Jump to content

Blanket of Secrecy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ira Leviton (talk | contribs) at 02:42, 9 December 2021 (Fixed a reference. Please see Category:CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Blanket of Secrecy
OriginEngland
GenresNew wave, synth-pop
Years active1982
LabelsF-Beat, Warner Bros.
Past membersPeter Marsh (aka Tinker)
Roger Bechirian (aka Soldier)
Andy Howell (aka Tailor)
Phil McWalter (aka Spy)
Ron Chadwick (aka Sailor)

Blanket of Secrecy (BoS) was a short-lived English new wave band formed in 1982. The band was notable for the fact that its band members, true to their band name, were never officially identified at the time - only the pseudonyms Tinker, Tailor and Soldier were disclosed to refer to the main members - as well as mention of Spy. This led to some speculation in the music press regarding the true identity of the members, with rumours that they might be the Attractions (Elvis Costello's backing band) and speculation that the lead singer was Jack Hues of Wang Chung.[1] However, they were eventually revealed to be Peter Marsh (Tinker, the lead singer), Andy Howell (Tailor), Roger Bechirian (Soldier) and Phil McWalter (Spy) .

Their music was synth-pop, similar to their contemporaries A Flock of Seagulls, although comparisons to The Attractions were also made.

History

Releases and chart history

The band's first LP was titled Walls Have Ears in the UK, and Ears Have Walls in the US. The album cover, ultimately to become an iconic classic, was designed by Barney Bubbles.[2] The group can be seen in shadow on the album's back cover, in a photo by Brian Griffin,[3] and in mostly obscured images on the cover of the single "Say You Will". They are seen full-face, and much more clearly, in the video for "Say You Will". Released in 1982, the album and single received significant airplay on both sides of the Atlantic, featuring in the Tipperade in the Netherlands[4] for four weeks.

At the time Ears Have Walls was recorded, BoS also recorded an entire second album, but the band broke up before it was released. It was eventually released, known simply as "2" on 24 August 2017 through Trick Records

Speculation about the band's identity

At the time of the group's one and only LP release, there were three main theories about the identity of the musicians involved with Blanket of Secrecy.

  • Theory No. 1: Because of the album credit "Directed by Roger Bechirian", all songs and instruments must be by Bechirian.
  • Theory No. 2: Some thought the album was actually by the Attractions.[5] Known primarily as Elvis Costello's backing group, the Attractions (a three-piece band, just like BoS) had issued one LP in 1980 that had been produced by Bechirian. Additionally, the Attractions were known to favour pseudonyms—the "Brain/Hart" writing team that penned several songs on their 1980 album Mad About The Wrong Boy was later revealed to be Attractions keyboardist Steve Nieve and his wife, poet and lyricist Fay Hart. Finally, the Attractions shared the same music publishing company as Blanket of Secrecy (Plangent Visions Music, Inc.), the same record label (F-Beat), and the same management company (Jake Riviera's Riviera Global Productions).
  • Theory No. 3: Several reviews at the time mentioned the name Peter Marsh as the possible main-man of the band. Marsh had been an original member of Easy Street, a mellow acoustic act of the 1970s whose ranks also included Richard James Burgess. Marsh had formed New Wave band Twist, which released one album in 1979, and he subsequently went on to produce plenty of synth-pop in the 1980s, collaborating with artists including Vangelis.

Actual identity

Extensive research by Blanket of Secrecy fan Gary L. Maher[6] eventually identified the participants definitively as:

  • Peter Marsh ("Tinker") – vocals and guitar
  • Roger Bechirian ("Soldier") – keyboards and backing vocals, percussion, producer, engineer and mixer
  • Andy Howell ("Tailor") – bass and backing vocals

Jack Hues of Wang Chung also confirmed the identity of Peter Marsh in an interview by Russell A. Trunk for Exclusive Magazine.[7]

Additionally, the single "Say You Will" bears a writing credit of Tinker/Spy. ASCAP has identified "Spy" as Phil McWalter. The song "Yo Yo" was credited to Tinker/Sailor, and Maher has identified "Sailor" as artist Ron Chadwick.

The Attractions connection trumpeted by some was proven to have been entirely incorrect, as no involvement by any of the Attractions in the Blanket of Secrecy project has ever come to light, although Pete Thomas played drums on two songs recorded for the second, never-released album - and Elvis Costello had performed as a backing vocalist on the track "Ads", released as a single several years earlier by Peter Marsh's former band, Twist. The song "Lovers", meanwhile, was written by Jack Hues and Nick Feldman (a.k.a. Nick De Spig) of Wang Chung, and arranged by Hues. One-time Wang Chung member "Hogg" (Dave Burnand) also appears on the album. The connection between the two bands is that Bechirian co-produced Wang Chung's first album, back when that group was known as Huang Chung.

Life before and after Blanket of Secrecy

All three BoS members had a hand in Carlene Carter's C'est C Bon record from 1983. Bechirian produced, and all three played on the album, as well as co-writing two of the songs. Bechirian also produced Nick Lowe's 1983 album The Abominable Showman, which featured backing vocals from Marsh and a Marsh–Howell song called "Cool Reaction".

  • Peter Marsh's musical career goes back at least to 1974, when he released a record with brother-in-law Ken Nicol under the name Nicol & Marsh (a.k.a. Nicol & Marsh's Easy Street). They then changed their name to Easy Street after Richard James Burgess joined and put out two records in 1976 and 1977. Their last record together was a 1978 release called simply Nicol & Marsh. Marsh's next project was Twist, which put out one album called This Is Your Life (1979). Between then and BoS, he also worked with Vangelis, with whom he released the single "Don't Be Foolish" in 1980 and Manfred Mann's Earth Band, and released solo singles including "You Say You Wanna Love Me" (1981, produced by Godley & Creme) and "Harmony" (1984).
  • Roger Bechirian is a noted producer, having worked with Huang Chung (Wang Chung), Elvis Costello, Squeeze, Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Carlene Carter, Trash Can Sinatras, the Undertones, Bell X1 and the reunited Monkees.
  • Andrew Howell is best known for having co-written The Monkees' reunion single "Heart and Soul", from Pool It!. He co-wrote and played many of the instruments on Simon Byrne's album Dream Crazy. He also played bass on Robert Ellis Orrall's Contain Yourself. Prior to BoS, Howell was also the bass player in South London punk band The Red Lights. He worked on a number of projects, including The Unbroken Ponies with former Red Lights manager Harry Rogers and Steve Young, lead guitarist of 1970s South London band Stone Cold Sober.

Discography

  • Ears Have Walls (US, Warner Bros. Records 23722-1, 1982)
  • Walls Have Ears (UK, F-Beat Records XXLP 16, 1982)
  • Walls Have Ears (Canada, WEA Records XWEA 58720, 1982)
  • "Say You Will" (extended mix) / "In the Garden" / "Feather in My Hand" (Warner Bros. 12" single)
  • "Say You Will" / "Close to Me" (Warner Bros. 45-rpm single)

Walls Have Ears/Ears Have Walls is still waiting for a CD re-issue – although in 2013 the tracks were digitally remixed by Roger Bechirian and released for digital download on iTunes.

The previously-unreleased second album, BOS2, was released in August 2017.[8]

Album credits

Walls Have Ears / Ears Have Walls

Side One:

  1. Say You Will (4:03) (Tinker/Spy) Intersong Music ASCAP
  2. Young Heart (3:42)
  3. Love Me Too (2:46)
  4. Remember Me and You (3:24)
  5. Long Cool Glass (3:35)
  6. Photograph (4:46)

Side Two:

  1. Yo Yo (3:19) (Tinker/Sailor) Intersong Music ASCAP
  2. Close to Me (4:16) (Tinker) Intersong Music ASCAP
  3. Something I Don't Need (3:02)
  4. Tell Me Baby (3:29)
  5. Lovers (4:52) (Hues/De Spig) WB Music Corp. ASCAP
  6. B.O.S. Theme (3:24) (Tinker/Tailor/Soldier)

All songs written by Tinker/Tailor except as indicated
All songs published by Intersong Music/Plangent Visions Music, Inc. ASCAP except as indicated
Copyright 1982 Warner Bros. Records, Inc.

Produced and directed by Roger Bechirian
Recorded at Ampro Studios and Rockfield Studios
Mixed at Rockfield
Assistant engineers, Rob Keyloch at Ampro and Paul Cobbold at Rockfield
Additional musicians:
Hogg – saxophone
Jack Hues – arrangements on "Lovers"
Originally mastered by Aaron Chakraverty at The Master Room
LP design – Heeps Willard (a pseudonym for Barney Bubbles)
Photography – Brian Griffin

Blanket of Secrecy 2

Move to the Rhythm
We Should Be Old Enough
Mr Munsun
What Kind of World
Take Her by the Hand
Walking on Water
Endless Love
Come Lie on My Couch (Remastered)
A Lonely Heart
Can't Turn Me Off
Covered by the Contract
Baby Don't You Change
  • ℗ 2017 Trick Records

References

  1. ^ "Blanket of Secrecy - Ears Have Walls (1982)". mineforlife.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Reasons to be Cheerful » Blanket Of Secrecy". www.barneybubbles.com. Archived from the original on 25 April 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  3. ^ Griffin, Brian. "Brian Griffin: Blanket Of Secrecy". www.briangriffin.co.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  4. ^ "Blanket Of Secrecy - Say You Will". Stichting Nederlandse Top 40 (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  5. ^ Blanket of Secrecy. "Blanket of Secrecy – Music Biography, Credits and Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  6. ^ Unofficial BoS Website Archived 30 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Anne Carlini – Exclusive Magazine". annecarlini.com. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  8. ^ "Official BoS website". Archived from the original on 6 October 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2017.