Living Links
Gathering The Forces

STREAM LIVING LINKS “GATHERING THE FORCES”
Even the most ardent fans of the early 80s post-punk underground explosion would be forgiven for never having heard Living Links. The band effortlessly combines the art-funk of Talking Heads with the threadbare melodies of Joy Division, and explored a compelling variety of ideas on their lone album Gathering The Forces. But their music didnโt make it far outside of their Baton Rouge, LA home, until now.
The obscure duo of husband and wife Hans and Margie VanBrackle released just one album and 2 singles between 1983-1985, though the pair wrote and performed live together for a longer period. However, Living Links was mostly a side project for the two singer/guitarists: Hans played guitar in punky locals US Times and Margie played & sang in the all-girl band the ParalElles.

Living Links played out locally during their heyday, occasionally with a live drummer, sometimes with a drum machine, or both. They often headlined shows over touring acts, no doubt due to Margieโs training in opera and musical theater and Hansโ ripping guitar work. But at the time, despite the impact that the Sex Pistols had on their 1978 tour through the area, โNew Waveโ music remained essentially an underground phenomenon.
Like the southern gothic undercurrent of contemporaries like the B-52s, R.E.M. or Atlantaโs The Brains (โMoney Changes Everythingโ), thereโs a playful feel to Living Linksโ music that eschews the dour posturing of more urban post-punk fare. And where the Talking Heads remained ensconced in David Byrneโs intellectual existentialism, the duoโs music is often more fun as it bops through numbers like โIโm Not Streetwiseโ and โIโm Awake When I Should Be Asleep.โ

RidingEasy Recordsโ reissue of Gathering The Forces combines the bandโs full discography, the 9-song album โ originally released on Skratch Records in 1985 โ plus 2 7โ singles (the 3-song Every Sad Night and โMangerโ/โIโm Not Streetwiseโ single) for a comprehensive introduction to this long overlooked band. Album opener โI Live in Hereโ perhaps most directly echoes their Joy Division influence, with Hansโ lead vocals nodding to Ian Curtisโ cold baritone delivery, and his guitar lines referencing Bernard Sumnerโs infectious single notes. But itโs not mere imitation โ the chorus lifts to a soaring melody with hazy synths and Hans delivering an impassioned croon. The title track shifts the mood to a Gang Of Four style dance track replete with handclaps and funky guitar bouncing along as the duo sings the anti-war anthem, โweโre all awaiting orders.โ Meanwhile, โLike an Animalโ and โTwo Girlsโ share the 60s-retro charm of the B-52s, with true earworm melodies. Elsewhere, โEvery Sad Nightโ, from their debut 7โ EP wouldnโt sound out of place next to a Young Marble Giants or other early Rough Trade release, with its stripped down instrumentation and Margie affecting a semi-British accent.
While Gathering The Forces might seem all over the map on paper, the duo pulls all of their influences together into a very cohesive whole. Listeners can hear the mood of the times that barely bubbled to the surface on college radio stations in small pockets of the country, beneath the weight of the Cougar Mellencamps, Michael Jacksons and Huey Lewises that dominated the mainstream.
Gathering The Forces will be available digitally via RidingEasy Records on November 3rd, 2023.
