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Sound Future

by Happy Ships

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    scans of various different covers from the original silkscreens, lots of pics and out-takes from artworks etc plus a couple of colourful reviews and word files of info
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1.
Cigarette 05:22
see how my fingers are stained working each day from the ashtray tarring the roads of my chest so much more to enjoy nicotine keeps the matter grey sucking it in from the outside cigarette stubs out my brain lighting another each mile ____________________ lyric: warrick (from a basic Wayne idea)
2.
Car Hooter 04:40
car hooter celebrates a sound future the city rocks with sick humour put your hands together on the car hooter revolutionize urban terror motor wrists unite for the new era shatter the peace with the car hooter words Warrick Sony
3.
nothing inside silent indifference swim with the tide no point of reference nothing inside the voice of the speaker moving the crowd demanding attention I don't wear gloves I walk about nude you speak about love I speak about food poetry in style changes in slow motion dancing with guns foreskin protection ha ha ha lift up your feet in all the right places sing with the voices of party dictators I don't like guns I don't make news I wear my life like I wear shoes ________ lyric by Warrick
4.
Teething 04:08
who upset the cart you know I know it wasn't me who messed with my genes why do you make me think day to day life seems as normal as ever though much more to relax and much less to pressure affairs of the heart are not affairs of the mind thats where the beasts are so lucky they have no meaning to find what is the meaning of living am I just teething or am I getting old I wonder about this feeling that makes no sense to me when I look around - feels good I can't get rid of this feeling that science has become something holy holier than thou but when the spirit of human nature no longer grants extensions will the pressure of a finger create the pleasure of extinction ____________ lyric:Lloyd
5.
get into the egg and bacon plantation ________________ Phillip and Wayne's song
6.
Making Out 03:44
making out is an easier thing today in the light of the old fashioned way tightening up and finding a suitable hole I find myself disputing my role if seeing is believing then seeing is making me blind my mind is numbed by it all I don't go to movies I'd rather take a walk in on the beach I'd rather live in my own little world here I am a cross wired ultimatum here I am the pride of God's creation hoping with more than just a little luck my life is more than just a fuck _________________ lyric :Lloyd
7.
8.
Brasshole 05:27

about

Happy Ships:
Jono Partridge - the pocket
Wayne Rath - drums, guitar, vocals
Phillip Nangle - agricultural implements, vocals, chants
Lloyd Ross - guitar, bass, voice, studio
Hamish Davidson - sax, voice, implements
Warrick Sony - bass, drums, voice, trombone

This was the last band that I was a fully-fledged member of before I gave up the glamour, bright lights, groupies, and wheelbarrow loads full of money that defined the life of a gigging alternative musician in sleepy Cape Town in the early ’80s. What helped the Ships’ rake in even more cash was the fact that we were experimental and played only once a year. As an early indication of how eclectic the Shifty catalogue was going to turn out, this album came out hot on the heels of Shifty’s first release, Sankomota. Listening to “Sound Future” after all these years makes me feel…kinda…proud. It still sounds fresh, full of fab ideas, and whacky youthful vigor. Hey, but don’t take my word for it. Read the thoughts of Swami Hamish and Warrick Sony, download the freebees and give the album a wee preview and decide for yourself.

- Lloyd Ross

credits

released June 16, 1985

The Happy Ships
As remembered by Hamish Davidson

Cape Town in 1980 was a wonderful place. Warrick Sony and I had just got out of two years of compulsory national service and it felt like getting out of prison. We were ready to party and the New Wave was sweeping the Peninsula. I got into “The Lancaster Band” playing sax in a trilby and shades and Warrick joined “The Rude Dementals” a punk outfit. Lloyd had a band called “Rubbish” in which Wayne Raath played bass or drums or both.

In terms of venues, there was “1886” and later that year, “Scratch” opened. Scratch was maybe the first reggae club in Africa. If it wasn't the first then it was surely the best! Jerry Dixon had an incredible sound rig set up and Henry Coombs imported and spun the latest and hottest disks.

By the end of 1980 we had all left our respective bands and were working in small units pursuing experimental stuff. The units were basically Warrick and me on the one hand and Wayne and Phillip Nangle on the other. If it had not been for Lloyd Ross, the “Happy Ships” would not have happened. He seemed to have the energy, positivity, and desire to get us together.

I remember a meeting at Phillip's house where we all just sat around talking music and seeing if we liked each other. At one point in the evening, Lloyd asked Wayne and Phillip to do their 'guitar thing'. Warrick and I weren't expecting to be impressed I can assure you, but what they did was incredible. It consisted of two out of sync and somehow interlocking guitar parts that were positively 'unhinged'. It was pure Captain Beefheart! After that we both thought, “OK we can work with these guys”. That guitar thing became Egg and Bacon Plantation.

I'll talk a bit about Egg And Bacon Plantation to give you some idea of how we worked. Warrick found a slow 3 underneath that guitar thing on drums, in effect turning the piece into a waltz and I put a 'hokey' horn melody on top. In the army where Warrick and I had both been in a military band, I had learned to get this fractured sound out of the saxophone by singing and blowing through the horn at the same time. Lloyd dug it and from then on I was a happy ship only to the extent that I shredded my reeds. The melody goes into a Star-Spangled Banner quote that helps to give the tune its 'Yankee Doodle' vibe. We added roosters crowing to complement the manic singing. The whole thing is a bit like a red neck barn dance in the deep South where the moonshine has been spiked with acid!

Towards the end of the piece, the guitar part starts modulating upwards in half steps. On saxophone this was not as easy to do. Being a relatively limited player at that time, you can hear that I lose it after a while. But not to worry, the whole band loses it shortly afterward and the piece ends in a glorious cacophony. This was a standard Happy Ships type ending. Things fell apart. The center would not hold.

We did only three live performances at the end of the years 1980, 1981 and 1983. We skipped 1982 because that was the year that Lloyd moved to Johannesburg to set up Shifty Records. The first two were resoundingly successful, the last one, more of a reunion after we had finished recording the album.

The reason for the success of the first two performances had a lot to do with the venue. Scratch Club had an incredible sound system and a large following. To play through that sound rig was a sheer pleasure. Christ only knows why they took a chance on an experimental band like us because, to my knowledge, no one had played that gig before. They seemed to like us. Jerry Dixon had a history of experimental music himself.

Another reason for the successes was the mix of technology and anti-technology. We had several lovely old analog synths at our disposal, plus effects pedals and drum machines. Then on top of all of this there was a battery of pots and pans and a plethora of kiddies toys. “Not so much Dada as Gaga” I recall one critic saying, which leads on to the final reason for our success....... in a word, 'expectation'. With at least a year between performances, we were well marketed and anticipated so that people came there expecting a wild and unpredictable time.
They got it!

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Happy Ships Cape Town, South Africa

" the mix of technology and anti-technology..several lovely old analogue synths .. effects pedals and drum machines... of pots and pans and a plethora of kiddies toys. “Not so much Dada as Gaga” one critic said
... at least a year between performances, we were well marketed and anticipated so that people came there expecting a wild and unpredictable time. They got it!"
... more

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