Crime & the City Solution

Crime & the City Solution

Circa 1990, L-R: Stern, Hacke, Bonney, Adams, Harvey
Background information
Origin Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Genres Post-punk, art punk, punk blues
Years active 1977 (1977)–1979 (1979), 1985 (1985)–1991 (1991), 2012 (2012)–present
Labels Mute, Possum, Rampant, BMG, Arista
Associated acts Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Einstürzende Neubauten, These Immortal Souls
Members Simon Bonney
Bronwyn Adams
Alexander Hacke
David Eugene Edwards
Troy Gregory
Danielle de Picciotto
Matthew Smith
Jim White
Past members see members list below

Crime & the City Solution are an Australian rock music band, which formed in late 1977 by singer-songwriter and mainstay, Simon Bonney. They disbanded in 1979 with bootleg recordings and demos that are extremely rare. In late 1983, Bonney traveled to London. Two years later he formed another version of the group there with members of the recently disbanded The Birthday Party; later they transferred to Berlin, where they issued four albums – Room of Lights (1986), Shine (1988), The Bride Ship (1989) and Paradise Discotheque (1990) – before disbanding again in 1991. In 2012 Bonney reformed the band in Detroit with two veterans of the Berlin era and a handful of new members.

Critic David Sheridan described the band's music as characterized by slow tempos, dark moods and Bonney's forlorn vocals, all of which can range from "endurance testing" at worst to "hauntingly beautiful" at best.[1]

History

Crime & the City Solution are an Australian rock group which formed in late 1977 in Sydney with a line-up of Simon Bonney on lead vocals, Phil Kitchener on bass guitar, Dave MacKinnon on saxophone, Don McLennan on drums (ex-Particles) and Harry Zantey on guitar.[2] The group has had five distinct line-ups with Bonney as the only mainstay: Sydney in 1977–78, Melbourne in 1979, two groupings in Berlin from 1985 to 1990, and Detroit from 2012 onwards.[2][3] In the late 1970s Bonney had met McLennan and sometimes provided guest vocals for McLennan's group, Particles.[2] According to Australian rock music historian, Ian McFarlane, Particles had "a cult following around the inner-city Sydney scene courtesy of its delightful, melodious pop sound".[4] Whereas according to Peter Nelson of Pulp fanzine, Crime & the City Solution, used "An exciting blend of fuzzed monotone guitar runs and squawking saxophone riffs . . . [like] the drone songs on Wire's Pink Flag".[2][5]

In late 1978 Bonney and McLennan had relocated to Melbourne where they formed a new version of Crime & the City Solution early the next year with Chris Astley on keyboards, Kim Beissel on saxophone, Lindsay O'Meara on bass guitar (ex-Voigt/465) and Dan Wallace-Crabbe on guitar.[2][3] In Melbourne Bonney became friends with local post-punk group, The Boys Next Door (later known as The Birthday Party).[2][6] Crime & the City Solution broke up in 1979 after a number of live shows and recording an unreleased demo.[2] Wallace-Crabbe later joined Laughing Clowns, O'Meara returned to Sydney and joined Pel Mel, Beissel played in → ↑ →, Astley and McLennan in other bands.

In late 1983 Bonney moved to London and reconnected with members of The Birthday Party. In 1985 he formed another version of Crime & the City Solution in London with Mick Harvey on drums, keyboards and bass guitar and Rowland S. Howard on guitar and backing vocals.[2][7] Howard's younger brother, Harry, soon joined on bass guitar.[2][7] In June 1985 the group's debut four-track EP, The Dangling Man, was released by Mute Records in the UK and Possum Records in Australia.[2][7] McFarlane found the EP provided "a gloomy, stripped-down, blues-flavoured sound".[2] A six-track EP, Just South of Heaven, followed in September for UK release only. It was "cleaner, more powerful set of songs dominated by Bonney's dramatic vocals and chilling instrumentation".[2] After the release Epic Soundtracks (aka Kevin Godfrey, ex-Swell Maps) joined on drums which freed Harvey to concentrate on keyboards and guitar.[2][7] In 1986 Bronwyn Adams, Bonney's domestic partner, joined on violin and backing vocals.[2][7]

With the line-up of Adams, Bonney, Harvey, Rowland and Harry Howard, and Soundtracks, Crime & the City Solution recorded their debut album, Room of Lights, which was produced by the band, Flood and Tony Cohen.[2][7] They recorded the album in Berlin. On 27 October 1986 it was released in the UK on Mute Records.[2][7] Amy Hanson of Allmusic praised it as "rough and ready rock that slotted itself nicely under a gothic canvas – they were and remain post-punk's forgotten kings ... Its urgency jangles, its cacophony is dichotomous, and, at times, the underlying energy is breathtaking as the band storms through a great set".[8] Late that year the Howard brothers and Soundtracks left to form their own group, These Immortal Souls.[2]

In 1987 Adams, Bonney and Harvey recruited Chrislo Haas (D.A.F., Liaisons Dangereuses) on synthesiser, Alexander Hacke (Einstürzende Neubauten) on guitar and Thomas Stern on bass guitar.[2][7] In Australia in March 1988, Rampant Records issued a compilation, Room of Lights, with tracks from the UK releases, Just South of Heaven and Room of Lights.[2] On 25 April that year Crime & the City Solution issued their second album, Shine, which Allmusic's Ned Raggett felt was "a touch less classically smooth and arranged, more rough around the edges and jagged, especially with Bonney's delivery ... his lyrics come across as distinctly unfriendly to a usual verse/chorus structure, sounding like a spoken-word recitation sung a line at a time".[9] In November Craig Lee described their performance at Bogart's for the Los Angeles Times, "For what is purportedly a loosely structured outfit, this group displayed a remarkable cohesiveness. At times the band has the earthy feel of both old blues and country sounds and the slightly mystical aura of the early Doors. But rather than rehash time-worn styles, the Solution translates these forms into its own introspective idioms".[10]

On 17 April 1989 Crime & the City Solution released their third album, The Bride Ship, for which Raggett found them "continue carving its own strange path. ... Harvey doubtless contributes most of the organ work. Simon Bonney continues to evolve into more of his own man – if anything, he's embracing country and western more explicitly in his singing style".[11] The Bride Ship was issued in Australia by BMG and Arista Records.[2][7] Alternative rocker Mark Lanegan cites Shine as one of his favourite albums, "[it] is succinct and is great from start to finish. There’s a great sense of space on this record that’s fantastic but the thing that I’m most drawn to is the melancholy on some of those songs. But it also has a cinematic quality".[12]

On 3 September 1990 Crime & the City Solution's fourth studio album, Paradise Discotheque, appeared.[2] It had been recorded between November 1989 to March 1990 and was produced by Haas.[13] The group disbanded late in 1991 and on 4 October 1993 a live album, The Adversary – Live, was released.[2] By 1991 Bonney had moved to Los Angeles where he released two solo albums, Forever (1992) and Everyman (1994).[2]

In late 2011, Bonney was based in Detroit and announced that Crime & the City Solution would re-form to record a new album for Mute Records in 2012. Personnel are Bonney, Adams, Hacke, David Eugene Edwards (of US bands 16 Horsepower and Woven Hand), Detroit musician Troy Gregory, Matthew Smith, Jim White (of the Australian group Dirty Three), and Danielle de Picciotto (married to Hacke). Recording occurred in Detroit.

Discography

Studio albums
EPs
Live
Compilations

Members

Sydney 1977–1978

Melbourne 1979

Berlin/London 1985–1986

Berlin 1987–1991

Detroit 2012 -

Miscellaneous

References

General
Specific
  1. http://www.trouserpress.com/entry.php?a=crime_and_the_city_solution
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 McFarlane, 'Crime and the City Solution' entry. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  3. 1 2 Beissel, Kim; Phil Turnbull. "Sydney Post-Punk Memoirs". No Night Sweats. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
  4. McFarlane, 'The Lighthouse Keepers' entry. Archived from the original Archived 29 November 2002 at the Wayback Machine. on 29 November 2002. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  5. Nelson, Peter (1978). "Crime & The City Solution: Concert Review". Bad Seeds Website. Retrieved 27 September 2012. Note: Originally published in Pulp, a fanzine, issue #5. This copy is housed on www.bad-seed.org (Bad Seeds Website).
  6. McFarlane, 'The Birthday Party' entry. Archived from the original Archived 9 August 2004 at the Wayback Machine. on 9 August 2004. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Holmgren, Magnus. "Crime and the City Solution". Australian Rock Database. Passagen (Magnus Holmgren). Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  8. Hanson, Amy. "Room of Lights – Crime & the City Solution". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  9. Raggett, Ned. "Shine – Crime & the City Solution". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  10. Lee, Craig (29 November 1988). "Hope for Crime, City Solution". Los Angeles Times. Eddy Hartenstein. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  11. Raggett, Ned. "The Bride Ship – Crime & the City Solution". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  12. Marszalek, Julian (26 January 2012). "'You Can't Escape Your Influence' – Mark Lanegan's Favourite Albums". The Quietus. John Doran. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  13. Paradise Discotheque (CD). Crime and the City Solution. London: Mute Records. 1990. STUMM78.
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