World Party

4 years ago, Karl Wallinger’s World Party fell apart. He had terminated his long deal with Chrysalis Records/EMI because of their handling of the Egyptology CD release (this CD included the hit “She’s the One”); without his knowledge most of his band and his former label manager produced a near identical version of his song to win Robbie Williams the Brits’ “Single of the Year”. Following this his manager and mentor, Steve Fargnoli, died of cancer and then Karl had an aneurysm.
It seemed like Karl Wallinger’s 20 year old ship of fools was scuppered, taking with it one of Britain’s finest musical treasures. Now, despite feeling like his head’s been sawn in half (which, incidentally, it has), Wallinger and World Party are back on the campaign trail. He’s regained control of his voice, his legs, his warped sense of humour and his music catalogue. He’s launched Seaview Records and is playing South By South West in Austin this year. Dumbing Up, the album that only received a partial UK release four years ago, has been remastered and repackaged with two new tracks, new graphics and a DVD of intimate World Party action. There may even be life for the bizarre comedy concept known as Seaview TV.
World Party? A social-democratic ideology? A good time for all? A better name than “The Karl Wallinger Band”? In the mid-eighties Wallinger walked out of cult heroes The Waterboys and launched World Party with a surprising hit album and US hit single, “Ship of Fools”. Private Revolution charted in America, proving that 20th century philosophy could be set to good tunes and sell. It was never a prolific project, but through five educational and entertaining albums, World Party carried the torch for intelligent pop and outstanding live musicianship. Eclectic in every sense of the word, World Party took its leads from Beatles, Dylan, The Beach Boys, The Stones, Junior Walker, Neil Young, Prince, and made the music its own.
It was Wallinger’s ability to turn his fanaticism for great ‘60s music into fresh material that persuaded Ensign Records’ Nigel Grainge to sign him up and give him total creative freedom and his own studio. “I was looking for a place to record Private Revolution and ended up in this eight bedroom Georgian rectory in Woburn,” he remembers. “The estate agent said an artist named Eddy was caretaking the place for the Woburn estate but that he might let me use it. I gave him a bit of rent and it was fantastic. I was 28 and making my first record, with my own band. There were these 12 white doves living in the roof, like the spirits of the nuns who lived there long ago. Their presence had a dualistic nature. On the one hand, there was the beauty of watching them fly together in circles over the house and neighbouring fields. But on the other hand, these doves just shit everywhere, blocking up the drains. Eddy and I were always running around trying to stop leaks.”
With the success of Private Revolution, the World Party estates grew to include Seaview, an ironically named loft space in a Victorian warehouse with a panoramic view of London. Always the chief architect, Karl drew on the talents of engineers and producers such as Prince’s Paisley Park engineer, Joe Blaney. “It was like having my own Abbey Road,” he says animatedly. “It was always an apprenticeship and I got these guys in so I could learn from them as well as benefit from their work.” A yet more accomplished second album resulted.
Goodbye Jumbo won the first ever Q “Album of the Year” award in 1990, was nominated for a Grammy and had hits with “Message in the Box” and “Way Down Now”. The third release, Bang! , was only held off the number one spot in the U.K. by R.E.M. The success attracted collaborations with the ancient music of the Dufai Collective, the soundtrack to Reality Bites and a track in Clueless, plus a world music project with Peter Gabriel, Joe Strummer, The Terem Quartet, Iggy Pop, Nigel Kennedy, and a tribal chief from Sarawak who played a one note flute. Karl’s became a name to drop in educated musical circles.
Flushed with success, Karl became the classic sharp-witted, sharp-tongued, selfish, reluctant, brilliant, hilarious, eccentric mix up that we expect of all true artists. “Listen to all the best music and you know that whoever wrote it was off his trolley. I never wrote a good song while I was straight.” he says, chain smoking despite doctor’s orders. But Karl has rarely listened to expert advice.
Contrary to its suggested democratic principles, Wallinger’s World Party is a whimsical dictatorship and the messages in the lyrics are definitely his. The party ethos has drifted as his philosophical allegiances have shifted. Private Revolution mirrored Dion Fortune’s Cosmic Doctrine. Goodbye Jumbo was Karl’s take on Carl Jung. Bang! was a paean to Bertrand Russell, with the single, “Is It Like Today” a four verse pr
