The Pop Group

For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder? [reissue] (2016)

eatdogs

For How Much Longer Do

We Tolerate Mass Murder? released in 1980 and became the final album by The

Pop Group until they reunited in 2010 and started recording again.

For an understanding of the overall sound contained here, I

will just say its like all the band members broke into a studio very drunk and started

jamming while someone hit the record button. FHMLDWTMM is a harsh album filled

with untamed emotions and is very very angry.

The band seemed to take inspirations from Captain Beefheart

and Psychedelic 60’s Jazz and spat them through a vortex full of fierce craftsmanship

and the rawness of Punk. I cannot imagine this was 100% rehearsed. Perhaps they

were in fact, all totally drunk and decided, “Eh, let’s just go in there and

make this album. Who cares what it sounds like?” For them, drunk or not, I give

a massive applause because this is terrific.

Oh, but it is not an easy listen that’s for sure! This is

probably the craziest Post-Punk committed to tape, and these are the same fellas

who recorded the album Y! The themes

here are relatable in today’s landscape, so it seems they were on the pulse of

something way ahead of time. Back then, they were seeing the rape of politics,

the push of consumerism, and the fall of the poor working class and it angered

them. The band addressed that here but it was ignored and tossed off as noise

and openly mocked. Reviews were mixed with some dismissing it completely and mentioning

how they missed the more “mystical” elements from their debut. Now while Y is an excellent album in the realm of

Art-Rock, FHMLDWTMM is an entirely different monster.

Mark Stuart is not a great singer, but his vocals fit very

well with the tone the band is bringing, which is chaotic. His snarl and screeches

blend in with the harshness of the musicianship and the echo effects give him a

tunnel sort of sound reminiscent of some Studio One Dub productions. The Funk

and Dub influence is very present here, more than on Y. The Drumming of Bruce Smith hits as if under water and the bass

playing of Dan Catsis thumps along like a dinosaur skipping along city streets

(see track “Feed the Hungry”).

Guitars are Post-Punks lethal weapon and both Gareth Sager

and John Waddington bring forth an amazing paring of Funkadelic-like riffs and

scary Disco that’s possessed by the ghost of Frank Zappa. Their playing is so

in and out of tune with one another you would think monkeys were given guitars

for a science experiment, yet it works and in some mutagenic way, it becomes

danceable. I love the ending part of the song “Blind Faith”. They seem to give

way to improvisation and it leaves the song on a radical endnote that is very surprising

on a difficult album full of so many changeups.

“We Are All Prostitutes” became their most well-known song

and it’s included on the 2016 reissue. Nick Cave has talked about the

inspiration this song gave him and his band The Birthday Party. It’s no joke

really just how hard and in your face this song is, and at the time it must

have been mind-blowing. Lyrically it’s to the point:

 

“We Are All

Prostitutes / Everyone has their price / And you too will learn to live the lie

/ Aggression / Competition / Ambition / Consumer fascism

“Capitalism is the

most barbaric of all religions”

“Department stores are

our new cathedrals / Our cars are martyrs to the cause”

“We are all

prostitutes”

“Our children shall

rise up against us / Because we are the ones to blame / We are the ones to

blame / They will give us a new name”

“We shall be / Hypocrites

hypocrites hypocrites”

 

While the song mentioned above might be their calling card,

the title track inspired “How Much Longer” comes off as a recorded performance

piece of Avant-Garde Beat Poetry. This is what I consider to the The Pop Groups

best trait. Their bravery and willingness to step over the air of normalcy is what

gives them the title of pioneers in inventive music and should not be mistaken

for falsehood. They were 100% real and serious, but also had a wink of the eye

(see track “Rob A Bank”).

As for this reissue, it sounds great and sourced from the

original master tapes, which is considerate since many vinyl reissues tend to

go the cheap route and source from a cd or digital copy. The addition of “We Are

All Prostitutes” in place of “One Out Of Many” was a good decision as well in

the track listing.

The Pop Group almost singlehandedly ushered in the change of

Punk to Post-Punk and came ahead of bands like Gang of Four and PiL. This

transition allowed bands to express themselves with more determination and a willingness

to break boundaries in music. I give major props for that ripple effect because

if it wasn’t for Y and FHMLDWTMM we wouldn’t have something as

amazing as Metal Box.

This is the noise of a collapsing society caught on tape,

running through the gamut of paranoia and death. Poverty, unemployment,

disassociation with leaders, an unmitigated mess of things, The Pop Group

touched on all that with just these nine songs. Dig it…