Laughing Stock: Difference between revisions
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| Released = 19 November 1991 |
| Released = 19 November 1991 |
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| Recorded = 1990–91 at [[Wessex Sound Studios|Wessex Studios]], [[London]] |
| Recorded = 1990–91 at [[Wessex Sound Studios|Wessex Studios]], [[London]] |
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| Genre = |
| Genre = [[Post-rock]], [[Ambient]], [[Experimental]] |
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| Length = 43:34 |
| Length = 43:34 |
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| Label = [[Verve Records]]<br />[[Polydor Records]] |
| Label = [[Verve Records]]<br />[[Polydor Records]] |
Revision as of 19:35, 12 March 2010
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Laughing Stock was Talk Talk's fifth and final studio album. Released in 1991, it was the only album the band released on the jazz-based Verve Records, after acrimoniously leaving EMI.
Like its predecessor, Spirit of Eden, the album featured improvised instrumentation from a large ensemble of musicians, including as many as seven violists on occasion. The recording sessions have attained near-mythical status among underground music fans; Tape Op magazine ran an extensive article detailing the demanding recording sessions, marked by Mark Hollis' perfectionist tendencies, and his use of candles and incense to set the mood.
Original bassist Paul Webb had left the band prior to recording.
Critical reception
Reviews of the album were generally good; many tended to emphasise the fact that it spanned several genres, with some noting a stylistic kinship with Miles Davis' contemplative In a Silent Way album. Like Spirit of Eden, the lyrical themes are often religious. The album is widely considered (along with Spirit of Eden) as one of the first records to be classed as within the post-rock genre. Laughing Stock has consistently risen in critical opinion as a result of post-rock's rise to relative popularity during the late 1990s.[citation needed]
Laughing Stock was rated the eleventh-best album of the '90s by Pitchfork Media, describing the album as "...a record that makes its own environment and becomes more than the sum of its sounds. 'Entrancing' barely describes the effect."[1]
Artwork
The cover art is by James Marsh, responsible for most of Talk Talk's artwork. (Though similar to the cover of the band's previous album, the birds on Laughing Stock's spherical tree form the shapes of the Earth's continents.)
Track listing
All songs written by Mark Hollis, except for "After the Flood", which was written by Tim Friese-Greene and Mark Hollis.
- "Myrrhman" – 5:33
- "Ascension Day" – 6:00
- "After The Flood" – 9:39
- "Taphead" – 7:39
- "New Grass" – 9:40
- "Runeii" – 4:58
There is a brief, untitled instrumental fragment preceding "Taphead" at the beginning of side 2 on the LP/cassette version. This is present on the US CD, but the UK omits it with "After The Flood" crossfading into "Taphead".
Personnel
Musical
- Lee Harris - drums
- Mark Feltham - harmonica
- Martin Ditcham - percussion
- Mark Hollis - vocals, guitar, piano, organ
- Tim Friese-Greene - organ, piano, harmonium
- Levine Andrade, Stephen Tees, George Robertson, Gavyn Wright, Jack Glickman, Wilf Gibson, Garfield Jackson - viola
- Simon Edwards, Ernest Mothle - acoustic bass
- Roger Smith, Paul Kegg - cello
- Henry Lowther - trumpet, flugelhorn
- Dave White - contra bass clarinet
Technical
- Phill Brown - engineer
- James Marsh - cover illustration
Notes
- ^ "Top 100 Albums of the 1990s; 20-11". Pitchfork Media.