

I haven’t posted in a few days mostly due to my anticipating this post.
In late April, 1978, Brian Eno showed up in New York to master the second Talking Heads LP. Not long after his arrival a concert took place at Artists Space in early May, wherein Communists, Terminal, Gynecologists, Theoretical Girls, Daily Life, Tone Death, The Contortions, DNA, MARS and Teenage Jesus and The Jerks played over the course of five nights. It was here that James Chance of the Contortions ended up beating the shit out of a Village Voice music editor and establishing The Contortions as one of the most talked about acts in town.
Eno had, of course, caught on to the East Village scene, and it wasn’t long before rumor was out that he had come to New York and was going produce a record: ten bands, two cuts apiece. Soon, this rumor was condensed and it was apparent that Eno was only going to record four bands, four songs each, and only East Village bands. The four selected turned out to be the last four acts of the Artists Space show that took place in early May.
“I was interested in it as an art historian. One of the things that really struck me was how brief some of these scenes are....The way I sold this record to Chris Blackwell, who was to put up the money for this, was I said this is a piece of history an I don’t expect that it’s going to make a lot of money now. It won’t sell a lot of records. But I think it will end up being an important document.” -Brian Eno
Released a few months later in 1978, No New York would soon become the signifier for No Wave. Before this record, MARS, DNA, Teenage Jesus and The Contortions were just a bunch of different bands whose only similarities were that they were all East Village bands and all friends. Bands such as Gynecologists and Theoretical Girls, who were much more definitive of the “No Wave sound”-the deconstructed post-post-punk noise melange, were not even featured, much to the surprise of pretty much everyone. Most of the musicians on the record were pretty disgusted with the results, and the underlying agreement seemed to be that Brian Eno had no idea what he was doing. Most of the bands were recorded doing their first takes, and featured recording of The Contortions’ “Can’t Stand Myself” was actually supposed to be a warm-up.
That said, there’s something beautiful about this record, and it’s possibly that the way it was recorded is in itself an act of the No Wave essence. Maybe the record is a compilation of single-takes and essentially live recordings, but that is precisely what the bands wanted to be. It’s not a produced album, but a documentation, and without it, the only reason anyone would remember James Chance was because he smashed their head in with a saxophone in the late seventies.
A note on the album cover: “I wanted pictures of everyone, from all the bands, on there. And of course ‘Oh god a photo session with all of those people, what a nightmare.’ Then I suddenly had this idea. In Europe we had all this stuff with Baader-Meinhof and the Red Brigade. eevry time you would go to a railway station or an airport you’d see these posters that had several identical-sized black and white photos of people who were terrorists or who the police were looking for. What was very interesting about those photos was that they were very different in quality from each other. Some were obviously cut from newspapers, they had different textures to them. And I thought, ‘Oh, that’s a good idea.’ So I just said to everybody, ‘Just give me any photograph of yourself that you have.’ And that’s what it was. Each person gave to me a photograph of themselves that they liked and I had them reduced all to the same size. And then for the front cover I went with photographer Marcia Resnick and all her gear and a few of the musicians to the World Trade Center and whilst in there took a picture with her camera. It was very poor lighting and I did everything wrong with the camera, but I was sort of intrigued with the image that came out. How ephemeral it looked. I don’t remember if the figures were someone in the group or not.” -Brian Eno
Get it here!






