Friday, September 13, 2024

Raw Mirror

 The classic Iggy-glam-phase photograph would be this one from the back of Raw Power 








































Silver lame pants, silver hair, lipstick, eyeshade

Also this one from the front  




But in some ways the archetypal glam photograph would be this other one from the back of Raw Power - although he's less glammed up looking, it's the look - the looking into the mirror - that is pure glam. 





It's part of a genre of mirror based glam / post-glam / neo-glam photography. 

And mirror-themed songs ("Mirror Freak", "The Hall of Mirrors").


An alternative shot from the same session 


As an extension to the genre - its antithetical inversion - Andrew Parker points to the iconic cover of Black Flag's Damaged



It's the anti-glam mirror. Where glam is about high esteem, inflated ego, narcissism, then this is low self esteem, fractured ego, self-hatred. 

It's also where Iggy-of-Dirt-and-No-Fun collides with Iggy-as-briefly-Bowie-creature


Andrew also points to this cover to Sabotage by Black Sabbath (an influence on Black Flag)




What an odd image - backs to the mirror fits their unglam despondent 'heavy' vision, but if they looked in the mirror they might also see how ghastly their clothes are.


Also in the genre - the inner sleeve of Scritti Politti's Cupid and Psyche 85




My take on this is that the image dramatises the internal hierarchy of "the band" which is that Gamson and Maher are looking at Green's image in the mirror, Green is looking at his own image. 


Can't remember if I used this in previous mirror-theme posts - but a very knowing bit of fun from Adam Ant here as image-obsessed Dick Turpin in "Stand and Deliver"




Stand and deliver / Your money or your life
Try and use a mirror /No bullet or a knife

We're the dandy highwaymen / So tired of excuses
Of deep meaning philosophies  / Where only showbiz loses



Oh and I never noticed the back sleeve of the single before







Looking glass look-alikes 









As Steve Pafford reveals in this blogpost, Adam Ant was the inspiration for "Mirror Man" by The Human League. Phil Oakey was genuinely concerned that Adam was getting lost in his image. 


“We’ve kept this quiet for years but it’s actually about Adam Ant" he told Tracks in 1989, when the League and the insect warrior shared a manager, Miles Copeand (Sting, The Police). “It’s not anti Adam Ant and we didn’t want to offend him, but he was having to respond to his public more than was good for him.”



This puts the song (which I never much cared for - too clumpily Motown-redux) in the tradition of Cockney Rebel's "Mirror Freak", which Steve Harley wrote about his friend Marc Bolan but also about all wannabe stars. 





^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

A suggestion from Asif  - by an offshoot of the very glammy-Goth Bauhaus.



6 comments:

  1. Raw Power and Damaged are both genuinely great works of art - as good as it gets; eternal. I really rate Black Sabbath, but I haven't heard Sabotage, but that might be up there as well.

    Scritti, Adam Ant, Human League, they're a big step down really. Tiny in comparison. Minuscule.

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    1. Sabotage is cool: their last truly great album. And maybe their weirdest. Well worth hearing if you are a Sabbath fan. The artwork is another solid entry in their epic list of truly terrible record covers.

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    2. Well the point of the post is not evaluative - it's thematic.

      But all those three loom pretty big in my mind. As big as Blacks Flag and Sabbath.

      Iggy and Stooges are just in another sphere altogether, it's like Beethoven or the paintings of Turner. Alan Vega had a story about seeing the Stooges in 1969 or 1970 in NYC and after the performance - which completely rerouted his idea of what he wanted to do as an artist - apparently the deejay at the venue put on something like the Brandeburg Concertos or The Ride of the Valkyries, something of that order - which Vega took to mean an acknowledgement that what they had witnessed was supreme art.

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  2. See also 'Mirror in the Bathroom' by the determinedly un-Glam The Beat: being obsessed with mirrors means sliding gently into mental illness.

    The latest incarnation of A.R. Kane played it at their show in Leeds last week, which is something I would like to have seen.

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    Replies
    1. Ooh I would like to have witnessed that - Rudy mentioned that among all the many things they had been into as kids, 2-Tone was one of them.

      Also, A.R. Kane have a song called "One Way Mirror"

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