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MON 9 FEB, 2004 Franz Ferdinand release their debut album

Setting the template for art-rock, and showcasing their ineffable cool in the process, Franz Ferdinand’s self-titled debut was a turning point for Scottish music. Malcolm Ross of influential bands Josef K, Orange Juice and Aztec Camera explains the album’s significance to Claire Sawers

T he slim, shiny ties. The side parts. The cardigans. Those first fifty seconds before ‘Take Me Out’ changes tempo from jangly, indie guitars into a throbbing, suave, Scotpop anthem. Wherever you were in the first fortnight of 2004, chances are, if you were near an open car window, or a switched-on telly, you were listening to Franz Ferdinand.

Their break-out single ‘Take Me Out’ announced the arrival of ‘the archdukes of cool’, an art-rock four-piece from Glasgow. After meeting at Glasgow School of Art, Alex Kapranos (lead vocals and guitar), Bob Hardy (bass), Nick McCarthy (keyboards and backing vocals) and Paul Thomson (drums and backing vocals) blended louche but debonair style with melodic, chart bothering charm. Malcolm Ross remembers seeing them for the first time on TV. ‘I was fed up of a lot of bands by

then,’ says Ross, who began his career in the ’80s, playing guitar in seminal Scottish bands Josef K, Orange Juice and Aztec Camera. Releasing music through the cult Glasgow indie label Postcard Recordings, Ross was part of an influential set of performers on the scene.

‘A lot of pop this just decade like sounded people throwing mud at a wall,’ shrugs Ross. ‘If you did it long enough, eventually something would stick. But I heard “Take Me Out” and that, I thought, that was a good song. ‘There was something stylish about them. Witty. They did things with a lot of intelligence. I never ever got Belle & Sebastian I’m

afraid, and Mogwai went straight over my head. But Franz Ferdinand, they really did it for me.’ The eponymous album from which ‘Take Me Out’ was taken bulldozed its way into the British, American and Australian charts. It produced three top ten singles with ‘Take Me Out’, ‘The Dark of the Matinee’ and ‘This Fire’, and quickly gathered a clutch of awards two BRITs, an Ivor Novello, the NM E’s album of the year, and 2004’s Mercury Prize.

‘I think they just had the package,’ explains Ross. ‘There was the technical competence on the album bringing in Tore Johansson [producer of The Cardigans, A-ha and A Camp]; that was a masterstroke. Plus Franz Ferdinand love their art references on the album sleeves, in lyrics, across their videos. You always got the sense that those ideas were really coming from the band members as opposed to a Svengali manager, or some camp stylist in the background.’

2005

‘Well, And how did it feel to Ross when Franz Ferdinand outed themselves as massive Josef K fans, also citing Orange Juice as a major influence? it was all vaguely flattering,’ he laughs. ‘To me, visually they definitely have a similarity to Postcard bands of the ‘80s, but musically, I think they’re somewhere between Josef K, who were always more edgy and dark, and Orange Juice, at the poppier end of things. I could hear synthpop sounds of Ultravox, or the post-punk of The Monochrome Set in there too.’

In a decade where Ross also enjoyed The Arctic Monkeys, Babyshambles and The Libertines, he thinks Franz Ferdinand’s debut effort sums up the noughties sound. ‘Technically, they can craft great songs, with no boring verses, or album fillers. There’s an energy to it, and maybe they’ll never match it again, but that was a recognisably good album. A classic.’

What we said then . . . ‘Rasping, twanging guitars, camp 80s new wave aesthetics, and tongue-in-cheek lyrical sloganeering . . . Odds are they can expand, develop and grow, and this is a pretty great starting point.’ ●●●●● The List, 5 Feb 2004

APRIL JUNE

JULY DECEMBER

Former GSA student Simon Starling wins the Turner Prize. His exhibition includes ‘shedboatshed’, in which he turned a shed into a boat, paddled it down the

Rhine, then reassembled it at a museum in Basel.

FEBRUARY JULY

AUGUST

Franz

The National Theatre Anthony Neilson’s

Ferdinand release their debut album. See above.

for Scotland is founded. Notable

productions in

The Wonderful World Of Dissocia opens at the Edinburgh

coming years include International Festival.

Neilson wins Best New Play and Best

OCTOBER Amid much controversy

concerning its £414m price tag,

three-year delay and general appearance, Enric Miralles’

Black Watch, Peer Gynt, The Bacchae and Tutti Frutti.

22 THE LIST 3–17 Dec 2009

Bathgate-born David Frankie Boyle

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theatrical work,

years despite various participate in the

to do so for four million people

Tennant is announced as the tenth Dr Who. He also continues his

winning Best Male Performance for his

Director at the Scottish Parliament

Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland.

building opens. role as Jimmy in

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controversies, Make Poverty History

including opinion- splitting jokes about Michael Jackson and

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rally.