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Wednesday, 4 January 2023

Alan Rankine

Death has been all over the place this Christmas and New Year. Just as the deaths of Pelé and Vivienne Westwood had sunk in it was announced yesterday that Alan Rankine, guitarist and keyboardist and one half of The Associates, died at the weekend aged sixty four. He formed the group with Billy Mackenzie in Dundee in the late 70s and they put out a cover of Bowie's Boys Keep Swinging as their debut single, a move guaranteed to cause a bit of attention. Their three albums over the next three years- The Affectionate Punch, the compilation Fourth Drawer Down and Sulk- are essential documents of post- punk becoming synth pop/ new pop. Alan left The Associates in 1982 leaving Mackenzie to use the name through to 1990 although they re- united briefly in 1993. Sadly Billy killed himself in 1997. 

Rankine went on to work as a producer, with a string of leftfield 80s artists including Cocteau Twins, The Pale Fountains and Paul Haig and he made several solo records. He also played a role in launching Belle And Sebastian's Tigermilk album into the world, helping students to set up the label Electric Honey at Glasgow's Stow College. 

These biographical details are available at obituaries all over the internet. What they can't describe, or contain, is the sheer electrifying, world tilting shock of hearing Party Fears Two for the first time. Released in 1982 it made the top ten in the UK, and is truly a pop single like no other. Built around a piano riff- a piano that sounds like it's made out of shards of glass and crystal- the song swoops and soars, Billy's voice careering in all directions, something otherworldly and alien, while the piano and drums crash onwards, circling in a mad dash to get to the end. The song's title came from Billy's brother who described a pair of girls trying to gain entry to a party he was at, smashing windows and kicking doors with their stiletto heels- he called them the Party Fears Two and Billy took the name from there. The song seems to be about Billy's own anxieties and issues, about how he looked and dressed, set to a melody that is drama personified. Rankine said the song was about being outsiders, about never fitting in, about 'feeling alienated, like you don't belong and feeling also that other people seem to be doing it with ease', and that comes across fully in the sound, the words and the production. 

There is the occasional let up- the line, 'So what if this party fears two/ the alcohol loves you while turning you blue', falls to a slightly lower pitch before climbing to the heights again as Billy cries, 'awake me!'. The piano riff becomes more obvious in the final section, more clear and present, sounding more like an actual piano, while Billy's voice seems to physically leave the record via the roof. 

It's an astonishing piece of work, a piece of art pressed onto black vinyl, a pop record that is laced with hooks but weirdly unsettling, never quite doing what a pop song should do, in a time (the early 80s) where pop music was being redefined on an almost weekly basis. 

Party Fears Two

Alan Rankine R.I.P.

11 comments:

Charity Chic said...

A lovely tribute Adam

Anonymous said...

The Associates were an immaculate time piece. Billy MacKenzie was of course a gloriously brilliant 'cabaret' singer, but it was only ever Alan Rankine who matched his creative vision. Alan Rankine seemed to pull musical genres out of the air for Billy to inhabit. Some 40+ years later I am still left breathless by the nihilistic funk of 'Message Oblique Speech' and the intense fever dream of 'Kitchen Person'. RIP
-SRC

I Sing In The Kitchen said...

This song never gets old. I used to love blasting it in the house when I was alone. Might have to today.

George said...

"a pair of girls trying to gain entry to a party he was at, smashing windows and kicking doors with their stiletto heels- "
Yes, Dundee was a rough place in the 1970s

Swiss Adam said...

Have a feeling it still could be George...

Khayem said...

I don’t think I’ll ever read a description of Party Fears Two that evokes that same feeling of awe and wonder that I felt as an 11 year old, hearing it for the first time. Wonderful writing there, Adam.

What I also loved was the deceptively plain single sleeve, giving no real hint of the aural explosion etched into the vinyl grooves housed within. I never tire of listening to the song. The B-side was superb too.

A lovely tribute to Alan, thank you!

Rol said...

I just read the news and wondered which of my blogging pals would have been first in with a tribute. Thank you. PFT is a great tune.

Post-Punk Monk said...

Thanks for the shout out. What an exciting description of "Party Fears Two." Just reading that I got chills up my spine. That's how powerful the music [and your writing] was. Can we ever have such thrills again? I'm reading about eleven year olds hearing this song for the first time and I was 27 years old when I did. Astonishing. But better late than never, I guess.

The Swede said...

A superb piece of writing about an utterly unique song that appeared to have been beamed in from the future back in 1982. Here we are in 2023 and it still sounds unlike anything else. Rest easy Mr Rankine.

JC said...

'a piece of art pressed onto black vinyl'

Wish I'd thought of that. Wonderful.

Swiss Adam said...

Feel free to recycle it whenever you want JC