Cooking Vinyl
May 2000


XTC - Wasp Star

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In Another Life
Boarded Up
My Brown Guitar
Church Of Women
You And The Clouds Will Still Be Beautiful
We're All Light
I'm The Man Who Murdered Love
Playground
Standing In For Joe
Stupidly Happy
The Wheel And The Maypole
Wounded Horse


XTC, now comprising the songwriting core duo of Andy Partridge and Colin Moulding, both founding members of XTC way back in 1975, are set to release their second lp in just over a year for their own Idea Records, exclusively under license to Cooking Vinyl. Andy and Colin 2000 Titled 'Wasp Star (Apple Venus Volume 2)', it is released on May 22nd.

Even before they began the sessions for Volume 1 in 1998, Andy and Colin conceived the idea of presenting two contrasting sides to XTC over two albums in rapid succession. Essentially, they had amassed a whole range of songs (four albums' worth, in truth) that conceptually fell into two categories. Accordingly, Wasp Star presents more of a group sound, a far more electric, rock-based form compared to the acoustic/orchestral variations of the first volume. Where Apple Venus Volume 1 all but abandoned normal form for experimental sounding songs, intricate orchestrations and complex vocal overdubs, Wasp Star starts out with simple song structures and then embellishes them with inventive melodies, beautifully crafted vocals and brain twisting lyricism.

Compared to the chamber pop of the first volume, 'Wasp Star' is, for the most part, XTC displaying their hard rock side. The remainder, of course, is hardly rock at all but the sort of consummate, articulate pop we've come to expect from XTC over the years.

All the songs for 'Wasp Star' were newly recorded during autumn 1999 and completed in February 2000 by Messrs Partridge and Moulding who, between them, played everything bar the drums and the occasional string and brass parts. Recordings were undertaken at XTC's own purpose built studios in Colin's garden and mixed at Rockfield. Whatever the instrumentation, what unites the two volumes is, naturally enough, the unimpeachable song writing (three by Colin/nine by Andy), their love of wordplay and impeccable vocal harmonies and arrangements. Prior to 'Apple Venus Volume 1', released in February 1999, XTC hadn't released a record since 1992. Now, seven years may seem like a long time but for the first five of those years, XTC were rather famously on strike from their former label Virgin Records. After such a hiatus, XTC had to return with something memorable and 'Apple Venus Volume 1' was just that. Indeed, it was arguably their most overtly ambitious and most critically acclaimed album to date, recalling the highlights of 'Skylarking' and 'Nonsuch' (that final album for Virgin in 1992).

'Apple Venus Volume 1' was, as one would expect, is non-conformity at its most brilliant, luscious orchestral pop that sounded like nothing else released in 1999. Any 'comeback' is tricky and in seven years much had changed, of course, but critics and fans alike were unanimous in welcoming XTC back once again.

Reviewers certainly did not hold back on the critical plaudits:

" 'Apple Venus' is a joyful, Technicolor return.' (Daily Telegraph)

'A quintessential new olde English classic' (The Guardian)

'This is pop art craftsmanship to make Britpop's finest blush' (The Sunday Times)

'This is the sound of XTC, the first sound anyone's heard for nigh on six years, and it's overwhelming.' (Uncut)

'The whole thing becomes an impossible triumph and you are willing to accept just about everything in 1999 that XTC can throw at you a fully realised, brilliantly sustained flight of aural fancy.' (Mojo)

XTC had released 10 albums for Virgin Records over the years prior to 'Apple Venus Volume 1', having ridden in on the coast-tails of punk with the punchy, jerky, angular rhythms of 'White Music' in 1978 and 'Go2' the same year. A brace of albums with producer Steve Lillywhite extended their range and reputation further - the first of these ('Drum And Wires') earned the band it's first Top Twenty hit with 'Making Plans For Nigel' in 1979. Further hits followed, 'Generals And Majors', 'Sgt Rock (Is Going To Help Me)' and 'Senses Working Overtime' among them. 'The Disappointed' from 'Nonsuch' was their last British Top 20 hit in April 1992.

They dispensed with Lillywhite's services for 1982's 'English Settlement' (one of several contenders as their masterpiece) and from this period on became known for their variety, notoriety, ingenuity and originality. It was also one of the albums that truly extended their reputation in America, 'Skylarking' being the other. 'Skylarking' was produced by Todd Rundgren, working mostly at his Woodstock, NY studio. It spent over six months on the US charts.

From here on, through albums such as the aforementioned 'Skylarking' (1986) and 'Oranges And Lemons' (1989) and 'Nonsuch' (1992), not to mention the Dukes Of Stratosphear experiments with psychedelia, XTC continued to set their own high standards. Their music was invariably impossible to categorise. Had they chosen to conform to writing straight pop songs they would undeniably have sold 10 times as many records as they did. Instead they always went their own way, living by their own rules and producing music that ranged from pure pop to psychedelia, from textured folk to orchestral majesty.

In the year 2000, nothing changes in the world of XTC, except change itself. On their return last year, most critics asked 'where do XTC stand in the 1999 scheme of things?' Nobody had an answer. So where do they stand in the year 2000? Same place, out on the periphery and out there in a class of their own.


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[Thanks to Cooking Vinyl]