Early 1982 saw Colin Newman’s third solo album ‘Not To’ revisit a good number of songs that Wire had first performed live but never recorded as studio takes, in equal turns sating a curiosity but also further underlining Wire’s extinct status. ‘Not To’ dusted off and updated ‘Lorries’, ‘We Meet Under Tables’, ‘Safe’, ‘5/10’ and ‘Remove for Improvement’, all of which had seen live Wire outings previously (and would be documented in rough, live recordings too – initially in 1981 on ‘Document and Eyewitness’, then many years later the remainder on ‘Turns and Strokes’). (There is also ‘You, Me And Happy’, though any Wire recording of this seems to be unheard of.)
Now, it was not only Colin Newman re-purposing this source material – Gilbert & Lewis and their ‘Dome’ project also made use of ‘And Then…’ on ‘Dome 1’ and ‘Ritual View’ on ‘Dome 2’, while Colin Newman himself had already revisited ‘Inventory’ for his initial solo album, 1980’s ‘A – Z’. ‘Alone’ from that same LP shares writing credits of Newman/Lewis, so a Wire connection there too perhaps.
So, ‘Not To’ inevitably had a great deal of comparisons to Wire from the off, given its source material. In particular, the more overtly ‘pop’ side was always bandied about as if this were the sole preserve of Colin Newman – despite his previous solo album, ‘Provisionally Entitled The Singing Fish’, straying into the kind of outer fringes sonic areas that erstwhile colleagues Gilbert and Lewis had been mapping as their own. Having said that, there’s no doubt that this ‘poppier’ side was in the sights with this album’s sound. The album was produced by Colin Newman himself and this gives it a gentler, somewhat more clean and precise sound in comparison to how things had been sounding with Mike Thorne, who had helmed all three Wire LPs to that point as well as Colin Newman’s first solo outing.
Wire’s late-period material of 1979/80 acquired something of a mythic status as the stuff from which would have been spun the band’s notional post-‘154’ fourth album, had the sheer impediment of being Wire and self-imploding tendencies not finally gone nova with 1980’s final live outing at the Electric Ballroom. Some of these tracks had partly been preserved already in rough form on 1981’s ‘Document and Eyewitness’ live album. Some years on, the ‘Turns and Strokes’ waifs and strays tidy-up compilation of the late ’90s would document even more of them.
For many years then, it was a good parlour game to entertain various permutations of what might have been on this notional fourth album, since it had never come to pass. But in customary contrary fashion, in 2013 Wire released ‘Change Becomes Us’, which saw the band revisit this period and re-record anew based on the same source material as a starting point.
In 2016, the album was re-issued. The vinyl LP preserved the original track listing while the 2 x CD version came complete with a second disc of 21 previously unreleased ‘B Sides, Demos & Supporting Material, Home Studio Demos’ plus the ‘We Means We Starts’ single A side for good measure.