The
first time that the name ‘Scott Walker’ properly impinged on my consciousness
was when the NME published in successive issues, their critics’ choices of best
albums of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and of all time. This was simultaneously a
celebration of the rich legacy of thirty years of proper pop lps and a
submission to a wave of nostalgia and ‘look back’-it is. It marked the beginning
of an era when many acts began to wave their influences about like gaudy flags.
But for people like me, it was also an education and from those lists I found
out about many, many great works of art. Before those lists, I had never heard
of ‘What’s Going on’, ‘Exile on Main Street’, ‘Blue’, ‘Trout Mask Replica’, ‘Innervisions’,
‘Spirit of Eden’ and host of other brain-bending records. Somewhere on the
1960s list, there were the curiously titled Scott 3 and Scott 4.
A couple of
years later, I was in a workmate’s flat. He rolled a joint and put Scott 4 on stereo. It was a surprising listening experience: some
of the songs had MOR show-tuney arrangements but others were startling, sparse
and strange. There were glacial harp sounds on the breathtaking ‘Boy Child’,
distorted narcoticized keyboards on ‘The World’s Strongest Man’. And on top of
everything was the almost comically velvet voice of the intense young man
staring disconsolately from the cover. My next encounter was through a compilation
which included jaunty Brel-influenced songs of seedy glamour ‘The Girls on the
Streets’ and ‘The Amorous Humphry Plugg’, and those wonderful immersions in
pure melancholy ‘The Bridge’ and ‘Big Louise’. Like a lot of the best pop music
(and other artforms too, I imagine) the songs teetered on the brink of the
farcical, and were perhaps too daft for a lot of modern listeners, but I loved
them.
Later on, I
was amazed to learn that his first three solo albums had been huge sellers, no
doubt partly to do with the phenomenal success of his previous band, The Walker
Brothers, and his status as a gloomy pin-up. The fourth of the ‘Scott’ series
had been the first to feature all original material but he made the apparently
fatal error of crediting the record to his real name (Scott Engel) and without
brand recognition, it disappeared and Scott entered the wilderness.
What followed
was one of the most curious journeys in the history of recorded music. Walker retreated
into MOR covers albums, heavy drinking and drug use and then, in the mid-seventies
reconvened The Walker Brothers to produce the hit ‘No Regrets’, two straight albums
and then one leftfield leap into art rock with their final lp, Nite Flights.
From there on, Walker slid into wilful obscurity, re-emerging once a decade for
the next thirty years with a group of increasingly dissonant and
confrontational albums that sounded next to nothing like the glorious quartet
of ‘Scott’ albums. I’ve only attempted
to listen to one of the later albums but couldn’t get to the end of it. Watching him being interviewed in the 30 Century
Man documentary, he is down-to-earth, plain-speaking, bright-eyed; he seems utterly
uninterested in image or in the kind of reminiscing that is the staple of this
kind of film. The work he is doing right then is all that matters to him and his
past is of no importance. In a more recent BBC interview now on youtube, he is
asked about his reputation as a recluse and how he feels about people wondering
why they haven’t heard from, or seen, him. ‘I’m not a recluse; I’m low-key,’ he
says smiling. ‘Generally, if I’ve got nothing to say or do, it’s pointless to
be around.’ Spoken like true artist. Scott Walker R.I.P.
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