POET OF THE COMMON MAN
Sydney Morning Herald, 12th January 1996
by Mark Mordue

Paul Kelly's Deeper Water marks a return to the whole truth and
secures his position as navigator of the soul, writes Mark Mordue.
Paul Kelly's back in town. I meet him at a King's Cross hotel
where his daughter, Madeleine, is turning her slice of cheese into
a jigsaw puzzle that makes sense only to her.
On his new album, Deeper Water, Kelly has named a song after her.
The chorus? "Madeleine you never let me sleep." Fathers everywhere
will empathise.
While the four-year-old tugs persistently at his hand, Kelly's
two-year-old daughter, Memphis, is in another room recovering from
carpet burns to the face after she dived off a hotel lounge headfirst
onto the floor.
Actor Kaarin Fairfax is, meanwhile, seeing an old friend, the
portrait photographer Wendy McDougall, out the door. Kelly met Fairfax
in 1988 when she starred in Sam Shepard's Lie Of The Mind. "We were
just hanging at the bar," Kelly recalls, throwing the memory to
Fairfax like an old joke.
The pair married in 1993. With two young children and stretches
of time in Los Angeles where Kelly has been based kick-starting
an American career - Kaarin Fairfax hasn't had much time for acting.
That's changing now the family is back in Australia.
"I did Correlli," Fairfax says, acting tough, pushing words out
the side of her mouth, "playing a criminal's goil-friend."
At the centre of all this, Paul Kelly just hangs back quietly.
Despite the hyperactivity, it's clear his family life protects him
- that Kelly pulls it around him like a warm blanket.
Seeing him on the couch with Madeleine when I arrive, he's oddly
calm, oddly vulnerable.
As he will say later, when discussing his returns to Australia
after overseas jaunts: "I like to come home. It's OK here."
Kelly's manager, Rob Barnham, starts ticking off the day's media
itinerary with Kelly. I'm tagging along for the afternoon to get
a closer look at one of Australia's favourite songmen.
Late last year Kelly toured Europe and America and he's playing
at home this month. In typical Kelly fashion, the songs from Deeper
Water have become part of our lives.
"That's why you write songs," Kelly says, as if it's nothing special
and certainly obvious. "You want them to be in people's lives."
With the Helen Demidenko/Darville controversy still percolating,
Kelly's eager to say The Hand That Signed The Paper "is good writing.
But all the Jews in the book are communists. So it's bad history."
It's a crucial distinction for Kelly, whose poet of the common man
credentials are built on both good writing and accuracy - whether
it be something as subtly textured and local as allusions to "a
Silvertop" taxi (To Her Door) or Randwick Bells (Randwick Bells),
or a turning point in the history of the land rights movement (From
Little Things Big Things Grow).
"I've always liked concrete writing with pictures and details,"
says Kelly with relish. "Chuck Berry was a great example of that.
I'm very conscious of it. I wanted to map where I came from the
way Chuck Berry mapped out America."
Dressed in a brown bomber jacket with a blue T-shirt and jeans,
Kelly's hair is close and short. I'm sure he has dressed this way
for ages, rock'n'roll basic, nothing too flash. As he says of writing:
"Simple is always best."
But the 40-year-old seems slimmer than a year ago, somehow sharper
than the sated, middle-aged bloke who last toured. Wanted Man, from
1994, was a critical low point for Kelly. Despite some great live
shows, the album sounded like a songwriter falling off the face
of American FM rock with a dull thud. Was the guy losing his touch,
or getting soft because of family life and success?
Ask Kelly about Wanted Man's artistic failure, ask him about Deeper
Water and its profound return to form - his best form ever - ask
him if he sees Deeper Water as more coherent, more feeling on every
front, and he just shrugs his shoulders.
"My friends like this record better," he finally admits, under
pressure. "It's more of a band record I think." Then he laughs.
"All my records feel like they're scraped together. Deeper Water
is just what I did this year."
Rather than shy or aloof, Kelly's just a quiet guy. Stillness
is one of his most potent qualities. It makes him easy company.
Strong company, too.
Back when he was the socket-eyed, leather jacketed poet of the
early '80s Melbourne music scene with his band The Dots, that stillness
simmered with self-destructiveness.
Listen to Post, his stark account of heroin use, inner-city relationships
and people dying, hear From St Kilda To Kings Cross, and you'll
get something of the world he left behind when he came to Sydney
to live for a few years.
Kelly prefaced his book of lyrics, (called Lyrics) with a quote
from Chekov: "I don't have what you would call a philosophy or coherent
world view, so I shall limit myself to describing how my heroes
love, marry, give birth, die and speak."
On Deeper Water parenthood is Kelly's dominating theme. But Kelly's
propensity for mawkishness is absent, and his spare eye never lets
the colloquial slide in a cliche. Deeper Water's take on family,
growing older and love also has a dark edge to it, something in
the territory around the songs, that gives the album an unusual
intensity and warmth.
Kelly weighs up what I'm trying to say with that observation,
weighs it quite considerably.
"I have a pretty good life now," he finally sighs. "But it ...
feels like it's endangered. Or precious, or fragile - maybe that's
what I'm trying to say. Maybe it's to do with having children or
something but, as a parent, you have to be prepared for disaster."
He starts to talk about his song Gathering Storm. "It sounds like
someone waiting for a lover. What was at the back of my mind when
I wrote it was a parent worrying about a child. And how there's
so much ... a lot of danger."
If Kelly deals with parenthood and the powerfully related theme
of mortality in songs like Deeper Water and Gathering Storm, he
also deals with sex with unusual rawness and heart. His song Blush
exalts to the summer beach lyric: "When we kiss she tastes so salty/On
her cheek and her neck/I can't wait till I get with her/So I can
kiss her salty breasts."
"It's really hard to write about good sex or write straightforwardly
about sex without being banal about it," he says. Citing Motown
music, Kelly adds "the great thing about a lot of soul music is
that they wrote about sex and joy really well. Whereas the singer-songwriter
tradition is about things that went wrong, the complications and
the unrequited."
He shakes his head. "When I was last in America I was listening
to modern r'n'b, urban radio. They played rap, hip-hop and they'll
have balladry, but horrible songs all about sex and "doing it',
and always the singers doing vocal gymnastics that are very explicit
and ... well, just horrible."
At Soundcom, an organisation responsible for Ansett's in-flight
music as well as in-store sounds for the likes of Just Jeans and
Woolworths, Kelly's asked to play a couple of songs, and it turns
into a free concert for the staff, who file in smiling, waiting
nervously for him to begin. The intimacy in the small conference
room between Kelly's performance and this audience of 20 is absurdly
reverent and close.
He chooses Blush, then Queen Stone, a thinly disguised paean to
heroin, the dark muse, written by his old guitarist Maurice Frawley.
Then he follows with Difficult Woman, which he wrote for Renee Geyer
- "I got my hands full with a difficult woman."
Overall it's a sweet, gently intense effort. Everybody claps,
absolutely beams appreciation. The love is palpable. Kelly puts
his guitar down, embarrassed. "If I'd known you were all coming
I'd have practised more."
Outside, in the daylight, Kelly says the experience was "a bit
strange". He seems quite rattled, then he laughs. "During the last
song I suddenly got a flash of one of those Elvis Presley movies."
I tell him about a saying I heard at a party a few months ago. "Scratch
an Adelaide person, find an Elvis." Kelly snorts, keeps laughing
to himself, then finally says between fits of chuckling: "I'm from
Adelaide, you know."
Copyright Sydney Morning Herald 1996
Transcribed by:
Richard Downing - rdowning@ihug.co.nz
I just downloaded this article from the Sydney Morning Herald's
WWW site:
www.smh.com.au/metro/content/960112/feat-index.html. It was
in their archive section and is quite old, from January 12. I hadn't
seen it before and thought that others who hadn't seen it might
like to.
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