Indeed that icy, trebly grit is ‘Portishead’’s true calling card: if ‘Dummy’’s inspiration was the luxury loneliness of film noir soundtracks, its follow-up thrives off trembling strings and the strangling dread of Bernard Herrmann’s horror movie scores that pair tension not so much with release but just with eerie stillness. Accordingly, ‘Half Day Closing’, all crepuscular spy movie theme, is followed by the hushed ‘Over’, the album’s masterpiece of minimalism, never allowing the listener to truly relax. Similarly, the hard cut at the end of ‘Elysium’ and its dangerously teetering static is immediately interrupted by ‘Western Eyes’’ ominous string swells. It’s a striking aesthetic: compared not just with the easy flow of ‘Dummy’ but also with many of its contemporaries, ‘Portishead’’s jarring atmosphere is stylish but also wilfully cantankerous, and has far more in common with the stubborn stygian murk of Godspeed You! Black Emperor’s debut album than anything that 1997 audiences might’ve expected from a hitherto coffee table-friendly, Mercury Prize-winning band – a bold move even in the context of 1997’s ever-broadening pop tastes.
Indeed, perhaps timing is the largest contributory factor for ‘Portishead’ being broadly disregarded over the past 20 years. After all, in late 1997, trip-hop as purist as this was starting to feel slightly draining: in a post-‘Endtroducing…’ landscape, music that majored on atmospherics, texture and sampling was starting to add new elements to the brew to maintain attention, whether that be in the form of Cornelius’ psychedelic cut-ups or Beck’s freewheeling postmodernism on ‘Odelay’. ‘Portishead’’s resolute gloom, by contrast, was substantial but stiff, requiring a sterner constitution to fully digest it: it is monolithic and unforgiving – qualities that today lend it welcome gravitas – but, alongside other recent records with trip-hop roots such as ‘Homogenic‘, also rather cold. To many fans of its by-now adored predecessor, its steely stance and more wiry build represented hard work with little reward.
Twenty years on, however, that sense of refusenik obstinance, combined with subtle, creepily insistent personality mutations and both critical and popular neglect for most of its life leaves the album as Portishead’s most intriguing record. Strange, macabre and slyly adventurous, dark, spacious and more nightmare than dream, Portishead’s second album might be their most unremembered, but in 2017 it looks like the meanest entry in one of pop’s leanest catalogues.
Also out this week in 1997:
The Verve – Urban Hymns (Hut), chart peak #1
Elton John – The Big Picture (Rocket), chart peak #3
Rolling Stones – Bridges To Babylon (Virgin), chart peak #6
Bob Dylan – Time Out Of Mind (Columbia), chart peak #10
Robbie Williams – Life Thru A Lens (Chrysalis), chart peak #1
Fluke – Risotto (Virgin), chart peak #45
EPMD – Back In Business (Def Jam), chart peak #100
To read all the other entries in Sam’s Twenty Years Ago Today blog, click here.