Portrait Of Paddy As A Young Man: Prefab Sprout’s Swoon

prefab swoonPerhaps like a lot of Prefab fans, I came to Swoon some time after I’d bought and fallen in love with the later albums Steve McQueen, Protest Songs, From Langley Park to Memphis and Jordan The Comeback.

The dry, Thomas Dolby-less production came as a bit of a shock at the time but Swoon stands up pretty well today. Though some critics have compared it to Steely Dan, my contemporary reference points would be Lloyd Cole, The Smiths, Aztec Camera and Songs To Remember-era Scritti, though it’s basically impossible to locate Prefab’s influences.

It’s tempting to say that Swoon – released in March 1984 – sounds like the epitome of an ‘indie’ record, 1980s style, with its stripped-back production values and jagged edges. Prefab singer/songwriter Paddy McAloon recently told The Guardian that he thinks of it as more akin to Captain Beefheart, nicknaming the album ‘Sprout Mask Replica’!

Swoon definitely still sounds very much like a debut album; it’s perky, eager to please, naive, studenty. McAloon’s vocals occasionally resemble the ramblings of a slightly squiffy, randy teenager. But the album’s adolescent in a really good way with its literary flights of fancy, indulgent ruminations on romantic love and lots of audacious melodic flourishes.

paddy prefabIt sounds almost like rock, with solid 4/4 drums, always-inventive bass from Paddy’s brother Martin and ‘girlie’ backing vocals from Wendy Smith, and yet it resolutely refuses to ‘rock out’ with not a single power chord or jangly electric guitar in the mix.

Instead, the intrepid layering of synths and acoustic guitars (utilised to far greater effect on Steve McQueen and Jordan) probes the songs’ pressure points. And Smith’s pristine vocals give the music an enigmatic, otherworldly flavour.

Lyrically, Swoon reminds me of Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’; a survey of a young man’s hopes, dreams and romantic/professional disappointments. From a songwriting perspective, the words presumably came before the music, resembling stream-of-consciousness prose rather than traditional verse/chorus songcraft. Novelist/essayist Dave Eggers wrote a great piece about how much he was influenced by this golden generation of literate British songwriters.

As befitting a band from the North East, work (and the lack of it) is a recurring theme, particularly on ‘I Never Play Basketball Now’ and the extraordinary ‘Technique’. ‘Couldn’t Bear To Be Special’ is a classic Prefab ballad (though surely never the right choice for second single) and seems to offer a truly original take on the doomed love affair – the narrator simply doesn’t feel worthy to deserve the attentions of another. Very Nick Hornby-esque.

Future producer Thomas Dolby has talked about the shock of hearing ‘Don’t Sing’ when he was a guest reviewer on the Radio 1 ‘Round Table’ show.

‘Cruel’ is still a delicious piece of pop/bossa nova, more than a decade before the likes of Belle and Sebastian mined similar ground. Some of Paddy’s chords are gorgeous on this. Lyrically it’s original too, an expression of lust and affection from someone who is desperately afraid of offending his ‘enlightened’ paramour. A very modern love song. It was once covered by Elvis Costello.

Oh – and don’t forget to read the funny mock liner notes penned by McAloon in the guise of an over-exuberant music scribe.

5 thoughts on “Portrait Of Paddy As A Young Man: Prefab Sprout’s Swoon

  1. Aaah, Swoon. one of my timeless favourites. I bought it some 25 years ago (Big double cover LP) after discovering the band on French TV playing “when love breaks down”. I even have the US version of Steve McQueen, named “2 wheels good”. Rumor has it that McQueen’s widow refused the album to bear the name of the movie star…
    Back to Swoon, these songs were crafted with precision. The playing is rigorous. Quirky melodies to decorate wordy lyrics. What is there to throw from this album? I have been waiting for Prefab to follow it up but it never came…now that’s “Cruel”

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  2. Hi Matt, For some reason my Mediamonkey played the debut Smiths album today. Of course it’s amazing: dizzy, jangly and completely unique. But it reminded me of the Sprouts so I put on Swoon. I saw a big display in my local record shop in Edinburgh the week it was released and I bought it sight unseen, and played it non-stop for the next few weeks. Swoon is amazing in so many ways. It’s strange to comment on an album that’s now so familiar but in its own way was so different from anything I’d ever heard heard before, you know what I mean. Today is the first time I’ve played the album in years, really sat down and listened from start to finish. Next I played Steve McQueen and I genuinely swooned, how lucky we were.

    I saw Thomas Dolby live in Edinburgh in 1984 (fab, by the way) and of course the next Prefabs’ album were so much more produced. But Swoon is always the one for me, it really set the tone in a completely unique direction. Still love Paddy, he’s always been on his own unique journey.

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      • Well, I love them all obviously . . . and Steve McQueen does sound much more complete and mature. I just have a gut connection with Swoon, it was so different and direct. Actually until the other night I hadn’t remembered how jangly it sounds, quite like the Smiths. I do love big productions and Thomas Dolby is a genius, but he did polish the jangle out of them, to fantastic effect. Cheers!

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      • Kind of chimes with approximately what Dolby said about hearing ‘Don’t Sing’ for the first time – hit him on a ‘gut’ level. What a good piece of luck he heard it… Also interesting that he always said that some of his favourite Paddy singing on ‘Steve McQueen’ was his outburst on ‘Goodbye Lucille’. Maybe he slightly regrets ‘polishing the jangle out of them’!

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