Jehovahkill
Jehovahkill is the eighth album by Julian Cope, released in 1992. Its original version was titled Julian H. Cope.
The album cover depicts the Callanish Stones, a site with a cruciform layout that predates Christ by at least 2,000 years.[6]
History
In 1992 Cope delivered his eleven-track Julian H. Cope album to Island Records.[7] Its "dark and challenging"[7] content was not well-received, with Cope's A&R man going as far as to describe "Slow Rider" as "the worst song he'd heard by anybody in his life".[7] According to Cope, the "results were certainly more sonically imbalanced and experimental" than anything he'd previously achieved.[8]
Island refused to issue the album.[7] When Cope explained that it was what he'd set out to achieve and "would prefer to stand or fall by the results"[8] he was allowed additional recording sessions. Although the existing content remained almost untouched, the album, re-titled Jehovahkill, was "ameliorated" with six further songs, including "Fa-Fa-Fa-Fine", "The Mystery Trend" and "No Hard Shoulder To Cry On".[7]
Within a week of the album's release, Island dropped Cope claiming, "his critical appeal is on the up but his commercial appeal is dropping",[7] the dismissal causing unexpected outrage in the music press.[7] In 2006 a "Second Edition" was released, containing material from Julian H. Cope and the Fear Loves This Place EP, including the Dictaphone-recorded "Nothing".[7]
Track listing
All tracks written by Julian Cope, except where noted.
1. |
"Soul Desert" |
3:53 |
2. |
"No Hard Shoulder to Cry On" |
2:44 |
3. |
"Akhenaten" |
2:52 |
4. |
"The Mystery Trend" |
4:17 |
5. |
"Up-Wards at 45°" |
5:46 |
6. |
"Know (Cut My Friend Down)" |
3:19 |
7. |
"Necropolis" | |
4:40 |
8. |
"Slow Rider" | |
2:18 |
9. |
"Gimme Back My Flag" | Cope and Skinner |
5:33 |
10. |
"Poet Is Priest..." | Cope and Skinner |
6:23 |
11. |
"Julian H. Cope" | |
2:49 |
12. |
"The Subtle Energies Commission" |
7:49 |
13. |
"Fa-Fa-Fa-Fine" |
2:25 |
14. |
"Fear Loves This Place" |
4:16 |
15. |
"The Tower" |
10:23 |
16. |
"Peggy Suicide Is Missing" |
0:42 |
1. |
"Nothing" | |
2:07 |
2. |
"I Have Always Been Here Before" | Roky Erikson |
4:41 |
3. |
"This Is My Kin" | |
4:22 |
4. |
"Michael Rother" | |
4:41 |
5. |
"Gogmagog" | |
2:51 |
6. |
"Gone" | |
5:02 |
7. |
"Vivien" |
3:03 |
8. |
"You Gotta Show" |
4:43 |
9. |
"Sqwubbsy The Olmec" |
1:50 |
10. |
"Sizewell B" |
4:46 |
11. |
"Paleface" |
5:02 |
12. |
"Free" |
5:05 |
13. |
"Poet Is Priest (original 21.36 mix)" |
21:28 |
14. |
"Starry Eyes" |
7:11 |
Chart positions
Personnel
- Julian Cope – vocals, wah-wah guitar, bass
- Donald Ross Skinner – guitar, bass
- Mark "Rooster" Cosby – guitar, drums, saxophone
- Hugoth Nicolson – synthesizer, mixer
- James Dowdall – Executive Producer
References
- ↑ Raggett, Ned. "Peggy Suicide". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
- ↑ Martin, Gavin (December 2006). "Julian Cope Jehovahkill Deluxe Edition". Classic Rock. p. 100.
- ↑ DiMartino, Dave. "Jehovahkill". Entertainment Weekly. January 1993. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
- ↑ Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". Q. October 1994. p. 135, cited 7 October 2012
- ↑ Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". Rolling Stone. May 1991, cited 7 October 2012
- ↑ Johnstone, Andrew (2010). How the Neolithics Influenced Rock 'n' Roll. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4461-9138-5.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Houghton, Mick (2006). "The JEHOVAHKILL Story". Booklet accompanying 2006 CD release.
- 1 2 Cope, Julian (2006). Booklet accompanying 2006 CD release.
- ↑ "Julian Cope - Jehovahill". chartarchive.org. Retrieved 7 October 2012.