Television - Science, Magic and Memory
Published July 03, 2007
It's funny how your memory plays tricks on you over a long period of time; often, it seems that once important events turn into mere personal trivia. Conversely, sometimes the smallest details become magnified into personal revelations of gargantuan proportions. And sometimes you wake up on any given morning and find you've simply changed your mind.
Like many people who bought it when it first came out, I wore out my original vinyl of Television's Marquee Moon, released in 1977. At the time, I liked it, even though it was certainly different that the rest of my growing collection of records, which tended towards the mainstream rock of my day - Zeppelin, Bad Company, ZZ Top, Aerosmith and the like.
But Marquee Moon lacked the blues basis that is the bedrock of classic hard rock - it was based not on blues, or country, or even pop: it was a sound unto its own, referencing itself to nothing but its own existence. Guitarists Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd played off each other with melody and precision, while bassist Fred Smith and drummer Billy Ficca worked the rhythm section around the beat as often as they sat right on top of it. Verlaine provided the bulk of the writing, bringing in a set of tunes whose moments of stark clarity offset the many other moments of beautiful lyricism. Ultimately, it's a fine example of as close as there is to a perfect debut album, brilliant from start to finish: edgy yet familiar, melodic yet strong, fresh yet traditional. It 's so good, it's quite possibly the best album of the late 70's punk/new wave scene.
Unfortunately, it was so good that the 1978 follow up album, Adventure, couldn't hope to be able to live up to expectations. Critics panned it, calling it glossy at best, or even formulaic - built by blueprint in a lab as it were. Consequently, most people just didn't bother with it. But close to thirty years have passed, and Adventure holds up pretty nicely. Not quite as good as that first album, but pretty close, with at least a couple of moments that rival anything on Marquee Moon - I'm thinking about the songs "Foxhole" and "Ain't That Nothin'" in particular. Both albums were reissued a few years ago with bonus tracks, including the original "Little Johnny Jewel" single that predates either album.
I always thought (despite their one reunion album in the 90s) it's too bad Television didn't have enough momentum to make a go of it the first time around. But looking back on these albums from a distance of thirty years, I'm thinking maybe it was just as well - after all, if they're still good enough to be talked about thirty years later, then maybe they simply translate over space and time, and perhaps long after many mainstream acts run out of tricks and illusions, Television's Marquee Moon and Adventure will continue to work their magic, reaching out from the past to speak to listeners in the future.
- Television - Science, Magic and Memory
- Published: July 03, 2007
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Indie Rock, Music: New Wave
- Writer: JC Mosquito
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Comments
Good to see you back in the fray Skeet.
I agree with you 100% about Marquee Moon by the way. But the one time I actually saw Television was on the short tour they did for that reunion album in the nineties. They only played New York and L.A...which is where I saw them as I lived there at the time.
Weird show too. The theatre had some sort of agreement with a halfway house nearby, so during intermission I was outside smoking cigarettes with a bunch of mental patients. Honestly, I'm not making that up.
Anyway, for me---and this is probably going to sound really weird---Marquee Moon sounds like Paul Butterfield's East/West crossed with Love's Forever Changes. Dont ask me why, but thats how it always struck me.
And that's not a bad thing by the way.
Great piece as always.
-Glen
Marquee Moon is simply one of the most perfect records I've ever heard. Can't get into Adventure though, which is a real shame.
The reissue of Adventure actually has the title track, "Adventure," which never made it to the original recording. I think Television was trying for something different here - they didn't want to just remake Marquee Moon. But, notorious song resequencer that I am, I find that you can combine the two albums, along with the Little Johnny Jewel bonus track, and make yourself one super deluxe Television compilation.
I'd give Adventure a shot again, Chris.
Glen - East/West meets Forever Changes? Yeah, I can kinda see it - not as weird a description as you might think. There was a local band up here about 25 years ago whose name escapes me at the moment, and I always thought they were a cross between Yes and the Ramones.
Thanx for your comments as always, gentlemen.





nice piece. Marquee Moon remains one of the most transcendent pieces of recorded music i have ever heard. thanks for the look back at these important recordings