Tuesday 12 April 2011

Marr-less Jarmans


l-r Gary, Ryan and Ross Jarman

The Cribs last night released a statement confirming the rumours that had been circling for a while. Johnny Marr has left the band. I got a little excited about this.

Marr is a legend, a hero, and a genius. But for me his this didn’t cross from The Smiths to The Cribs. ‘Ignore The Ignorant’ is a great album, don’t get me wrong. But the Wakefield band had lost what made the The Cribs, The Cribs. The first three albums all had a certain rawness and raucous trait, that the fourth didn’t. They even took to singing instead of screaming. What’s that all about?

At live shows there were stories of people losing eyes, breaking legs and one girl almost died. None of that when Marr was playing. It was like the Jarmans had all grown up. No taking off shoes, stage diving, falling about on stage, knocking teeth out or falling onto a jar of flying saucers to be taken to hospital to have stitches, and then having to return again later to have kidneys stitched back together… It was as if they didn’t want to misbehave in front of Uncle Johnny, or have a life threatening accident again.

A blood soaked Ryan Jarman crowd surfs sometime in the past

Originally the idea was for Marr to continue as a permanent member of the band, they even went into the studio with Edwyn Collins and started to record sessions for the fifth album. But it wasn’t working. This lead to the first proper hiatus in the eight year history of the band.

At some point late last year, the brothers casually got back together without Marr, and things started to click. Johnny had begun work on a solo album, so they decided that it was the best time to part company.

Seems like they’re back to having fun. “We are really honestly loving being back together as just 3 brothers literally playing in the basement/garage again. Right now we are in Portland and demoing in Gary's basement and it feels so liberating. We have a bunch of new songs and are embracing the lo-fi again. It never was about fancy studios and LA and all that. We are back in our usual environment and feeling good about it. We've got everything we need.” Brilliant. Can’t wait to hear this new material, and get the old The Cribs back. It should be bloody marvellous.

8 comments:

  1. Chuffed and sad at the same time. Probably more chuffed though. Though I.T.I was a good album, but not really a Cribs album. I dont even think it can be called an "evolution" as i agree with what you wrote, they had just been subdued and maybe awestruck at the fact Johnny was writing tunes with them, and they lost all the raw energy that made them great. One positive with Marr was they became incredibly tight live. Iv seen them loads and was never more impressed than at the last 2 gigs, both which featured marr.

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  2. Yeah they were a LOT tighter. Imagine if the raw energy they had before hand, and the tightness post Marr came together. Only positives to say about these lads though. Absolute heros of mine.

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  3. Completely agree. But saying that Housewife is an absolutely amazing song. Was Marr on that?

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  4. Marr was on Housewife and it was class. City of Bugs too, is now one of my favorite Cribs tunes. But still preferred them pre-marr. I want Ryan to yelp and drone again!

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  5. Yeah Housewife was amazing. Came out of no-where didn't it!

    Yeah that's what i'm after like, he's the best at that, sounds like nothing anyone else could scream.

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  6. With Marr I think they became a little bit of what they claimed to hate so much. There was not so much heart and soul that we came to expect from the three Wakefield brothers. Let's hope that the passion comes back with the new stuff.

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  7. I still think they put their heart and soul and utmost passion into it. Don't think the could afford not to.

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  8. Maybe Kate Nash will fill Marr's slot with some lovely piano parts?

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