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This is the transcript of a coffee fuelled interview with MD
and co-founder of Too Pure, Paul Cox - according to whom Too Pure
grew out of chance meetings in a cluster of unsavoury pubs in North
London. Read how each band joined the ranks, the highs the lows,
the lurching and the pubs it all happened in and take it all with
a pinch of salt. It's divided into chapters - just keep clicking
on 'next chapter' to keep reading, and it's bristling with links
to other relevant bits of the site....
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Too Pure started in 1989 - how did it happen?
I was working at Pacific records, distributing acid house records,
phoning up record shops, selling them Candy Flip, Rebel MC etc,
and I met Richard there - he was label manager for Shut up and Dance
records - legendary impossible to work with, but he seemed to do
alright and before I joined the company I spent a year unemployed
and while idle set up this indie club - The Sausage Machine. It
had gone really well - turned into a weekly club - getting some
good crowds down - Richard started to come down and got really into
it and it became the catalyst for this idea 'Why don't we put out
some of this music....
You put out 'Now That's Disgusting Music'
Half of it was bands that had played at the club and moved on -
recorded records and got some success and we asked them to come
back and record something for this LP - that was Silverfish, The
Hearthrobs, Snuff and Megacity 4 - quite indicative of what was
going on in the live scene at the time - and then we chose 4 bands
that we enjoyed ....actually it's embarrassing cause one of them
was the band I was in - The Unbelievers - I was always embarrassed
about that, but Richard insisted we were on it on merit! That was
me, Simon who now does sound for Stereolab and my mate Mike who
drives a cab - the Lush cab (as a cheap publicity stunt Lush got
Mike's cab all painted up with the cover design for their LP 'Spit'...lots
of photo opportunities! It looked quite pretty) ....Lush did their
early - probably their 1st gigs there - they never graduated to
headlining the Sausage Machine actually! I would phone up Heavenly
Records, where Emma worked to book their bands to play - East Village
were really good; and she would answer the phone and say 'Oh can
we play' so we'd let them, but at that time they were really not
very good! It was a relatively meteoric rise - the 1st EP came out
and 4AD got involved, so they went from shit support band to playing
headline gigs in bigger venues....The first few live dates Th'Faith
Healers did outside London were supporting Lush on their 1st UK
tour - we'd just got involved with them - I don't even think the
1st single had come out...
So how did you meet The Faith Healers?
It was just how the gigs were happening - in North London there
was us and Roger at the Falcon and we pretty much put the same bands
on - we'd pass them on to each other, Silverfish, Milk, Th'Faith
Healers...they wanted to play gigs. Actually I think they played
at the Dublin Castle and my flatmate Andy Hoople saw them and came
home and tried to describe them to me - they must have been all
instrumental, because he described them as sort of mutant Shadows
- twangy guitars, but also quite Sonic Youth-y - long drawn out
thing...by the time we got to book them to play at The White Horse
they had Roxanne on vocals; she was the barmaid at The Falcon where
they were all hanging out at the time, I expect there was some drunken
conversation - 'Ooh I wouldn't mind singing in a band'. Pretty soon,
apart from half the people at their gigs walking out! They were
just - one of the most striking bands of the time.
So - they were friends with Stereolab?
Well - it was probably about 18 months later - about 2 Faith Healers
singles down the line - it was '91 and Joe Dilworth who was playing
drums for Th'Faith Healers was friends with Tim Gane - probably
from McCarthy days, so Tim, when he was putting the 1st line-up
of Stereolab together (see left) invited Joe to play drums and they
recorded a single to release themselves (on Duophonic) 'The Light
That Ceases to Fail' and Joe being the cheapskate that he was gave
a copy of his new single to Richard for his birthday, it was a while
before they played any gigs actually - so there was just this single,
which we liked - we went to see them and they were brilliant live:-
Joe said they were looking for another label to release another
record - did we want to meet them? So we did, and agreed to release
their 2nd single...
At this point were you still running the label from your bedroom?
Yeah - we were still working at Pacific and it was going through
real shit at that time - going down the pan...I was going into work
and doing my own thing - do Sausage Machine or Too Pure stuff. In
the end Pacific went bust and we lost a lot of money - we'd been
working there unpaid for 3 or 4 months...
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How did the PJ Harvey thing happen?
Well, that happened at exactly the same time as Stereolab. I got
a tape from another West Country band, The Becketts. They played
at the White Horse and this guy from the Becketts said 'Here's a
band, they're friends of mine from Dorset...they really want to
play in London, I think you'll like them...' I remember I thought
the tape was really badly presented - really naff cover - a sort
of out of focus black and white photo, really bad name - sort of
Singer/Songwriter sounding - folky-ness. It just sat in the box
for a few weeks before I even bothered playing it! But when I did
play it obviously stood out because it was just not 'indie' and
it was at the height of shoegazing... Everyone was shoegazing and
Lurching.
It was like a rocky blues-y thing - a really weird mixture and
I played it to people to get their reactions...and I wondered if
it was too 'accomplished'...too good! Cause to a certain degree
that turns me off...and everyone said like 'Wow - who cares! Who
cares what genre it's in!'. There were 3 tracks on that demo - the
first 2 were Dress and Sheela-na-gig - it's not surpising that everyone
was impressed! It came at the same time as Richard getting that
1st Stereolab single and we talked about it and said 'Well, we want
to do Th'Faith Healers, we want to do Stereolab, we want to do PJ
Harvey...why not just throw everything behind this...and see if
it works - go for broke.....I think PJ Harvey and Th'Faith Healers
singles came out on the same day and Stereolab 2 weeks later, so
it was a month of Big big deal for us! We had those 3 singles all
in the top ten of the indie charts at the same time. Then the PJ
Harvey thing just went crazy.... John Peel reviewed the single in
the NME that week, made it single of the week and it all took off...
Where did you first meet Polly and the others?
Well - I missed the first time they played in London - I'd booked
them to play at the Sausage Machine at the Moonlight Club in West
Hampstead I booked a night that was Moonshake's 1st gig! Dave Callahan
was a long time friend of Tim Gane's and he'd suggested that he
got in touch with me to get a gig, so Dave sent me a tape of what
was going to be the first single - the EP on Creation...I knew of
his history in The Wolfhounds etc so it was a great gig to do -
launching this new band....and we chose to put PJ Harvey on too.
But I was away on holiday so didn't get to see them. Richard went....Tim
was there - it was a whole load of Too Pure people - but nobody
knew that then. Richard said PJ Harvey were great and I booked them
again - for the White Horse and so we talked to them at that gig
and asked them if they'd thought of putting any records out...said
'Well, we've got this label...' Polly knew of the label - unbelievably
- She was a fan of Th'Faith Healers.
I didn't expect her to be so 'on the ball' musically - maybe because
her music showed no signs of any indie influences - it sounded so
unlike anything else. We had meetings with her and Mark Vernon,
who was managing them at that time and in the second meeting, Mark
Vernon threw this question at us 'I think the band are ready to
record an album: Will you do it?'
We hadn't expected that! We hadn't recorded an album and couldn't
afford to record an album and didn't know what to do, so just said
'Yes' - not knowing how we'd pay for it. And there and then Mark
Vernon wrote down a letter of intent/contract on a piece of paper
in the pub 'We agree to put out a couple of singles and an LP by
the end of the year' sort of thing. We went away from that meeting
panicking but knew we had to do it...
How did you? Was this when you got involved with Ivo at 4AD?
Well, yeah - at the same time as that, Dave Callahan had decided
or been told that he needed some management and Tim Gane suggested
me and Richard...we didn't really want to do management but we thought
it would be a good thing to do; we liked Moonshake, it would be
a real challenge - we thought it would be interesting to work with
Creation. Sadly, within 3 weeks of deciding to do it, Dave, being
Dave, decided that Creation weren't really up to the job and he
wanted out of there, and without even asking us, handed in his notice
there and we were without a label!
At this point Pacific had gone down, and Richard had gone to work
at Polydor distribution.... I had to shop Moonshake around to get
a record deal, because we couldn't afford to do them on Too Pure...it
didn't really occur to us that they could release records with us
- they were on Creation! Why on earth would they want to release
a record on Too Pure! So I started talking to people like Dedicated
and One Little Indian and 4AD.....I went down there with the Creation
EP and a demo with 'Second Hand Clothes' and 'I'll Bring Tears'
(an unreleased song written and sung by Margaret). Ivo really liked
the stuff and he slowly pieced together that - he'd bought the Stereolab
single and heard about PJ Harvey...he realised it was all coming
from the same place....
There was a gig at the Borderline, with Moonshake headlining, PJ
Harvey supporting ....So we got toghether with him before the gig
- he said he was going away the next day and would call us when
he got back in a week...But before he left, the next day, he rang
and said 'Look I want to get involved in some way - I don't know
how, but if you need help...let me know.' We realised this was a
way that we could afford to get a PJ Harvey LP recorded, afford
to have Moonshake - become a proper label! It was really hard to
decide....I'd come to 4AD via the Pixies - Richard was a more long
term 4AD fan:- Ivo was buying into the company, so it was a big
deal....but he was coming across so well and it was a way forward.
This was Christmas 1991 and sadly this was the time that Island
was chasing PJ Harvey....Ivo made it possible to make an offer to
her that actually matched the Island deal, over a period of time,
but Mark Vernon was pretty determined to do the Island deal....Over
Christmas PJ Harvey were recording the 1st album for us - at first
in the Island studio in Chiswick. That wasn't working out and they
abandoned those recordings. So there is an alternative version of
the first album... I think we've got the tapes somewhere!
So they went and re-recorded it all down at Head's place (where
they'd recorded the demo and the 2 singles)...We released it in
.............1992 Later in '92 we got an office and Richard left
his job just before the PJ Harvey LP came out....Just after that
the Stereolab LP came out and then Th'Faith Healers LP came out....
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So you were a proper label - and got some more bands! Who was
next - Pram?
Yeah - Pram had been around for ages - I'd been playing their demos
at Pacific and getting the tape ripped out of the player! It was
the strangest thing anyone had ever heard! Everything including
the kitchen sink was on there....We'd put them on at the Sausage
Machine so during 1992 when they were working on Gash (1st LP by
Pram - they released it themselves & sold it at gigs ) we wanted
to put it out, but were busy with everything else....We'd given
them some money to do some recording....I think we thought 'If we
like it we'll put it out'....We'd got so busy with those 1st 3 albums
that we almost forgot about Pram! And then 6 months later, we went
back to them and said 'Are you still together?' - cause you know
they just sit in their house in Birmingham, listening to Can and
doing whatever it is they do - making their music! ...they said
"Yeah!" So we gave them some money to record that 1st
EP. Which was amazing - I still think it's one of the best things
we've released...so we said, "Yes, brilliant - let's release
it" and it went from there - we almost missed them, mis-started
with them...
How did Seefeel join the roster?
Seefeel was a string of demo tapes that Mark Clifford was sending
me, that got better and better (as you would hope!)...starting off
sounding a little bit shoe-gazey...a bit My Bloody Valentine. In
fact, very My Bloody Valentine, and it just got better and better.
It got to a point where we were playing it a lot and liked it but
didn't really know what it was/ what they were trying to do....Mark
Clifford was very persistent, and in the end we got them into the
office to meet them and see what they were like. We said to them
'We like this - we're playing it, but we don't really know what
it's all about.' It was beginning to not fit in, having been too
generic - shoegazing to start with, it now didn't really fit anywhere...And
they persuaded us to do it.
This was during which year? 92?
We didn't release anything in 92, we'd been getting demos then...they'd
played a couple of horrendous gigs at the White Horse - which was
obviously not the right place for them! They were an indie band
that didn't want to be an indie band... This was around that time
that The Aphex Twin, Black Dog etc - all that 'ambient' techno was
getting so big...Warp started up and everything...They were kind
of edging towards that.. Yeah - suddenly Seefeel kind of found a
home - having lost a home with sort of more traditional song based
guitar music....it was becoming more cohesive for them musically...
This leads us on to Mouse on Mars ... the first electronic band
on Too Pure.
Jan sent a tape (they were admirers of Seefeel's) - just some noodlings
that him and Andi had done together. It was a really enjoyable and
intriguing listen, and kind of 'What are they?' Because it wasn't
four to the floor club music - it was so strange. The tape was so
strange - for instance the Brian Wilson track - with the Brian Wilson
sample on it, has got a straightforward 4/4 rock drum loop on it
and kind of sounds like a Can-y /Krautrock-y thing and it sounded
like a different band - I thought he'd just got a tape of a band
a recorded some electronica over the top! I had to ask him 'Is that
you?' - the first phone calls were hilarious - us and these 2 German
guys - very tentative....We didn't really know what we were doing
- whether we should do it or not, but thought - we'll go to see
them - they'd told us a German label was interested, so we realised
we had to decide. So we went to meet them, and they're such characters!
Meeting them swung it! On the plane on the way back we were like'What
the fuck was that all about!'...they're totally....mad. Really creative
- full of character. It was going to be fun working with them -
exciting, we just wanted to do it. That 1st tape Jan sent had a
letter with it which said 'I'm sending you this because I like Stereolab
and Seefeel, you may not like what we're doing, but thanks for releasing
those records.' We thought Mouse on Mars was a crap name and tried
to disuade them from using it, but they wouldn't change it, thankfully...they
were right.
Minxus - they were part of the London music scene again...
Yeah - they played often - at the Sausage Machine and many others...they
were called The Embuggered once, probably other names too. It was
another one of those persistent things. Joe (Whitney) brought in
tapes all the time - they were really prolific and recorded on their
4track at home....I really liked what they were doing but felt that
She's imagery was a bit overtly Gothic, and that the vocals were
just a little bit over embellished...a bit...almost over accomplished
in a way....But I liked them and I got Richard to listen to them....It
was probably about 2 years of them giving us demos and inviting
us to gigs and then there was one gig at the Powerhaus that just
clicked:- Bunch of new songs - Richard said 'I think they're great
now' and we decided to go for it.....The Minxus thing was not a
successful Too Pure thing really, but I still believe in those songs.
I believe the 1st Minxus album should have been as striking as the
1st Pixies album....
They didn't stay together all that long... What are they up
to now?
She (the lead singer)is doing something like the She Roccola Review
- sort of obscure Ike and Tina Turner songs recorded by Joe (drums)
and Gavin (guitar) on the 4 track, and She and a couple of other
girls do a vocal sort of karaoke style and dance... It's sort of
a cabaret act.... Joe drums for The Flaming Stars now and Gavin's
still writing songs and bringing them in - he seems to have a clothing
empire starting up on the Holloway Road...
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The Voodoo Queens - how did they join the label?
A lot of people were kind of surprised /didn't see them as a Too
Pure type of band ... It was what was happening in London at the
time...Me and Richard had tried to get together with Huggy Bear
who'd been playing alot, with all these other bands, including Mambo
Taxi. Anjali left them (Mambo Taxi, not Huggy Bear), I think she
knew exactly what she wanted to do and she wanted her own band!
We had a tape from her...she was calling up just for advice and
stuff, and then John Peel offered them a session after just one
gig, I think - it was all moving really quickly....Richard had gone
to his local venue 'Harlow Square' to see Cornershop play...he saw
The Voodoo Queens support them there and was completely blown away.
Anjali's a born performer - an absolute star - put her on stage
or in front of a camera and she's away! They sell themselves. There
were at least 2 killer singles:- 'Supermodel Superficial' was the
first and was really the highpoint of their career...Darryl and
Jamie at Rough Trade said it was their highest selling single of
the whole year! They were on TV - competing against Boyzone for
busker of the week on Naked City - Anjali's style tips featured
in glossy magazines etc... We knew that it might be a short lived
thing and I think they did too....When Anjali tried to develop it
musically they it became a bit forced...they lost a bit of their
charm. Huggy Bear and that whole scene of 5 bands a night, anything
can happen (and the riot girl thing which was part of it - but not
for half of the bands that got lumped in with it!) was really exciting.
But didn't last....When Huggy Bear supported Bikini Kill at ULU
they were so good - they were poised to become a band of Sonic Youth-like
proportions, but just seemed to shy away from developing - seemed
bent on being destructive...John's in the new Comet Gain line up
now...
How did you find Long Fin Killie?
Luke was in Fenn - they were a good band - much more straightforward
- quite sonic guitar music. Luke wrote most of their songs...We
really liked them - went up to Glasgow to see them play....I irritated
Luke for at least 2 years saying 'I like it, but I'm not sure...'
but he persevered. Then in the end he said, 'I've left Fenn; really,
this other band I've had going aswell's the real McCoy.' Initially
we were really annoyed - he'd been pushing and pushing us to sign
this band that he wasn't really into...but he'd wanted to develop
this other thing quietly I suppose...he sent us a tape and I put
them on at the White Horse - this was Long Fin Killie...they were
weird, they had this amazing song The Lamberton Lamplighter - quite
an extraordinary weird pop song - weird story - weird instrumentation.
All along the way we could see Luke was a real star - had real prescence....intelligent
and eloquent - just made sense all the time....but this went on
and on - in the end we said let's release the Lamberton Lamplighter
and see how it goes - then he did some more recording and we got
rolling with it - at last... And I'm glad we did - they're not a
massive band yet but he has such massive talent and it's been so
amazing working with him. The two Long Fin Killie LPs I'm so proud
of having released - I still think they're undiscoverd gems....
Meanwhile Moonshake had split and Margaret formed Laika...
That was a serious mess - especially as it seemed so untimely -
they'd toured with PJ Harvey in America - after Eva Luna and Big
Good Angel they seemed poised to do something cataclysmically good.
Eva Luna was a ground breaking album....then Margaret didn't really
like Dave keeping the name etc But she's now rolling on with Laika
- she's really proud of what she did with Moonshake....Dave released
a record that was received quite badly....I'm still pissed off by
how badly it was reacted to - it's a really ambitious, interesting
LP - maybe a little hurried...but it led to a situation that made
it impossible to keep working with them for financial reasons...
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Jack - how did you find out about them?
Chris and Loretta from Piao told me they'd seen a band that were
the best band they'd seen in a year or two...they knew they weren't
the kind of band they'd be able to do on their label - just too
expensive and too complex to do (Chris and Loretta started putting
on gigs and putting out records during the whole Huggies/Cornershop/Riot
girl time - about 10 bands for 1 pence in a toilet in Camden...They
really kicked off with an all dayer in Hammersmith for under 18s
to get into aswell as the usual gig going audience...it was called
Piao because they couldn't charge on the door 'Pay in advance only'.
Chris was a serious anorak - worked at Record and Tape and went
to every single gig in London.) I took their recommnedation really
seriously and I rang Anthony straight away to see if there was a
demo. There was and it was 'Dress you in mourning' and 'Wintercomesummer'...So
striking / ludicrous - to have a demo that starts with a seven minute
ballad, with 2 minutes of instrumental before the vocal comes in!
You just don't do that - you have, say, a two minute song - grab
people's attention. It was obvious they were quite daring - this
was a demo and they'd shoved on saxaphone and violin and piano -
they'd really gone for it! And their songs were really strong. I
remember going to see a ludicrous gig at the Laurel Tree where they
had the full line- up - must've been 10 people - taking up half
the Laurel Tree, and I heard all sorts in them that night not least
a Liverpool thing - a Bunnymen/Teardrops thing - sort of lush pop
songs - definately pop songs but with a dark side, a complex side.
And they were amibtious - they want to reach as wide a public as
possible - to be huge, on their own terms...very big ideas and big
personalities so we knew we wanted to work with them -we knew it
would be really exciting and challenging....
How did you set up things in America and find Seely?
The American deal came about after dealing with various different
companies for our releases - The year we had those 1st high profile
releases out we went to CMJ in New York and had a Too Pure night
with Stereolab, Th' Faith Healers and Moonshake - massively sold
out; and out of that we got a deal for Stereolab with Elektra -
which was annoying really because it meant they could leave us (they
release their records in England on their own label), Th'Faith Healers
with Elektra too and Moonshake with Matador, PJ Harvey had already
gone to Island in the States....working with different companies
there - finding out how majors work there - it helped financially
too of course...Seefeel got a deal there with Astralwerks...but
we felt it was an interesting prospect to get the whole label a
deal over there....then Richard was in LA and Robin Hurley from
the 4AD office over there recommended Mark Giger from American Recordings
and after a last minute meeting with him he was totally persuaded
to go to them - Mark knew virtually more about the history of Too
Pure than he did....So it seemed ideal. We really wanted someone
out there running things so with that deal we could have Nick West
there in an office in LA - we'd known him since Pacific days.....
Seely had sent demos to me here and I enjoyed them but they were
a little bit too indie at first then they sent stuff to Nick...eventually
they decided to record an LP themselves for a local label in Atlanta
and sent a copy to Nick - he really liked it and sent a copy to
us in London...we really liked it and thought it worth while to
go and see them - it was a way of taking America seriously - a way
of Nick getting more involved. We met them and really liked them
- they were really determined and were going to develop and develop
- liked them and thought it worth while to help them get to where
they're going
How did Scala (3 of the members of Seefeel) come back to the
label?
Mark Clifford had taken what seemed to be a bit of a stranglehold
on the proceedings within Seefeel - the other 3 had been doing some
song writing and didn't have an outlet for it, Touch had helped
them to record some early demos - and they came to us for a publishing
deal actually, but when we heard the songs we realised we liked
it so much, we wanted to do it and asked them to come and record
for us...Seefeel leaving Too Pure was unpleasant, even though they
tried to leave on good terms, it was sad what happened to Seefeel
- they were poised to really happen and it kind of went astray so
it's good to be working with them again.
Was there anything you wanted to achieve with Too Pure- a mission
statement sort of thing?
There was never any statement of intent - Too Pure just sort of
happened organically - no real aesthetic or definate aim - just
releasing stuff we liked, worked with people we thought it would
be fun to work with...
I'm intrigued by the balance between business and art - it 's a
shame you have to sell records to release them...it can't be 100%
artistic decision making...it can be heartbreaking - a delicate
balancing act...You have to recoup the money you spend in order
to make more records or its all over...but labels that expand and
get too big seem to loose the direction or desire to push forward
new or different things that they once had....
If you grow too much and become too commerically based you can
get too far away from what motivates you, from what you want to
do... 4AD is a good blueprint - it has million selling records like
the Breeders or whatever but it's still what they want to do - they
still release things like His Name is Alive and Dead Can Dance that
are unique and rather less likely to have big pop hits...
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