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I Am Damo Suzuki

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Wikipedia article




"'I Am Damo Suzuki'" is a song by the English Post-punk band The Fall released on their 1985 album 'This Nation's Saving Grace' . It was written in tribute to the Japanese ex-pat vocalist Damo Suzuki of the Krautrock group Can,Johnson, Craig. "[https://spikemagazine.com/0205damosuzuki/ Damo Suzuki : HollyAris : I Am Damo Suzuki]". 'Spiked', 1 February 2005. Retrieved 1 May 2022 whom Fall vocalist Mark E. Smith consistently described as a major influence.Ford (2002), p. 147Hanley (2014), p. 251 Smith's lyrics describe and evoke Suzuki's stage presence and singing style. The music was composed by guitarist Brix Smith and drummer Karl Burns. Described as spectral, the music is heavily influenced by the 1971 Can song "Oh Yeah", but also contains elements (especially the descending chords) of other Can tracks such as "Bel Air" (1973), "Gomorrah" (1974) and "Midnight Men" (1977).

The song was described in 2022 as a "hypnotic art-rock anthem befitting of [Can's] name",Terich, Jeff."[https://www.treblezine.com/beginners-guide-the-fall-best-albums/ Beginner's Guide: The Best The Fall albums to start with]". 'Treble Magazine', 23 March 2022. Retrieved 1 May 2022 while in 2019 Suzuki biographer Paul Woods wrote that "MES took the 'Oh Yeah' riff and overrode it with a speed-freak surrealist tribute to Can and Damo himself while throwing in an oblique reference to Fritz Leiber, one of a number of supernatural horror authors who also obsessed him."

Music and lyrics



The lyrics were written by Fall vocalist Mark E. Smith. They describe Suzuki's personality, stage presence and at times mimic his singing style. Smith had earlier said that Suzuki's surrealistic lyrics and tendency abandon language, and even have his vocals played backwards in the final mix (as on "Oh Yeah") was a major influence on his writing and delivery style. Smith's opening lyrics: "Generous of lyric / Jehovah's Witness /

Stands in Cologne Marktplatz / drums come in / When the drums come in fast / Drums to shock, into brass evil", evoke both his admiration for the older singer and the aggressive style of Can's drummer Jaki Liebezeit.Norton; Stanley (2021), p. 42 Other lyrics such as "who is "Mr. Herr Stockhausen / Introduce me / I'm Damo Suzuki" indicate how listening to Can had broadened Smith's musical taste, while the word "What have you got in that paper bag? / Is it a dose of Vitamin C?" reference the Can song Vitamin C, while the carrying sack was later evoked in the 1988 Fall song "Carrier Bag Man" from The Frenz Experiment album.

The band recorded two separate takes during the sessions for 'This Nation's Saving Grace', but Smith and producer John Leckie could not agree on which one to use. The vocalist preferred the band sound on the first take, and his vocal delivery on the second. As a solution Leckie spliced parts of the vocals from the second onto first. He said "the two takes had different arrangements, like the verse and chorus came in at different times, so the whole thing gives the impression of being completely random".Booklet from the Omnibus edition of 'This Nation's Saving Grace' Because Smith was standing next to Burns during the recording of the vocals, there was inevitably sound leakage when the tapes were merged. According to Leckie, "the drums [were] coming through the vocal mix and every time the drums stop on the first take you can hear these ambient drums going on from the vocal mix on the second take and I thought it was fantastic and so did everyone else, but a totally unconventional way of doing it."

The rhythm-heavy music was written by guitarist Brix Smith and drummer Karl Burns.Smith (2017), 19851986Irvin (2017), p. 495 The descending riff is based on the end section of "Bel Air" from the Can album 'Future Days', while Burns' drum pattern is based on "Oh Yeah" from Can's 1971 'Tago Mago' album.Middles, Mick. "[https://thequietus.com/articles/05603-the-fall-this-nation-s-saving-grace-review The Fall: This Nation's Saving Grace Omnibus Edition review]". 'The Quietus', 26 January 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2022Andrews, Kernan. "[https://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/29122/damo-suzuki-21st-cettury-nomad Damo Suzuki - 21st cettury nomad]". 'Galway Advertiser', 29 July 2010.Retrieved 1 May 2022 Brix wrote in 2017 that while it is one of her favourite songs she wrote for The Fall, "when I listen to it now I can hear my then technical weaknesses as a player, but in saying that I can also hear complete freedom and a certain creativity that might not have been captured had I played it perfectly".

Reaction and influence



Fall bassist Steve Hanley said that he met Suzuki years later in a club, and that the singer had approached him with the words "I am Damo Suzuki", and after they had talked Hanley believed Suzuki "seemed pleased enough" with the song.Hanley (2014)

Smith and Suzuki had become friends and met a few times by 1985. Suzuki used the song title for his 2019 biography "I am Damo Suzuki"."[https://www.thewire.co.uk/news/53817/i-am-damo-suzuki-published-on-omnibus-press I Am Damo Suzuki biography to be published by Omnibus Press]". The Wire, 2 January 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2022 In a 2010 interview, Suzuki said, "I know Mark E. He is Damo Suzuki as he is still singing this. I thought there is an another Damo Suzuki in this world." The tribute is described in Suzuki's 2019 autobiography as the "ultimate namecheck".Suzuki; Woods (2019), pp. 155156

The American hip hop group Injury Reserve sampled parts of the song, mostly the keyboards, for their track "Ground Zero" which appears on their 2021 album 'By the Time I Get to Phoenix'."[https://www.whosampled.com/sample/880368/Injury-Reserve-Ground-Zero-The-Fall-I-Am-Damo-Suzuki/ Injury Reserve: Ground Zero]". WhoSampled.com. Retrieved 1 May 2022

Personnel



;The Fall

* Mark E. Smith vocals

* Brix Smith guitar

* Steve Hanley bass guitar

* Craig Scanlon guitar

* Karl Burns drums

* Simon Rogers keyboards

;Technical

* John Leckie production, engineering

* Joe Gillingham engineering

References



Sources



* Edge, Brian. 'Paintwork: Portrait of The Fall'. London: Omnibus Press, 1989.

* Ford, Simon. 'Hip Priest: The Story of Mark E.Smith and the Fall'. London: Quartet Books, 2002.

* Hanley, Steve. 'The Big Midweek: Life Inside The Fall'. London: Route, 2014.

* Irvin, Jim (ed). 'The Mojo Collection: 4th Edition'. London: Canongate Books, 2017.

* Norton, Tessa; Stanley, Bob. 'Excavate!: The Wonderful and Frightening World of The Fall '. London: Faber & Faber, 2021.

* Smith, Brix. 'The Rise, The Fall, and The Rise'. London: Faber & Faber, 2017.

* Suzuki, Damo, Woods, Paul. 'I Am Damo Suzuki'. Omnibus Press, 2019.


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