Sulk (British Band) Albums
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''Sulk'' is the second studio album by the Scottish post-punk and
pop Pop or POP may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Music * Pop music, a musical genre Artists * POP, a Japanese idol group now known as Gang Parade * Pop!, a UK pop group * Pop! featuring Angie Hart, an Australian band Albums * ''Pop'' (G ...
band the Associates. It was released on 14 May 1982 on their own Associates imprint of Beggars Banquet Records for the UK and throughout the rest of Europe on WEA Records and in the US on 4 October by Sire Records. It stayed in the UK Albums Chart for 20 weeks, peaking at No. 10, and it was crowned the album of the year by British music magazine ''
Melody Maker ''Melody Maker'' was a British weekly music magazine, one of the world's earliest music weeklies; according to its publisher, IPC Media, the earliest. It was founded in 1926, largely as a magazine for dance band musicians, by Leicester-born ...
''. Although it was the group's breakthrough record both critically and commercially, it was to be the last studio album recorded by the original pairing of Alan Rankine and
Billy Mackenzie William MacArthur Mackenzie (27 March 1957 – 22 January 1997) was a Scottish singer and songwriter, known for his distinctive high tenor voice. He was the co-founder and lead vocalist of post-punk and new wave band the Associates. He also h ...
, as Rankine departed four months after its release.


Recording

Signing a distribution deal with WEA Records at the end of 1981 on the strength of the
demos Demos may refer to: Computing * DEMOS, a Soviet Unix-like operating system * DEMOS (ISP), the first internet service provider in the USSR * Demos Commander, an Orthodox File Manager for Unix-like systems * plural for Demo (computer programming) ...
for "
Party Fears Two "Party Fears Two" is a song by Scottish new wave band the Associates, written by Billy Mackenzie and Alan Rankine. It was included on their second studio album ''Sulk'' (1982) and released as both a 7-inch and 12-inch single with the preceding t ...
" and "Club Country", Associates were given a £60,000 advance by the record label. Having spent half of the advance immediately on block-booking a studio for an indefinite period of time, the band moved into individual rooms at the Swiss Cottage Holiday Inn in London, including an extra room for MacKenzie's pet whippets, which he fed on smoked salmon ordered from the hotel's room service. The band also spent large amounts of money on other items such as clothing and drugs. In a 2007 interview bassist Michael Dempsey recalled that "we were all ridiculously profligate. But it wasn't entirely ridiculous to be doing things that way because Bill would coax money out of record companies in a kind of mesmeric way. He thought that the more money we owed them, the more obligation on their part to make this work to get their investment back." Rankine said that the excessive spending influenced the sound of the album: "If we hadn't spent the money, the album wouldn't have got made in the way it did. It was mental, but there was also a self-assured cockiness, because we knew we had these songs." ''Sulk'' was recorded at producer
Mike Hedges Mike Hedges (born 1953) is a British audio producer/engineer best known for his work with The Cure, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Manic Street Preachers. During his career, Hedges has worked with an eclectic roster of artists ranging from roc ...
' self-built Playground studio, in a former warehouse in nearby
Camden Town Camden Town (), often shortened to Camden, is a district of northwest London, England, north of Charing Cross. Historically in Middlesex, it is the administrative centre of the London Borough of Camden, and identified in the London Plan as o ...
, and cost £33,000 to make. The stories regarding the recording sessions for this album have been well documented over the years. Rankine said that "I don't think there's been any exaggeration about what went on. If anything, I think people have been holding back a bit in their recollections. It was madness." He confirmed that the sessions included stunts such as urinating in a guitar and filling drums with water to see how it affected their sound, but that the story that the band had filled the studio with helium balloons was an exaggeration, stating that they had fooled around with a helium balloon that had been brought in one day, but no more than that. However, both Rankine and Dempsey said that despite the heavy spending and antics in the studio, the band worked long hours and were completely focused on the record they were making. Drummer John Murphy left the band shortly after completing the recording of the album, unable to cope with MacKenzie and Rankine's behaviour.


Writing and composition

The bulk of ''Sulk'' was written and recorded in the same sessions for compilation album ''
Fourth Drawer Down ''Fourth Drawer Down'' is a compilation album by Scottish post-punk and new wave band the Associates, released in October 1981 by independent record label Situation Two. It compiles the A- and B-sides from the six singles the band released that ...
'' (1981), and the bizarre antics in the studio were a result of the band experimenting with ways of creating new sounds. Rankine said, "We were constantly thinking of what we could do to make this sound different, what can we do with the tools that we've got—which was the musicians. We were the tools. It wasn't just for the sake of being different. But we'd look up lists of instruments and go, 'What the hell is a jangle piano?' The next day this piano would suddenly arrive with all these little metal bits. And that's what we used on 'Party Fears Two', for the intro." He also described their restructuring of the traditional drum kit to create an attention-grabbing sound: "What we did on Bap de la Bap"and quite a lot of the songs on ''Sulk'' was take away all the tom-toms and make the whole drum kit out of
snare drum The snare (or side drum) is a percussion instrument that produces a sharp staccato sound when the head is struck with a drum stick, due to the use of a series of stiff wires held under tension against the lower skin. Snare drums are often used ...
s. So there'd be a seven-inch metal snare drum as the snare and a five-inch copper snare as one of the toms, and then maybe a real deep nine-inch black beauty made out of ebony as another tom-tom. So it made the whole thing really explosive." MacKenzie's lyrics on ''Sulk'' are often cryptic and ambiguous. Speaking to '' NME'' at the time of the album's release about the band's biggest hit single, MacKenzie said, "'Party Fears' could be about a whole lot of things. It could be about a husband and wife arguing with each other. It could be about communism and conservatism, political party extremes. It could be about schizophrenics. The lyrics of a song like that go deliberately to the extremes to get something across, like an actor using a heavy hand gesture when he speaks a line." According to Rankine, "'Nude Spoons' was about an acid trip Bill had had when he was fifteen or sixteen. Apparently, the spoons were copulating and there was a war going on between the spoons and the plastic flowers in the pot next to them." Rankine believed that "Club Country" was MacKenzie's response to attending the
New Romantic The New Romantic movement was an underground subculture movement that originated in the United Kingdom in the late 1970s. The movement emerged from the nightclub scene in London and Birmingham at venues such as Billy's and The Blitz. The New ...
clubs at the time and finding the scene to be very superficial.


Release and promotion

The first single released from the album was "
Party Fears Two "Party Fears Two" is a song by Scottish new wave band the Associates, written by Billy Mackenzie and Alan Rankine. It was included on their second studio album ''Sulk'' (1982) and released as both a 7-inch and 12-inch single with the preceding t ...
". It became the band's breakthrough single, reaching number 9 on the UK Singles Chart in March 1982. A second single, "Club Country", was almost as successful, reaching number 13 in May 1982. The singles' success owed greatly to Associates' memorable appearances on the UK's best known and most watched television music show of the time, '' Top of the Pops''. The group took the opportunity to subvert the family-friendly nature of the programme with absurdist pranks: on their second appearance performing "Party Fears Two", Rankine played the banjo while dressed in a fencing suit and wearing samurai make-up with chopsticks in his hair, while MacKenzie spent much of the song singing to the image of himself in the television monitors rather than face the audience or the cameras. For their final ''Top of the Pops'' appearance, Rankine had two chocolate guitars made by the London department store
Harrods Harrods Limited is a department store located on Brompton Road in Knightsbridge, London, England. It is currently owned by the state of Qatar via its sovereign wealth fund, the Qatar Investment Authority. The Harrods brand also applies to other ...
which he played during their performance of "18 Carat Love Affair", one of which he broke up and gave to audience members halfway through the song. Rankine said that the reason for their stunts was that "partly it was just a response to the boredom of having to be there at the BBC studio from half eight in the morning and not getting out until ten at night". Following the chart success of "Party Fears Two" and "Club Country", the band released the double A-sided single "18 Carat Love Affair"/" Love Hangover" in July 1982, which reached number 21 in the UK charts. "18 Carat Love Affair" was a version of ''Sulk'''s closing instrumental track "nothinginsomethingparticular" with added vocals, while "Love Hangover" was a cover of
Diana Ross Diana Ross (born March 26, 1944) is an American singer and actress. She rose to fame as the lead singer of the vocal group the Supremes, who became Motown's most successful act during the 1960s and one of the world's best-selling girl groups o ...
's 1976 hit single. Problems started to surface within the group the following month when they began rehearsals with a nine-piece band for an upcoming tour of the US and Canada to promote the forthcoming release of ''Sulk'' in North America. The demands placed on MacKenzie's voice caused him to develop pharyngitis, resulting in the cancellation of a string of August concert dates across the UK, including three planned headline shows at the Edinburgh Festival. In September MacKenzie pulled out of the tour the night before the band were due to travel, claiming that he did not feel the musicians were up to the standards required. This was the final straw for Rankine, who felt MacKenzie had thrown away the group's best chance to become famous in the US, and he quit the band. The album was issued in the US on Sire Records on 4 October 1982 with a significantly different track listing. Along with an overall different track sequence, the UK LP tracks "Bap de la Bap", "Nude Spoons" and "nothinginsomethingparticular" were replaced with both sides of the "18 Carat Love Affair"/"Love Hangover" single and two tracks from the ''
Fourth Drawer Down ''Fourth Drawer Down'' is a compilation album by Scottish post-punk and new wave band the Associates, released in October 1981 by independent record label Situation Two. It compiles the A- and B-sides from the six singles the band released that ...
'' compilation, "The Associate" and "White Car in Germany". "It's Better This Way" and "Party Fears Two" appeared as versions remixed by Mark Arthurworrey, and "Club Country" was replaced by the 7" edited single version. The original UK and European CD release of ''Sulk'', released in 1988, also followed the US track listing, but contained edited versions of "Club Country", "Love Hangover" and "The Associate". The remastered version of ''Sulk'', issued in June 2000, finally reverted to the versions and track listing on the original UK release, apart from replacing "Club Country" with a different version from those on all previous releases. The remastered CD also included seven bonus tracks, including both "18 Carat Love Affair" and "Love Hangover".


Critical reception

Ian Pye of ''
Melody Maker ''Melody Maker'' was a British weekly music magazine, one of the world's earliest music weeklies; according to its publisher, IPC Media, the earliest. It was founded in 1926, largely as a magazine for dance band musicians, by Leicester-born ...
'' stated that the group's "melodramatic aspirations" needed a voice like MacKenzie's to be able to carry them out successfully, and said, "In parts, ''Sulk'' is really over-produced, the stamp of perfectionists, and while there's nothing to match the commercial appeal of their two ingles this record has an almost timeless majesty that can only make Billy MacKenzie's rapturous grin grow wider still". Paul Morley of '' NME'' wrote "''Sulk'' deals with everything, in its hectic, drifting way ... There is an uninterruptible mix-up of cheap mystery, vague menace, solemn farce, serious struggle, arrogant ingenuity, deep anxiety, brash irregularity, smooth endeavour ... Sometimes ''Sulk'' is simply enormous: and then again it is fantastically unlikely." Reviewing the 2000 reissue David Peschek of '' Mojo'' called ''Sulk'' "their florid, hysterical masterpiece" and observed, "This remains extraordinarily potent music, a repository of the otherness contemporary pop so lacks".
Simon Reynolds Simon Reynolds (born 19 June 1963) is an English music journalist and author who began his professional career on the staff of ''Melody Maker'' in the mid-1980s. He has since gone on to freelance and publish a number of full-length books on music ...
stated in ''
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'' that "''Sulk'' is so lovely it's harrowing... Associates crammed all the derangement and texture-saturated voluptuousness of psychedelia into pop". David Quantick's review of the deluxe edition in 2016 observed that "''Sulk'' appears at first to be a pop album—and there are few greater pop singles than 'Party Fears Two'—but its glossy sound and high budget disguise the fact that it's actually very odd". Ned Raggett of AllMusic said that ''Sulk'' was "very much the Associates at probably the best period of their career. MacKenzie's impossibly piercing cabaret falsetto rivals that of obvious role model Russell Mael from
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, while Rankine's ear for unexpected hooks and sweeping arrangements turns the stereotypes of early-'80s synth music on their heads. The bass work from ex-
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member Michael Dempsey isn't chopped liver either, and the result is a messy but wonderful triumph no matter what version is found."


Accolades

''Sulk'' was named album of the year for 1982 in ''Melody Maker'' and was placed at number 18 in the ''NME'' critics' list of albums of the year. The album was also included in the book ''
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die ''1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die'' is a musical reference book first published in 2005 by Universe Publishing. Part of the ''1001 Before You Die'' series, it compiles writings and information on albums chosen by a panel of music critics ...
'' (2005).


Track listing

All songs written and composed by Alan Rankine and
Billy Mackenzie William MacArthur Mackenzie (27 March 1957 – 22 January 1997) was a Scottish singer and songwriter, known for his distinctive high tenor voice. He was the co-founder and lead vocalist of post-punk and new wave band the Associates. He also h ...
, except where indicated.


Original UK and Canada release

Side one # "Arrogance Gave Him Up" – 2:57 # "No" – 5:41 # "Bap de la Bap" – 4:13 # " Gloomy Sunday" ( Rezső Seress,
Sam M. Lewis Sam M. Lewis (October 25, 1885 – November 22, 1959) was an American singer and lyricist. Career Lewis was born Samuel M. Levine in New York City, United States. He began his music career by singing in cafés throughout New York City, and be ...
) – 4:09 # "Nude Spoons" – 4:15 Side two # "Skipping" (Rankine, Mackenzie, Michael Dempsey) – 3:57 # "It's Better This Way" – 3:22 # "
Party Fears Two "Party Fears Two" is a song by Scottish new wave band the Associates, written by Billy Mackenzie and Alan Rankine. It was included on their second studio album ''Sulk'' (1982) and released as both a 7-inch and 12-inch single with the preceding t ...
" – 5:45 # "Club Country" – 5:29 # "nothinginsomethingparticular" – 2:16


Original US and Europe release

Side one # "It's Better This Way" (remix) – 3:30 # "Party Fears Two" (remix) – 5:08 # "Club Country" – 5:33 # " Love Hangover" ( Pam Sawyer, Marilyn McLeod) – 6:09 # "18 Carat Love Affair" – 3:47 Side two # "Arrogance Gave Him Up" – 3:00 # "No" – 5:45 # "Skipping" (Rankine, Mackenzie, Dempsey) – 4:00 # "White Car in Germany" – 4:50 # "Gloomy Sunday" (Seress, Lewis) – 4:08 # "The Associate" – 5:00


2000 remastered CD

Tracks 1 to 10 as original UK and Canada version, except that the edits of "Party Fears Two" and "Club Country" are 5:11 and 4:48 long, respectively.
  1. "Love Hangover" (Sawyer, McLeod) (12" version of double A-sided single, released July 1982) – 6:15
  2. "18 Carat Love Affair" (double A-sided single, released July 1982) – 3:42
  3. "Ulcragyceptimol" (B-side of 12" of "Club Country") – 4:32
  4. "And Then I Read a Book" (previously unreleased) – 4:28
  5. "Australia" 1 – 3:20
  6. "Grecian 2000" (previously unreleased) – 3:29
  7. "The Room We Sat in Before" 2 – 3:31


2016 2-CD Deluxe Edition

CD1 As original UK and Canada version, except that the edit of "Party Fears Two" is 5:35 long. CD2 # "18 Carat Love Affair" – 3:42 # "Love Hangover" (Sawyer, McLeod) – 6:11 # "Club Country" (12" Version) – 6:58 # "Party Fears Two" (Instrumental) (previously unreleased) – 4:41 # "It's Better This Way" (Alt Version) – 3:41 # "And Then I Read a Book" (previously unreleased) – 3:48 # "Ulcragyceptimol" – 4:33 # "Skipping" (Alt Version) (Rankine, Mackenzie, Dempsey) (previously unreleased) – 3:49 # "Australia" 1 (previously unreleased) – 3:31 # "Me, Myself and the Tragic Story" 3 (previously unreleased) – 3:17 # "I Never Will" 4 (Demo) – 3:51 # "Club Country" (Demo) – 4:05 # "Grecian 2000" – 3:28 * 1 "Australia" is a version of the instrumental track "Voluntary Wishes", which appeared on the 12" single of "18 Carat Love Affair"/"Love Hangover", with a different arrangement and with vocals. * 2 "The Room We Sat in Before" is a demo version of "It's Better This Way" featuring just electric guitars and vocals, and produced by Chris Parry, owner of Associates' previous record label Fiction Records. * 3 "Me, Myself and the Tragic Story" is an alternative version of "Arrogance Gave Him Up". * 4 "I Never Will" is an early version of "Party Fears Two", with different lyrics. Note: the versions of "And Then I Read a Book" and "Australia" are different on the 2000 and 2016 releases.


Personnel

The Associates *
Billy Mackenzie William MacArthur Mackenzie (27 March 1957 – 22 January 1997) was a Scottish singer and songwriter, known for his distinctive high tenor voice. He was the co-founder and lead vocalist of post-punk and new wave band the Associates. He also h ...
– vocals * Alan Rankine – guitar, keyboards, other instruments * Michael Dempsey – bass * John Murphy – drums Additional personnel *
Martha Ladly Martha Jane Ladly is a Canadian academic, designer and musician. She is a professor of design at OCAD University. Ladly also has had a long career as a musician and achieved international fame as part of rock band Martha and the Muffins. She ha ...
– backing vocals, keyboards on "Club Country", "Love Hangover" and "18 Carat Love Affair" * Steve Goulding – drums on "Love Hangover" (uncredited) Technical *
Mike Hedges Mike Hedges (born 1953) is a British audio producer/engineer best known for his work with The Cure, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Manic Street Preachers. During his career, Hedges has worked with an eclectic roster of artists ranging from roc ...
production * John Leckie – production on "Australia" and "Me, Myself and the Tragic Story" on 2016 deluxe edition * Peter Ashworth – sleeve photography


Release history


References

Sources *


External links


''Sulk ''
( Adobe Flash) at Radio3Net (streamed copy where licensed) * {{DEFAULTSORT:Sulk 1982 albums The Associates (band) albums Beggars Banquet Records albums Sire Records albums V2 Records albums Warner Music Group albums Albums produced by Mike Hedges