During their short three year career, little information on Belgian group the Names
spread outside France and the Low Countries. Likewise their appeal was equally
removed, the bulk of their records selling on the strength of their association
with the Factory label and producer Martin Hannett, rather than the excellent music they
invariably contained. Yet Michel Sordinia's group deserved better, as creators
of a brand of sophisticated alternative rock far superior to that purveyed by
the majority of their English peers.
| Early Years: The Passengers
The group attracted the beginnings of a following during 1978,
and as they improved as musicians, their music became more complex.
Following the departure of Franckson and Hanrez, Sordinia took
over as frontman, gradually mastering the art of playing bass and
singing simultaneously. Den Tandt scraped together sufficient
funds to purchase a early synthesizer, while Deprez remained on
guitar. Although the subsequent non-drummer situation took longer
to resolve, the group were able to spend most of 1978 and early
1979 concentrating on refining a sound they could call their own,
writing original material such as Speak German to Your Car,
Reduced to Stereotypes and Dance in Circles, none of which was released.
In terms of musical influence, the Passengers live set now leaned
increasingly toward two of the headline acts they were booked to
support: Simple Minds and Magazine. Indeed the Magazine show in
the spring of 1979 proved something of a watershed. As well as
a proper soundcheck, the influential Manchester band allowed
their guests full use of their lightshow. The resulting set was
well received, and the Passengers subsequently gained further
bookings in Brussels as an opening act. A live performance for
BRT radio in 1979 (complete with canned applause) accurately
captures their set at this time, and excerpts from it are
included on the archive collection Spectators of Life. Live tapes
also underline the fact that Sordinia sang in English from the
outset, a decision which probably alienated some Belgian
audiences, but a necessary evil if the group were to make any
headway internationally.
The Names evolved from Brussels new wave group the Passengers, formed in Brussels around
Christmas 1977 by guitarist Marc Deprez and bassist Michel Sordinia, then
passing as Mike S. Christophe Den Tandt was subsequently recruited on drums,
and with second guitarist Robert Franckson and singer Isabelle Hanrez,
the band began gigging with a set combining original material with Velvet
Underground and Richard Hell covers. Somewhat predictably, given the gender
configuration, comparisons with Blondie became commonplace. Despite being
university students the punk ethos held sway: having entered (and won) a
talent competition, the group promptly turned down their prize of a one-off single deal.
| Debut 45: Spectators Of Life
After a demo tape caught the attention of WEA's Belgian office,
the label offered the Passengers a one-off single deal, more as
a means of testing the market for home-grown New Wave than
through any particular enthusiasm for their music. Declining a
producer, the band elected to press the record straight from the
demo. It was a move they soon came to regret, but Spectators Of
Life was nonetheless a gem, combining a piano-led Europop feel
with an urgent, modern dynamic. Backed with White Life and The
Drive (redolent of Wire and Magazine respectively), the single
was also issued as a 12" on Celluloid. Surprisingly, this
promising debut failed to sell in appreciable quantities, and is
today a scarce collector's item. Probably it was too commercial
for a post-punk audience, but too edgy for the mainstream.
Before the single appeared the group became the Names, a move
prompted by reading reviews of a rival set of Passengers in the
NME. Since the band already harboured ambitions in
the UK, a swift change of identity was deemed necessary, the
Names being adopted following an ironic (and, with hindsight,
frankly bad) suggestion from a friend. Throughout this period,
and indeed their entire career, the Names
were managed by Michelle Mauguit, also Sordinia's partner. On
this score she revealed to Brussels scenesheet En Attendant:
"Certain tensions arise, just like in every other group, but
nothing serious. We sort out any problems together, because
I remain above all a friend. In that respect the work
always takes second place."(1)
| The Factory Connection
Following the WEA single, a second turning point came after the
Joy Division concert at the Plan K in Brussels on 17 January
1980. Having targeted Fiction and Factory as the best of
Britain's cutting-edge labels, Sordinia seized the opportunity
to slip Joy Division manager Rob Gretton a copy of Spectators of
Life. Although Fiction had already responded positively, when
Gretton called a few weeks later to offer a single on Factory the
Names needed no second bidding. Factory mandarin Tony Wilson
closed the agreement with a simple handshake on a visit to
Brussels soon after. Nightshift, and to shake
their guitars as they played. Factory's restricted budget meant
that the group were not present for the final mix, and although
happy with the sound Hannett achieved, felt he had thinned their
cherished 'wall of sound' a little too much, particularly on the
flipside, I Wish I Could Speak Your Language.
While in Manchester the Names were to have played support to A
Certain Ratio at the Beach Club on 29 July, but were forced to
cancel. Their place was taken at short notice by Steve Morris,
Peter Hook and Bernard Sumner, whose short set (as the No-Names)
marked the low-key debut of New Order. A good indication of their
live set during this period is provided by the five tracks
included on the Some Of The Interesting Things You'll See On A
Long-Distance Flight CD (TWI 082), which (despite appearances) were
taped at a Brussels show in 1980, and the several tracks from the
Oostakker show included on the posthumous Spectators of Life LTM CD.
Indeed had the Names recorded an album at this time, the results
might well have been awesome, with Questions and Answers being
a song at least as good as Nightshift.
| Fac 29: Nightshift
Boasting a dark power and grace, Nightshift received good press
on release in November (on 7" only, FAC 29). Nevertheless its
excellence was overshadowed to a degree by the image of the label
on which it appeared. For genuinely inventive groups such as
Section 25, Crispy Ambulance, Minny Pops and the Names, the
patronage of Factory would prove both a blessing and a curse,
with the careers of all four blighted by the charge of aping Joy
Division long after each produced entire albums of unique and
original material. For better or worse, however, Factory at least
got the Names noticed outside Belgium, and by the following
summer had sold over 4500 copies of Nightshift - despite having
failed to order a prompt second pressing after the initial run
sold out.
A Factory newsletter dated August 1981 reveals two further points
of interest. The gorgeous picture sleeve was inspired by the
flipside, and supposedly depicts 'people at a party having
conversations'. More importantly, distributor Pinnacle expressed
the view that Factory were the only record company in Britain
capable of failing to make Nightshift a hit. Factory (ie Wilson)
countered that they were 'not a record company, but that's
another story...'
Incidently, not one but two videos were shot for Nightshift. The
first, shot at the band's rehearsal space, appeared on the A
Factory Video collection (FACT 56), while a second was never
publicly aired. Interviewed by this writer in 1990, Sordinia
declared both 'unbearable', although in this writer's opinion the
Nightshift clip is probably the best on the entire Factory tape.
| Enter Crepuscule
The strong influence of Factory on the Brussels scene increased
tenfold with the establishment of sister labels Factory Benelux
and Les Disques du Crepuscule by journalist Michel Duval. After
initial singles by A Certain Ratio, Section 25 and Durutti
Column, Crepuscule proper opened its account with the celebrated
cassette package From Brussels With Love (TWI 007), released in
November 1980. The Names contributed Cat, a self-produced track
recorded seven months earlier in April. The Names also joined
Section 25 and A Certain Ratio for a valedictory Factory night
at the Plan K on November 23rd.
Following the recording of Nightshift, the remainder of 1980 and
the first half of 1981 was spent writing new material, already
with an album in mind, and wrestling with the new sound imposed
by Hannett. It is some respects ironic that Hannett was also the
producer of choice to both Joy Division and Magazine, with whom
the Names were frequently - and unfavourably - compared. For even
the swiftest of listens to any record by the Names reveals no
bass-heavy dark night of the soul. The Names were sober,
certainly, but never steeped in psychodrama, while their music -
sweeping, cinematic, sometimes epic - was blessed with an airy
European feel which set it poles apart from the dour likes of the
Sound, or the Cure.
| Calcutta
In May 1981 a new single, Calcutta, was cut in Brussels for
Factory Benelux, but only after some deliberation sent to Hannett
in Manchester for remixing. As a result the release of this all-important
second single would be delayed for no less than eight
months. In the meantime, the Names completed a short Dutch tour
with labelmates Minny Pops, and recorded two tracks for
Crepuscule compilations. The first, the short instrumental Music
for Someone, was released on the double set The Fruit of the Original
Sin in November, and became a frequent opener at live shows. Tokyo
Twilight, the second, appeared on the celebrated Christmas album,
Ghosts of Christmas Past. The old material in the live set was
also dropped in favour of songs written for a proposed debut album.
1981 also saw Sordinia briefly involved in a sideline project,
By Chance, whose one single on Crammed Discs (Soul Kitchen/
Revenge) is of interest if only because Revenge would later be
radically reworked as a Names song. An oddball but danceable
Belgian 'supergroup', By Chance recorded in London and also
performed one gig with Marine and Defunkt at Plan K during the
summer. While their style was several light years removed from
the Names, Sordinia says he enjoyed the indulgence, and felt his
singing improved as a result.
Calcutta, backed by Postcards, was eventually released by Factory
Benelux (FBN 9, on both 7" and 12") in January 1982, more than
a year after Nightshift had whetted public interest. Both new
sides were excellent songs, yet the single sold fewer copies than
Nightshift, despite being pronounced 'difficult to resist' by the
NME. In Brussels, it hardly helped that wags re-christened the
lead song Quelle Cute Ass ('what a cute ass') - a ribald
interpretation Sordinia failed to anticipate, and can hardly have
welcomed.
| 1982: Dialogue North-South
Despite Calcutta's relatively disappointing showing, 1982 proved
to be the Names' most prolific year. Through the first half of
February the group took part in the first Crepuscule package
tour, Dialogue North-South, alongside such luminaries as Paul
Haig, Richard Jobson, Durutti Column, Marine, Minny Pops,
Isolation Ward and Antena. The tour took in Belgium, Holland,
France and - just - the UK, the original intention being that all
concerned would play experimental sets unhindered by tiresome
concepts like familiar singles, or musicians standing upright on
stage. In the event only the Names, Minny Pops and Tuxedomoon
would fully embrace this concept. Adopting the moniker N.I.M.
(Names in Mutation), the Names presented only Music For Someone
and the second (slow) side of their album-to-be, bravely soldiering on with the concept
long after it became clear that other participants were content
to play it safe. In Lyon, a large university town in which the
Names were particularly popular, this uncompromising approach had
to be abandoned after the audience threatened to riot unless the
band delivered their singles.
Guitarist Marc Deprez also performed a short solo set on several
dates, his Durutti-esque composition Ballade à Tervuren
subsequently appearing on the Crepuscule video Umbrellas in the
Sun (TWI 099), and a version taken from the live tape of the
NIM show at the Beurschouwburg in Brussels on February 3rd appearing
on the Spectators Of Life LTM archive CD. The spoken
introduction is by Wally Van Middendorp of Dutch labelmates Minny
Pops. Covering the tour for Sounds, Johnny Waller seemed
to feel the need to apologise for liking the band:
A patchy album and cassette souvenir of the tour was released by
Crepuscule soon after as Some Of The Interesting Things You'll See On A
Long-Distance Flight (TWI 081), which includes a low-fi version
of (This is) Harmony. To confuse matters the eventual CD version
replaced this with five early Names numbers recorded live in
Brussels in 1980.
"Which leaves the Names, for whom everyone I spoke to had
nothing but scorn, 'too gloomy', 'just like Joy Division'
and 'no originality'. While admitting that all these have
an element of truth, they're gross exaggerations and I
found their deep drum resonance and driving bass enjoyably
derivative."(2)
| Swimming
Dialogue North-South wound up in London with a sparsely attended
show by the Names and Marine at The Venue on 16 February 1982.
The gig saw the band slated for their taste and reserve by the
NME's Chris Bohn:
The next day the band recorded a BBC radio session for the John
Peel programme, although these versions of Discovery,
Life by the Sea, (This Is) Harmony and Shanghai
Gesture suffered from hurried mixing. Sordinia and company then
continued their exhausting
schedule and again travelled north to Manchester, this time to
record an album, already titled Swimming.
"After Marine, the Names sound redundant; still locked into
a cosy dripfeed dream of comfortable distances and slight
vagaries, they swaddle tasteful, tame rhythms with
suffocating synthesised cotton wool blankets. The Names are
neat and unsoiled by life and as such fail to touch all but
those similarly cocooned."(3)
Like Nightshift, Swimming was cut at Strawberry Studio with
Martin Hannett producing, an earlier proposal to record with John
Leckie having fallen through. Hannett, ever idiosyncratic in his
working methods, refused to listen to any of the material in
advance of the session, despite the fact that all was already
fully arranged. For their part the band were keen to impress on
him the concept of 'small sounds-big consequences', and sought
more natural, acoustic textures, including piano as a lead
instrument.
At Hannett's suggestion the album was split into two distinct
sides, side one with an uptempo 'day' feel, and a slower 'night'
feel to the second. The resulting set was a less dense affair
than their previous two singles, and while the deceptive
lightness of the overall production might not benefit every song
individually, it does make for a more balanced listen over forty-five minutes.
Despite the title, and the curious aquatic sounds
linking each track, the album was not underpinned by any grand
concept, although it later transpired that the water noises made
it hard for radio to break up the album for airplay.
Released on Crepuscule (rather than Factory Benelux) in June
1982, Swimming still sounds fresh today and belies the fact that
it was completed in no more than a week. However the album was
all but ignored by the British music press save for The Face, who
determined:
Curiously, it seems that several different sleeve designs were
considered for Swimming, all of them outstanding. The promotional
poster offered the striking red and black abstract by Benoit
Hennebert, adapted for the Spectators Of Life CD,
while the press advert (reproduced in Britain in
Masterbag) featured a quite different but highly attractive
monochrome graphic.
"The Names are concerned with space. Dunes, sea birds and
grey waves fill Swimming, its fragile, occasionally
pedestrian structures given depth and cohesion by an
intelligent, imaginative Martin Hannett production."(4)
| The Turn Of The Tide
Although Swimming found some acclaim and healthy sales it failed
to elevate the band onto a higher commercial plateau. Indeed
times were changing, and 1982 saw a sudden thaw in the 'cold
wave' which had frozen the alternative rock scene since the turn
of the decade. Great White Hopes such as Wire, Joy Division,
Magazine and Josef K were already long gone, while others faded
as the radio began to play a different tune. 1981 had seen New
Order release Movement, and the Cure exchange Faith for
Pornography. By the close of 1982 the bright new pop of
Temptation and Let's Go To Bed had already appeared as singles:
fine records both, but a far cry from that which had gone before. Indeed even
Cabaret Voltaire were beginning to flirt with the mainstream.
Matters were only made worse for the Names when drummer Luc
Capelle was badly injured in a motorbike crash shortly after
Swimming was released. Sensing that the writing was on the wall,
the Names struggled on until the close of 1982, recording their
swansong single in Brussels with temporary drummer Michel
Silverstein. Hannett travelled to Brussels to produce the three
tracks, although the band chose (perhaps unwisely) to supervise
the final mix themselves.
| The Astronaut
The Astronaut eventually appeared on 12" only (TWI 111), with
many copies pressed in green vinyl, and was backed by Revenge and
Shining Hours, two recordings deemed 'unfinished' by Sordinia.
In truth all three tracks were a disappointment, with Shining
Hours in particular projecting far better live, as is clear from
the tape of the last Names performance at Lombeek. The same tape
also features Secrets, a strong song written too late in the day
to benefit from a studio recording.
Long before TWI 111 appeared in October 1983 the Names had
elected to split. On graduating (in journalism/law and economics
respectively), Sordinia and Deprez found themselves without the
grants on which they had previously subsisted. Neither wished to
fund the Names with unemployment cheques. With no real audience
beyond a widespread cult, and no band revenue besides modest gig
fees and copyright mechanicals, orthodox employment assumed
priority.
With the subsequent drop in commitment came a corresponding fall
in quality, and so the Names parted company. With the benefit of
hindsight in 1990, Sordinia admitted to a few regrets on this
score, and felt that the band should perhaps have tried harder
to adapt and survive. But the split proved permanent. Marc Deprez
entered the civil service, while both drummers remained in music.
Christophe den Tandt subsequently gained a Yale scholarship and
studied literature in North America for five years before
returning to Brussels to teach. Michel Sordinia became a film
critic, writing books on Terry Gilliam and Nagisa Oshima before
directing for the first time in 1991.
| The Astronaut
In 1990 Swimming was remastered for CD, and released under that
title on Factory Benelux as FBN 9 CD. The disc added a plethora
of extra tracks, including both sides of FAC 29 and FBN 9
singles, as well as The Astronaut, and two studio-recorded
compilation tracks, Music For Someone and Cat. LTM re-issued
the set in 2000, following it with the archive set Spectators Of Life.
Remarkably, in 1994 all four original members reunited under the
moniker Jazz to record a new studio album, Nightvision. Joined
by bassist Eric De Bruyne, the 'new' group produced a polished
set of nine new songs, with The Tether Ends Here and The Fall in
particular proving the equal of anything the Names recorded
fifteen years earlier. Hardly heard outside Belgium, where it
appeared in the Pazz label in 1997, CD copies can be obtained by
mailorder from LTM. Two further cuts from this period can
also be heard on the Spectators Of Life CD, including a cover of I'm In
Love With a German Filmstar, originally a hit for Fiction/Polydor
recording group the Passions in 1981.
James Nice, March 2001.
| Sources
1) En Attendant (Belgium), 1.80.
THE NAMES DISCOGRAPHY
2) Sounds, 3.4.82.
3) NME, 2.82.
4) The Face, 7.82.
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All contents Copyright © 2001 by James Nice/LTM Publishing