Modesty and Grace
Personnel:
Vocals: Armitage, Sue Roberts, Smith
Bass: Glen Smith
Keyboards: Nick Watts
Stylophone: Steve Whitfield
Cymbal Crash: Dez
The Rest: Smith
Recorded and mixed: Steve Whitfield (aided by Dez)
Recorded and mixed at Chairworks in Castleford, 1st-3rd March 2008
Mastered by Pob
Smith says:
I seem to classify songs by where I wrote them, or where I came up with the first idea for them. Some songs are Shelley songs, the ones I wrote when I was living at home with my parents. There are some college songs, which I wrote when I was away in Manchester. There are some post-Poly songs, which were written either in Shelley or Scissett. There are some Sheffield songs, (but really not that many - I started recording when I was living in Sheffield, and so it was more about learning to document what I'd written, rather than writing anything new). And there are a few London songs, and Modesty and Grace is definitely a London song.
I wrote it over a chord loop on Cubase, and it was going to be a dazzling Europop classic, except I couldn't get the verses to sit right. The riff and the hook were in place, and the vocal line, but it didn't sing very well, and all my verses were shamefully trite - I had this notion it could be translated into French, as everything sounds better when it's sung in French. The 'whores of fate' refrain wasn't there at the time - that arrived courtesy of Armitage when he got his ink-stained fingers on it, as did the words for the verses. And it was too slow, and it sounded lame.
So when it came to recording it, we speeded it up, and put real drums on it, which were really just a drum loop with a few fills dropped in. We didn't have a middle 8 for it, so we concocted one in the studio. I love the guitar on the break (a Les Paul Studio through a Fender Deluxe amp, guitar geeks), and I love the Hammond that Nick plays (a real Hammond - my dream's come true!) but the thing that really moves it along is Glen's bass line, which is subtle but gives it such a pulse! (True confessions - when we came up with the bassline, we were thinking of Red Light Spells Danger by Billy Ocean, one of the great disco classics).
Lyrics
Modesty and GraceRemember the incident at the motorway service station
A five ton trucker called the police
The sovereign and chain gang were giving the burger boy aggravation
You handed out the pick-and-mix of peace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
The pimped-up petrolheads were pushing hard for a confrontation
Squealing tyres and handbrake turns
The way you ignored them was a kind of international condemnation
The kind of coolness that burns
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
(The whores of fate hitch up their skirts
The dogs of war reach the gates
The saints unmask their sneers and smirks
You walk on through time and space)
While every nation speaks annihilation unto nation
And every party ends in tears
While every person preaches poison unto person
I watch you walking through the years
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
Modesty and Grace
(The whores of fate hitch up their skirts
The dogs of war reach the gates
The saints unmask their sneers and smirks
You walk on through time and space)
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