TAGLIATELLE TUBBIES
By Simon Williams, NME
Like tabloid hypocrisy, stroppy bus conductors and careless
estate agents, certain aspects of reality will never, ever let you
down. And the music business - 'alternative' or not - is no
exception.
Take Prolapse, for example: a haphazard collective of half-a-dozen
studey types seemingly drawn together by a penchant for shouting and
Sonic Youth B-sides and armed with a name about as hospital
radio-friendly as FrankieWank & The F----ers, surely few acts
could compete with them on a thoroughly low-rent scale of Transit
van-trundling, bedsit-bundling indie schmindie on-the-road
nightmares.
Sure enough, ruddy-faced ranting vocalist Scotch Mick is fondly
recalling some of the more glamorous moments of Prolapse's career.
Like that time in Germany when they arrived in a huge squat in
Hanover after spending light years on the sodding autobahn to find
they were playing with the Gay City Rollers - oh yes - the majority
of whom appeared to be getting intimate in the boys' toilets.
Anyway, it was really bloody cold and Prolapse were all
shaking'n'quaking from a high-octane blend of on-tour psychosis and
the DTs, and the larger-than-life singer of the Gay City Rollers - a
chap called Elvis, natch - well, he reappeared from the bogs and he
had blood, like, under his armpit. By the time Scotch Mick had seen
the wall of a nearby bar burst into flames, the actual gig itself had
become something of an irrelevance. Suffice it to say the show was
rubbish.
'It was,' growls Mick with masterful understatement, 'f---ing
horrible.'
Spending a weekend in Rome with Prolapse should therefore fill the
more sophisticated among us with the sort of dread normally
associated with cold concrete floors, stinking syringe-littered
toilet venues and cockroach-infested lunacy. But that's enough about
Camden.
And, in a very real sense, that'senough about the potential social
perils of being in Prolapse, for this weekend is blissfully free from
any touring traumas or tribulations - primarily because they aren't
even playing any gigs! They're just here to chew the fat with NME
over their new album 'The Italian Flag' - the rather piss-poor excuse
for our current location -and to havr the odd discreet conflab with
their continental paymeisters at Warner Briothers. In fact, with the
luvverly blue skies and visits to the Pantheon and the Vatican, these
48 hours could almost be described as classy.
Prolapse? Classy!???? Skankin' shrimp paste sandwiches, tomorrow
Scotch Mick will be on a British Airways flight with Brian 'Queen'
May. And Anita 'Eastenders' Dobson! And not only that, but he's also
been pissed in Los Angeles! With Drew Barrymore!
'I pulled her ear!' he beams, ruddily. Yeah! Really! 'Yeah, I said
"Cheers, Big Ears" and she went, "What? Cheers, Big Ass?" so I said,
"No, ears!" and pulled one of hers to show her waht I meant.'
Even better, we find Scotch Mick and co-conspirator/co-vocalist Linda
Steelyard in a local backstreet restaurant, guffawing heartily at the
Inglese menu and its poorly translated promises of Spaghetti on
Angler's Way, A Little Walnuts by Vernaccia and, of course, the
soon-to-be legendary starter, The Salmon Fill With a Smoke, because
the menu reads like a Prolapse set list.
Yes indeed, 'Slash/Oblique', 'I Hate the Clicking Man', 'Return of
Shoes'... you'll find all these and more stuumpily-titled delights on
'The Italian Flag', the 'Lapses fine forthcoming (third) album. More
Prolapse facts? The other two-thirds of the band consist of The Other
Mick (Harrison, bass), Dave Jeffreys (guitar), Pat Marsden (guitar),
Tim Pattison (drums) and Donal Ross-Skinner (keyboartds). They all
sound like they should be modelling donkey jackets in a Vic&Bob
sketch, and they are all currently back in Leicester or London or
wherever else it is that Prolapse have been accused of 'coming from',
maaaaan.
To the average discerning punkoid punter, Prolapse have been around
for blatheringly ages, whipping out such a stompingly comprehensive
string of sniggles'n'sniggers for such a baffling variety of record
companies that Mick and Linda struggle to remember, a) the song
titles, b) the label names and c) what the hecksie becksie they're
going on about.
In reality, the sextet fell into (mis)shape about three years ago in
between studies in Leicester, and Mick was so shy he wore a balaclava
onstage for the first, ooooh, 20 gigs. They have subsequently played
a sweltering welter of maniac live shows with Pulp, Sonic Youth and
Stereolab, the majoroty of which have dwelt upon the deranged antics
of Linda and Mick. Crucially, every year Prolapse bung out a
fantastic single like 'Pull Thru Barker' or 'TCR' and everyone goes
'BRILLIANT!' but nobody buys it so they slide back into saggy old
oblivion; and this week Prolapse's BRILLIANT new single is called
'Autocade', which is so poptastically fantastic that Mick hates
it.
Ummmmm.
'I choose not to be on it,' he says dismissively. 'I just don't like
the song - it's not my cup of tea. But that's OK, we're in a band
where it's not gonna cause any fuss. Ijust don't like our new single,
that's all. It's too pop. That's the way the cookie crumbles.'
'It should be pointed out here that we didn't set out to write a pop
song,' defends Linda. 'We don't want people thinking that. It just
happened!'
'I still think it's crap,' mutters Mick.
'I could have shouted all over it ad then it wouldn't be a pop song,'
insists Linda. 'It could've easily been someone boiling a kettle over
the music or whatever. I mean, the next single could be ten minutes
of Hoover noise!'
It probably will be, as well, which is precisely why Prolapse are
hardly ranked alongside Fairy Liquid and Uncle Berkov's Ratcatcher
Delight in the household name stakes. 'I can't write words that are
about anything other than murder,' sighs Linda. 'And death. Oh, and
relationships splitting up. I'm probably the nastiest person in the
band, really.'
True, she has just spooned an entire mouthful of - wait for it -
Parmesan cheese into her mouth, which is pretty damn nasty.
'We're somewhere between Throbbing Gristle and The Razorcuts,' leers
Mick. 'Some of our album is unlistenable! A lot of it sounds on first
listen like there's no structure to it. It's just the rantings of a
madman and a madwoman!'
Brilliant! Of course, on the second and third and tenth listens
you're convulsing along to the delirious rushes of sonic mayhem and
Stereolab-in-a-madhouse grooves and understanding exactly what Linda
means when she says that, 'There are a lot of people who are really
fanatical about our music - they really do love us!'
Yip! Especially in America! But we digress. Anyhow, some Prolapse
songs 'depress the shit' out of Linda, and that's brilliant as well,
because, she says, 'I'd like people to get off on the words and I
don't mean that people should go out and murder people but I'd like
them to relate to it like a Smiths song: I'd like them to say, 'Oh,
it's really miserable, but I know what she's going on about.'
What about the somewhat haphazard take on your career plan?
'We're not one of those bands that are really intense and go, 'Where
shall we take it now?', sniffs Linda. 'Maybe that's where we're going
wrong. We're quite take-us-or-leave-us, really. We're not into
licking arses or anything like that.'
'If we'd put our minds to it, we could be as big as Symposium,' beams
Mick. 'Or Morbid Angel.'
Great!
'I don't know what I'm doing in a band, actually. I don't really care
about it. I'd be quite happy if 80,000 people bought the album - I'd
be like, f---in' hell, people do appreciate us! But I'm not a wee
crappy indie kid, I really don't care.'
He doesn't either - he prefers his job as an archaeologist back in
Leicester to being a pop singer. But, of course, he does as well,
because beneath his charmingly cantankerous Crass-rousing
melody-loathing anarchist-with-a-small 'a' hollerings, one heartily
suspects that Scotch Mick is as enamoured of his band's furious pop
noise as the rest of the radiator-lugging Linda-hugging Prolapse
fanatcics are.
'I had to list my three current favourite bands the other
day,'reveals Linda, blushing with the social importance of it all.
Excellent! And, pray, which particular globally-renowned publication
was canvassing your opinions on the likes of Tiny Too, Spraydog, and
(possibly) Frankie Wank & The F---ers?
'It was for the Prolapse newsletter.' More blushing. 'Heeheehee!'
'Hurhurhurmph!' gurgles Mick.'And we wonder why we've never been
big?'
Still class in a pint glass, though.
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