Desperate Straights

Desperate Straights is a collaborative studio album by British avant-rock groups Slapp Happy and Henry Cow. It was recorded at Virgin Records' Manor Studio and Nova Sound Studios in November 1974, and released in February 1975. It was Slapp Happy's second album for Virgin, and they had invited Henry Cow to record with them.

Desperate Straights
Studio album by
Released21 February 1975 (1975-02-21)
RecordedNovember 1974
StudioThe Manor, Oxfordshire, England;
Nova Sound Studios, London
GenreAvant-rock, art pop, cabaret
Length36:06
LabelVirgin (UK)
ProducerSlapp Happy, Henry Cow and Simon Heyworth
Slapp Happy chronology
Slapp Happy
(1974)
Desperate Straights
(1975)
In Praise of Learning
(1975)
Henry Cow chronology
Unrest
(1974)
Desperate Straights
(1975)
In Praise of Learning
(1975)

Content

The album is a blend of Henry Cow's avant-garde music and Slapp Happy's nostalgic pop,[1] and the success of this collaboration led to the two bands merging and recording In Praise of Learning in 1975. "Europa" and "War (Is Energy Enslaved)" were recorded for a single by Slapp Happy with session musicians in May 1974, but it was not released. The two songs were re-recorded with Henry Cow for this album. "War" was released later on Slapp Happy and Henry Cow's second collaborative album In Praise of Learning.[2][3] The lyrics of the song "A Worm Is at Work" refers to the song "War", and the lyrics of "Europa" relates to William Blake's Europe a Prophecy (1794).[4][5]

CD reissues

  • In 1993 Virgin Records reissued Desperate Straights together with Slapp Happy's Casablanca Moon on a single CD.
  • In 2004 Recommended Records issued a remastered version of Desperate Straights on CD by itself.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[6]
Pitchfork Media8.2/10[7]

In a review of Desperate Straights at AllMusic, Ted Mills described the album as "surprisingly melodic", given the musicians behind it.[6] He said it is "light on the art-school angst and heavy on the playfulness".[6] "Some Questions About Hats" reminded Mills of Kurt Weill, while Blegvad's "Strayed" sounded like Kevin Ayers art rock.[6]

Reviewing the album at Pitchfork Media, Dominique Leone felt that even though Henry Cow features prominently in the recording's baroque sound, it is Moore and Blegvad's songs that "steal the show".[7] They use "delicate" instruments – "soft" piano, brushed cymbals, violin, clarinet – and are closer to Weill and art song than contemporary pop music. Leone recommended Desperate Straights to "anyone into pushing the chamber-pop envelope".[7]

Pete Erskine wrote in New Musical Express in April 1975 that "Desperate Straights cannot be recommended too highly".[5] He described the album as "an extended lament intended to awaken the wearers of rose-tinted spectacles". Erskine stated that the music is "jagged, angular and at time (deliberately) grotesque – not the kind of thing you have humming softly in the background whilst doing the ironing."[5]

Track listing

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Some Questions About Hats"Anthony Moore, Peter Blegvad1:49
2."The Owl"Moore2:14
3."A Worm Is at Work"Moore, Blegvad1:52
4."Bad Alchemy"John Greaves, Blegvad3:06
5."Europa"Moore, Blegvad2:48
6."Desperate Straights"Moore4:14
7."Riding Tigers"Blegvad1:43
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
8."Apes in Capes"Moore2:14
9."Strayed"Blegvad1:53
10."Giants"Moore, Blegvad1:57
11."Excerpt from The Messiah"George Frideric Handel, arr. Blegvad1:48
12."In the Sickbay"Dagmar Krause, Blegvad2:08
13."Caucasian Lullaby"Chris Cutler, Moore8:20

Personnel

Slapp Happy
Henry Cow
Additional musicians
Production

References

  1. Garmo 2001, p. 68.
  2. Piekut 2019, pp. 175–178.
  3. MacDonald, Ian (7 June 1975). "Henry Cow: In Praise of Learning". New Musical Express. ISSN 0028-6362. Retrieved 11 June 2018 via Rock's Backpages.
  4. Garmo 2001, p. 69.
  5. Erskine, Pete (5 April 1975). "Wrap your pre-frontal lobes round this lot...". New Musical Express. p. 10. ISSN 0028-6362.
  6. Mills, Ted. "Desperate Straights". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  7. Leone, Dominique (12 October 2004). "Desperate Straights". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 30 April 2020.

Works cited

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.