Time Capsule: Life Without Buildings, Any Other City
24 years after its release, no album sounds quite like the Glasgow band's only.

I first heard “Juno” by Life Without Buildings ten years ago, when I was maybe twenty years old. I was immediately swept away by the effortless creative power of this relatively obscure art-rock band from Scotland. When I started listening to their music, the band had already been lost to the immovable passage of time, but thanks in part to a 2014 vinyl reissue of their one and only album, 2001’s Any Other City, I and many others could be introduced to a band that existed for a single blip in the indie-rock timeline. I felt then like an ornithologist who had just discovered the exotic call of a long extinct bird: bittersweet because I could never hear it in person, yet happy to have heard it at all.
Life Without Buildings began in the summer of 1999, as a bit of fun for three friends from the Glasgow School of Art. Comprising Will Bradley (drums), Chris Evans (bass) and Robert Johnston (guitar), the band started out playing purely instrumental music before recruiting visual and sound artist Sue Tompkins to provide her poetic, spoken-word lyrics to their quick, steady chugging backing. That led to gigs, and eventually their recording Any Other City.
For a while, Any Other City lived in an underground part of the hardcore post-punk world. Burned CDs were passed around in grungy flats and parking lots. Tompkins’ unique vocals became the lightning rod for both praise and criticism. In an early review from 2001, NME wrote that “only mad people and immediate family could warm to Tompkins. Hers is the sound of a performance artist having a self-conscious breakdown.” And my personal favorite slight, from the same review: “Plainly, she thinks she’s Patti Smith reborn with an estuary accent.” Which, I guess, is a pretty British dig.
Of course, now we can all point at NME and laugh. Hindsight is 20/20, and Life Without Buildings were doing something other bands weren’t: They were taking risks. They were taking their time to explore the outer limits of what music and lyrics can be. In that sense, Any Other City explores the deconstruction of language and music. The listener can wonder, forever and ever, what “LGO, LGO, chi sound,” means, and they’d maybe never get closer to the truth, if there even was one. Tompkins’ stuttering vocal work doesn’t follow the rules. She’ll repeat words and phrases, or she’ll meander through a sentence in fragments. It’s sometimes disorienting but always engaging, and it’s a style that has endured nearly twenty-five years later.