The Herald - The Herald Magazine

The return of The Phantom Band. Kind of

Sean Guthrie meets the six-piece to discuss their newly reissued mind-bending debut album

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TUESDAY night in an old-school tavern off the sorry fiasco that is Sauchiehal­l Street in Glasgow, and Rick Anthony is greeting his old friend Gerry Hart with a warm hug. On the television­s that surround the central bar, updates on missing footballer Emiliano Sala play out, interspers­ed with mundane sports news. The punters pay little heed, supping away the January blues instead.

Pints in hand, the singer and bass player of The Phantom Band sit down at a table by the door and are soon joined by Duncan Marquiss, one of the group’s two guitarists. Their ease in each other’s company is palpable.

Things weren’t always so chilled. In October 2015 the group were on tour in Europe when all their equipment – more than £13,000 worth – was stolen from their van after a concert in the northern French city of Lille, effectivel­y calling a halt to the group’s activities.

Three years on, we are gathered on a dark midwinter evening to discuss happier times, specifical­ly their mind-bending debut album Checkmate Savage, which has just been afforded a double-vinyl reissue by Chemikal Undergroun­d to mark its 10th anniversar­y, the initial pressing having sold out long ago and original copies being touted for silly money online.

On its release, Checkmate Savage was hailed in a four-star review by Mojo magazine as “a record as auspicious and accomplish­ed as it is unforeseen”, while the NME – before its reputation­al collapse – gave the “thrilling tunefest” an 8/10 rating.

The record excited fellow musicians too. “There’s not a second you want to skip,” says Eugene Kelly of The Vaselines. “It’s like a Celtic folk rock band stole Martyn Ware from his early Human League days and then jammed along to their favourite Krautrock records before adding Highland gothic lyrics to the mix.”

“I had heard rumours about difficult studio sessions,” recalls Barry Burns of Mogwai. “You can hear the broad range of influences that might have caused disagreeme­nts but it also sounds like they had a united front. Checkmate Savage is a belter of a debut.”

With Paul Savage, the album’s producer and the inspiratio­n for its playful title, yet to make his scheduled appearance, we begin at the end. Is there any likelihood of the band – who also include drummer Iain Stewart, guitarist Greg Sinclair and keyboard player Andy Wake – adding to their four albums?

“Some people are keener than others,” says Hart, “but who’s keener depends what day of the week it is.”

“At that point in Lille we were thinking it would be good to have a break anyway,” says Anthony, who has released two solo albums under the alias of Rick Redbeard. “It was kind of cosmic. It was hard practising a couple of times a week and we were all working too.”

“When the band started it seemed to propel itself through whatever momentum was created by everyone getting together,” adds Marquiss, who also performs solo under his own name. “I think it’s good to allow it to tail off. The other challenge is it’s increasing­ly difficult to be able to afford to do it.”

“It would take a lot of energy to build it back up again,” concludes Anthony.

“It’s nice to imagine we might release something ourselves but I don’t know if that’s likely.” “That’s never going to happen,” Hart retorts quickly, smiling.

Having dealt with the murky future of The Phantom Band, we turn – mostly willingly – to the group’s lambent past.

Just before the unfolding of what could be described as a must-read primer for bands planning their maiden journey into the mysterious, maddening and, yes, miraculous world of the recording studio, Savage arrives after a day at the console in Chem19, the facility he runs in Blantyre where most of Checkmate Savage was recorded. More beers are bought before he settles at the table and the talk turns to the complicate­d birth of the group’s debut.

Recording began in 2007 but the inital aim of having it wrapped within a fortnight rapidly unravelled. “In the first few days you were good at keeping cool,” says Anthony to Savage, “but you were like, ‘I don’t think we’re going to get this in two weeks’.”

Had they pinned down the song structures? “We thought we did, but we

didn’t,” admits Anthony. “People are learning to use the studio as an instrument,” explains Savage. “You start to go, ‘We could do this’ or ‘We could try this’.”

“Equally we’d be sitting around and Paul would say, ‘Have you looked at this instrument?’ or bring out the Space Echo,” recalls Hart.

As for the myriad flourishes that adorn Checkmate Savage like spots on a leopard, Savage credits the presence of the three musicians with the least fealty to the album’s rhythmic pulse. “The great thing was having Duncan, Greg and Andy. It was total chaos,” he says approvingl­y. “Andy probably took up two weeks of the recording. There was an immense amount of ‘There’s just a trill here’ and ‘A little keyboard here’.”

Did such meticulous­ness cause any ego meltdowns?

“If there was any ego it was probably wiped out in the first few days,” says Anthony, “when all the stuff we were recording sounded s***, or not s***, but Paul was like, ‘We need to rethink how we’re going to record this’.”

In circumstan­ces like these a leader often emerges and dictates the strategy for their colleagues to follow. “People would do that but it wouldn’t make any difference,” says Anthony, prompting a wave of laughter.

“Everyone had moments where you were thinking, ‘Oh, God, everyone must

You could go to a certain length and the song would be too long, and if you went longer it would shorten it

be thinking I’m struggling’,” says Hart, “but then you’re on the other side and you see someone going through a similar situation and you’re like, ‘I’ve been through that. Take it easy’.”

As much as it was his role to ensure the best sound, the former Delgado was also charged with maintainin­g positivity. “I was trying to record them as well as possible in the best way possible,” he explains. “Without killing it, without making everyone go, ‘For f***’s sake, this is a drag’.”

Fortunatel­y the sessions, which by now had grown to four weeks (“It felt like forever,” says Anthony), were anything but tiresome. “Not many people came into the studio and referenced Neu! and Can, and that was a breath of fresh air,” says Savage.

Unsurprisi­ngly, given the leanings of many music journalist­s, much was made of the German influence on Checkmate Savage when it was unleashed, but there were other, less explicit tributarie­s that led to its torrent of ideas. “Everyone in the band loves such a variety of music,” says Marquiss, “so you would get …”

“… Slayer,” interjects Anthony.

“And Andy was into techno,” says

Marquiss. “There were lots of Captain Beefheart references,” says Savage, “and northern soul.”

“And minimalism,” adds Marquiss.

“Yeah,” says Savage. “Minimalism in certain sections and then completely the opposite in others. It was fun for me for these guys to have these kinds of visions. Imagery was used – ‘This is dark and cloudy’ and ‘This is where the sun breaks through’.”

“Early on we weren’t playing gigs but we were rehearsing nine hours a week,” remembers Hart, “and when you’ve got that time you do whatever you want.”

INEVITABLY for an album born of

elongated jam sessions, song lengths

had to be reined in, though the

finished product still features four

tracks that break the six-minute mark. No songs, however, outstay their welcome. “Our experience of time is relative,” says Marquiss. “That’s one of the lessons of minimalist music.”

“You could go to a certain length and the song would be too long, and if you went longer it would shorten it a little,” says Anthony, smiling. “There was a weird logic to it.” The group’s label masters, Savage and his fellow ex-Delgados Stewart Henderson, Alun Woodward and Emma Pollock, were as unconcerne­d by the duration of the songs as the musicians.

“Stewart [Henderson] would come in but it was always a social visit rather than ‘Where are the hits?’,” says Anthony. “Paul was there but he never said: ‘That’s not going to fly on Radio 1’.” Cue laughter.

“You should see me now,” Savage jests.

Beyond the confines of the table, a number of men in their 60s have been meandering stiffly into the bar carrying guitar cases and drums. The occasional thump of a beater on a bass drum and buzz of an amplifier hints depressing­ly at the imminent arrival of ye olde blues rock. Meanwhile a best-of-Prince compilatio­n has replaced the dreary rambling of Sky Sports News.

Which seems a fitting juncture at which to shift the focus to Franz Ferdinand, whose lease of Govan Town Hall gave Checkmate Savage an unexpected fillip. Besides producing The Phantom Band’s debut, Savage was engineerin­g Franz’s third album, a job that overran and consequent­ly saw him spend two weeks recording overdubs and mixing Checkmate Savage at the Beaux-Arts town hall that is now Film City Glasgow. It was there that Savage revelled in the bliss of recording geekery, riding the faders of Franz frontman Alex Kapranos’ vintage Flickinger console, a desk Savage describes as “overspecce­d beyond belief”.

“I had no idea at the time of the quality I was using,” he purrs. “But the thing I’ve never had the chance to do since is putting two speakers on the stage and two microphone­s at the back of the hall. As we were mixing the record I was sending Rick’s vocal to the hall, using it as a real-time reverb. So a lot of the reverb sounds are live sends through Govan Town Hall and returning – without getting too geeky about it – without any fakery.”

“What would you do differentl­y?” asks Hart as Prince Rogers Nelson concedes the stage to a predictabl­y unspirited run through a 12-bar blues.

“Nothing,” responds Savage without missing a beat.

Taking the musical graverobbi­ng that’s occurring across the room as our cue, we don our coats and step out into the street, where Anthony hands a CD-R of new solo material to Savage and Marquiss offers guest list places for a forthcomin­g solo appearance. “Put me on it,” says Anthony immediatel­y.

As we say our farewells, what is striking is not just the fact a special chapter of The Phantom Band’s past has survived the cruellest blow the music business can deliver, sealed forever in the grooves of two sturdy slabs of wax, but that their friendship has too. You could say it’s a ghost story with a happy ending.

The 10th anniversar­y vinyl reissue of Checkmate Savage is out now on Chemikal Undergroun­d

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 ??  ?? The Phantom Band – ‘Like a Celtic folk rock band stole Martyn Ware from his early Human League days and then jammed along to their favourite Krautrock records before adding Highland gothic lyrics’
The Phantom Band – ‘Like a Celtic folk rock band stole Martyn Ware from his early Human League days and then jammed along to their favourite Krautrock records before adding Highland gothic lyrics’

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