Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År
The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

COOL VARIATIONS

Record Collector

|

September 2023

At the start of the 80s Tom Waits felt trapped. Hemmed in by the persona he’d created over the previous decade, his salvation came with the album Swordfishtrombones, an artistic volte-face that celebrates its 40th birthday this month. Wesley Doyle looks at its creation – via an album-byalbum run-through of what led up to it – and reassesses the peerless work that followed

COOL VARIATIONS

In 1979 Tom Waits told Melody Maker that he was working on a screenplay called, Why is the Dream so much Sweeter than the Taste? “It’s about a guy who’s a success at being a failure, and a guy who’s a failure at being a success.” He’d spent the preceding decade creating a body of work that positioned him as the poet laureate of Hollywood’s disenfranchised; a Skid Row barfly who sang of life on the margins and the romance that could be found there, no matter how tawdry.

But over the course of seven albums, the life Waits sang about began to seep into his own. The self-mythologising culminated in an alter-ego that became artistically restrictive, and personally destructive. Waits was looking for a way out and he found it in a creative and romantic partnership that has informed his work ever since.

The first fruits of that relationship formed the album Swordfishtrombones, originally released in September 1983. It’s a jumble of waltzes, polkas, ballads and rancheras, underpinned by clanking junk-shop percussion and archaic instrumentation, all topped off with Waits’ reverse-engineered voice – he sounded old in his twenties, so his style has never really dated. The record saved his career and set him up as one of the most respected, critically acclaimed musicians of the past 50 years.

Trying to pin Waits down is a pointless task. His entire 80s output and beyond sounds more the product of a foundry than a recording studio. He’s made wrongfooting his audience an artform, which has given him an integrity that’s hard to come by.

Over the next six pages we look at the route Waits took – via

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Record Collector

Record Collector

Record Collector

UNDER THE RADAR

Artists, bands, and labels meriting more attention

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

LOOKIN' AFTER No 1s THE XMAS FACTOR

Does your granny always tell ya that the old songs are the best? The truth might be more curious and complex, as Chris Roberts finds, tearing off the wrapping paper to discover the full history of the Christmas No 1

time to read

13 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Behold The Man Friday, The Leader Of The Virgin Prunes

Since the late 70s, Gavin Friday has trod a singular path, whether as part of influential post-punks The Virgin Prunes, soundtracking Hollywood blockbusters.

time to read

10 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

THE ENGINE ROOM

The unsung heroes who helped forge modern music

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKERS

In 1975, 10cc and Queen reigned supreme with I'm Not In Love and that also happened to be the Christmas No 1. But how did both Bohemian Rhapsody. The former was the chart-topping sound of the game-changing singles happen that year, and which, wonders Paul summer and a production landmark, the latter a multi-part song-suite McNulty, remains the most revolutionary example of 70s songcraft?

time to read

24 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

'WE'D JUST WALLOW IN HOW FUCKING BRILLIANT WE WERE'

Graham Gouldman on I'm Not In Love, The Original Soundtrack and 10cc's next-level pop.

time to read

8 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

The Collector

Warren Kurtz began collecting records in the 60s and has written about music since the 70s.

time to read

6 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Heaven From Hell

An exhilarating masterpiece wrung from a period of turmoil and unease, all done up for its 50th birthday.

time to read

5 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

33½ minutes with...Brinsley Schwarz

It's 60 years since Brinsley Schwarz made his recording bow, a handful of singles with the semi-psychedelic pop band Kippington Lodge, but he became a more visible presence later in the decade when he lent his name to the pub rock figureheads who also included Nick Lowe in their number.

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

TEEN SPIRIT

Of all the first-wave punk bands, Eater were arguably the truest to form.

time to read

9 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size

Holiday offer front
Holiday offer back