The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony & the Johnsons

The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony & the Johnsons
Live album by the Unthanks
Released 28 November 2011 (UK)
Recorded 8 and 9 December 2010 at the Union Chapel, Islington, London
Length 1:07:44
Label Rabble Rouser RRM009 (UK)
Rough Trade Records RTRADCD636 (UK/USA)
High Note Records HN925CD (Taiwan)[1]
Producer Adrian McNally
the Unthanks chronology
Last (2011) The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony & the Johnsons (2011) The Unthanks with Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band (2012)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Rolling Stone[2]
AllMusic[3]
musicOMH[4]
The Observer[5]
The Guardian[6]
The Independent on Sunday[7]

The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony & the Johnsons, the fifth album by English folk group the Unthanks and the first to be recorded live, was released on 28 November 2011. Its extended title is: Diversions Vol. 1: The Songs of Robert Wyatt and Antony & the Johnsons: Live from the Union Chapel, London.

The album, which consists entirely of songs by Robert Wyatt and by Antony Hegarty (now known as Anohni) of Antony and the Johnsons, was recorded at the Union Chapel, Islington, London, on 8 and 9 December 2010. It received a 4.5-starred review in Rolling Stone, four-starred reviews in The Guardian and The Observer and four-starred ratings from AllMusic and musicOMH.

Reception

David Fricke, in a 4.5-starred review for Rolling Stone magazine, said there is "a silvery deceptive spine running through the sisters' Earth-angel voices".[2] In a four-starred review, Neil Spencer of The Observer called the album "[a] triumphant excursion", adding that "...the Unthanks' intertwining voices – cadent, mournful, tender – never falter and the between-songs banter ('There will be clog dancing!') grounds an ethereal atmosphere".[5] Robin Denselow, in a four-starred review for The Guardian, described the album as "a thoughtful, delicate and bravely original tribute to two fine contemporary songwriters".[6] Reviewing the album for BBC Music, Martin Aston was struck by "hearing You Are My Sister sung to each other by sisters in blood as well as spirit, the arrangement and tone touching rather than cloying".[8]

Writing in The Independent on Sunday, Nick Coleman said that "The Hegarty songs respond slightly better to the treatment than do Wyatt's, with the exception of 'Sea Song'."[7] In a four-starred review for musicOMH, Chris White said: "In a largely flawless set, the Antony & The Johnsons songs in particular are luminously beautiful, perfectly suited to the sisters’ passionate, breathy vocals and McNally’s elegant arrangements" but felt that the Unthanks are "at their best when providing a mixed palette of the centuries-old music of their native county and their own unique takes on the work of some of today’s most interesting performers. Just focusing on the latter, they’re marginally less interesting."[4]

In a four-starred review for AllMusic, James Christopher Monger described it as "one of the more riveting and idiosyncratic tribute albums of the past ten years".[3]

Track listing

Antony and the Johnsons

  1. "Bird Guhl" (Antony Hegarty) from I Am a Bird Now (3:57)
  2. "Man is the Baby" (Antony Hegarty) from I Am a Bird Now (5:43)
  3. "You Are My Sister" (Antony Hegarty) from the EP You Are My Sister (5:56)
  4. "For Today I Am a Boy" (Antony Hegarty) from I Am a Bird Now (4:06)
  5. "Paddy's Gone" (Antony Hegarty) from I Am a Bird Now (4:13)
  6. "Spiralling" (Antony Hegarty) from I Am a Bird Now (4:41)

Robert Wyatt

  1. "Stay Tuned" (Anja Garbarek) from Comicopera (4:43)
  2. "Dondestan" (Robert Wyatt) from Dondestan (Revisited) (3:18)
  3. "Lullaby for Hamza" (Robert Wyatt/Alfreda Benge) from Cuckooland (3:44)
  4. "Lisp Service" (Hugh Hopper/Robert Wyatt) from Dondestan (Revisited) (3:11)
  5. "Free Will and Testament" (Wyatt/Kramer) from Shleep (5:03)
  6. "Out of the Blue" (Wyatt/Elfriede Ellidge) from Comicopera (4:11)
  7. "Cuckoo Madame" (Wyatt/Benge) from Cuckooland (5:13)
  8. "Sea Song" (Wyatt) from Rock Bottom (6:59)
  9. "Forest" (excerpt) (Wyatt/Benge) from Cuckooland (2:51)

Total album length = 1:07:44

Personnel

The Unthanks
Additional musicians

Arrangements

Production and design

The album, which was recorded live at the Union Chapel, Islington, London on 8 and 9 December 2010, was mixed and produced by Adrian McNally. It was mastered by Denis Blackham.[9]

The tri-fold album cover, designed by Steven Wainwright, incorporates illustrations by Becky Unthank and photographs by Mark Winpenny.[9]

Notes

  1. Clog dancing – and the sound that the feet make when they do it – is integral to the Unthanks' stage act and to the recording of some of their songs. They list "feet", alongside vocals and instruments, in the album's sleeve notes.

References

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