We live in the short term and hope for the best
If it sounds vaguely familiar its a Scottish band that never escaped obscurity. Finitribe. The song? Forevergreen.
Why on earth does it interest me? Well, three reasons...
(1) somehow by coincidence I'd gotten hold of this cassette tape whilst I was 13 years old and delivering newspapers to make spending money....
(2) "We live in the short term and hope for the best" --- that was the utopian vision of that track from years ago.
If that wasn't what the whole goddamn last week was about, I just don't know how else to describe it....
(3) Somehow it connected the dots to Enya's Orinoco Flow track. I know its years later but in the timeline of my life its all a mishmash... Because damn it, I had to take a phone call from Venezuela in Montevideo. And that phone call underlined that "We live in the short term and hope for the best" is total bullshit.
Yes... utopian visions can be total bullshit.
The lyrics by themselves do not do it justice.
FOREVERGREEN
"People used to dream about the future.
They thought there was no limits to progress."
"And in warmer seas are new realms of pleasure!"
"They dreamed of a clean, bright future,
where science make everything possible
and everybody better off."
"A weekend, if you wish, in Hotel Atlantis!"
"But somewhere along the line that future got cancelled."
Moving on a linear express
to a levitation disc
to Technopolis Town
Which is evergreen, this is forevergreen
From a lap top via a satellite disc
A Buddhist gong is sent to catch our fish
Under the ocean in our sea
Out with the mean, in with the green
"Teletopia...Technopolis...Marinopolis...Aquatopia... Seatopia...Aeropolis...Alice City...Geofront..."
The sun is rising on a linear express
there is a smell of sweet success
Fuzzy logic, there is no no life on a cloud
It's time to be proud
Fuzzy logic, there is no yes
Intelligence here is under duress
No sound, there is no wind
In our big wonderland
"Now being built, Millenium Tower out at the sea of Tokyo Bay,
soon to be followed by Aeropolis, another tower city, 6000 feet tall,
whose inhabitants commute vertically, by elevators through the clouds.
They lead the West in computers, robotics, superconducters and new material."
Moving on a linear express
to a levitation disc to Technopolis Town
Which is evergreen this is forevergreen
Evergreen, forevergreen
Evergreen, forevergreen
"We live in the short term, and hope for the best" "Glad you came"
"And hope for the best" "Glad you came"
I've shamelessly snatched another description of the track from here:
'Forevergreen' is a song by Scottish indie/techno band Finitribe, released in 1992 on the One Little Indian album 'An Unexpected Groovy Treat'. It was released in many different remixed forms as a single and is their most famous tune, although it did not chart anywhere and the group is willfully obscure to this day. Culturally, it belongs to the early-90s pre-dot.com 'Wired' magazine techno-virtual reality ambient William Gibson's 'Neuromancer' transhumanist fractal crop circle pre-X Files UFO-obsessed goatsucker Schwa-inspired etc, although it was a joke at the expense of all these things.
Musically it's a dated but charming techno-pop song, similar in style to the earlier work of labelmates The Shamen, but thankfully without Mr C. The lyrics - 'moving on a linear express, to a levitation disc in technopolis town, which is evergreen, this is forevergreen' - are a sardonic reflection on the pagan-techno-utopianism of the times; Finitribe's political sensibilities were much more down to earth than their contemporaries, such as The Shamen again. At a time when the latter were bleating about the shamanistic consciousness of the metasphere (cf. 'Re:Evolution'), Finitribe were moaning about hubris. Their previous album, 'Grossing 10K', had contained counterblastes against McDonalds and consumerism in general, all of which is forgivable as the band were and remain Scottish, both genetically and as a state of mind.
The song contains a list of futuristic construction projects, read in a Californian voice, which are or were genuine developments in and around Tokyo and Oita. 'Alice City' was to have been a large drum-shaped underground city which could generate its own power with special magnets, whilst 'Aeropolis' and 'Millenium Tower' were plans for massive, imposing skyscrapers which resembled something from the Imperial homeworld Coruscant, the latter by Sir Norman Foster. All of them would have been opening just about now if the Japanese real-estate crash hadn't led to them all being cancelled. Each would have housed 30-40,000 people; presumably they would now have to be armed with missiles.
'Teletopia' is an exception - it was a government programme dating from 1985 to create 'new media' cities, with digital telephone, cable lines and wireless communication. It is apparently still in operation and has been quite a success.
The song is packed with curious samples, inlcuding no less than Foghorn Leghorn. It opens with an English lady announcer whose monologue, revealed in full in one of the 12" mixes, read:
"People used to dream about the future. They thought there was no limit to progress. They dreamed of a clean, bright future, where science would make everything possible, and everybody better off. But somewhere along the line that future got cancelled."
The recurring 'and in warmer seas are new realms of pleasure' is an item of dialogue from the narration for General Motors' Futurama exhibit from the 1964 World's Fair, perhaps the last time people actually did used to dream about the future. Five years later the future happened, Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, and now most people do not dream about the future at all.
The album from which 'Forevergreen' came was plastered with excerpts from 'The Name of the Rose', 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service', old Yosemite Sam cartoons and others. 'People Used to Dream About the Future' is now a fashion label; their website offers both a t-shirt and a sweatshirt.
2 Comments:
Just finished listening once more to An Unexpected Groovy Treat, but this time I'd also finished rewatching Neon Genesis Evangelion about a week ago.
What struck me was how during the reciting of the cities, "Geofront" was mentioned. The links to potential Japanese underground cities ties in directly with the use of Geofront within Eva.
Forevergreen!
I just (Re)discovered this on Spotify. Top album, brings back many happy memories.
Decided to Google the list of place names (Teletopia, Marinopolis etc) and stumbled across your blog. Nice work!
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