Once upon a time I corresponded, via the intermediary of her
agent, with Diamanda Galás. I wanted permission to use some of her lyrics in a
compendium of Gothic culture I was putting together. ‘Ah yes, this is the
gentleman who wrote that lovely piece about me … Of course he can use it’, she
said, purring away, I liked to imagine. Phew. I’m not sure what she’d make of this.
I first came across Diamanda Galás in the form of her very
uncharacteristic ‘speed gospel’ album from 1988, You Must Be Certain of the Devil, which I picked up at a
second-hand record store in Oxford. That recording is pretty accessible, but I
swiftly discovered how challenging the rest of her output tends to be.
Nevertheless, I could hear a genuinely prophetic voice in her concern for people
with AIDS and mental illness, or the victims of genocides the world preferred
to forget about.
In case you don’t know, Galás’s masterpiece is the Plague Mass of 1991, a scarifying but
spellbinding examination of the malign relationship between religion and disease
which uses liturgical texts to align the bodies of those who suffer sickness
with that of Christ in the Eucharist. I see it as a Christian meditation of
profound meaning and importance. I’m also slightly and scandalously tickled
that when I lent it to a Goth music journalist friend to listen to in 2000 she
turned it off after ten minutes saying it was ‘the most disturbed thing I’ve
ever heard’. I saw the diva herself perform in London in 2001 and again two
years later: I felt as though I should have a medal really, with a bar for the
second occasion.
My impression was that Diamanda had gone off the boil in
recent years. I watched a couple of recent concert videos on Youtube which
suggested that the famous multi-octave voice might be getting a bit ropey as
she edged through her sixth decade, and failed to find anything new that she
may have been doing (actually there was a bit, though her publicity seemed to
be somewhat neglectful, and she is still performing – this year more than most). So I hadn’t given her much
thought of late, though I continue to pray for her in recognition of her at-least-once-prophetic
role.
I had no idea until very recently that Ms Galás had
expressed any opinion at all about PJ Harvey. But, in 2009, I see, she remembered
back to 1995 when ‘There were friends of mine, drag queens, calling me saying “there’s
somebody who’s dressing like you, wearing your hair, studying your vocals,
wearing your makeup.” At first I said “I don’t want to know, I’m working”,
but then I went to one of her concerts. And I’m telling you, if you’re gonna do
me in drag? You’d better be taller than me. And tougher than me. And you’d
better be a man.’
Oh dear. It reminds me a bit of what Ms G said about
Patricia Morrison, then of the Sisters of Mercy, another very inappropriate
comparison: ‘she’s so much taller and fatter than me [I think poor Morrison is
5 foot nothing] and she dresses so badly’. But then you can find film of PJH
being terribly snarky about Kylie Minogue. It’s more than a little perplexing that
charismatic women musicians feel the need to scorn one another so and, even
when they’re outspoken feminists, to enlist gendered imagery to do it.
The Blessed Diamanda’s friends were somewhat misinforming
her, anyway: although she and Polly share an interest in extremity and
therefore both inhabit corners of the great Gothic continuum, there’s barely
any other correspondence between them on any level, musical, thematic,
stylistic, or personal. That To Bring You
My Love moment in 1995 marked the sole point of convergence, and that’s
because they were both looking to something beyond them rather than one to the
other: a Goth-girl visual rhetoric that stretches back into the past as far as
Theda Bara and the Marquesa Casati, and ultimately to Romantic and Symbolist
depictions of ‘fatal women’ in the art of the last quarter of the 19th
century. Ms Galás might relate her black ensemble to culture and heritage (‘ever
since the age of 12, my brother and I dressed like this. All my relatives in
Sparta have these immaculate white houses, and then they come out and it’s black,
black, black in the middle of the day’), but, really, no Pelopennese peasant
woman ever looked like that. Maila Nurmi may have done, but she was Finnish. One reviewer in Uncut’s recent Polly festschrift
says that in the mid-90s she began copying ‘Diamanda Galás’s rictus-grin’, but
that’s not what Galás herself took exception to, and frankly as a singer you
have to make some fairly funny faces to get the sounds out. She still does that,
twenty-odd years later.
Never someone to love so much as to admire from a safe
distance, Galás has not merely obscured the truth about herself but actively distorted
it, making it hard to warm to the person that might lay behind. She invented a
lesbian vigilante squadron, the Black Leather Beaver Patrol, which she would periodically
claim she led, and gleefully informed one interviewer that ‘everything I tell
you will be lies anyway’. So when the genuinely moving truth poked through the
surface – the death of her brother from AIDS, as well that of as her best
friend – you didn’t know quite how much salt to take it with. Was she really
married to that best friend, or was that another piece of embroidery? Has her
father really died in a road accident at the age of 91? That there might be a
gap, or several gaps, between appearance and reality seemed very probable from
an exchange in the correspondence columns of avant-garde music magazine The Wire in 2000 after someone
questioned whether Galás could have studied the subject she claimed at the ‘Scripps Institute’ in California, at
the time she claimed. This provoked a
frosty, detailed, and clearly furious response from the singer, quite different
from her usual dramatic and expletive-laden statements; but a very curious one,
which, according to how you interpret the dates she gave, implied that she was
an undergraduate at the age either of 14 or 10. Neither of which is likely.
This 2011 concert in Barcelona tells you everything you need
to know about my current issues with Ms G. There is no mistaking the virtuosity
of her piano-playing or vocalising; in that, in fact, lies the issue. The texts
she musicalizes and the songs she covers tend to be overwhelmed by what she
does to them. The first number, ‘Anoixe Petra’, is a gorgeous 1960s Greek laika song which she strangles with
arpeggiation and vocal gymnastics (it led me to the original, much more moving
version by Marinella). There are often absolutely luscious introductions to the
songs (her version of ‘O lieb, so lang du lieben kanst’ a poem by Ferdinand
Freiligrath set to music by Liszt, is a case in point) but then the Galás-isms
start and the text is swiftly crushed beneath the pyrotechnics. Vocally, it
isn’t that she can’t sing gently and intimately, but she steers away from it
into a snarl that sounds impossibly comic more often than I suspect she
intends. The set concludes with that melancholy standard ‘Gloomy Sunday’, in a significantly
more mannered form than the recorded version on Malediction and Prayer (1998): this is an artist of unimaginable
talent becoming, perhaps, misled by her own ability.
It’s all frustrating, because when you read Galás’s
offerings about life and art, as in the 2013 lecture assemblage of poetry and
essays, ‘The Mouth of the Crocodile’, it can be both interesting and moving,
and you can see her point notwithstanding the uncomfortably violent expressions
she sometimes employs. But despite her insistence on musical radicalism and the
pointlessness of standing still artistically (exactly as Polly does), truth be
told, she hasn’t shifted very far at all, continuing to deploy the same
weaponry she’s been polishing for the last thirty years – unless there are
subtleties this non-musician can’t appreciate. ‘Anoixe Petra’ in the Barcelona
concert contains elements that are exactly the same as the wonderful performance
of ‘Keigome Keigome’ on Malediction and
Prayer. I know what she’s trying to do – to capture the incantatory and
exorcismatory qualities of texts as a form of activism, as part of a
conversation between the dead and the living, and a call to arms, which is all entirely
admirable. But I’m not convinced the exercise really achieves that. Sitting at
the piano, she’s entering the world
of these texts, but can anyone else follow her?
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