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Pop CultureDecember 9, 2018

RIP Pete Shelley: Punk, Lover, Homosapien

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Kiran Dass remembers Pete Shelley, co-founder and co-songwriter of the Buzzcocks, who died this week.

After we’d heard that co-founder of punk group the Buzzcocks Pete Shelley had died of a heart attack aged 63 at home in Estonia, one of my friends pointed out that one of the great things about the Buzzcocks, whose songs are often genderless, is that whether you are gay, straight, male, female, in love or brokenhearted, there is always a Buzzcocks song that you can relate to. And with his own fluid sexuality and ambiguity, Shelley was one of the first examples of queer punks who blazed the trail.

I can think of at least eleven Pete Shelley/Buzzcocks songs that have the word ‘love’ in the title. Here’s some of them: ‘Love is Lies’, ‘Love You More’, ‘Love in Vain’, ‘Waiting for Love’, ‘You Say You Don’t Love Me’, ‘I Don’t Know What Love Is’, ‘Love Battery’, ‘In Love with Somebody Else,’ and of course, the iconic ‘Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve). And let’s not forget the Buzzcocks’ archly titled second album Love Bites.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=terg_LPT3X0

This is one of the many endearing and singular things about the Buzzcocks and specifically Shelley, that I love. While generally, punk’s stance (a stance which rapidly became cliched, with its air of artifice) was one of anarchy, rebellion, aggression and confrontation, the Buzzcocks didn’t share the Clash’s machismo. And while Sex Pistols sneered about ‘No Feelings’, the Buzzcocks quite radically sang about the murky, confusing and often emotional, fumbling terrain of love, lust, jealousy and small-town ennui in a smart, direct and witty and sometimes cynical way. The songs are personal but universal. There is a kind of poetry to these personal lyrics and Shelley was the master at clever wordplay. I guess it’s not by coincidence that he’d changed his name from the more prosaic Pete McNeish, taking on the surname Shelley after the Romantic poet.

Another punk trope was to bang on about boredom and being bored. Buzzcocks brilliantly turned this on its head with the iconic and meta Howard Devoto penned ‘Boredom’. “You know the scene – very humdrum. Boredom, Boredom, Boredom”. A song so great post-punk group Orange Juice high-fived the Buzzcocks by referencing it in their catchy hit ‘Rip it Up’ – “and my favourite song’s entitled ‘Boredom’” croons Edwyn Collins as they add a guitar piece that reinterprets Shelley’s guitar solo from the song.

I love that Shelley wrote the music for ‘Boredom’ on a crappy Woolworth’s guitar, and my favourite thing about the song is his crack-up memorable two-note guitar solo, delivered at speed (66 times, in fact). That was one of the most important things to me about Shelley – a kind of rejection of or at least indifference to slick musicianship. He once said in the GuardianI’m not interested in being able to play. A musician is like another brand of entertainer.” And yet, while retaining a kind of simplicity and economy, he crafted one perfect tightly-wound pop song riddled with hooks after another. Shelley was a truly visionary songwriter.

And you know, it’s impossible to pin down just one favourite Buzzcocks song because there are so many hits. The compilation Singles Going Steady (there’s that clever wordplay again) collects a bunch of singles, and as Scottish crime writer and fan Ian Rankin has pointed out about the Buzzcocks – there is not an ounce of fat on there.

THE BUZZCOCKS

My favourites change all the time to form a kind of rotating suite. ‘Boredom’ of course. The BBC-banned single ‘Orgasm Addict’ with its sleeve (Buzzcocks and Shelley always had such great, smart design) featuring a collage of an iron-headed woman designed by band associate and artist Linder, the irresistible rush of ‘Love You More’. Definitely ‘E.S.P’ – I smile every time and feel ecstatic whenever I hear that beautifully simple repeated guitar motif. (“Do you believe in E.S.P? I do and I’m trying to get through to you!”) There’s ‘Sixteen’, ‘Fiction Romance’ (“a fiction romance, I love this story that never seems to happen in my life”), ‘Moving Away from the Pulsebeat’, ‘Fast Cars’ (“they’re so depressing going around and around/I hate fast cars”), and ‘Lipstick’! I love the way he rhymes “morning” with “warning” and how old bandmate Devoto borrowed Shelley’s exact guitar riff for his follow up group Magazine’s song ‘Shot By Both Sides’.

But one of the things I most admire and respect Shelley and the Buzzcocks for is the seismic statement they made about DIY and autonomy when they self-released their debut EP Spiral Scratch in 1977, setting a strong example for the future of independent music. They recorded four tracks in 30 minutes and released it themselves with borrowed money on their own label New Hormones. In doing this, they asserted the point that you didn’t have to wait to be asked to do something, you don’t need permission to put music out. You could just Do It Yourself. I love the back cover tracklisting, and how it itemises what take was used and if there were overdubs: Side One ‘Breakdown’ – “3rd take, No dubs” ‘Time’s Up’ – “1st take, guitar dub.” A smart way to demystify, show the ease of and democratise the music-making process.

Shelley, who studied engineering at polytech had experimented with building his own oscillators prior to forming the Buzzcocks. With an interest in Krautrock and synthesizers, this was something he explored further post Buzzcocks, particularly with his superb second solo album Homosapien (1981). I love this album. With it, Shelley re-invented himself, or, depending on how you look at it, went back to his roots, using synthesizers and drum machines to create a more experimental but very poppy synth album. The sly title track with the suggestive lyrics “I’m the shy boy, you’re the coy boy, and you know we’re Homosapien too. I’m the cruiser, you’re the loser, me and you sir, Homosapien too,” was, surprise, surprise, banned by our old mates the BBC. See also the 1979 track ‘Big Noise from the Jungle’ that Shelley and a Manchester teenager named Eric Random recorded together as The Tiller Boys – a surprising, avant-rock piece that nods to Shelley’s early love of Can. What a wonderfully sonically adventurous musician. That’s true punk.

Shelley once said in the Guardian that “history is made by those that turn up.” Let’s be thankful he did.

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Pop CultureDecember 8, 2018

The incredible story of House of Drag’s Medulla Oblongata

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Alex Casey talks to Medulla Oblongata following their shock elimination from House of Drag. 

Medulla Oblongata is the name of the stem that connects the spinal cord to the brain. It’s also the part that controls the gag reflex. It’s also the name of the recently-eliminated contestant from House of Drag, a non-binary former refugee from the Maldives and one of the most fascinating characters on the competitive drag show. “Are you just saying that because I’m not white?” Medulla spikes back at my assessment, grinning before taking a small sip of hot chocolate.

I wasn’t. On a set visit to House of Drag, Medulla had bristled past us meek media types in full drag, wearing a fur bodysuit with googly eyes stuck to each boob. They had already finished the costume challenge as the other drag stars scampered around in their underwear, wildly gluing together cups and cellophane. In private interviews, Medulla shared poetic insights such as “drag is love, drag is life, drag is family,” without an inch of irony or pretense.

Then, they were gone.

Fun fact: a TVNZ publicist was holing up these balls

“I got what I wanted out of the show. I just wanted more exposure, I didn’t go in to win or anything,” Medulla tells me. Seems an odd attitude for a reality TV competition. “I’m just not that competitive – I prefer elevating others. I’ll style wigs for people, I’ll do their makeup. To play any part in queer culture is indescribable for me.” Age and experience was also a factor, with Medulla being the oldest at 32. “When I walked in, I realised I was competing against children. I was happy to let them have it.”

Once I heard Medulla’s incredible origin story, it was hardly surprising that they had such a relaxed approach to the competition. “House of Drag is just a blip in the big grand scheme of my life. It’s a million miles away from where I grew up and what I’ve been through, so no shade and no mean comments from anyone else could ever shake me.” Born in the Maldives to a middle class family, Medulla was raised by nannies from Sri Lanka, India and Nepal, but remained sheltered to the realities of Maldivian life.

At the age of 13, Medulla was moved to Malaysia after surviving an attempted sexual assault from a group boys at their school. “It was a huge, horrible situation. I got the boys suspended and then my dad shipped me off to Malaysia because he didn’t want me anywhere near that school.” It was a case of out of sight, out of mind. “The further I was away from it, the less I had to think about it.” Three years later, their parents presented them with a choice of countries: Saudi Arabia, Yemen or New Zealand.

Photo: TVNZ

Medulla chose New Zealand because it was the farthest option. “I remember landing in Christchurch and stepping on the tarmac, feeling the cold breeze on my face, and immediately feeling like I was home,” they recall. “I am so fortunate to have been sent here. I came into my own here, I found out who I am what I want to do.” Although they had dabbled in wearing their step-sisters clothes as a child, the concept of drag and queer culture was still a great unknown, especially considering these ‘offences’ are punishable by death in the Maldives.

It was in Te Anau, of all places, where Medulla first dabbled in drag. “I met a man from Auckland who had travelled down to fundraise for a new medical centre. One of his ideas was to have a little drag pageant with all the locals. He told me I would look fabulous in drag, so I did it.” Stepping out for the first time in front of an audience in drag, Medulla remembers the pageant going went well. “It was great, but I didn’t do it again for two years. I didn’t have the resources and I was just stuck in this really small town.”

Medulla Oblongata and Bunny Holiday in House of Drag

There was also the issue that, back home, Medulla’s family had no idea of their double life. “I couldn’t fully embrace drag even then because I was still in the closet. I felt like I was lying.” They came out to their parents, who responded as saying “we accept you as you are, but we cannot accept you as our son.” After winning the Miss Wellington drag show in 2014, the prize was sullied by the reaction back home. News of the drag win quickly reached the media in the Maldives, which led to hate mail and death threats.

Medulla says that negative media coverage is still around today. “After the comedy challenge in episode two of House of Drag, I posted some photos of my looks online. Almost immediately afterwards, all these articles came out in the Maldives saying that I had psychological issues and that I should be jailed if I ever came back.” They still get messages from people who they grew up with voicing their disgust. “These are people that I loved, it’s just like… what can you do? The only thing that I can do is be as visible and as queer and as authentic as I can.”

The cast of House of Drag

Now identifying as gender non-conforming, Medulla is thankful that House of Drag welcomed a spectrum of gender identities. “I’m just post gender, you know? I’m over it. I feel like I am none and all at the same time, and it’s very revolutionary that someone like me can be in a TV show.” Spending three hours to transform into ‘her’, there’s little difference between the drag persona and the everyday person. “In or out of drag, I’m still myself. But when I’m her, my mannerisms make more sense and I make more sense.”

Having travelled back to the Maldives to participate in human rights protests, and witnessing friends murdered and beaten for their beliefs, Medulla remains a fierce activist in New Zealand. After our interview, they were heading into the city to raise money for HIV awareness, and didn’t complete dismiss my suggestion that they should consider running for Parliament. “At the very least, I want New Zealand should raise their refugee quota. There are so many people who want to be given the chance to prove themselves.”

“New Zealand has given me the opportunity to be my true, authentic self, I’m just so grateful that I’ve been given the opportunity to shine.”