The Rockologist: The Chameleons Are The Greatest Band You've Never Heard Of - Page 3

Part of: The Rockologist

For their next album, 1985's What Does Anything Mean? Basically, Burgess continued to explore the ever deeper, darker corridors of the human psyche in his lyrics, while the band itself was progressing somewhat musically. Most significantly, the band was using keyboards now. In fact, the album's opening track, "Silence Sea And Sky" is little more than a lush and pastoral sounding hymn played on a keyboard. Interestingly, here is the fact that this short, beautiful piece resurfaces not only on this album, but on the one that would follow.

The best track here, however, finds the band doing its musical balancing act of counterpoint between darker sounds and lighter shades more successfully than ever. On "Home Is Where The Heart Is," another of those gorgeous, pastoral keyboards runs directly against a wash of dark power chords flying up and down the fretboard. On songs like "In Shreds," the same wall of sound is matched by lyrics, which suggest an ever-deepening wall of psychosis.

For the Chameleons' next record, 1986's Strange Times, Geffen Records, their new American label, seemed determined to right the notoriously botched release of Script. So they put it out as a specially priced double album of sorts (this was, of course, back when vinyl albums were still the dominant format for music). The American release of Strange Times contained not only the complete new album, but a bonus EP with covers of David Bowie's "John I'm Only Dancing" and John Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows" (a perfect choice for a band whose lyrical specialty was exploring consciousness). The EP also contained an acoustically stripped down version of the album track "Tears", as well as a great new song called "Paradiso."

While many of the Chameleons' most hardcore fans will tell you that Strange Times is the band's best record, I find myself more divided between that album and Script. Still, Strange Times is certainly their most ambitious and exploratory work.

In its original vinyl release, an entire side of Strange Times is made up of a seamless suite of songs beginning with "Swamp Thing" and its doomy warnings of "the storm comes, or is it just another shower?" and ending with "Childhood." In between, Burgess lyrically pontificates on the significance of such themes as "Time" and "Seriocity." That gorgeous keyboard piece from the second album is back, too, as the prelude to "In Answer," which finds the ever seeking Burgess turning to more spiritual avenues in his search for truth.

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Article Author: Glen Boyd

You'll find Blogcritics assistant music editor Glen Boyd sharing his Thoughtmares on his personal blogs The World Wide Glen, and The Rockologist. In a previous life, Glen was a music professional and journalist whose work has appeared in The Rocket, SPIN, Pulse!, and The Source. …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Michael J. West

    Jan 29, 2007 at 10:04 am

    Ahhhhhhhhhh Yes Glen! The Chameleons are sooo great. I have to agree that Script of the Bridge is their best album. "Up the Down Escalator," "Pleasure and Pain," and "Friday's Child" are three of my very favorite songs.

    You don't mention the Tony Fletcher Walked on Water EP from 1988. Do you not have that one? It's surprisingly good.

  • 2 - alessandro nicolo

    Jan 29, 2007 at 10:43 am

    Super details Glen. I may go out and buy their stuff today.

  • 3 - Glen Boyd

    Jan 29, 2007 at 11:34 am

    Well I'm glad both you guys liked this. Micheal, I haven't heard the EP you mentioned but will make a point of checking it out. Alessandro, the best place to start is either "Script" or "Strange Times". Both are great, but most of the video clips you see on this page come from "Script" so you would already be somewhat familiar with the music.

    Thanx for the comments.

    -Glen

  • 4 - Vern Halen

    Jan 29, 2007 at 2:09 pm

    Och aye, Glen - I don't often get stone cold stumped, but you've got me here. Never heard 'em, never heard OF them. I watched their videos you linked - I might've liked them had I known about them at the time, but that kind of music doesn't interest me anymore.

    What DID interest me though is that they're still working and playing. Where do they play? And who buys their albums?

  • 5 - Glen Boyd

    Jan 29, 2007 at 2:52 pm

    Vern,

    I guess thats why my friends know me as the king of obscuro rock trivia.

    Anyway, to answer your questions:

    As far as I know The Chameleons are still together, though the last time they toured was in 2002. 2001's "Why Call It Anything?" was their last official CD release (and its a good one), although they released a DVD of the 2002 tour called "Ascension" last year in a limited run of 1000 copies (I did notice it's available on Amazon.com though).

    As to who listens to them, they have a rather small, but rabidly devoted cult following (of which I am one). Since my focus on these "Rockologist" columns, has thus far been bands who were big at the time but that people have forgotten about--I decided this time around it might be fun to a focus on a band few people even remembered while they were around.

    Anyway you should be able to get updates on The Chameleons at their website

    And they are a band worth checking out. Thanx as always for stopping by with your comments Vern.

    -Glen

  • 6 - Glen Boyd

    Jan 29, 2007 at 2:53 pm

    I just tried to respond to the above comment and it didn''t post---

    ?????

  • 7 - Glen Boyd

    Jan 29, 2007 at 2:59 pm

    Okay lets try this again.

    Vern, to answer your questions. As far as I know The Chameleons are still together but they haven't toured since 2002. Their last CD was 2001's Why Call It Anything? (and its a good one), but they did put out a DVD of the 2002 tour last year in a limited run of 1000 copies (I did see copies available on Amazon).

    As to who listens to them? They have a small, but a very rabidly devoted cult following.

    Since I've been largely devoting these "Rockologist" columns to bands who were popular in their heyday, but largely forgotten now--I thought it would be fun to focus on a band that few even remembered while they were originally around.

    Like I said in the headline, The Chameleons Are The Greatest Band You've Never Heard of.

    Thanx for the comments Vern.

    -Glen

  • 8 - Christopher Rose

    Jan 29, 2007 at 3:12 pm

    Glen, you didn't quite format the link properly AND you got snagged by Akismet. Both fixed.

    PS: It's marking my own comments as spam too! :-)

  • 9 - Glen Boyd

    Jan 29, 2007 at 3:25 pm

    OK Chris. If ya want you can remove comment #7 since it just repeats what is said in comment #5. Your call and no big deal either way on my end. Thanx for catching it and for the fix.

    -Glen

  • 10 - Richard

    Feb 03, 2007 at 1:57 pm

    The Chameleons are my all time favorite band. I grew up in the North of Holland in the eighties and discovered music like Echo & the Bunnymen, The Sound, Cocteau Twins and of course The Chameleons. I was really stunned when I heard Script for the first time. Thursday's Child gave me shivers and Second skin was all a single had to be. All the guitarloops rifs and so forth are so intense that if you listen to the album via an headset you know what I mean by this.

    Unfortunately they split up in 1987 after a lot of arguments which way to go after their manager died. Mark Burgess went on to do his own gigs and Reg and Dave founded The Reegs.

    After their revival they released Why call it anything and an unplugged album This never ending now.

    But again tension rose and arguments started to rear up again an yet another split was there. So officially there is no band called The Chameleons anymore.

    If you want to experience The Chameleons's livesound, buy the album The Chameleons Live released in march 2002. It's great.

  • 11 - bren

    Sep 16, 2007 at 7:05 am

    im very lucky im from manchester here in the u.k and was there to see every gig in Britain,right from the start with the first single "in shreads" we just loved the searing guitars,a world away from the goth rubbish going on here then
    Sure there is angst in the lyrics but what beauty lay within,always thought they were going to make it big like u2,glad it didnt it would of ruined what they had

  • 12 - SB

    Nov 12, 2009 at 5:07 pm

    Nice article, surprised you didn't mention the awesome Fletcher EP though.

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