| When EM Forster
gave us the aphorism "only connect" he wasn't strictly
talking about the collective musical endeavours of Rob McVey,
guitarist Doug Morch, bassist Aidan Banks and drummer Matt Dabbs,
but he might well have been. In their brief year in the public
eye, Long-View have stepped round the distractions of scenes and
posturing to release a run of magically elevational singles and
one exquisitely yearning debut album, establishing a clear identity
for the band as genuine communicators rather than this week's
circus act.
Long-View are here to remind us that music
is at its best when it cuts straight through to the emotional
core, without regard for who, how, when or why. Pull down the
tinsel curtain of increasingly self-referential styles and on
the other side you'll find Long-View's beautifully crafted songs
of hope, humanity, togetherness, ecstasy, separations, seasons,
re-unions, hometowns and angels glimpsed through the drizzle.
"I think after you've had a great night
out and you've listened to whatever kind of music goes with that,
you maybe go home and you're on your own and you want something
that really gets you, stuff that's deeper," says Aidan. "We
have tracks that rock, like 'When You Sleep' which is essentially
about having a good time, but I think what we keep coming back
to is the more emotional stuff. I think there's certain records
for certain times, and we'd love our record to be one that you
put on when you're on your own and you need something to get you,
rather than something you just stick on and rock out to."
It was unlikely that either Rob or Aidan were
ever going to be confined by the limitations of two-dimensional
rock'n'roll. While they played in guitar bands together during
school days in Winchester they also grew up with a wider musical
knowledge. Aidan played piano and violin. Rob studied classical
guitar throughout his teens. Drawn by the city's history of definitive
bands Rob moved up to Manchester where he continued to study classical
music theory at university. A deep knowledge of semi-quavers was
not, however, going to serve as an end point.
"I didn't want to be regurgitating classical
music in a baroque style which was a lot of the music I was playing,"
he says. "I wanted to create music about things I saw. The
only interest I've got in music is the way it makes you feel about
your own life, and what I was studying wasn't relevant to my life.
If you are in a rock band you're not regurgitating, you are the
creative force... you Are Beethoven. "
Of more immediate relevance to Rob's life was
day-to-day survival in Manchester as a student and then unemployed
musician. By the second half of the 90s he'd met up with Matt
Dabbs, occasionally jamming with the drummer at live gigs in the
city's Dry Bar and hanging out at the Night & Day cafe with
upcoming local musicians. Pre Long-View line-ups involving Rob
came and went, but after Aidan had moved up from Winchester to
join the band the three-piece gelled. Finally Doug Morch came
on board, quitting his involvement with a Leeds based band, and
adding a complimentary layer of incandescent guitar to Rob's harmonic
chord surges.
Long-View's ascent - from the back streets
of Manchester to Top 30 in the UK singles chart and on to recording
in the US with Pearl Jam producer Parashar - might have looked
swift and effortless from the outside. But this shorthand version
doesn't take into account their years of honing musicianship and
crystallising an unshakeable belief in songs which reflect real
human experience.
The initial low-level release of 'Further'
in June 2002 and the band's second EP, October 2002's 'When You
Sleep' revealed a band who had clearly fought to find their identity.
Even in the first releases there was a breathtaking ability to
make uplifting spiritual rock without being pompous. In Rob's
voice there was humility and compassion. The guitars glowed in
stained glass wonderment without trying to blind you. Here was
the first band ever to make sonic cathedrals sound vulnerable.
Small wonder that after a year of UK support tours they had a
dedicated fan base who knew they'd found something special.
In January 2003 they released a third EP, 'Nowhere',
followed by a full release for 'Further' in July, leading to a
Top 30 hit for the band. Riding high in the singles charts, they
followed through with the mid summer release of their first album,
'Mercury'. The collection of twelve glimmering studies in celestial
melancholy triggered an avalanche of praise in the UK media, most
critics recognising that here was a band able to work on the same
epic scale as a U2 or Verve, but as adept at bruised emotions
as Manchester colleagues Elbow or Doves. The recording sessions
in Seattle had only served to remind the band of their unique
Englishness. With Rick Parashar at the controls the sound of the
band had become enormous, elemental even, but the location was
distinctly recognizable as the lifescape that Rob grew up in.
"You can only write about what you see,"
says Rob. "When for a time I was living in a field in Cornwall,
I wrote 'Falling For You', which is a song about naivety and that
kind of romance in naivety. But what I really wanted to write
about was the summer and the sensuality of it and the way the
air smells in the summer when you're on holiday and the sense
of nostalgia you have related to that. "That was the emotion
that I wanted to capture, and that was real to me. I wasn't trying
to throw myself into any fake situation and it wasn't about wearing
a leather jacket and pretending to be from New York. All of the
album is like that, its about things I went through or felt, from
being at a comprehensive school in the south of England to arriving
in Manchester and putting the band together."
2003 saw Long-View make a full connection.
Through the summer they toured for two months in the UK, and converted
huge crowds at festivals. There were over a thousand people in
a tent to watch them at Reading. The momentum kept up throughout
the year with the September release of the next single 'Can't
Explain' and a perfectly matched tour with Elbow in November.
Finding themselves established in the UK by
the end of 2003 was of particular satisfaction to the band having
done it on their own terms. While those looking for instant labels
had sought to place them in a category alongside Coldplay, on
rock's sensitive side, anyone with a closer knowledge could trace
a deeper history going back to the more reflective early 90s American
bands and British guitar bands from MBV to . Certainly they had
made their connection while disregarding the surface vogue for
imported 'rock'n'roll' hedonism. Long-View have their own definitions
of danger.
"I think it’s a lot safer right
now to be in a 70s garage rock band than being in a band like
ours," adds Aidan. "It’s much safer to try and
be in a scene which is cool. Anyone can identify a period in the
70s or 80s which is 'really cool' this week and trade of that
for a bit, but its not going to last."
"I don't think any of that says much about
people's lives" continues Rob. "We're not trying to
do anything apart from write songs about everyday life, like The
Smiths did perfectly, about British culture, about British life,
like Oasis did in their way."
As Long-View glide into the New Year, starting
by releasing one of the highpoints from their album, the snow-capped
peak of rapturous effusion 'Still' in January, there's little
doubt that they're about to enter a gripping new phase of their
existence. 'Mercury' was where they started to connect. Now they're
set to explore further, hunkered down in a group house in Bury,
with a turntable battle between the Cure and Interpol going on
in the living room, a bizarre collection of furniture available
for guests to sit on while they're "scrutinized", and
a growing realisation that their singer is more of a visionary
and quite a lot "weirder" than they ever thought. Out
of grey Northern days, real human feelings, the rustle of angel
wings and a musical idealism bordering on sainthood, Long-View
are going to make the kind of second album that levitates cities.
"I just think that right now we're writing
the best music and being the most creative that we ever have been,"
says Matt.
Just stop, get out, take a deep breath and
enjoy the incredible View.
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