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In 1992 the trio pressed 500
copies of their first single, a Balearic double-header called
Mother Earth/The Hump, and released it themselves. They also
met Steven Hall, head of the Junior Boys Own imprint and
the man who would become their long-time friend, label
boss and manager. Darren played
Steven their latest piece of work, the Elvis-channelling
space cadet travelogue Mmm... Skyscraper I Love You. Dance
acts simply didn't make records like this. Nobody did.
From day one Underworld were going to take
it live and that meant that token PAs at M25 raves weren't
an option. At Glastonbury
1992, they camped out on the fringes of the festival with
some like-minded collaborators and set up the Experimental
Sound Field, an improvised, ever-mutating
hybrid of DJing and live performance which lasted from noon
till dawn.
"That really was the blueprint for Underworld," says
Karl. "We couldn't go back after that. And
we'd still like to play for 18 hours." They may have
become more concise but to this day Underworld don't use
set lists.
The same organic approach informed their
epic remixes for a colourful range of clients from Leftfield
and Orbital to
Shakespear's Sister and Simply Red. Karl's lyrics were equally
unusual. Inspired by Lou Reed's New York and Sam Shepard's
Motel Chronicles, he took to carrying
a notepad around to record things observed and overheard,
turning them into surrealist collages and bringing a manic
poetry to dance music.
"I believe we all see the world as
a series of fragments," he
says. "I just try to write them down as fast as I can." Starry-eyed
clubbers would thus find themselves shouting along to tales
of porndogs, waitresses and erasers of love without having
the faintest idea what
they meant.
CRAZYCRAZYCRAZYCRAZY
In the early 1990s, dance and rock music still for the most
part kept each other at arm's length but Underworld's appearances
at Megadog's live dance events and a string of singles
which rearranged techno's DNA (Rez, Dirty, Spikee) helped
close the gap. Their 1994
debut album, dubnobasswithmyheadman went to number 11 in
the charts. Clearly it wasn't just the clubland cognoscenti
who were listening. Karl: "We weren't
even intending to make an album. It's just that Rick said,
We've got enough tracks. What do you reckon? It was only
later I discovered that it
was a lot of people's introduction to dance music."
That autumn Underworld played their first
headlining gig at the London Astoria, supported by an up-and-coming
duo
called the Dust (soon-to-be Chemical) Brothers. The following
year director Danny Boyle played dubnobasswithmyheadman incessantly
while assembling Trainspotting and used it as the soundtrack
for the rough cut. Then, in
the final stages of editing, he picked up a copy of Born
Slippy in HMV and the rest we know.
Underworld, and the scene from which they
sprang, were moving too fast to pin down. Dance festivals
like Tribal Gathering,
and changing tastes at old stalwarts Glastonbury and Reading,
made electronic music a main stage proposition. Underworld's
increasing live abilities
informed the raging, relentless flow of their second album,
1996's Second Toughest In The Infants, which took its name
from a proud boast by Rick's nephew. Incidentally, he's now
an appropriately tough 6'4".
Thanks in part to Born Slippy (reissued
by public demand and only kept from the Number One it deserved
by the Fugees),
the rest of the globe opened up to Underworld. They played
landmark shows in Japan, Europe and America, watching the
world embrace the joys of the kickdrum
and the acid squiggle even if, as in the case of the US "electronica" fad,
they sometimes they got the wrong end of the stick.
By now U2 and REM were among their admirers.
Even Hollywood was wooed, and Underworld produced the punishing
Moaner for
the (sadly hopeless) Batman Forever. "Whenever we're
asked to give tracks for films, it's for the drug-crazed-DJ-in-violent-car-chase-death-scene," Rick
lamented. Karl went to the London premier but left before
the film even started. Good choice.
AND YOU GO PING
All honeymoons end eventually and the making of 1999's Beaucoup
Fish (working title: Tonight, Matthew, We Will Be Underworld)
was fraught with pressure. Karl gave up drinking, which
had become a problem but had also helped fuel his high-speed
lowlife monologues, and spent a few months relocating his
muse. Expectations and workload
were both testingly high.
The result, however, justified the tribulations.
More eclectic and reflective than its predecessors, Beaucoup
Fish dipped
its toes into a number of styles, from aquatic deep house
to panic-attack techno and kung-fu breakbeat. King Of Snake
was inspired by the alarming sight of mongoose-cobra battles
in Japan and the album title came
from a sample of a Cajun fisherman Rick met in the 1980s.
For the first time, Underworld threw open
their music to remixers, including Fatboy Slim, Dave Clarke,
Francois Kevorkian
and the Micronauts. That year they played to their biggest
crowds yet, including a triumphant Saturday night set before
headliners Manic Street Preachers
at Glastonbury. Beaucoup Fish was justly nominated for the
Mercury Music Prize, their 2nd nomination.
The strain, however, claimed a casualty.
Darren left in 2000 to pursue his DJ career , kick start
his label ‘Underwater’ and
begin his own solo productions. Karl: "If someone needs
to move on, they need to move on. It just wasn't the space
for him anymore."
Rick and Karl pressed on. The live album/DVD Everything
Everything was already a work in progress but with Darren's
departure it became an unrepeatable memento.
YOU BRING LIGHT IN
In 2002, Underworld released their first album as a duo.
A Hundred Days Off proved that their trademark sound and
ingenuity hadn't disappeared. The single Two Months Off
was their most unambivalently celebratory song to date
and became a fixture of the Ibizan summer. Rick
and Karl followed it by compiling an album for DMC's Back To Mine series, an insight
into their influences, from Gregory Isaacs and Depeche Mode
to LFO and the Aphex Twin.
And so to Anthology. It's not the full story - Underworld's
back catalogue is too vast and rich for that - but it's a
gripping one all the same, marking each step along the twisting
road from (to paraphrase The Clash) Romford to the world.
If Underworld's music has ever chimed with a moment in your
life, these are good memories. The best.
TRACKLISTING CD1:
1. Big Mouth
2. Dirty
3. Skyscraper
4. Rez
5. Spikee
6. Dirty epic
7. Dark And Long
TRACKLISTING CD2:
1. Cowgirl
2. Pearls Girl
3. Born Slippy
4. Jumbo
5. Push Up
6. Moaner
7. K.O.S
8. 8 Ball
9. 2 Months Off
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