Pop cure-alls
Robert Smith
Will Hodgkinson Friday May 30, 2003 The Guardian
Along with leading the Cure, one of the most influential bands of
all time, Robert Smith appears to have unlocked
the secret of freezing time. For a few years in the 80s you could
go to any town in England and find at least one
sullen youth with spiky black hair wearing a black mohair jumper,
oversized trainers, eyeliner and a dash of
lipstick.
Those boys have since grown up, thinned out on top and filled out
in the middle, but the man who inspired them
still looks exactly the same. The hair, makeup, black clothes and
big trainers are all there, and Robert Smith
doesn't even look any older. Bognor, where Smith lives, is one English
town that still has its own spiky-haired
youth.
The Cure are going strong, too. In November 2002 the band played
three of their most acclaimed albums -
Pornography (1982), Disintegration (1989), and Bloodflowers (2000)
- in their entirety at the Berlin Tempodrom,
and the film of that concert is now being released on DVD.
"Pornography and Disintegration are always the fans' top two albums,
and mine as well," says Smith. "I wanted
Bloodflowers to be the third part of a trilogy. The first two records
had something that was there by virtue of the
intensity we put into the studio, and they both resulted in putting
me into a delayed state of shock. With
Bloodflowers, because of my age, I can't recreate that intensity,
but I think it has a lyricism that makes it
compare favourably to the other two."
Pornography, the darkest of all Cure albums, was intended as a swansong.
"My attitude was: it's all rubbish, we're
rubbish, so let's go out with a bang," says Smith. "I wrote all
the songs in a windmill over one weekend. We slept
very little during the recording, there was a lot of drugs involved,
and the stage shows that followed were just
brawls between us and the audience. It's strange because that's
not my nature at all, and it wasn't even fun. In
fact it was really, really awful."
Smith has aimed for the intensity that all his favourite music has.
The first record that touched him was Help!
by the Beatles, which came out when he was five. "My sister used
to play it in her bedroom, and I would sit on
the stairs, listening to it through the door," he says. "It made
me realise that there was another world going on
beyond my immediate environment. The melodies on these tunes are
so fantastic, and the imagination that goes
into these songs is just unreal. It's so perfect it makes me weep.
I listen to Help! and I'm filled with hope that the
world could be a better place."
Smith's original idea for the Cure was to play perfect three-minute
pop songs, despite coming out of the
aggression and chaos of punk. "I was enamoured by the melody of
the Buzzcocks and Elvis Costello, not the
anarchy of the Sex Pistols," he says. "Living in Crawley, you really
didn't have to go out of your way to get
beaten up so I couldn't see the point in putting a safety pin through
my nose. But Costello always seemed that bit
cleverer. I bought my first guitar, a Jazz Master, just because
he looked so cool with his. Ever since then I've
bought guitars based on what they look like."
The Jimi Hendrix Experience's Are You Experienced? is Smith's favourite
hippy-era album. "Hendrix was the
first person I had come across who seemed completely free, and when
you're nine or 10, your life is entirely
dominated by adults. So he represented this thing that I wanted
to be. Hendrix was the first person who made
me think it might be good to be a singer and a guitarist - before
that I wanted to be a footballer."
While Hendrix had planted the seed, Smith recognised Bowie as his
first kindred spirit pop star. "I felt that his
records had been made with me in mind," he says. "He was blatantly
different, and everyone of my age
remembers the time he played Starman on Top of the Pops. The school
was divided between those who thought
he was a queer and those who thought he was a genius. Immediately,
I thought: this is it. This is the man I've
been waiting for. He showed that you could do things on your own
terms; that you could define your own genre
and not worry about what anyone else is doing, which is I think
the definition of a true artist."
The only problem with Bowie was that his total difference made him
a very distant ideal, while Alex Harvey's
brand of pop stardom offered up a much more attainable dream. "Alex
Harvey was the physical manifestation
of what I thought I could be. I was 14 when I first went to see
him, and then I followed him around to all the
shows. He never really got anywhere, even though he had something
so magical when he performed - he had the
persona of a victim, and you just sided with him against all that
was going wrong. I would have died to have had
Alex Harvey as an uncle."
For most of the 1980s, Smith avoided listening to his contemporaries.
"I would be more familiar with Janet
Jackson than I was with the Teardrop Explodes or Joy Division, because
I didn't want to listen to my competitors
for fear of nicking ideas off them," he says. "On the tour bus,
it would either be disco, or Irish bands like the
Dubliners."
A change came when Smith heard My Bloody Valentine for the first
time. "It was the first band I heard who
quite clearly pissed all over us, and their album Loveless is certainly
one of my all-time three favourite records.
It's the sound of someone [guitarist/leader Kevin Shields] who is
so driven that they're demented. And the fact
that they spent so much time and money on it is so excellent."