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according to sheryl garratt, editor of
the face, “they came at a time when the music press were desperate
for something to write about, so they smothered them with praise.
the problem for me is that i’ve seen it all before. but then suede
are not aimed at me. they’re aimed at 19- and 20-year olds, who
haven’t. brett’s feyness was certainly appealing to those
who’d never experienced david bowie.”
suede’s music is certainly
distinctive, if a little derivative. brittle, overwrought guitar
pop, it demands attention. as does anderson – unquestionably the
group’s leader – who employs the same strident mockney tones
used in the past by the likes of anthony newley, bowie and cockney
rebel’s steve harley. the sound of suede is the sound of bedroom
doors being slammed, and all the youthful market-town angst that
goes with it. this is rock which is intended to mean more than life
itself, to teenagers, anyway – music to get you through
adolescence, however arch and mannered it might be (typical song
titles: so young, breakdown, sleeping pills, the next life etc).
trying to find something which sounds uncontrived or unaffected in
suede’s songs is like trying to find an afro-american in a woody
allen film. yet the fact that they sound insincere does not
necessarily mean they are.
“it’ll sound pretentious if i try
and describe it,” says anderson, “but suede for me is something
very young and beautiful and vital. almost sort of silver. that’s
the colour i always think of, silver, something very shiny. our
music is the kind of music that should be listened to by one person
in front of their stereo. it’s not a gang thing at all.
“there’s
no arrogance with us, or even confidence, really. it just stems from
an absolute love of music, and visions about how wonderful music can
be. things just jump into my brain sometimes, which have a lot to do
with sexuality and violence. i don’t know, i just get a vision
every now and then. i’m not talking about william blake or
anything like that. it’s only me.” aha.
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