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Godley & Creme - Consequences CD (album) cover

CONSEQUENCES

Godley & Creme

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Evolver
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams
4 stars Sides 1,2 and 6 (of the vinyl version) MUST be heard by any prog fan. G&C use lush arrangements, Gizmo strings, and numerous recorded sound effects to create a set of musical landscapes that transport the listener. A highlight (to me, at least) is The Flood, which uses the sound of water drops beginning in a mild rhythm, steadily increasing into a delge. Listen to this on headphones, with the volume turned up.

Sides 3,4 & 5 are primarily a strangely funny Peter Cook comedy about a couple and their lawyers attempting to negotiate a divorce in an office located in an odd musician's attic, while outside, the weather is threatening to bring an end to the world (as we know it). Yes, it sounds weird, and it is. Interspersed are a handful of G&C tunes, not their best.

The final side is Blint's Tune, a semi-orchestral (OK, the orchestra is actually the Gizmo) piece, that is intended to tame the wild weather. It's a great piece, and when listened with the entire album, a draining experience.

Report this review (#140800)
Posted Thursday, September 27, 2007 | Review Permalink
5 stars "Consequences" is quite difficult album to listen especially for these who are not familiar with 10cc albums and later Godley & Creme albums as well. It's difficult because of its length mostly and because that is a very weird mix of a comedy sketch and music story. But the music is just fabulous. Gizmotron orgy indeed. The first two sides of the album are the most exciting, full of experiments. They show brilliantly the elements of the world in the language of music: wind, fire, ground, water. Song "The Wind" is a must-listen. Very satisfying musically is also "Sleeping Earth". Godley & Creme made and an excelent job either musically and technically, because the sound effects are really stunning. Though, in my opinion, the album would be a perfect masterpiece if only consist the sides A and B (before the dialogues starts), it deserves five stars anyway.
Report this review (#229408)
Posted Saturday, August 1, 2009 | Review Permalink
Dobermensch
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars A boring album when listened to in a single sitting, but pretty good when chopped up into individual parts. Peter Cook's spoken sections are decidedly dreary and somewhat repetitive, but are quite amusing in that he gets more bladdered throughout. The narrative just seems to go round and round in circles.

I didn't laugh at any part of this album, but found it occasionally riveting in a 'What the hell's gonna happen next' sort of way.

For '77 this is groundbreaking stuff indeed . All sorts of odd experamentalism is used throughout, mainly on the instrumental parts which sound quite strange indeed. State of the art electronics are utilised making it sound far more modern than the year in which it was recorded. This equipment must have cost an arm and a leg back then.

This is an adventure into some weird territory where everything is based on new recording technology which is taken to extremes. Every sound is crystal clear - for example - the section of some guy brushing his teeth.

A pair of headphones are what you need to fully appreciate this - It's undoubtedly an original recording but suffers somewhat from the not so funny Peter Cook spoken parts, but rises from the ashes with some good Godley and Creme polyphonic vocals which sound unlike nobody else.

Report this review (#303153)
Posted Sunday, October 10, 2010 | Review Permalink
HolyMoly
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Retired Admin
4 stars Kevin Godley and Lol Creme were songwriting partners in the very successful art-pop band10cc in the mid 1970s. The other songwriting partnership in that band, Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart, were the more conventional poppers, while Godley and Creme generally steered the band into quirkier territory. In fact, while in 10cc, they invented an electronic device called the "Gizmo", a little box attached to the bridge end of a guitar with a little keyboard on it. The effect it produced was a "bowing" effect (as in violin bow), I guess similar in concept to the "E-bow" developed years later. Eventually they figured out how to make a wide range of sounds with this device, and decided in 1976 to make a demonstration single to help promote their invention. That was the original plan, anyway.

What eventually happened was that Godley and Creme left 10cc to devote their full energies to this, a vast three-record concept album based almost entirely on sounds produced by the Gizmo. Imagine what guts those guys had. The result is one of the most confounding, eccentric album packages ever conceived. But is it good? Yes and no.

The concept: Mother Nature reclaims the Earth with violent storms and other natural disasters, destroying everything in her path; such are the "Consequences" of Man's abuse of Earth's natural resources. Meanwhile an eccentric man (who has predicted all along that this would happen, and even correctly predicted the day it would happen) composes a Piano Concerto designed to pacify Mother Nature and thus save the human race. Meanwhile (and here's where things get really weird), there's a very long and somewhat tedious black comedy going on in this man's attic (?) between two lawyers and their clients who are in the process of divorce proceedings. In the end, this eccentric man (Mr. Blint) unleashes his grand Piano Concerto (all of side 6, as it happens), and presumably all ends well, since I'm still alive and writing this review right now.

The execution: The first record (sides one and two) is entirely instrumental, and entirely performed using the Gizmo. Musical sounds of every conceivable type are blended in exciting ways - horns, strings, wind effects, crashing waves, voices, a large rock festival being decimated by a storm, and so on, all produced by this device. Just read this excerpt from the producer's fascinating liner notes included in the set:

"Getting a guitar to sound like a saxophone seemed an impossible task, but it was achieved after three days in the studio. Each note of a guitar solo was recorded separately and faded in on the track so there would be no percussive element. The track was sent through a speaker and out of a rubber hose with perforated cigarette paper at the end. Enough pressure was displaced by forcing the sound through the holes of the cigarette paper to give the rasp of a saxophone"

Far out, huh? Good thing we now have samplers to do all that sort of thinking for us.

Sides three, four and five are dominated by a strange little comedic play written and performed by the talented comedian Peter Cook. This is where the dialogue concerning the divorce proceedings mentioned above happens. Low key pop songs (songs! the first time I actually mentioned songs in this review!) show up every now and then, but they seem secondary to the dry, pun-filled, not-quite-funny-but-not-quite-anything-else-either dialogue. This is the part of the album I'm most prone to skipping, mainly because the dialogue is really hard to digest unless you listen very closely (most of it is real quiet), and even then I still find myself scratching my head in confusion most of the time. Seems like they could have thought this part through a little better.

Finally, side six is "Blint's Tune (Movements 1-17)", in all its pretentious glory (I mean that in an endearing sense). A 14 minute Piano Concerto (still relying heavily on Gizmo sounds, but featuring real piano) that really is quite dramatic, enjoyable, and satisfying. I'm still left wondering what the point of all this was, and why we needed three records to do it, but it's as good a finale as I could have asked for.

When I first heard about this album a few years ago, I longed to own it, despite the fact that every review I read said it was terrible. It's just one of those oddities that exemplify the kind of anything-goes atmosphere that pervaded certain intellectual sectors in the 1970s - this was released, by the way, with full support by a major label, Polygram/Mercury, who thought they just might have a new "Tubular Bells" on their hands. Using primitive technology by today's standards, Godley and Creme aimed for nothing less than making an album with sounds never before heard on a record. And they pulled it off - barely. But I'll give this basically three-star album an extra star just for showing so much moxie.

Report this review (#772445)
Posted Saturday, June 16, 2012 | Review Permalink
3 stars After 10cc's fourth album "How dare you!", Kevin Godley & Lol Creme left the band to begin an own musical journey of some albums. I will here follow their discography and try to point out my opinion about the music I encounter. 1977, the same year Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart made Deceptive Bends, thirty-eight years ago, Godley & Creme made their first one: "Consequences". The cover is black with a cloud in the middle.

Consequences is a difficult record to handle. It lasts for almost two ours and I was a triple-LP when it came. There are a few kind out usual songs and a lot of sound experiments that are very progressive. In this case I believe the label "prog related" is not enough to describe the music. Together with this the record also contains a long radio play by the comedian Peter Cook. Well, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme has here made an interesting mess. There are so many sound experiments and talking on this album that you could be annoyed if you felt that you wanted some ordinary music. "Consequences" isn't a place for ordinary music but still I think most people will find things to love here. The comical play that is separated in many parts would amuse many, it is funny and the extremely progressive compositions are intriguing as well. Other, such as me prefer the album's quite ordinary songs which are lovely in many ways. I will now gave you my favourites on the album.

"Five O'Clock in the morning" which also is the most usual track is totally fantastic. It contains lovely vocals from Godley & Creme and the melody and the text brings me joy all over my house(10/10). The short "Honolulu Lulu"(8/10) which continues in the beginning of next track is also lovely such as "Lost weekend"(8/10) with fine harmonies. I also love "Sailor"(8/10) by the same reasons. I don't like the fact that they didn't sung more than they did here because they are so great at singing. Of instrumental track I would also recommend "Blint's Tune Movements 1-17"(7/10) which is a pretentious and interesting little musical symphony, made thet same year as "Feel the benefit-suite" but is something totally different. The song "Rosie" is very fine too(7/10) and the same should be written about "Cool, cool, cool"(7/10). I also enjoy a lot of the instrumental and experimenting parts where the sound sounds like water or what it is.

I appreciate "Consequences" much more than I like it. I like the intentions and thoughts that lie behind it. So even if I thought it was quite hard to get through it, I would say that the result is intriguing and I will give the record three stars. But what a pity 10cc broke up. Despite what I may write or have written it feels like the band separated into one too experimental part and one too easy listened part(but I haven't written about Bloody tourists yet).

Best tracks: Five O'Clock in the morning, Honolulu Lulu, Sailor Three stars

Report this review (#1394116)
Posted Sunday, April 5, 2015 | Review Permalink

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