Setlist
(incomplete): Laid / Sometimes / Honest Joe / Homeboy / Tomorrow / PS / Five-O / Johnny Yen / Lost A Friend / GreenpeaceSupport
n/aMore Information & Reviews
None.
None.
Early promo version in record company sleeve and with alternative track names.
Tomorrow / Lost A Friend / Waltzing Along / She’s a Star / Greenpeace / Go to the Bank / Play Dead / Avalanche / Homeboy / Watering Hole / Blue Pastures
Release Name: | Whiplash (early advance promo) |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 1st December 1996 |
Format: | Promo Album |
Catalogue: | ADV1997-2 |
Promo version of the album with Watering Hole titled Angel and Play Dead titled Whiplash.
Released 31 years ago in 1994, Wah Wah is an album of jams and experimental tracks recorded during the Laid sessions. The band had intended for it to be released with Laid, but this was overruled by their record company.
Hammer Strings / Pressure’s On / Jam J / Frequency Dip / Lay The Law Down / Burn The Cat / Maria / Low Clouds / Building A Fire / Gospel Oak / DVV / Say Say Something / Rhythmic Dreams / Dead Man / Rain Whistling / Basic Brian / Low Clouds / Bottom Of The Well / Honest Joe / Arabic Agony / Tomorrow / Laughter / Sayonara
Release Name: | Wah Wah |
Artist Name: | James |
Release Date: | 12th September 1994 |
Format: | Studio Album |
Catalogue: | LP – 522 827-1, CAS 522 827-4, CD 522 827-2 |
Wah Wah was recorded during the six-week sessions for the Laid LP at Real World Studios in Bath. The band had set up a second studio where they could jam when not working on the Laid album. Brian Eno or Markus Dravs would then select a piece of this improvised music and mix it, but only doing one take on the mix to keep in the spirit of the improvisation. Tim was then left to come up with lyrics, but with many of the tracks they remained instrumentals or had soundbites rather than coherent structured lyrics.
All but three of the tracks on Wah Wah were conceived this way according to Tim’s liner notes. Pressure’s On dated back to 1991. Maria, albeit in more conventional form, had been in the James live set since 1992, but failed to make the cut for Laid. Tomorrow was said to have been conceived at BBC’s Maida Vale studios on the day Laid was released, when the band had time between playing a song into each show that day on Radio 1.
The concept of Wah Wah came about when Eno visited the band’s rehearsals in Manchester before the album sessions began and witnessed the unique jamming process which provided the seeds for James songs. He felt that the results of these jams were as important to James sound as the songs that emerged and encouraged them to consider releasing these jams.
Plans to release Wah Wah coincidentally with Laid were shelved as the record company were initially reluctant to release it. Jam J was coupled with Say Something from Laid as a double a-side in March 1994 – however it was the latter that received the majority of the radio play and the MTV-friendly video.
Struggling to decide how to release the album, it eventually came out as a limited edition which was to be deleted after one week in September 1994. There was to be no single, no tour and very little other promotion of the album.
Despite this the album reached number 11 in its week of release although it did disappear quickly from the charts. Pressure’s On, Basic Brian, Jam J, Honest Joe and Tomorrow (later to be resurrected for Whiplash) had featured regularly in James live sets, but there was little to appeal to the more casual James fan in the rest of the album. For the more committed, it provided a previously unseen insight into the band’s working methods.
The press response to the album was mixed. The low profile of the release saw it ignored in certain quarters. Some reviewers missed the concept of the album and were puzzled as to why James were releasing it at all. The NME bizarrely called it “one of the few genuinely engaging dance albums around.”
Full US promo tape of the Wah Wah album.
Hammer Strings / Pressure’s On / Jam J / Frequency Dip / Lay The Law Down / Burn The Cat / Maria / Low Clouds / Building A Fire / Gospel Oak / DVV / Say Say Something / Rhythmic Dreams / Dead Man / Rain Whistling / Basic Brian / Low Clouds / Bottom Of The Well / Honest Joe / Arabic Agony / Tomorrow / Laughter / Sayonara
Release Name: | Wah Wah promo tape |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 1st September 1994 |
Format: | Promo Album |
Catalogue: | tbd |
Full US promo tape of the Wah Wah album.
Six-track in store play copy of selections from Wah Wah for US stores
Pressure’s On / Jam J / Maria / DVV / Honest Joe / Tomorrow
Release Name: | Selections From Wah Wah (US promo) |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 1st August 1994 |
Format: | Promo Album |
Catalogue: | SACD947 |
Six-track in store play copy of selections from Wah Wah for US stores
Michael Snyder, San Francisco Chronicle
There are signs that the Manchester, England, rock sextet James doesn’t take itself too seriously.
Take the name. There is a Jim in the line-up, bass-player Jim Glennie, but no James. And the cover of the band’s latest album, ”Laid,” depicts the six boyish James men standing around in casual dresses. It’s not really a drag thing — no wigs or make-up. On the other hand, each member is eating a banana.
At the Warfield on Thursday, that mild sense of humor took a back seat to the band’s unlikely, affecting blend of street-corner folk, industrial rock beats and sweetly sad pop music. One of the groups in the neo-psychedelic Manchester rave wave of a few years ago, James is still willing to stretch compact tunes into elongated acid-house versions.
Many of the songs dealt with emotionally needy people and dysfunctional behavior. Yet, there was no shortage of sarcastic, self- deprecating lyrics. Consider the line in the cynical hard-rocker ”Low Low Low,” which describes Homo sapiens as ”an ape-like race at the a – – – – – – end of the 20th century.”
Furthermore, it was hard to avoid smiling whenever tow-headed lead singer Tim Booth, shirt-tail flapping, slid up into his trademark falsetto yodel. During the rousing underground hit ”Born of Frustration,” Booth’s visceral wail on the refrain was enough to bring Fido running.
Meanwhile, guitarist Larry Gott reeled out solos that were sharp and majestic, or dreamy and sleek. The fiddling of violinist/guitarist Saul Davies provided the country and the Celtic airs.
Keyboardist Mark Hunter brought a billowing, synthesized ether to the sound. Drummer David Baynton-Power jousted ably with the machine percussion. During the instrumental breaks, Booth would jerk into a frantic, spastic dance that makes Joe Cocker look like Fred Astaire.
Greeted by an enthusiastic full house, James appears to be hopping beyond cult status. The band’s delightful presence on last year’s WOMAD U.S. tour didn’t hurt attendance. It helps that the musicians’ disheveled anti-star attitude exudes genuine warmth.
A version of the title song from ”Laid,” the band’s fifth stateside album, was a total joy. Introduced by the busker strum of a hollow- bodied guitar, ”Laid” is jangly, blunt and carnal in its account of the singer’s difficult, sexually adventurous relationship with a willful, flighty woman.
”Say Something” and ”Sometimes” — two more pieces from ”Laid” — had the grand flourish of U2’s music on ”The Unforgettable Fire” album: wide-angle synthesizer soundscapes cut by slide guitar licks and splashed with cool folk-pop melodies.
The similarity may be the result of James recording ”Laid” with U2’s producer, the interactive avant-garde figure Brian Eno.
In any case, James is at its best in its simplest, most intimate moments — the stately, aching ballad ”Out to Get You,” the infectious international hit ”Sit Down” and the wry, charming ”Laid.”
At this point, no one can legitimately claim to have just “discovered” James. After all, the British band is 11-years-old – ancient mariners sailing in the alternative rock ocean, if you will – but the band has, mostly, maintained a low profile. They have been semi-stars in England – and touted by both Morrissey and Neil Young – but their early albums on Sire in the US barely made a dent. Their first appearance locally was in late 1992 when they opened up for Tom Tom Club and Soup Dragons at the Channel. While James made a strong mark in concert – passionate, creative, built of U2-like stock – and the concurrent album, “Seven” (on Polygram) struck a chord, they seemed to fade back into the woodwork. Too un-definable? Too fey? Too British?
Who knows? But recent times have been good for the sextet, fronted by rag doll-like singer Tim Booth. Their current, Brian Eno-produced album “Laid” is a hit and they sold out Avalon a week ahead of their 90-minute set last night. And they were, in a word, sublime.
All right, you’re trapped in Criticsville so more adjectives will, of course, follow: uplifting, elegaic, panoramic. Mostly, James is all about a journey, musical and emotional. Last night, it started on a soft, spiritual-romantic plane with “Sometimes (Lester Piggott)” (“Sometimes when I look deep into your eyes/I swear I can see your soul”) and “Heavens,” and it coursed through the quietly accusatory “P.S” (with its “You liar . . . You’re sour” punctuations) before, mid-set, moving back to the spiritual and atmospheric with “Come Home” and “5-0” (“Will we grow together?/Will it be alive?/Will it last forever?).” Then, another arc that included the sensual pop bounce of “Laid,” the techno throb of “Honest Joe,” the anthemic, U2-like reach of “Sit Down” and the closing of the regular set, a spacey, synth-and-violin driven piece called “Skindiving,” a song that would not be out of place on Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here.”
We’re talking bredth and depth. We’re talking head and heart. We’re talking about a band that can crisscross the emotional spectrum and sell neither despair nor euphoria short or cheap.
There’s a sense of integrity and, you might gather, a moral purity to this band. It’s not unlike the vibe you’d sometimes get from early R.E.M, U2 or Waterboys. And, there’s not any pompous, tilting-at-windmill rockisms – aka The Alarm syndrome.
With James, there’s nothing in the least that’s showy. Booth flopped listlessly in the breeze until the encore, when he donned a dress (for the first time on stage, he said) and did a bit of whirling-dervish stuff. Basically, James’ songs tend to climb slowly, sometimes from an acoustic guitar base, and reach a series of glorious crescendos. Sometimes, it’s a double percussionist’s climax; sometimes it’s a flavor added by a slide guitar (a rarely heard flavor in this genre); sometimes, it’s the bond you feel when a heartfelt singer admits, “We feel nothing at all,” or, alternately, “What I need is you.”
James’ sound is the sound made by a velvet hammer.