

This books ends with the release of that classic record and is an exploration of the artistic and cultural milieu the band were shaped by and emerged from - art school, pop art, conceptual art, avant-garde music and high fashion.

The prime movers in Roxy were two fine arts graduates both called Bry(i)an. Ferry studied at Newcastle University where he fell under the influence of the British pop artist Richard Hamilton. Hamilton’s idea that an artist did not have to be committed to one particular style fed into the stylistic eclecticism of the band. Eno seems to have spent his time as an art student, at Ipswich and Winchester, assiduously not creating art but instead expounding elaborate theories about it (his immense facility for doing this has, in a sense, been the cornerstone of his subsequent music career).

Andy Mackay, who was to become the saxophonist and oboeist in Roxy Music, studied music and English at Reading University, and first came into contact with Eno through their shared interest in avant-garde music. The influence of composers like La Monte Young and Terry Riley was to provide a powerful counterpoint to Ferry’s more soul based and Great American Songbook approach. Last, but not least in terms of the evolution of Roxy Music, all three were dedicated dandies.

Bracewell has a tendency to treat Roxy Music as sui generis. They weren’t of course. The curious thing about his book is that he writes about the visual arts world Roxy emerged from at great length but says almost nothing about how they relate to the pop music scene they became part of. It detracts nothing from the brilliance of the band to point out that pop and art were bedfellows long before Roxy Music came along. As George Melly observed in his groundbreaking survey of sixties pop culture Revolt Into Style, published in 1970 when Bryan Ferry was still teaching ceramics at a girls school, the art schools were the great enablers of British pop music. John Lennon, Ray Davies, Pete Townshend and Syd Barrett all attended art schools and the experience informed their work in various ways. David Bowie, the other great practitioner of arty glam rock, didn’t go to art school, but you would certainly be forgiven for thinking that he had. Bowie receives no more than a few passing mentions in the book and the relationship between his work and that of Roxy Music is left unexplored.

Bracewell has interviewed all members of Roxy and all the other key players in the bands’ pre-history and early history. His prose style is rather dry and quasi-academic but, thankfully, regularly interspersed with extended quotations from his cast of characters. What they have to say is anything but dry and constitutes a fascinating oral history of the British art and fashion scene of the sixties and early seventies.

If you’re looking for a biography of Roxy Music this is not it - the book is almost over by the time the band is formed. Bracewell’s approach is extremely wide-ranging and, at times, Roxy Music are lost sight of. To some extent he uses Roxy as an entry point into a particular stretch of British cultural history. But for anyone interested in the symbiotic relationship between art and music that was a feature of this period, particularly in Britain, Re-make/Re-model is rewarding reading. ( )
  gpower61 | Mar 14, 2022 |
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A new edition as part of the Faber Social Greatest Hits - books that have taken writing about music in new and exciting directions for the twenty-first century.

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