|
Robyn Hitchcock
I WANNA GO BACKWARDS
"I
was writing songs and living inside myself," Robyn Hitchcock
recalls in the liner notes of I Wanna Go Backwards, the
new five-CD box set collecting some his best work from the 1980s. "Outside
in the world, Thatcher waged the Falklands War, suppressed the
Miners' Strike, abolished the Greater London Council, dismembered
public utilities, sold off the school playing fields and cozied
up to Reagan in a sickening foreplay to the Blair/Bush mating ritual.... My
heroes were gone, seeding themselves in me, and those seeds gestated. I
began to feel like a keeper of souls. Characters that I had known
and loved formed embryonically again in my songs, and other creatures
loomed too."
Over
the past three decades, Robyn Hitchcock has built a large and distinctive
body of work that's established him as one of rock's most respected
and beloved iconoclasts. The prolific English singer/songwriter/guitarist's
vivid surrealist songcraft has won him an uncommonly devoted international
fan base, and created an ongoing demand for rare and unreleased
Hitchcock material. Meanwhile, many of the artist's most
popular and influential albums have fallen out of print and become
difficult for fans to obtain, changing hands for hefty sums on
the collectors' market.
The
latter situation is addressed by Yep Roc's release of the five-CD
Hitchcock box set I Wanna Go Backwards. The lavish
package is the first of two projected archival Hitchcock boxes. It
was during the 1980s that Hitchcock established himself as a frequent
visitor to the U.S., both solo and with his esteemed backup combo
the Egyptians, and built a large American audience.
I
Wanna Go Backwards encompasses expanded editions of three
of Hitchcock's best-loved albums, Black Snake Diamond Role, I
Often Dream of Trains and Eye, along with While
Thatcher Mauled Britain Part 1 & 2, a newly compiled
two-disc collection of b-sides, outtakes and home demo recordings,
many of them previously unreleased. All of the individual
albums feature bonus tracks and enhanced liner notes, including
Hitchcock's personal reminiscences on Black Snake Diamond
Role and While Thatcher Mauled Britain, an extract
from a novel in progress on I Often Dream of Trains,
and several pieces of original poetry on Eye, along
with previously unpublished photos and Hitchcock cartoons.
In
addition to the exclusive CD box set packaging, Black Snake
Diamond Role, I Often Dream of Trains and Eye will
also be individually released in their expanded, enhanced new editions. I
Wanna Go Backwards will also be released as an eight-record
vinyl box set version complete with original LP artwork. Additionally,
Yep Roc is making another long-out-of-print early Hitchcock album,
1982's Groovy Decay, available exclusively as a digital
download.
"With
music you have to follow the rise and fall of the format," says
Hitchcock. "These records were LPs that became cassettes,
then CDs, then CDs again, and are now LPs and CDs once more, each
time with new bonus material clinging to them. Like books,
records deserve to be in print. But Graham Greene didn't
have to keep coming up with bonus tracks each time they reprinted Brighton
Rock."
The
release of I Wanna Go Backwards coincides with a recent
career resurgence during which Hitchcock has released the acclaimed
albums Spooked and Ole! Tarantula, and become
the subject of the recent Sundance Channel documentary Sex,
Food, Death…& Insects.
The
three albums on I Wanna Go Backwards represent the cream
of Hitchcock's solo work—i.e., the records that he cut without
the Egyptians—during the '80s. 1981's Black Snake
Diamond Role was Hitchcock's first solo release, recorded
during the waning days of his seminal postpunk combo the Soft Boys
with an assortment of players including all three Soft Boys Kimberly
Rew, Matthew Seligman and Morris Windsor, Vibrators guitarist Knox,
Psychedelic Furs drummer Vince Ely and soon-to-be synth-pop star
Thomas Dolby.
"Black
Snake Diamond Role was the first Robyn Hitchcock LP—that
meant a lot if you were Robyn Hitchcock," he notes. "The
first session was in June 1980, while John Lennon was alive and
Jimmy Carter was president. The final one was in January
1981, when they weren’t."
Black
Snake Diamond Role continued the Soft Boys' legacy of warped
jangle-pop, while introducing the moody, introspective side that
Hitchcock would further explore in the years to come. The
album introduced such enduring Hitchcock compositions as "The
Man Who Invented Himself," "Brenda's Iron Sledge" and "Acid
Bird," which are joined on the new edition by eight bonus
tracks, most of them outtakes from the original album sessions.
I
Often Dream of Trains, originally released in 1984, was
a notable departure from Hitchcock's prior work, presenting his
kaleidoscopic lyrical imagery and haunting melodic sensibility
in spare, mostly acoustic settings that emphasize the material's
intimate focus. The album balances the haunting introspection
of such ballads as "Cathedral" and "Trams of Old
London" with the barbed humor of "Sometimes I Wish
I Was A Pretty Girl" and "Uncorrected Personality Traits." The
new edition of I Often Dream of Trains augments the
album's original 18 tracks with six bonus numbers.
1990's Eye was
something of a sequel to I Often Dream of Trains, with
Hitchcock returning to stripped-down solo approach as a low-key
respite from the major-label rock albums that he was recording
at the time. "I got to record Eye at a time
when a lot of people were on my case," explains Hitchcock. "It
had nobody else on it and no Alternative Chart expectations. It
was luxury, a wide open meadow to kvetch in."
Eye remains
a fan favorite, thanks to such memorable tunes as "Glass Hotel," "Clean
Steve" and "Queen Elvis." The expanded edition
adds four bonus tracks to the original album's 17.
The
two-CD, 39-song While Thatcher Mauled Britain Part 1 & 2,
meanwhile, features a comprehensive selection of '80s-vintage solo
b-sides, outtakes and home demo recordings, drawn from Hitchcock's
voluminous archives. The collection yields a multitude of
hitherto unheard compositions, as well as alternate and embryonic
versions of familiar Hitchcock favorites.
Although
the home recordings that dominate While Thatcher Mauled Britain were
not initially intended for public consumption, Hitchcock relishes
the opportunity to open his sonic closet for fans' inspection. "A
demo is generally more relaxed than when the same performer stands
in front of the red light at the official session," Hitchcock
observes. "That's been the case with me; on informal
recordings, I play and sing with more swing despite the odd rogue
note... There is something more alive about a piece of music
where all the final decisions are yet to be made.
"Songs
and music can develop fast in the fertilized mind, so, as with
any clutch of tadpoles, many newly-hatched songs never make it
to the slippery banks of showbusiness. But they might have
made fine creatures. Thanks to the miracle of magnetic recording
tape, these small beings can live again, with all their potential
intact."
The
release of I Wanna Go Backwards, and the individual albums
that comprise it, offers the definitive retrospective of Robyn
Hitchcock's '80s solo output, documenting a crucial period of this
one-of-a-kind creative force.
"Your
younger self is always faster and less subtle," Hitchcock
states. "I would sing some of the songs differently
now, but on the whole they sound fine. As I've said before,
50 isn't better or worse than 30 for an artist: you're just leaning
in from a different angle."
###
For more information, please contact:
Ken Weinstein – Big Hassle Media
212-619-1360
James Bailey – Yep Roc Records
(336) 578-7300 x244
james@yeproc.com
|