JohnTem82387976

14 August 2016

Reupload - Dex Dexter - Another Car, Another Car Crash/ Car Trek





Label: Trade 2/ Island
Year of Release: 1996

Was there ever a music press hyped scene more mocked than Romo? We could talk about Lionpop if you want, but that really fits under the category of "vague and poorly named ideas which only one person ever mentioned". Romo, on the other hand, was a simple case of bad timing and under-prepared artists. Some of the bands involved, like InAura, would produce material which under the right circumstances may have hit home. The issue was that their travelling companions had barely formed five minutes ago, were still in the process of forging identities of their own, and seemed to have an abundance of confidence which belied the actual material gathered. A romantic modernist reaction against the excessive laddisms of Britpop made complete sense at the time, but many of the acts involved seemed like student performance art revue projects caught halfway through rehearsal time having fully designed the costumes whilst only managing to have written one page of the script. In the end, Britpop died, Pop returned, and that was that. You can't invent the future. Sigue Sigue Sputnik will tell you that.

For a scene so hyped it's also shocking that so few pieces of recorded work slipped out. Orlando were the kings, managing one album and a few singles. InAura had a great album ready which was rejected by EMI, and subsequently issued by an indie two years too late for anybody to notice or care. Boutique were allowed a couple of interesting singles before slipping under the radar.

Dex Dexter were even less noticeable, being given permission to put out this single - with one of the greatest titles for an A side of all time - before being forgotten about almost immediately. The curious thing about the end product is how it sounds more like a late nineties lo-fi British approach to indie than "Romo" per se. Each angular guitar riff, each cheap keyboard drone which sounds rather like Sweep the puppet squeaking in protest, and each novelty car horn noise makes the end product more akin to the Teen C frolics of Bis than any serious new movement. At the risk of using idle comparisons for a second consecutive sentence, it's true to say that the sharpness of early Adam and the Ants is equally apparent, but unlike Orlando or InAura, there's not much in the way of sweeping electronic melodrama going on here. Maybe if Dex Dexter hadn't boarded the Romo bus, they'd have stood a slight chance in the indie world outside.

Their demise seemed extremely swift. I was introduced to the lead singer Seb at the Water Rats in Kings Cross mere months after this single was issued, and asked him what they had planned next. "You know as much as I do," he grumbled, his flamboyant persona dropping almost immediately. There were to be no more releases, but if you want to put the expectations of some music critics into perspective, go away and read Taylor Parkes' review of a Dex Dexter live gig here. Seldom has hyperbole been less justified, but hopefully enough time has passed now for the single to be enjoyed for what it is without any weight of expectation attached.



4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have the CD single of this somewhere, and could never understand the ire it generated in my indie scenester friends - but the MM article makes things a little clearer about the standard they thought it should live up to. Romo was in some ways just a too-early not-dance-enough version of Electroclash, and you could feasibly whip up a fairly ok one-CD compilation if you wanted to include Minty & Off-set related stuff too.

Michael said...

Love the title sounds like a Only Ones / Bowie / Human / Primaries mash up.

Kurt Van Der Bogarde said...

I've got a bootleg of Xavior's solo album Chainsaw Mass Appeal and a bunch of Dex demos including the brilliant Chemistry Of Youth which was going to be the second single after this. Brilliant band but collapsed under the rift between the pop/Prince/looning around ethos of Xav and the prog-rock philosophy of the rest esp Even the keyboardist. Xavior later played keyboards for Placebo and fronted Paul St Paul And The Apostles before going on to be a highly resepcted dining pianist - each weekend lunchtime he can be found tinkling the ivories at Bistroteque in East London - at least when he hasn't been paid stonking big fees to do such gigs as Elton John &n David Furnish's wedding.

Anonymous said...


Ah, dex dex ter... We didn't want to be prog, we just didn't want to be, or sound like, BIS, nor Chleopatrah.
..Who are those bands? ..Exactly.
...So Kurt, Xav seems to have gone from strength to strength, hey.
Perception continues to be the mother of all narratives apparently.

Evan