As trans-Atlantic alchemists pulling from a shared dialectic that somehow encompassed both postmodern deconstructionist tendencies and a delightfully subversive sense of poptimism, it’s easy to see how David Cunningham and Peter Gordon immediately hit it off upon initially meeting each other back in the late 1970s at the height of their youthful transgressions. Having initially worked together on the second Flying Lizards’ LP »Fourth Wall«, with its ingenious fusion of dismantled rhythms and rearranged melodies juxtaposed against the slyly sultry singing of Snatch’s Patti Palladin — with Gordon adding a few sprinkles of mischievous sax in the mix — it’s no wonder the collaboration would lead to further musical adventures.
Which leads us directly to the genesis of »The Yellow Box«. Embarking on a collaborative exercise in the structural repurposing of music as untethered puzzle pieces in need of rearrangement with no predetermined outcomes, the duo gave birth to a project that would see them move through both time and recording studios across Europe, taking nearly two years from 1981–1983 to complete. Enlisting the great Anton Fier on drums from the Feelies/Lounge Lizards nexus, and John Greaves on bass from Henry Cow/Soft Heap lore, to round out their dueling creative counterparts, the album would be something of a lost treasure until its eventual release on Cunningham’s Piano imprint in 1996.
Cinematic in scope, and filled with drifting drones, beautiful counter-melodies, eerie minimalism, Kraftwerkian synthesizers, looped voices, skronky interludes, and other shifting undercurrents of sound, it was an album that utilized both a diverse array of expressive languages, as well as early sampling techniques and prepared instruments, well before most people were thinking in such expansive, integrated terms at the dawn of the 1980s. But such is life at the vanguard of new music — and one of the reasons that it likely sat on the shelf for so long before finally being released well over a decade later. Like a sparser, less groove-oriented version of »My Life in the Bush of Ghosts«, or a more radical take on the experimental work of Can’s Holger Czukay, »The Yellow Box« stands at the crossroads of time and technology, fusing multiple strands of musical thought and compositional techniques into a disjointed whole that somehow still comes off as a conceptually complete record.
Now, here it is again, over 40 years later, with perhaps even more historical resonance than it had before, remade and remodelled, just waiting to be rediscovered again.