One of the most influential punk/post-punk groups of all time, The Fall, inspire devotion from those who can get past their voluminous output, their distinctively discordant sound, and late frontman Mark E Smith's seemingly inscrutable lyrics, which are deep with arcane references to everything from football to truck drivers to a library full of authors. Once you're in, you're in.
The Fall have inspired a lot of books, many of which have been written by former members of the group (of which there are many) but most of them are biographical in form. Excavate!: The Wonderful and Frightening World of The Fall, however, is a totally different beast. Tessa Norton and Bob Stanley (of Saint Etienne) have put together a compendium of ephemera and essays that explore tangential but essential aspects to Mark E Smith and The Fall‘s world. There are essays on architecture, Smith's worth ethic, football, education, and how they all relate to Smith's worldview. It's also full of gig posters, early press releases, handwritten notes from M.E.S., a discography, and lots more. Excavate! is about The Fall, but it also feels like The Fall.
With Excavate! out this week via Faber US (order yours), I talked with Norton and Stanley via Zoom about the book, the concept behind it, what didn't make it in, and both of their relationships with The Fall's music. Bob also clued us in on what's next from Saint Etienne, and more. Read our conversation below.
There are a bunch of books on The Fall, but this one is very unique. What gave you the idea for this, and how long ago?
Bob Stanley: Well, years back, we talked about doing a blog -- like an album by album blog -- and very quickly realized that was not a good idea.
Tessa Norton: Yeah, not the right way to approach it.
Bob Stanley: Not long after he died, we were just saying, we've got a shelf of Fall books up there and some are better than others and some are very good, but none of them were really what either of us would want from a Fall book. But they didn't really talk to us about what we found special about The Fall.
Tessa Norton: We were saying that the reason our personal ideal Fall book maybe hadn't been written was because it would need to be about everything else, as much as it was about the music. It shouldn't just be a piece of rock journalism. As much as some of the books are very good, they can only ever illuminate one little aspect of what the group is about. And I think for us, it's a band that we both got into as teenagers, and then it stayed with you in the background throughout your life. It's the expansiveness of this mad worldview that takes in everything from ghost stories, to geography, to trade union politics, to krautrock, to rockabilly. It's that breadth that is really integral to being a Fall fan, I think.
Did you have more of a list of what you didn't want the book to be than what you did? Or did you just have a list of writers that you wanted to have contribute? How did you attack it?
Tessa: I think we started throwing around, how like an essay collection would feel if everyone writing an essay had their own field of expertise, maybe they were an eminent writer in some unrelated fields, and then if that person started writing an essay that gradually revealed itself to secretly be about The Fall and be like, "Hang on, I'm supposed to be reading an architecture article, why is all this all of a sudden about The Fall?" And then you did the same with a literature essay or something like that. And then what that could be like then if you put all of those together. That's an extreme conception of what the book could've been like. And from there, we started thinking about other writers that we knew of, or whose work we'd read, who were either fans or had an interesting. I think pretty much everyone is a fan to some degree, but had an interesting perspective on the group, but maybe had some other frames of reference in as well. The first essay in the book's quite a good example of that. It's written by Elain Harwood, she's one of the most eminent UK writers on mid 20th century architecture, and she just happens to be a really big Fall fan. Getting her to write an essay about her own field, but then also bringing in that fandom knowledge.
Bob: She's might be the biggest Fall fan I know. She's been going to see them since the late '70s. You wouldn't really get that from her essay necessarily, though, which is quite nice. Some of the ephemera in the book is hers as well.