A trip to Vietnam!
Well, not literally, since really I'm talking about French Indochina, or as the French call it, Indochine. Oh, and it's really the name of the band, not where they come from. And they're French, and don't play oriental-sounding music, so if you came here expecting a Manchurian cover of Smells like Teen Spirit well, I'm sorry to disappoint. Actually, Indochine, despite having a logo which reminds me of a Ku Klux Klan burning crucifix (see above), has been around for years. Formed sometime in 1981 I believe, they for a long time competed with the likes of Noir Desir and Telephone as one of only few decent old French rock bands, since this is after Renault's (yes, that's his real name) prime. And anyway he didn't really do rock. Good God I digress, but the point is they are actually the only ones left really. I mean yeah, you get the newbies like Saez and Matmatah, and the fastfolky music the Tetes Raides make, but Noir Desir's lead singer famously killed some actress a couple of years ago in Cocaine-fuelled craziness, and Telephone just split up in 1986 after their last album...
And yet, Nicola and Stephane Sirkis carry on banging out those tunes until 1999, when Stephane died of Hepatitis. Nicola carried on without him ("Indochine vit, Stephane le voulait", or "indochine lives, Stephane wanted it to be so"), and has since become more of a success than ever - he has since sold millions of the three albums that followed. Does that say anything about his brother? I don't know, since some of the older classics were apparently written by him. It is worth noting also that during the early nineties they were pretty crap.
So what's all the fuss about then? I only have one album, so I can't talk much about the older tracks, Paradize having been released in 2002. But I do have the most famous track of all: "J'ai demande a la lune" (sorry missing accents - can't find how they work on Linux), which frankly was played to death on different radio channels, especially NRJ (which is a play on letters, like NRG would in english). It is about how someone asks the moon if his loved one still wants him. Sounds wierd, but it's a nice and slow song which you'll end up humming all day (or, when climbing up some mountain in the middle of the Lake District when it should probably be the last thing on your mind)
Unfortunately, the other tracks are in M4a format, which will usually only work with iTunes, or on another player if you've got the codecs.
This track is called Marilyn, and no one has ever really been sure if it's about Monroe or Manson, although it is most probably the latter, as it uses a guitar riff not unlike some used by Satan's son. Again, you might find yourself going "oooohooohooohooooooooooooo" randomly in the middle of the day, which can only be a good thing!
"Le Grand Secret" was recorded in collaboration with Melissa Auf der Maur, whom I've never heard of before or since but has, to a German-speaker, a hilarious-sounding name (Melissa on the Wall - ok, not that funny). Another much calmer song, I like it because of its piano which acts as a good background sound. Don't worry you probably won't end up singing it though. Classic love song really.
Dunkerque. Now there's name for a track eh? Scene of the crushing-defeat-turned-into-heroic-victory-because-sailors-were-told-to-help-and-did in early WWII, it uses cool sounds in the background to make it sound about a million times better than it would without them. Never quite been able to figure out what the track is actually about, but it goes on about normal life kinda-things, saying that "the world is a pervert" as its opening line. As you would.
This is it for a while now - won't be able to post for about 4 or 5 days, but I promise I'll be back! I guess that's why I provided a whopping 4 tracks for you today - to keep you calm.
any queries, comments etc email morrybyte@gmail.com


