"Throbbing Gristle"
"Throbbing Gristle"
Still Walking
автор:
Throbbing Gristle
жанры: industrial, electronic, experimental, noise
альбомы: 20 Jazz Funk Greats, Heathen Earth: The Live Sound of TG
- Текст
- Открытка с текстом
still walking share of thee water in its element like all of us like a book spell of semen wall of silence or too? this end or all of us he said all of us do it each time asleep each time he said especially again especially item the totem was his the uncle was his every time it fell open at the same ritual every time she said the words he cried and no one saw that's how it is he said that's the whole problem each time she said
20 Jazz Funk Greats is the band's first fully studio album, as prior albums contained both live and studio recordings. The production is credited to "Sinclair/Brooks".
The album's cover photograph was taken at Beachy Head, a chalk headland on the south coast of England, close to the town of Eastbourne in the county of East Sussex, and one of the world's most notorious suicide spots. In a 2012 interview, Cosey stated:
We did the cover so it was a pastiche of something you would find in a Woolworth’s bargain bin. We took the otograph at the most famous suicide spot in England, called Beachy Head. So, the picture is not what it seems, it is not so nicey nicey at all, and neither is the music once you take it home and buy it. We had this idea in mind that someone quite innocently would come along to a record store and see and think they would be getting 20 really good jazz/funk greats, and then they would put it on at home and they would just get decimated.
On the 1981 Fetish Records issue of the release an apparently dead and naked male body lay in front of the band on the album cover.
Pitchfork described the album's style as such: "In a smash and grab that testifies to both increased musical ambition and a relentless urge to wrongfoot audience expectations, 20 Jazz Funk Greats finds the band waking up from D.O.A's dark night of the soul and feeling curiously frisky. Snacking on not only the titular funk and jazz, the band also takes touristic zig zags through exotica, rock and disco", ultimately describing it as a "kitsch detour toward mutant disco".
Pitchfork gave the album its highest possible grade of 10/10, regarding it as Throbbing Gristle's peak.
Pitchfork ranked 20 Jazz Funk Greats at number 91 in its list of the one-hundred greatest albums of the 1970s.
All songs written and composed by Throbbing Gristle (Genesis P-Orridge, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Chris Carter, Peter Christopherson).