The rewards remain timeless: Challenging at times for challenging times....
Tom Waits - Swordfishtrombones
Q: How do you feel about yourself as a vocalist?
A: At best, I'm a barking dog, but I think my voice is well suited to my material.
Q: Have you taken steps to protect your voice?
A: Protect it from what? vandals?
So began a reluctant and somewhat awkward round of interviews in the year Swordfishtrombones was released. The sharp wit and downbeat humour of this one was published in the NME in 1983.
Swordfishtrombones was the very first Tom Waits album I actually bought after accidentally seeing a late night showing of his movie 'Big Time' when it first aired on television. It intrigued, bewildered and hypnotised in equal measure, the magic stayed with me. It drew me into a strange new musical world and thus had me trying to find books in the local library which gave mention of anything about this illuminating character called Tom Waits. It spurred me on to save up a little money; a few months later, I took a chance and splashed out on the album Swordfishtrombones. Mainly because it had '16 Shells From A Thirty-Ought-Six' on it which I remember particularly well from the Big Time movie. Every album there after was bought at intervals going forward and back from what seemed like a pivotal point from which to explore Tom Waits discography.
Only hinted at in Waits previous albums, Kathleen Brennan finally brought out the mighty 'Beefheartisms' in Swordfishtrombones and together they forged another foundation stone to the expressive continuation of work ever since.Waits credited Brennan with introducing him to much new music, most notably the work of Captain Beefheart, a key influence on the direction in which he wanted to take his music. He later noted that "once you've heard Beefheart it's hard to wash him out of your clothes. It stains, like coffee or blood."
Always a great songwriter in the traditional sense of the word, Tom Waits dissects and twists these wonderful songs into a bold move which shocked as many as it surprised in 1983. Just as Beefheart seemed to channel Howlin Wolf at times, Waits soaked them both up with aplomb along with the already great 'Satchmo' of course and digested them to inspire him further on down the line.
Sorrowful, forgiving, harrowing, gentle, haunting, humorous and gripping, Swordfishtrombones could be looked on as an opening chapter to a new book by an author wishing to step out of the overburdened shadow of being pigeonholed into the drunken bohemian, tortured, late night piano troubadour. Now with the cigarette and whiskey chaser romanticism channeled into a furious uplift where once the tears might be soaking the keys, now the piano lid itself could be seen as a tool to slam the rhythm down, lighting a fuse to illuminate the rest of his career.
From the twisted opener Underground I can almost imagine Tom Waits digging himself out of a grave, having been buried alive, clawing at the blood stained roots as he comes up for air. The track is like a bold statement of intent which cries out further with the now classic Shore Leave. Untoward beats now nestle with off kilter marimba that keeps tingling the groove into a story telling tale of salt washed harbours and rust soaked rain. Dave The Butcher now gleams with murderous intent as a trio of almost shocking tracks gives way to one of Waits most pure love songs in Johnsburg, Illinois; an ode to his now wife Kathleen Brennan who came from there. A timely reminder of the majestic songcraft we knew from his debut album Closing time through to Heartattack and Vine.
Themes of loss, abandon and heartache are dominant throughout with loosely connected tales sometimes surrounding war and its after effects. The track Swordfishtrombone itself, the poignant Soldiers Things, Shore Leave and the haunting Rainbirds unanswered instrumental prayer.
A concise but wide reaching album which seemed to spawn individual songs which were starting points for entire further albums; including the infamous Frank in Frank's Wild Years, in more than just it's title. Shore Leave links with Singapore and weaves it's way into the outstanding Rain Dogs album next time around. Waits albums have always been full of nursery rhymes and frightening lines, always delighting in throwing a spanner in the works, or even in the instrumentation! Often under the influence of Harry Partch, a composer who created his own instruments out of everyday materials. So often Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan never let us rest on our laurels and love to tinker with the sounds we think we already know in our heads.
Each album that followed Swordfishtrombones owes alot to it's daring ambition and eclecticism.
Challenging at times for challenging times and certainly none the worse for a dose of "I'm gonna whittle you into kindlin'" from '16 Shells From a Thirty-Ought Six'; what a great phrase, and just the spine tingling way it's delivered; it always stays with me and needless to say Swordfishtrombones is always a pleasure to revisit.









