We Love the City

Released 16th October 2000; 2CD version re-released 28th September 2009

We Love the City was Hefner’s commercial and creative peak.

Having cleared a large backlog of songs on the band’s first two albums and various B-sides, for their third Darren Hayman wrote a new set of songs, loosely themed around love in the capital city. We Love The City eschews the band’s former broken indie-folk sound in favour of a bouncy, urban, blue-eyed soul, and an expanded line up including Hammond organs, Wurlitzer pianos and brass sections.

Songs like ‘Greedy Ugly People’, ‘Good Fruit’, ‘Painting and Kissing’ and ‘The Day that Thatcher Dies’ are typical examples of the direct, infectious, intelligent style that endeared Hefner to so many. The album’s narrative is conceptual and played out by a retinue of vividly drawn characters, but at heart this is Hayman’s most personal and focussed work.

Always championed by John Peel, promotion for this album culminated in a full, real time performance show session, broadcast live from BBC Maida Vale (now available elsewhere as the album Maida Vale).

This two-disc set expands the original album to a mighty 39 songs, including all of the relevant B-sides, substantially different alternate versions and surprising remixes from Electric Sound of Joy, Piano Magic and The Wisdom of Harry.

Review of We Love the City from http://www.thelineofbestfit.com/

BY SIMON TYERS, 8 OCTOBER 2009


Hefner
‘s posthumous merchandise bears the legend “Britain’s biggest small band”. With 2000′s third proper album We Love The City they nearly became Britain’s smallest big band, cracking the top 50 with the preceding single ‘Good Fruit’ and playing a good amount of big festivals. Up to this point they were self-made men who sounded like they recorded ad hoc in bedrooms after listening to too many Jonathan Richman and country records and never got round to understanding women. Darren Hayman claims in the liner notes that this is his favourite of their four albums, the first to be written towards a whole album rather than a selection of tracks plucked from his back catalogue. He’s also said it was influenced by Dexys Midnight Runners’ Searching For The Young Soul Rebels, a grand statement to make but, if it doesn’t come up to Kevin Rowland’s famously exacting standards of hard-hitting soul, the occasionally expanded musical palette tacked onto the reliably ramshackle basic indie trio template (although Hefner were a quartet by now) and raw emotional core give it a blue-eyed sheen that demonstrated why they earned themselves such a cult following bereft of major press or radio support.

Claimed at the time as a concept album about London, it’s more apparent that the lyrical theme is more of people being in love in and against the city, its boho aspirations and commuter daily grind. “This is sixth form poetry, not Keats or Yeats” Hayman cautions on the title track, but in its field his character studies and urbanity appreciations touch a nerve, albeit not the same one suggested in ‘The Day That Thatcher Dies’. While nobody would ever claim he possesses one of the great voices, it carries here as an emotional, yearning tool that benefits the likes of the querulous, Violent Femmes-ish ‘Don’t Go’ and ‘The Greedy Ugly People’, unyielding in its triumphant coda “love don’t stop no wars, don’t stop no cancer, it stops my heart”. The title track frames his appreciation of the city “that never loves us back” in a frame that specifies it’s only because “because it lets us down”, thinking big and bringing people together despite itself. It’s actually a much more solid, consistent album than memory recalls. Shining anew the best is ‘The Cure For Evil’, a piano led love song that implicitly fears mutual adoration might fall apart through either neglect or overdoing it, featuring one of six guest vocal appearances from Amelia Fletcher (Talulah Gosh, Heavenly, Marine Research, Tender Trap) and a triumphant brass coda.

Hayman’s archive-clearing exercises on these reissues has been all encompassing, and this one gives us an extra 27 – count ‘em – tracks. The B-sides (sadly not including their cover of David Soul’s
‘Don’t Give Up On Us’) essentially sound like lesser versions of the sound of this and the previous album, bar the odd and not un-proficient analogue pulsing of ‘Blackhorse Road’, a sound Hefner would take up fuller on next album Dead Media with, shall we say, mixed results. The demos just sound like less produced versions of the same tracks as on the album. Boxing Hefner, the odds’n’sods compilation that preceded this record, offcuts ‘Lee Remick’ (not the Go-Betweens song of the same name, although it sounds a bit like them), about family feuding and “all my pretty friends who just grew up and failed”, and ‘The Hymn For The Things We Didn’t Do’ are worth seeking out, while the remixes give up on remodelling much of the songs and go their own direction. The Electric Sound Of Joy, big Lamacq tips at the time, offer a brass-motorik crossover, Baxendale turn ‘The Greedy Ugly People’ into warped spangly electro and the usually dreampop collective Piano Magic literally cut up ‘Good Fruit’ into something often not far from the Ibizan sound, if you can imagine such a thing.

“The city has no faith if we’ve no faith in the city/But this is my home, this is where I want to be” Hayman asserts amid the whirling organs and brass flourishes of ‘The Greater London Radio’. It’s an ambitious statement that dovetails with the great leap forward into lusher arrangement and production territory that, if only for this album, Hayman and Hefner made. Strip away all that, though, and at its heart are tremendously romantic, intelligent songs that demonstrate how, from a bare bones guitar-bass-drums indie outset and beyond all stylistic ideals, Hefner found their own unique voice.

Buy We Love the City on 2CD

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Or buy the downloads from Bandcamp

 

Good Fruit – Single

Good Fruit

Originally released 14th August 2000.

‘Our most successful song from our most successful album’, muses Darren. Featuring vocals from Amelia Fletcher (whose indie pedigree includes Talulah Gosh, Heavenly, Marine Research and Tender Trap), the single achieved substantial radio play and was packaged as a 2 CD edition: disc 1 included the home-recorded b-sides, ‘Jubilee’ and the instrumental ‘Blackhorse Road’, while disc 2 featured ‘I Will Make Her Love Me’ and ‘Seafaring’. The 7-inch included two remixes by The Wisdom of Harry and Piano Magic.

Buy Good Fruit CD-1


 

Buy Good Fruit CD-2


 

 

The Greedy Ugly People – Single

Greedy Ugly People

Originally released 2nd October 2000.

Darren’s favourite Hefner song for its ‘simplicity of lyric and sentiment, but done in an original way’. The double CD edition featured, on CD-1, the b-sides ‘Milkmaids’ and ‘Kate Cleaver’s House’, and ‘Everything’s Falling Apart’ and ‘Don’t Give Up On Us Babe’ (a David Soul cover) on CD-2, while the 7-inch included two remixes by Baxendale (a band previously released by Darren on his now-defunct label Evil World) and Electric Sound of Joy. A rare twelve-inch also exists featuring a longer version of Baxendale’s mix.

Buy The Greedy Ugly People CD-1


Buy The Greedy Ugly People CD-2


 

 

Christian Girls – Single

Christian Girls

Originally released April 2000 on Too Pure.

Released on CD and 7-inch with the b-sides ‘We Don’t Care What They Say About Us’ and ‘The Fear’ (omitted from the 7-inch), the single version of ‘Christian Girls’ represents the third recording of the song; having signed Hefner on the basis of its original recording, Too Pure placed pressure on the band to re-record it as a single. After recording ‘More Christian Girls’ (the same song with different lyrics), the band relented and released the final version of the single, which would subsequently appear on Boxing Hefner.

Buy Christian Girls CD


 

 

Boxing Hefner

Boxing Hefner

A compilation of a-sides, b-sides, rarities and unreleased songs, Boxing Hefner features three Steve Lamacq BBC sessions and one Peel session, alongside several previously-released songs, and according to Darren contains more of the band’s live favourites than any other Hefner release.

 

Review of Boxing Hefner from pennyblackmusic.co.uk

BY SCOTT MILLER

As far as I can tell, Hefner has a pretty healthy buzz in the UK, which is why I feel a little self-conscious writing this review. See, I live in the US, and, while I’m sure there are pockets of folks here who love Hefner, they’re not what you’d call a household name. In other words, before I got this record a few weeks ago, I had never heard them. So please cut me the same type of slack that you would a kid from Greenland who was gushing about how great this new band Belle & Sebastian are in a review of ‘Boy With the Arab Strap’.

That said, on to the gushing…

I got Boxing Hefner in the mail with a bunch of other stuff that I was unfamiliar with. I was going through one of those periods where it suddenly strikes me that there must be tons of great new bands that I’m missing out on- so I ordered a bunch of stuff I’d never heard & waited patiently for the enlightening shipment to arrive.

There’s a pretty great alley in Sacramento (where I live) that goes really far back & dead ends in to a fence. No cars ever drive up it & it’s covered by trees & not all messed up by broken bottles or anything. Not to mention some gracious woman (who I’d thank profusely if I wasn’t fairly certain that she’d freak out if she knew kids were hanging out behind her house) has stored a bunch of lawn chairs in the alley, so we’ve made it our personal little hangout where we can listen to records (on the coveted battery operated record player), shoot the breeze, and mysteriously, some beer or wine usually appears on the scene. I was by myself the day that the pregnant package arrived (is there anything worse than waiting for something exciting in the mail?) so I took it to the alley & released a bit of stale UK air & some 15 records.

I kind of circled them at first like you do with the presents at Christmas time – trying to formulate some strategy that will make for an inspiring order of events – evenly spacing out the socks, the gift certificates, & the stuff you REALLY hope you got. And of course, you want to save the best one for last. I’d say I did
pretty good – there were some pretty great singles in there (and, yes, a few pairs of socks) & I was feeling pretty good about the future of pop music. Pretty good is all I expect most of the time so when I lazily grabbed the last record, I was already pretty full (not to mention, the sun was going down). But this record, it turns out, was no last piece of ham at Christmas dinner that one mindlessly eats, despite being stuffed, solely, I suppose, because it’s the last piece (& it looks so lonely.) No, this record with the silly cartoon on the cover, this record by a band whose name totally rubbed me the wrong way, this “Boxing Hefner” turned out to be the proverbial last, greatest present under the tree. 3 weeks later, it’s so ingrained in my brain (in fact, I’m listening to it right now) that it’s hard to think back to my first impressions, but I’ll try.

“Christian Girls” was first & I liked it OK but there was still that initial mistrust of something new going on. “Lee Remick” was second. And third. And fourth. I don’t know exactly what Lee Remick did to deserve to have 2 of the greatest pop songs in the world written about her, but it must have been pretty great (or maybe it’s just those eyes). Anyway, this isn’t the Go Betweens song, but a gorgeous ballad that seems to me to be about growing up & realising that things aren’t so perfect, but still revisiting (thus somehow retaining) your innocence via the things you obsessed on when young. The things that became symbols of God knows what but Christ they were important- in this case, Lee Remick. I suppose that lots of bands can write about bittersweet things like that, but Hefner make their songs SOUND like what they’re about. Do you know what I mean? It’s more than ‘Sad Song = Slow’; Happy Song = Fast’. The lyrics equate with the music so perfectly that you get the feeling that the songs were written, if not at the same moment, at least on the same day as the things they sing about happened. They’re neither lo-fi nor overly polished – simply naked.

The obvious focal point of the group is Darren Hayman, who sings, plays guitar & writes the songs. His voice, though not what you could call good in any traditional sense, is absolutely perfect, no essential, for the songs.

Ahh..the songs. They’re little epics sung with so much damn passion – a passion that matches blow for blow the highly personal (& sometimes uncomfortably specific) lyrics. It also makes for a completely obsessive experience, and when you’re obsessed, you don’t always think too clearly.

Take this review – I’m fairly sure the point I started to make an hour ago about “Lee Remick” & how I listened to it over & over has digressed- or maybe blurred is a better word.

Yes, my point has most definitely gotten very blurry.

I’m no longer in the alley, that’s for sure. I was briefly at the record store the next day buying their second record ‘The Fidelity Wars’ (another story and a GREAT album!) but I’m not there anymore either.

I think maybe it’s Monday morning now (I got Boxing Hefner on Friday) & I’m crawling in to work. Everyone’s asking me what I did this weekend & I’m giving them answers that are best suited for their individual personalities. I didn’t tell anyone what I REALLY did though – it was just too hard to explain. What I REALLY did was listen to Hefner. First thing in the morning, walking around, at a show, going to bed….that’s what I did.

I was watching Raging Bull on Sunday evening and I was marvelling at how for each amazing, scene-stealing performance that DeNiro gave, Scorsese matched it blow for blow with the most awesome camera angle and/or visual. Then I thought about how Darren Hayman does that with his music & lyrics. Obsessed, I said.

But I realise that I need to make some sense now since this is supposed to be a review – but really there’s no way to properly describe how music sounds, and comparisons are usually lazy. Case in point: from what I’ve read, these are the comparisons Hefner most often get in the press. Belle & Sebastian, Violent Femmes & Jonathan Richman.

First, everything gets compared to Belle & Sebastian these days, but I’ve never heard any bands that sound like what I like about B&S. The only thing I can think of is that most bands have a hard time putting out a completely interesting album & both Hefner & B&S have done that. But where Belle & Sebastian might insert a perfect trumpet solo, Hefner are more likely to throw in a raggedly inspired Trombone bit.

The Violent Femmes makes some sense. Both have simple, live sounding instrumentation that often leans to the acoustic side of things – but while the Violent Femmes helped define underground music in the 80s (at least in the US), Hefner are very much English & I also feel that what they’re doing is most definitely not “80’s”. I actually threw on the first Violent Femmes record recently to see what I felt about the comparison, and I’d say that ‘Good Feeling’ comes close to the simplistic beauty that Hefner are capable of.

Jonathan Richman is accurate in the sense that both share a refreshing directness & honesty, a sort of timeless quality & each have imperfectly perfect voices, but let’s face it, nobody is like Jonathan Richman, Hefner included. (They do, however, do a great version of J. Richman’s “To Hide A Little Thought” on Boxing Hefner that’s every bit as good as the original, and, as only great bands can do, they make it theirs.)

I could go on and on and I’d still just be talking in circles, so I’ll wrap this up by stating the obvious: I love Hefner. I think you will too. Boxing Hefner is a great record & a perfect introduction to the band. Don’t be deterred by the fact that this is technically an odds & ends record (2 songs are unreleased, 5 are unreleased [and fairly different] versions of older songs & 5 have appeared on record before). It’s every bit as good as the other two. I trust that everyone reading this has been totally wrapped up in a band/record before & I hope that if you get anything from this review, it’s that sense of being so in to something that you want to say 100 things at once & you’re never sure if you’ve said any of it. Thanks for reading.

Revelations! – EP

Revelations

 

Originally released January 2000 on Top Dog Recordings.

 

Recorded live from one of the band’s Peel Sessions, Revelations! is a four-track EP of gospel covers, inspired by bassist John Morrison’s habit of playing tapes of gospel songs on the band’s tour bus. John himself selected the soul-influenced ‘Nobody Knows (The Trouble I See)’ and ‘Dragnet For Jesus’; Darren chose the folkier tracks ‘He Got Better Things For You’ and ‘Turkle Dove’.

Orphan Songs – EP

Orphan Songs

Originally released 28th October 1999 on Everlasting Records (Spain only).

Orphan Songs (or Canciones Huerfanas) features six previously-released Hefner songs collated solely for the Spanish market, including ‘More Christian Girls’ (the second edition of ‘Christian Girls’ with rewritten lyrics), ‘Normal Molly’, ‘China Crisis’, ‘Goethe’s Letter To Vic Chesnutt’, ‘My Art College Days Are Over’, and ‘Wicker Girl’.

I Took Her Love For Granted – Single

I Took Her Love For Granted

Originally released 11th October 1999 on Too Pure.

The third and final single from The Fidelity Wars, ‘I Took Her Love For Granted’ was released on CD and 7-inch with ‘To Hide A Little Thought’ (omitted from the 7-inch) and a Jonathan Richman cover, ‘A Bellyful Of Babies’, as its b-sides. The single’s video, shot by John Hardwick, featured the band running through a south London park, apparently naked (but wearing nylon body stockings). ‘I remember John, the director, making us watch The Magnificent Seven before the day to get us into character,’ recalls Darren.

Buy I Took Her Love For Granted CD