Jehovahkill

Jehovahkill
Studio album by Julian Cope
Released 8 December 1992
Genre Post-punk
Length 69:53
Label Island
Producer Julian Cope, Donald Ross Skinner
Julian Cope chronology
Peggy Suicide
(1991)
Jehovahkill
(1992)
Rite
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Classic Rock[2]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[3]
Q[4]
Rolling Stone[5]

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. 

Phase 1
No. Title Length
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
Phase 2
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
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
Phase 3
No. Title Length
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
Phase 4 (Second Edition)
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
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
Phase 5
No. Title Length
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
Phase 6
No. Title Length
13. "Poet Is Priest (original 21.36 mix)"   21:28
14. "Starry Eyes"   7:11

Chart positions

Charts (1992) Peak
position
UK Albums Chart[9] 20

Personnel

References

  1. Raggett, Ned. "Peggy Suicide". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  2. Martin, Gavin (December 2006). "Julian Cope Jehovahkill Deluxe Edition". Classic Rock. p. 100.
  3. DiMartino, Dave. "Jehovahkill". Entertainment Weekly. January 1993. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  4. Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". Q. October 1994. p. 135, cited 7 October 2012
  5. Columnist. "Peggy Suicide". Rolling Stone. May 1991, cited 7 October 2012
  6. Johnstone, Andrew (2010). How the Neolithics Influenced Rock 'n' Roll. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4461-9138-5.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Houghton, Mick (2006). "The JEHOVAHKILL Story". Booklet accompanying 2006 CD release.
  8. 1 2 Cope, Julian (2006). Booklet accompanying 2006 CD release. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. "Julian Cope - Jehovahill". chartarchive.org. Retrieved 7 October 2012.


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