Prog

MATT BERRY

Blue Elephant ACID JAZZ

- JO KENDALL

SHOT THROUGH WITH DISQUIET, NOSTALGIA AND POIGNANCY.

The actor-musician creates a multipart monster.

Among us freaks, weirdos and misfits there’s a tremendous affection for Matt Berry. He’s our ambassador of odd in mainstream entertainm­ent, bringing us characters such as ageing, idiosyncra­tic actor Stephen Toast, providing silly voice-overs for mega corporatio­ns, and sneaking progressiv­e ideas past the guards with his surrealist humour, sartorial style and over two decades of writing and producing music.

Following his last release, 2020’s stripped-back and countryfie­d Phantom Birds, ninth album Blue Elephant goes back to Berry’s signature styles; 60s-influenced pop, folkflecke­d jazz and psychedeli­a. Berry plays 18 instrument­s (!), sings and self-produces; percussion comes from prog maestro Craig Blundell, who contribute­d to Phantom Birds and is neighbours with the polymath. Fuelled by “lots of cups of tea, lots of laughs” Blue Elephant is one of the strongest things Berry’s released to date, best consumed on vinyl with a continuous, multipart track per side.

Reflecting on the cover art – also painted by Berry – it’s Joseph Merrick, aka The Elephant Man, in a blue tonic suit, lurking in a nightclub. This character might be a Berry favourite; he cropped up in Berry’s 2019 Victorian detective sitcom Year Of The Rabbit, too. So Blue Elephant heads for somewhere – Swinging London? – in Aboard, all Mellotron, piano, groovy bass, funky drum breaks and ghostly background washes. It’s Walk On The Wild Side meets Histoire De Melody Nelson that soon gives way to the upbeat Summer Sun, and Berry’s first sung parts.

Berry has said that he wanted to retreat from song-based compositio­n and his 15 ‘movements’ deliver ideas descended from Hot Rats, Odgens’ Nut Gone Flake and Lonerism with a home production style would suit Aphrodite’s Child, Pentangle, or Jacco Gardner. Nuanced and shot through with disquiet, nostalgia and poignancy, Blue Elephant veers from Doors to The Moody Blues via some pleasingly over-the-top flanging. There’s backwards word salad on side two, spirited away by fluttering electronic­s, and in Safer Passage something gorgeously otherworld­ly, with vocoder, Farfisa and manipulate­d vocals. By Story Told this could easily tip over into a musical… which Berry’s done before with 2004’s AD/BC, influenced by his love of Jesus Christ Superstar.

Ending in a funky epilogue for Now Disappear (Again) Blundell and Berry’s collaborat­ion works well. The humour of previous releases skulks in the background, but is outweighed by experiment­al and imaginativ­e arrangemen­ts. Like his 2010 folk opus Badger’s Wake, it’s suite salvation.

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