Category Archives: What’s In A Cover?

What’s In A Cover? Mr B’s A Thoroughly Modern Existential Crisis

Morecambe and Wise; Cheech and Chong; Trevor and Simon; Sooty and Sweep; Fish and Chips; Pete Doherty and Heroin – to add alongside these great double acts should also go musicians and plane artwork.

For that matter, any aerodynamic form of transport. Led Zeppelin announced themselves on their self-titled debut album with a picture of an exploding Hindenburg air ship (a reference to the suggestion from The Who’s Keith Moon that a Yardbirds off shoot supergroup would go down like “a lead balloon”… Yardbirds guitarist Jimmy Page took note).

The Beastie Boys producer Rick Rubin was so inspired by Led Zeppelin’s cover that for the band’s 1986’s Licensed to Ill album he got graphic designer Stephen Byrum to create the legendary sleeve of an Boeing 727 adorned with group’s insignia on its tail, crashing into the side of a mountain: a gloriously metaphoric and literal illustration of the group’s musical and cultural impact, as well as a sad lament to the loss of the gatefold sleeve and it’s imaginative uses (Bless poor Marshall Mathers whose attempt at a reboot for his Kamikaze album can be consigned to the reject bin along with wet carboard, rotten vegetables and Mafia snitches! – sometimes the best flattery is just to leave well alone).

When it comes to creative use of plane imagery on your artwork, nobody can come close to pop art’s high priests the Mael Brothers. The writer J.G Ballard once described Second World War London as being a physical representation of surrealist art, in which you would see buildings where the front and back had been blown out, but inside those buildings all of the furniture and furnishings remained intact. Sparks employ this on the cover of their 1975 album Indiscreet, where lead singer Russ in the guise of a pilot lies elegantly prostate against the crashed jet that appears on the suburban neighbourhood drive of Ron. Ron looks on with the casual disdain of a man whose scanned his petunias to find one of next-door neighbour’s dog turds gleaming back at him! The sleeve encapsulates the ordinary and the extraordinary in harmonic unity and holds a million different tales and interpretations which are both comic and profound.

(Colourhorizon – Russ is draped like a Roxy leading lady…a homage, a parody?)

U2 (A group named after an American fighter plane) have a cover with the band milling about in an Airport – are they departing or arriving? Who knows…who cares?! Green Day’s Dookie sees a tongue lapped, goggle adorned cartoon dog dropping bombs from a plane with chaotic glee as he hurtles to his own violent canine exit. A quartet of red neon jet silhouettes, ominously halo the mountains on the back cover of Talking Heads Remain in Light album and The Beat’s 1982 release Special Beat Service, shows the band acting as the ska revivalist convoy for a Middle Eastern dignitary, as they disembark from the plane on a dark night.

So within this hallowed group of aviation enthusiasts, is the debonair owner of the most geometrically perfect and aesthetically appealing upper lip foliage: Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer. This is the man with Robert Donat and David Niven as guardian angels. A man who religiously adheres to the code of the great Viv Stanshall, whom when touring in America in the late 1960’s with his group the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band was asked by a Police Officer how without any weaponry was Viv going to protect himself against the violent extremes of American society? Viv defiantly answered: “…with good manners!” A man for whom Harris Tweed holds the same superhuman transformative powers as Popeye’s cans of spinach. Mr. B…  whose only genuine rival to the master straw boater wearer title is Dirk Bogarde in Visconti’s Death in Venice.

Mr B is an embodiment of how class, distinction and invention can effortlessly shape, follow and design you without ever falling into the bottomless pit of nostalgia porn. There is space in this world for a modern Harry Flashman to operate with great elan. But remember tucked inside those crustless cucumber sandwiches is a healthy spicy dollop of Levi Roots Reggae Reggae sauce!

Be the synthesis, merge the great traditions with a thoroughly unstudied modern sensibility that is all encompassing, truly arresting and totally inspiring. The warning is heeded on the album cover as we see a beached and desiccated emblem of British national pride: a Hawker Typhoon on Brighton beach. A relic, not resuscitated by a resurgence of national pride and sentiment, but unwashed and unloved. An irony free representation of rusted metal hopes and dreams, no more out of place than any other bit of detritus that has come in with the sea. The missing picture from photographer Marin Parr’s 1984 collection of New Brighton holidaymakers’ pictures – where poor families descend for a day at the polluted seaside.

A decayed vessel pockmarked by the enemy’s bullet holes, waiting for a dignified burial which will never materialise beyond the solemn head shake of an enervated passer-by. Or could it just be a symbolism free portrait of a cool image? Is it even a plane album cover?

If not, will that then preclude it from all the words that have preceded? Could this be a fevered dream and the cover doesn’t actually exist? Could this be a Smiths style celluloid homage, where in Mr. B’ s case a wrecked plane is an avatar for George Sanders, Dennis Price or James Mason?  In the words of Chuck Berry ‘”You never can tell”

————————- Henry Forrest

Further reading – Henry would like to point you in the direction of Martin Parr’s work The Last Resort

https://publicdelivery.org/martin-parr-last-resort/

Hit the Henry Forrest tag below to read more from Henry!

Thanks to @Grymm23 on twitter for the heads up on the source photo! https://m.facebook.com/hawkertyphoonRB396/photos/there-was-a-single-recorded-loss-on-this-day-in-1944-with-the-pilot-safesafe-1-2/2246341785581089/

Back issues of What’s In A Cover?…

What’s In A Cover? Garsa on The Unfairity

What’s In A Cover? Hawksmoor on Methods Of Dreaming

What’s In A Cover? Concrete Island with The Heartwood Institute

‘Paint Me A Dream’ with The Chemistry Set

Summer Heads and Winter Beds by The Raft with Phil Wilson

‘Painting In Carlisle’ by The Maitlands

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

Head over to the CONTENTS page to find the best in new music with review, interviews, articles and much more! You’ll find everything from psych to folk-horror!

What’s In A Cover? Garsa on The Unfairity

A protest folk-tronica artist for 2021+, solo artist Garsa has a new debut EP called The Unfairity, led by the outstanding single ‘Ghosts’ (reviewed here). He combines song-writing and heart with electronica. Both old fashioned and new fashioned, he is a man out of time, and of the now.

To celebrate the release of The Unfairity, we caught up with Garsa (Martin) as part of our ongoing series, What’s In A Cover, which celebrates art work!

Firstly, listen to and buy The Unfairity here!

Let’s start with the big one! Who made the art, why that style and how does it represent The Unfairity?

I made the art. I wanted something that I could do myself as previous single art was other people’s royalty free work from various sites. I wanted to get away from that. Not being a great artist or photographer, I played with some ideas on the computer and came up with the simple abstract landscape using triangles to build up a picture. I wanted something simple yet eye catching and in a style that I could use for future releases, to keep a kind of set theme going on.

It has a great childlike quality… it reminds me of fuzzy felt!

Yes, I can totally see that! That’s actually a great idea for a release! Fuzzy felt album sleeve, design your own scene *adds fuzzy felt album cover idea to notepad*.

I can answer the “representing The Unfairity” part of question one with this too. My nine-year-old son Lachlan came up with the term The Unfairity and let me use it for the E.P. I suppose the fact that the cover has a childlike quality and was named by a child using a made-up word represents it quite well.

And it has a DIY aspect to it which reflects the bedroom recording vibe going on!

Yes, I suppose it does. It was made on the same computer, from the same seat as the songs were recorded and was very much a learn as you go process. It’s all been very DIY, mainly due to lack of funds so I’ve had no choice but to do it myself. I’m glad I did though. I feel as though I’ve achieved something in doing it and I’ve certainly learnt a few new skills.

I’ve dubbed you “the Peggy Suicide of Oldham” … you dig ;-)?

If I’m honest I’m not massively familiar with Julian Cope’s work. Not because I dislike him. I do like what bits I’ve heard! He’s just one of those artists that I have passed by without giving a proper listen to. I need to take the time to dig into his back catalogue.

I’m aware of what his music means and its importance so, to be dubbed “the Peggy Suicide of Oldham” is quite the compliment, I think!

Peggy Suicide is probably the best place to start 😉 But his post 2000 work is stunning – Black Sheep in particular is sensational. But that’s enough about the Arch Drude!

Thanks to Garsa for taking time to talk to us! Don’t forget to check out the EP here!

If you enjoyed What’s In A Cover, head over to the Contents page to read more – and lots of reviews, reviews/not reviews (?) and miscellaneous articles to dig into!

What’s In A Cover? Hawksmoor on Methods Of Dreaming

Just look at that gorgeous, visceral, creepy cover art for Methods Of Dreaming! It’s the new album from Hawksmoor, brought to you by the good people at Spun Out Of Control, whose roster contains artwork that just makes you want to buy up everything! Methods Of Dreaming is a dark, swirling album inspired by Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze. We were lucky to catch up with James McKeown, the thoroughly troubled mind behind Methods Of Dreaming to talk about that cover art!

You can listen to and buy Methods Of Dreaming right here!

https://spunoutofcontrol.bandcamp.com/album/methods-of-dreaming

Eric Adrian Lee’s artwork for Methods Of Dreaming is intoxicating! Tell us how it came about and how it reflects the themes of the album!

Yes it certainly is! Really the music and the background concept were the main prompts. The background concept was the idea of a paper published by an academic on behalf of the Milton Keynes Institute for Neurological Dream Research called “Methods of Dreaming” and the music was created to reflect this. Eric was into the album and this was the image he came up with. An initial idea that I discussed with Spun Out of Control and then Eric was a book cover I have of the Christopher Priest novel A Dream of Wessex as this evoked the feel I was looking for. One of the main aspects behind wanting to collaborate with Spun Out of Control is their strong visual aesthetic. The Methods of Dreaming cover and many of Eric’s designs in general really evoke one of the central tenets of Hauntology, “retro-futurism”, as explained by Mark Fisher in The Weird and The Eerie, the concept of non-linear time; the covers are redolent of ’80’s VHS video cassette covers, which represents the fact that many of the releases are soundtracks, real or imaginary, yet they are at the same time contemporary and contain contemporary music which is predominantly released and managed via a digital platform – Bandcamp, yet available physically on the older formats of cassette and vinyl. So a kind of retro and modern duality and hence not pinned to a specific time.

Why do you think the eye is such an important image in horror and psychedelia?

I suppose when linked to Psychedelia it has become a sort of visual shorthand for ‘consciousness’ and the idea of the ‘third eye’ of the expanded mind. In the context of Psych I would immediately think of the 13th Floor Elevators and I’m sure it even goes back to the Merry Pranksters and the Acid Tests etc. I’m not really a Horror film expert, but an early example of a horrific eye image on film is the famous eyeball slicing from Buñuel/Dali’s Un Chien Andalou and you could probably also include Alex’s ‘treatment’ in Kubrick’s version of A Clockwork Orange and the poster too.

I must admit though… the cover does remind me of Skipper The Eyechild from Garth Merenghi’s Darkplace!

Well I have always assumed that Garth Merenghi’s Darkplace was very much a British cult programme but Eric may well be familiar with it? As stated though, eyes in artwork are ubiquitous. 

When the art work arrived you must have felt like the last piece of the jigsaw was there, the cover really gives the album a “home” thematically. It roots the album to a time period beautifully! The listener knows what to expect before they start…

Absolutely, the cover brought the whole concept to life and being so visually striking has no doubt helped it to reach a wider potential audience. As I explained with the non-linear time frame, I don’t think it’s tied to an era, more the idea of time, but one that is hard to pin-point. Either way, it does suggest the content is cerebral in nature, which I hope it is and have had responses that suggest it is either relaxing escapism, or anxiety inducing. I’m happy with both of those responses.

Thanks to Hawksmoor for talking to us about Methods Of Dreaming!

Did you know that in 1988 Hawksmoor collaborated with The Heartwood Institute on the soundtrack for Alan Clarke’s adaptation of Concrete Island. You can read the review of the new Blu-ray release here!

Head to the Contents page to find your new favourite music, with categories including What’s In A Cover, Reviews, Reviews/Not Reviews, Miscellaneous, Interviews and much more!

What’s In A Cover? Concrete Island with The Heartwood Institute

This is a mouth watering proposition – The Heartwood Institute and Hawksmoor taking on Ballard’s Concrete Island. For fans you know this is going to be epic before you hit play. For the uninitiated, here’s a handy article to know if The Heartwood Institute are for you!

Concrete Island features wonderful cover art from Eric Adrian Lee. We caught up with The Heartwood Institute to talk about the artwork and how important the art is!

The artwork for Concrete Island is phenomenal- tell us how it came about!

“I think serendipity is the word. I’ve always been blown away with the way Spun Out Of Control package their releases, the art and layout is always amazing. So once they were on board for the release they suggested Eric Adrian Lee. Both James ( Hawksmoor ) and myself were delighted to have Eric doing the art. He was sent a preview copy of the audio and came back with that amazing art. He absolutely nailed the vibe first time – that 70’s brutalist / sc-fi look that’s really central to the original novel.”

It’s the perfect evocation of old paperworks. This seems perfect for Heartwood Institute, would I be correct in assuming that in general literature, movies and TV are a bigger influence on your music than other music?

“Well I have to confess I’m a big collector of 70’s and 80’s paperbacks, I love the design work on them. I’ll often buy several copies of the same book if they have different cool artwork. But yes, for sure I’m taking a lot of influences and inspiration from outside of music. It’s no secret I’m fascinated by the whole idea of hauntology and trying to translate that into music.”

Many of your albums work to a theme- does it make it easier to find cover art as you have something to represent, or harder as it has to fit just right?

“A lot of what I do is really thematically inspired and I mostly have images in mind, so I tend to send the sleeve designer a whole bunch of images, not always for them to use, but to express where the music itself is coming from. In a sense Concrete Island was much easier to pass that on, all it required was saying it’s J G Ballard, it’s Concrete Island. A swift google image search will show some amazingly inspirational book covers.”

Imagery is very important to your music, so album art must be key?

“Definitely, when you’re doing instrumental music it’s not always easy to get across what it’s about or inspired by. So the imagery that goes with it really needs to get that across. With the Witchcraft Murders LP, it was really a huge bonus to be able to produce a zine to go along with the release. It really helped get the background across. Certainly something I’ll be thinking about doing for future releases, even just as a pdf.”

… and here’s the guide image provided by Spun Out Of Control to the artist, Eric Adrian Lee, to suggest a tannoy system in the centre of the island!

Listen to and buy Concrete Island here!

https://spunoutofcontrol.bandcamp.com/album/concrete-island

and here’s Everything You Need To Know About The Whispering Knights

Read back issues of What’s In A Cover?…

‘Paint Me A Dream’ with The Chemistry Set

Summer Heads and Winter Beds by The Raft with Phil Wilson

‘Painting In Carlisle’ by The Maitlands

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

What’s In A Cover? ‘Paint Me A Dream’ with The Chemistry Set

Psychedelic stalwarts The Chemistry Set are masters of the acid-y English strain of psych, but at heart are simply great song writers. They have a brand new single called ‘Paint Me A Dream’, so as part of our ongoing series What’s In A Cover? we caught up with the band to talk about the cover art!

Listen, read and buy!

https://thechemistryset.bandcamp.com/album/paint-me-a-dream-plus-bonus-tracks

How hard is it finding artwork for releases, is it a chore or a joy? 

It is a joy! and essential. When we came back in 2008, we worked with a highly original photographer from Barcelona called Blanca Vinas and she did all our covers for a few years. We then worked with a graphic artist from Barcelona called Serse Rodriguez, he did the incredible cover for The Endless More & More and some singles. We will work again with Serse. On “Paint Me A Dream” we work with the sensational Canadian artist Kirk Sutherland – https://www.saatchiart.com/kirksutherland 

Where did the art for ‘Paint Me A Dream’ come from and what does it represent? 

It’s great because Kirk is a huge fan of the band and was a fan for years before we spoke about him doing some art. Now, Kirk has synasthesia where he can taste colour and see colours in music, so it was perfect for us. As he can taste colours and see colours in music, it was an ideal marriage for “Paint Me A Dream”, which is about is about the power of visions. It begins, lyrically, with a group of mystics who become hypnotized as they sing together while playing dulcimers and lyres. This in turn evolves into mystical visions and a request to the divine eye to “paint them a dream” (travel from the grey to the Technicolor). As the painted dream multiplies and embraces them further, they meet Orpheus, the lyre-playing Greek musician, poet and prophet, travelling further in time and space to encounter translucent orbs, stratospheric emanations and transcendental oscillations. Yes, it’s a trip and so is the art! 

It reminds me of Christmas, the colour combination is a like a tree full of baubles, which feels right for The Chemistry Set’s warm , fuzzy old fashioned sense of song writing. 

I like the way Kirk uses layers and they always remind me of a psychedelic milky way, yes you are right it has the effect of Christmas tree baubles and a lot of his artwork has bright flashing strobes or orbs. The use of colour is magnificent. 

A single with remixes feels lovely and 90s, tell us about it! 

We love remixes and have done them since we returned. We released an album of remixes called “Chemistry is not just numbers” which is a quote from Carl Sagan. I love handing our music over to someone who can do whatever they like with it. We are not precious, quite the opposite. It is exhilarating to hear what someone else can do to your music. Music is about freedom of expression and to hear different interpretations is beautiful.  

https://thechemistryset.bandcamp.com/album/paint-me-a-dream-plus-bonus-tracks

Read a review of The Endless More & More, which listening to it this week it clear that most psych bands are really just trying to be The Chemistry Set

What’s In A Cover? Lust For Life by Iggy Pop and Fried by Julian Cope

In the first ever guest written piece on colourhorizon, the unutterable Henry Forrest finds himself with Lust For Life and gets Fried

What’s in a cover looks at two iconoclastic artists whom used to front legendary bands and their second solo album attempts…

Lust For Life is a black and white photo haloed by a yellow border, with the name of the artist on the left-hand corner of the sleeve and the album’s title on the right. An acceptable passport photo and half an hour of the designer’s effort to find a suitable typography, yet we have a famous and much imitated record cover.

On Iggy’s 1977 debut The Idiot the cover photo was Iggy aping a German Expressionist painting: announcing his arrival as a serious artist as he warbled about former acquaintances (‘Dum Dum Boys’) and the jaded dynamics of night life (‘Nightclubbing’).

On Lust For Life (released the same year) the sleeve is intense in it’s apparent blandness. We know too much about the history of rock’s wildest frontman to write it off as a generic PR exercise.

This is Iggy, the former James Jewell Osterberg…Godfather of Punk announcing his rebirth on the album’s title track, cleansed of improprieties, but still riddled with some. Eyes gleaming, sporting the world’s longest eyelashes. Cold water washed, groomed and wearing his cleanest dirty shirt…. Reformed? The well-behaved Iggy, whom will now only piss in your sink rather than take a shit in it! Who’ll take the cash from your wallet but leave a handwritten I.O.U note in its place.

Iggy: the entry point for uptight Anglos like photographer Mick Rock and David Bowie to vicariously engage in nihilistic performance art. The peanut butter smeared chest is cleaned up and plucked of any indecent hairs and now sporting a reapplied CE sticker (Corporate Entity), the track marks scabbed over – with the only use for tin foil these days to cover the previous night’s homemade shepards pie. Iggy is appearing boyish, detoxed and wanting to shift more units than Fleetwood Mac with songs about dilapidated urban landscapes, fame disillusionment and drug and alcohol recovery. He’s sacrificed dignity, financial security and personal happiness and is crawling out on the other side ready for the ascension.

Iggy’s Lust for Life cover – wholesomely wholesome, affirming the positive and the clean cut, the confidence trick that will release Middle America of its dollars so that Lust for Life beats Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Rumours’ as 1977’s biggest release….(100,000 copies sold, only a mere 39,000,000 less than Fleetwood Mac – Kinda worked!)

Do you remember when ITV used to run programmes through the early hours of the night? Reruns of American sitcoms like Soap and Coach, Australian Prison drama Prisoner Cell Block H, raunchy dating shows that gave the world Graham Norton Carnal Knowledge, The Old Grey Whistle Test revived on an even smaller budget Helter Skelter and a music quiz show that was presented by Kerrang Magazine editor Phil Alexander Popped in, Crashed Out.

Popped in, Crashed Out was the unwashed alternative to ‘Never Mind the Buzzcocks’ where host Phil would give his famous musical contestants the answers if he liked you! It was usually the same non competing guests every week: Leigh from Terrorvision, the bassist from System of a Down and very occasionally Rock royalty in Ozzy Osbourne or Rob Halford. Syd Barrett featured in one of the answers and led to one of the contestants (maybe a Faith No More’s roadie) who derisively said: ‘I love Syd Barrett, that is what pisses me off about Julian Cope, he pretends to be mad whilst Syd Barrett whom he copies, is.”

Julian: naked, covered by a tortoise shell, playing with a toy car – is that not inspired madness pretention enough for you? For a Scott Walker devotee, Julian’s second album, Fried would not be as fantastically accessible or successful as the crooner’s own follow up. Like Iggy, Julian released his second album in the same year he released his debut, but unlike Iggy, Julian was trying to rid the stench of commercialised pop, not immerse himself in it.

The ubiquitous presence that was Julian Cope taking his cue from John Peel and Janice Long to mime his latest hit on Top of the Pops was gone. And now here was the hitless iconoclast’s seven stone frame sheltered under a half shell playing with a dinky toy on a slag heap! Polygram were not happy at the disappointing sales of Fried and got rid of Cope, as his psychedelic paganist ditties were not ringing the cash registers of Our Price and so Cope listened to what Bill Drummond said (whom would be topping the charts under first the uber commercial Timelords then the fabulously successful KLF) and Cope decided that alongside Pan, money was worth worshipping, and produced the Saint Julian album and hit single ‘World Shut Your Mouth’ Julian Cope was now competing with Roachford’s audience and winning handsomely. Fried’s naked fragility – contrived or not, was replaced by the traditional comforting rock and roll regalia of leather trousers and endless guitar solos.

Julian Cope’s Fried – the unacceptable album cover that all mothers returned to the racks seconds after being handed it by their kids

–Henry Forrest

If these classic albums aren’t in your collection – get on it!

Read more What’s In A Cover? articles…!

Summer Heads and Winter Beds by The Raft with Phil Wilson

‘Painting In Carlisle’ by The Maitlands

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

What’s In A Cover? Summer Heads and Winter Beds by The Raft with Phil Wilson

As fuzzy and pink as an episode of Columbo filmed inside a birthday cake, the front cover of The Raft’s new album looks like colonoscopy footage from an unfortunate jelly baby.

Pink is the perfect colour for The Raft as Phil Wilson has spent the best part of two decades making pick n mix style music using the ingredients of shoegaze, The The’s, The La’s and Barney Summer & Johnny Marr’s vaguely monikered side project Electronic. His music is all sugar and gelatine. Grab a scoop and fill your bag!

The miasma reflects his shoegaze leanings and the pink shows Phil’s softer side, he’s not quite the full Edwyn Collins but his songs are full of love and emotion and sensitivity. I caught up with Phil to talk about the album and the art, but first, let’s have a listen to the new album, and if you like it, treat yourself!

https://shorediverecords.bandcamp.com/album/summerheads-and-winter-beds

I asked Phil about the artwork;

“A guy I didn’t know put an ad up in one of the shoegaze groups on Facebook offering his artwork for free for album covers, I checked his page out, liked that particular image and the rest is history. At that point, I already had the album title, Summerheads And Winter Beds and it just seemed to fit. It felt summery but also a little dark and mysterious. I’m quite indecisive when it comes to album art so I usually go with my gut and this image definitely spoke to me. If you like it, you should check out his other stuff. His name is Andrew Latham and his design company is called Ghostheory Art & Photography.

How does Summer Heads And Winter Beds compare to the previous album, Abloom?

“I’d say there’s more substance to this one and it’s a bit more grown up. I wanted to make a more expansive album that had more than just pop songs on. It’s still pop at its core but some of the tracks are a little bit more experimental and the arrangements more complicated. It sounds nothing like it, but I had Giant Steps by The Boo Radleys in mind a lot of the time while recording this one.”

Read more What’s In A Cover? articles…!

‘Painting In Carlisle’ by The Maitlands

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

What’s In A Cover? Painting In Carlisle by The Maitlands with Ingy

Amazingly, the painting that forms the album artwork to ‘Painting In Carlisle’ by The Maitlands is in fact a real painting the band discovered. Even more surprisingly, the painting now hangs in Ingy’s house. Who’s Ingy? You’ve probably met him to be fair, he’s the singer and ringmaster of The Maitlands and the kind of guy who writes songs about odd looking blokes in paintings. I caught up with him to talk about the painting in Carlisle.

Listen and if you like treat yourself!

https://themaitlands1.bandcamp.com/track/painting-in-carlisle

How did you acquire the painting?

I saw the painting on the staircase going up to play at a shop called the Warwick Bazaar. Artist wasnt known so we dont know anything about the man really. It just stuck me how awkward he looked, and on the way back from Carlisle, I made up his story…how I imagined him to be. It now hangs in my spare room as Ste Ackley [Maitlands guitarist] bought it for me once we recorded the song.

Wait, so after the song was recorded he went back to Carlisle to buy it?

Yeah, well I think he got it posted out.

I bet p n p was high. And how do the lyrics in the song relate to this mysterious man?

“You dont know what to do with yourself”, is about the awkwardness in with he looks to be experiencing while being painted.
“High blood pressure”, you can see it on his face.
So I assume hes a drinker.

“Cram packed attic full of ex wives porcelain”
“Bad luck Tonka Truck”
“Even this old plastic starship, looks like its ran out of stream”

I’ve painted him as a hoarder in my imagination, hench the above references.

There is another line in it “it’s time to tell the truth about what the workforce are doing building building’s that weren’t made to last”

That actually doesnt have anything to do with that painting, that’s my commentary on Grenfell towers and the like. But we could pretend he’s a retired, divorced, alcoholic, engineer.

The last line in the song is “sick of hanging round the stairs at the Warwick Bazaar” which is self explanatory.

Here’s photo evidence of The Maitlands with the actual painting!

Find your own painting at Warwick Bazaar!

Read more What’s In A Cover? articles…!

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

What would happen if the latest Maitlands single ‘When It Rain, It Went Pours’ went on Take Me Out? Yes, the actual song went on Take Me Out.

What’s In A Cover? Licensed To Ill by Beastie Boys and Dragnet by The Fall

Licensed To Ill’s infamous plane not only serves as a metaphor for the Beasties but also an unintended Nostradamus style prophecy for the end of this phase of their life cycle.

In an image stinkingly redolent of the 1980’s; the plane is a symbol of status and power. But more than just greed is good, it also builds in rap’s obsession with self aggrandisement. The Beasties have their own branded liner, making them the biggest and the best. Like when Marty gets the new car at the end of Back To The Future, the Boys have the best wheels / wings and are off touring round the world so brace yourself.

Let’s not beat around the bush, the plane is a phallus. Again, power, but more importantly, getting one over the ‘cock rock’ bands. When we consider the band toured with an enormous pneumatic knob on stage, you get the impression they’re more obsessed with bell ends than a campanology group.

Of course, the wonderful sight gig is that, flip the album over and the plane’s gone face first into a cliff. Firstly this tells us that humour is behind everything the Beasties do. Secondly in revealing that their enormous phallic plane is in fact, fucked, the back cover satirises the front. More importantly it transmits a valuable life lesson that power is not only linked to stupidity, but fragility. Thirdly, and this is where Nostradamus comes in, we can see see the plane as the Beasties and how the ‘Fight For Your Right’ frat boy act would become hit a grim dead end and finally die, the cliff face being Daily Mail outrage, stolen VW badges and commotion in Liverpool. The Beasties, like the Sex Pistols before them, would see their destructive nature turned inwards. From the ashes of the plane crash the Beastie Boys flew again, with Paul’s Boutique…. but that’s another story…

And the number on the tail 3M TA3? EAT ME!

Meanwhile on Dragnet, The Fall’s sophomore album (to use Pitchfork terminology) shows a stark black and white image of spider and butterfly on a web.

It’s perhaps too easy to say but The Fall had already positioned themselves as the spider at the centre of the web. They were originally called The Outsiders and rejoiced in being distanced from the Factory set. They were keen to draw people in though and the butterfly is us, the listener. If you get caught in the web of The Fall you may escape, but if you get stuck, there’s no escape and before you know it you’re buying everything you can. With his usual pre-cog kills, Mark E Smith had already predicted the entire position and effect of his wonderful, contrary band.

The choice of a spider is interesting and reflects that Mark was leaving the twisted social realism of suicidal bingo callers behind him and starting on embracing his love of MR James and Lovecraft. There’s a spider on the front of the album and in the music contained within there’s killers and spectres and spooky chills. Given the trap depicted on the artwork, Mark’s opening line of “is there anybody there?” could be interpreted as asking for acolytes or victims.

Contrasting their artwork with the nature displayed by the Bunnymen, the austerity of Joy Division, the high art of Magazine and the politics of Gang Of Four; The Fall on Dragnet offer a less celebrated but arguably more personal representation of their nature in the album art.

From the Beastie Boys as a plane, to the spider of The Fall, both bands use objects as metaphors for themselves and the role they played in music.

Read more What’s In A Cover? articles…!

Hinterland by Lonelady and English Martyrs by Total Victory

Spying by Jennie Vee and Vintage Violence by John Cale

So Alone by Johnny Thunders and Marquee Moon by Television

Fans of The Fall may enjoy this article on the time travel antics of The Remainderer and the Mark E Smith obituary

What’s In A Cover? LoneLady’s Hinterland and Total Victory’s English Martyrs

Today we look at the album art of two essential artists who continue the North West post punk tradition. Today we look at the front covers of LoneLady’s Hinterland and Total Victory’s English Martyrs and what messages and themes they may convey. What’s in a cover?

LoneLady (Julie Campbell) makes post punk and dance music made from the very DNA of Manchester. Hinterland is her most recent full length album.

On Hinterland (close-by to an ‘Interzone’?), an image of factory decay and abandonment is used to represent Manchester’s industrial heritage; the damp spaces, resonant halls and sodium strips. More so than previous Manchester bands, LoneLady is an artist obsessed with concrete. She’s Ballard with a guitar. Puressence may have touched upon living in a post industrial landscape, but their heart was with people trying to find a way ahead (“take another pill to make me feel better”), Julie sides with the bricks and mortar.

The sky, bleached white to represent the creeping anodyne of gentrification. The chimneys disappear into that white, disappearing into the smog/ past.

The << rewind symbol, an emblem of the HiFi / VCR age reminds us that all technology, like industry, has a shelf life. Analogue passed to digital and at some stage digital too will fade away (“fade away, fade away”). For a city that revels in progress, rewinding/returning seems a strange choice. “Which brings us back to zero” sang The Chameleons, which is a key MCR lyric for life repeating, returning. Here the <<‘s represent “what went before”, the classic function of history to consider today as a product of yesterday. Each relic stands as a record.

The <<‘s give the album a large of slice of Peter Saville style, positioning Hinterland among the back catalogue of New Order, her pagan idols. Hinterland fits in between Low Life and Brotherhood as neatly as Tetris blocks.

Julie herself floats ghost-like amidst the cover / amidst the ruins. A physical part of the world she portrays though, not some idle spectre. Giving life to the harsh environment, just as her warm voice does to the music. She cuts a Romantic figure, the Bryon of brutalism.

Finally, between the chevrons of the rewind symbol, the leaves on the branches seem to form a pair of eyes, gazing at us, looking at Hinterland. See if you can spot them…

Julie Campbell is her city’s finest exponent of psycho-geography and effortlessly, the album art of Hinterland works to support her passions, world view and head space.

https://lonelady.bandcamp.com/album/hinterland-2

We’ve paired LoneLady’s Hinterland with Total Victory’s English Martyrs, partly due to if you love one, chances are you’ll love the other. In a bit of lazy shorthand the band will hate, with their blend of social commentary and humour, fans of The Fall and Half Man Half Biscuit should enjoy Total Victory. Their earlier keystone song ‘Conservative Girls’ features the chorus “so you bring your new girl home, you say you’ve fallen in love, with traffic islands and supermarkets and shopping centres, that go on forever” acts as a linking point between LoneLady and Total Victory.

Their most recent album, English Martyrs is a thrilling exploration of identity, patriotism and nationality. What makes a national identity? The central song is ‘Once In Every Century’ which has the key chorus:

“Every culture started from nothing / And develops until it’s full of the hubris / That comes from revering itself / And it’s sick from the myth / It breaks down in a ditch and it forms into silt.”

The front cover of English Martyrs shows King Penda, from the Alan Clarke movie Penda’s Fen. This ties English Martyrs with the folk horror tradition, especially when we consider nationality as something spawned from mud and silt. “This hilltop corresponds with every single last moment in time”, as geography and history become one, one reflects the other, one tells the story of the other. We live surrounded by history, Total Victory read it in hills and mud, LoneLady reads it in factories and waste land.

King Penda, surveys the land below him, just as Total Victory survey England. Identity and nationality, formed from the mud below, is viewed and dissected. Like The Fall’s Grotesque, a set of representative characters inhabit the songs. Both English Martyrs and Grotesque are Hogarth prints made with guitars.

https://totalvictory.bandcamp.com/album/english-martyrs

So from Ballard with guitars to Hogarth with guitars, LoneLady and Total Victory offer the best in modern music, and the best insights into the world around them, and the world around us. All life contained here…

More stuff to read!

What’s In A Cover? John Cale’s Vintage Violence and Jennie Vee’s Spying

What’s In A Cover? Johnny Thunders’ So Alone and Television’s Marquee Moon

“Full, if hyperbolic” review of English Martyrs *

The Real New Manchester: LoneLady

*(“if hyperbolic” refers to the nice person who shared the review on the HMHB message board!)