Monday, 8 July 2013

Book review: A Dance with Dragons by George R R Martin (Harper Voyager)




(****) I have been a fan of George R R Martin’s epic fantasy series, A Song of Ice and Fire, since the publication of the first installment, A Game of Thrones in 1996. It had everything I wanted from fantasy that had been missing from Lord of the Rings – grit, realpolitik, multi-dimensional characters, snappy –  often funny –  dialogue, and sophisticated plotting. No longer did people do things simply because ‘it was written’; no longer was the struggle between good and evil being fought for the sake of the struggle. People had solid motives for their actions and the line between good and evil was blurred and continuously shifting. I put up with the two main faults of the books – elaborate descriptiveness and a boding sense that Martin might lose control of the plot at some point. The former didn’t improve but the latter didn’t materialise. 

At least not the first three books. Then came the interminable wait for the fourth installment, and incessant broken promises from Martin as to when it would appear. We waited five years and then, in 2005, got two novels worth of half a novel. A Feast for Crows came in at over 1000 pages but only told half a story. The three characters most of the readers cared about, Tyrion the Dwarf, Jon the Bastard of the Night Watch and Daenarys the exiled Queen across the Water, did not feature, and were being saved up for the next installment which would run in parallel with A Feast for Crows. Instead Martin chose to: expand storylines about Samwell Tarly, an overweight scribe and would-be intellect, Brienne a female knight, the battle for succession in the Iron Islands, and political intrigue in Dorne; and a continue the storylines of Arya and Sansa Stark and Cersei Lannister. A Feast for Crows was still a good fantasy novel, but the sheen – the increasing lack of humour, the persistence of the over-descriptiveness, the missing central characters the ever expanding sub-plots – had been tarnished. I agreed with the general thrust of the critical and fan communities – Martin needed to get his act together quickly for the next installment.

Six years later, in 2011, came A Dance with Dragons, even longer than its partner. By then I had lost some interest in the series and was studying for a late degree in English Literature, so reading a 1000+ page-long fantasy novel for pleasure wasn’t on. My interest was rekindled by the TV series, and having finished my serious reading this summer, I finally grappled with this latest installment. It took me a month to read, and I would have been lost without the helpful A Song of Ice and Fire wiki and the plot summaries of the previous novels on Wikipedia. As before, Martin introduces new storylines and continues old ones. Of the three main ones, The Tyrion and Jon story strands were disappointing in resolving little. Tyrion’s dialogue – one of the big strengths of the earlier books – appears to me to have become less funny, although it is hard to know whether that’s because my reading habits have developed in the eleven years since I last read about his exploits or because Martin is losing his touch. Jon’s pronouncements, on the other hand, have become positively irritating. It’s as if Martin thinks the signs of great leadership are to always disagree with your advisers – a trait that he had previously laid on Daenarys (did she ever take any advice from any of her trusted advisers?). All we ever get from Jon are alleged pearls of wisdom that if collected together and used as guidance would cause countries to fall and companies to go bankrupt. Better is the Daenarys storyline where Martin is far subtler in showing the problems of ruling a conquered territory. She is advised by many, some well, some poorly, and the advice she follows doesn’t always work out. I would guess that one of Martin’s influences are the covert insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. Of the new storylines, the Dornish prince’s quest for Danearys’s hand in marriage could easily have been cut without loss, and the emergence of another Targaryen prince-in-exile failed to ignite my interest. The most powerful new storyline, of a character called Reek (not actually a new storyline but if I explain why it spoils the plot), will be familiar to viewers of the TV series where he was introduced much earlier, but not to readers who haven’t seen it. Owing much to Tolkien’s Sméagol in LOTR , his strand is by far the most exciting, sickening and unexpected in the novel. As in previous parts, some major characters die unexpectedly, and there are a number of surprising plot twists. A Dance with Dragons ends less decisively than Cersei’s downfall in A Feast for Crows in part because Martin’s original plan of ending with two big battles had to be postponed due to lack of space, and we are left instead with a number of cliff-hangers, but there is a compensating epilogue – the strongest single part of the novel in plot terms, and some hope that Martin is now seriously considering pulling together his far-too-many story strands.   

And he has, at last, learnt to cut down on his ornate descriptiveness. Let's see if The Winds of Winter comes out any more quickly (not a chance).

Monday, 24 June 2013

Album reviews - QUOTSA, Daft Punk, Strokes, David Bowie, Justin Timberlake

Hello. This is my first post. Catching up on my music, and listened to a number of albums released this year.

These stink:

Justin Timberlake - The 20/20 Experience (RCA Records). * We waited seven years for this? Twelve songs, none of them shorter than 4 and half minutes (and eight of them six minutes or longer!). Every single one of them outstays its welcome, often after thirty seconds. Timberlake appears to be confusing songwriting with intricate production, and while a couple of the latter (and shorter) songs threaten you with a hook, its all undermined by lack of any discernible melody.



David Bowie - The Next Day (ISO Records). *  We waited ten years for this? My problem with artists like David Bowie (and Scott Walker is also guily of this) is that they try to push the boundaries of music by introducing random elements - in Bowie's case with cut-up lyrics and experiments in sound (in Walker's case it tends to be just the experimental sound thing - fist hitting dead pig percussion sounds like ... fist hitting dead pig), that every once in a while produce a step forward in music but mostly produce noise. This album isn't as unlistenable as Timberlake's dire effort but none of it is staying on my ipod, not even the best track, lead single 'Where Are We Now?"

This was disappointing:

The Strokes - Comedown Machine (Rough Trade Records) ** More varied than its predecessors with Julian Casablancas collaborating more with his band mates than for previous albums. That may not have been a good idea. Some electronic French influences, particularly on 'Welcome to Japan', possibly deriving from Casablancas's appearance on the new Daft Punk album.  Kept 'Call it Fate, Call it Karma' on my ipod, the least typical track on the album, combining a falsetto vocal from Casblancas with a jazz guitar. All in all,  slightly worse than the last album, which is in keeping with their career trajectory.


These grew on me:

Daft Punk - Random Access Memories (Daft Life) *** The second most hyped album of 2013 so far, after Bowie's, but this has more to it. A move largely away from synthenthisers and electonic gadgets (although   Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo  and Thomas Bangalter appear to have excludedc auto-tune from their definition of "electronic gadgets") and towards real instruments, and a shed load of collaborators, including Chic's Nile Rodgers, Casablancas and Omar Hakim (the drummer for Dire Straits Brothers in Arms and Sting's first solo album The Dream of the Blue Turtles). I am not usually a fan of Pharell Williams's weedy R 'n' B falsetto vocal, but Daft Punk put it to great use on 'Lose Yourself to Dance' and the brilliant lead single 'Get Lucky'. My favourite track though is the 9-minute 'Giorgio by Moroder' which features a monologue by Moroder over which plays a track that is clearly written in homage to him and fellow French 70s electonic legends , Jean-Michel Jarre and Space.

Queens of the Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork (Matador Records)*** We waited seven years for this? Yeah alright, maybe it was worth it this time. QUOTSA's best album since the classic 2001 Songs for the Deaf . I didn't like 'My God is the Sun' when it was first released as the opening single, but for all its stereotypical heavy-metallic QUOTSA sound, it grew on me. I immediately took to the slower, piano-based 'Vampyre Of Time And Memory' which builds to a slow mellow crescendo. 'Kalopsia' is even mellower ro begin with, and in fact I overlooked it at first, but liked it more on repeat listens, particularly as the heavier guitar riff kicks in. 'I Appear Missing' owes a lot to early Radiohead but had a chorus that is comes from a slow heavy-rock tradition. This album is softer than usual for QUOTSA and risks alienating some fans, but I think it's an interesting and tuneful album.