Howard Devoto had the foresight to promote two infamous
Sex Pistols concerts in Manchester, and his vision was no less acute when he left
Buzzcocks after recording
Spiral Scratch. Possibly sensing the festering of punk's clichés and limitations, and unquestionably not taken by the movement's beginnings, he bailed -- effectively skipping out on most of 1977 -- and resurfaced with
Magazine. Initially, the departure from punk was not complete. "Shot by Both Sides," the band's first single, was based off an old riff given by
Devoto's
Buzzcocks partner
Pete Shelley, and the guts of follow-up single "Touch and Go" were rather basic rev-and-vroom. And, like many punk bands,
Magazine would likely cite
David Bowie,
Iggy Pop, and
Roxy Music. However -- this point is crucial -- instead of playing mindlessly sloppy variants of "Hang on to Yourself," "Search and Destroy," and "Virginia Plain," the band was inspired by the much more adventurous
Low,
The Idiot, and "For Your Pleasure." That is the driving force behind
Real Life's status as one of the post-punk era's major jump-off points. Punk's untethered energy is rigidly controlled, run through arrangements that are tightly wound, herky-jerky, unpredictable, proficiently dynamic. The rapidly careening "Shot by Both Sides" (up there with
PiL's "Public Image" as an indelible post-punk single) and the slowly unfolding "Parade" (the closest thing to a ballad, its hook is "Sometimes I forget that we're supposed to be in love") are equally ill-at-ease. The dynamism is all the more perceptible when
Dave Formula's alternately flighty and assaultive keyboards are present: the opening "Definitive Gaze," for instance, switches between a sci-fi love theme and the score for a chase scene. As close as the band comes to upstaging
Devoto, the singer is central, with his live wire tendencies typically enhanced, rather than truly outshined, by his mates. The interplay is at its best in "The Light Pours out of Me," a song that defines
Magazine more than "Shot by Both Sides," while also functioning as the closest the band got to making an anthem. Various aspects of
Devoto's personality and legacy, truly brought forth throughout this album, have been transferred and blown up throughout the careers of
Momus (the restless, unapologetic intellectual),
Thom Yorke (the pensive outsider), and maybe even
Luke Haines (the nonchalantly acidic crank).
AMG Review by Andy Kellman
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