The Album Review Club - End of Round #9 Break (page 1904)

King Swamp King Swamp.
The beat clue was at the bottom of the jpg.lol
Sneaky bugger.

I really like what you did there Rob. A well put together clue.

Shame about the file name giving it away.
Yeah, that was pretty stupid of me. Didn't even occur to me that that name would be visible.
 
King Swamp – King Swamp (1989)

King Swamp Album Cover.jpg

Introduction

I had a few options swirling around my head, but when Foggy pointed out that there had only been five selections from the 1980s, that sealed my choice.

I bought this album in 1989 after reading a couple of positive reviews, and to be honest, after a couple of plays, I didn’t really get it. It was one of my final vinyl purchases (having already moved to CDs in 1986), and I didn’t hear anything that made me think that it was worth the effort of slipping it out of the sleeve and putting it on my plasticky turntable.

And then in the 1990 season finale of Miami Vice, as Crockett and Tubbs roared over a bridge to the pounding drums and driving guitar of “Year Zero”, it made me want to revisit the album and see if I’d missed something.

I had. It’s a masterpiece. I recorded it to tape and spent nearly two years playing that cassette in my car or at home as I hunted down a CD copy in every record shop in Manchester. One day, the miracle happened – sometime in April/May 1992, HMV on market Street had two copies of the album! The green on the band’s logo had changed to a nice purple, and my wait was rewarded with a bonus track, “Glow”, that didn’t appear on the vinyl version.



The Band

King Swamp was the brainchild of Gang of Four founder, Dave Allen, and Steve Halliwell who had been in Shriekback with Allen. After a tour of the states, Allen and Halliwell spent some time hanging around in Louisiana, soaking up the local music and tales of voodoo and zombies. They poured all of this experience into writing songs for an album and were joined by ex-Shriekback member, Martyn Barker, on drums. Dominic Miller, who has had a low-key solo career but has also been Sting’s main guitar player for over 30 years, handles guitars, which just left the vocals.

Allen and Halliwell spent over a year trying to find a vocalist who matched the lofty ambitions of their songs until finally they found Walter Wray. And what a voice this guy has! Whilst King Swamp would only record one more album after their debut, and Wray went on to record a very good solo album with Miller (Foxgloves and Steel Strings), I’m gobsmacked that another band didn’t pick him up as a vocalist.

Interesting fact: The band’s name is a play on The Band song “King Harvest”, which I hadn’t heard until it came up in the Top 1000 albums thread, but it’s a song I now love.



The Album

Mixed by the legendary Bob Clearmountain, the album has a terrific classic rock feel with a few interesting twists.

It opens with the more commercial-sounding singles “Is This love?” and “Blown Away”, but really hits its stride in a heavyweight middle-section that recalls Led Zeppelin at their finest.

“Widders Dump”, inspired by Russel Hoban’s novel Riddley Walker, starts with some epic lonesome Dobro from Miller and builds into something more powerful with Wray’s snarling vocal and Barker’s thumping drums – a latter-day “When the Levee Breaks”. This is followed up by the aforementioned “Year Zero”, a dynamic rocker whose lyrics, along with the title, are clearly inspired by Pol Pot’s devastation of Cambodia:-

Year Zero and I’m back in the fields
Demolishing history for a new regime
What were our virtues are now our sins
The bad move out and the worse move in


The lyrics even go on to tip a nod to Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, and another fantastic element of this song is the chain-gang vocals that punctuate each line of the verse – a trick that is repeated on the equally good “Motherlode”. Just listen to that groovy bass and twang that starts “Motherlode”, and when Walter Wray sings the refrain: “The government got my money; juju man’s got my soul”, you know you’ve got a different version of 80s rock and roll. To think, I’ve seen a pithy comment online that refers to King Swamp as a “faceless AOR ploy”!

The keyboard-driven “Lousiana Bride” brings a barrel-load of cultural and mystical influences into the mix with its zombie brides, gris-gris, alligator teeth, devil’s shoestring, bayous, Mama-Louis and Papa Chickenshack.

The bonus track “Glow” is a nice change of pace with some spooky guitar to accompany the fevered dreams and nightmares of somebody “down in a bunker with a double key”. Nice gloomy stuff!



Final Thoughts

King Swamp is a showcase for Dominic Miller’s guitar skills – it’s no wonder Sting snapped him up shortly after this album. The songs are brilliant, and high on atmospheric lyrics – which I love, even if they don’t always make literal sense – and both the arrangements and performances are top-drawer. Riding on top of all this is Walter Wray’s epic vocal talent. There are so many reasons why this album sits proudly in my top five of all time.

It’s not as slick as most rock that was around in the mid to late 80s, but neither is it as left-field as the alternative rock bands of the time. Whilst it isn’t as revolutionary as the grunge that would follow within two years, it does feature some satisfying crunchy guitars. I’d say that King Swamp sits in a middle ground between slick and raw, and The Cult would probably be the best reference point.

I don’t think it’s everybody’s cup of tea, and I think some will still find it a bit too commercial, but I’m hoping that some of you can appreciate why I think it’s a lost classic.
 
King Swamp – King Swamp (1989)

View attachment 53739

Introduction

I had a few options swirling around my head, but when Foggy pointed out that there had only been five selections from the 1980s, that sealed my choice.

I bought this album in 1989 after reading a couple of positive reviews, and to be honest, after a couple of plays, I didn’t really get it. It was one of my final vinyl purchases (having already moved to CDs in 1986), and I didn’t hear anything that made me think that it was worth the effort of slipping it out of the sleeve and putting it on my plasticky turntable.

And then in the 1990 season finale of Miami Vice, as Crockett and Tubbs roared over a bridge to the pounding drums and driving guitar of “Year Zero”, it made me want to revisit the album and see if I’d missed something.

I had. It’s a masterpiece. I recorded it to tape and spent nearly two years playing that cassette in my car or at home as I hunted down a CD copy in every record shop in Manchester. One day, the miracle happened – sometime in April/May 1992, HMV on market Street had two copies of the album! The green on the band’s logo had changed to a nice purple, and my wait was rewarded with a bonus track, “Glow”, that didn’t appear on the vinyl version.



The Band

King Swamp was the brainchild of Gang of Four founder, Dave Allen, and Steve Halliwell who had been in Shriekback with Allen. After a tour of the states, Allen and Halliwell spent some time hanging around in Louisiana, soaking up the local music and tales of voodoo and zombies. They poured all of this experience into writing songs for an album and were joined by ex-Shriekback member, Martyn Barker, on drums. Dominic Miller, who has had a low-key solo career but has also been Sting’s main guitar player for over 30 years, handles guitars, which just left the vocals.

Allen and Halliwell spent over a year trying to find a vocalist who matched the lofty ambitions of their songs until finally they found Walter Wray. And what a voice this guy has! Whilst King Swamp would only record one more album after their debut, and Wray went on to record a very good solo album with Miller (Foxgloves and Steel Strings), I’m gobsmacked that another band didn’t pick him up as a vocalist.

Interesting fact: The band’s name is a play on The Band song “King Harvest”, which I hadn’t heard until it came up in the Top 1000 albums thread, but it’s a song I now love.



The Album

Mixed by the legendary Bob Clearmountain, the album has a terrific classic rock feel with a few interesting twists.

It opens with the more commercial-sounding singles “Is This love?” and “Blown Away”, but really hits its stride in a heavyweight middle-section that recalls Led Zeppelin at their finest.

“Widders Dump”, inspired by Russel Hoban’s novel Riddley Walker, starts with some epic lonesome Dobro from Miller and builds into something more powerful with Wray’s snarling vocal and Barker’s thumping drums – a latter-day “When the Levee Breaks”. This is followed up by the aforementioned “Year Zero”, a dynamic rocker whose lyrics, along with the title, are clearly inspired by Pol Pot’s devastation of Cambodia:-

Year Zero and I’m back in the fields
Demolishing history for a new regime
What were our virtues are now our sins
The bad move out and the worse move in


The lyrics even go on to tip a nod to Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, and another fantastic element of this song is the chain-gang vocals that punctuate each line of the verse – a trick that is repeated on the equally good “Motherlode”. Just listen to that groovy bass and twang that starts “Motherlode”, and when Walter Wray sings the refrain: “The government got my money; juju man’s got my soul”, you know you’ve got a different version of 80s rock and roll. To think, I’ve seen a pithy comment online that refers to King Swamp as a “faceless AOR ploy”!

The keyboard-driven “Lousiana Bride” brings a barrel-load of cultural and mystical influences into the mix with its zombie brides, gris-gris, alligator teeth, devil’s shoestring, bayous, Mama-Louis and Papa Chickenshack.

The bonus track “Glow” is a nice change of pace with some spooky guitar to accompany the fevered dreams and nightmares of somebody “down in a bunker with a double key”. Nice gloomy stuff!



Final Thoughts

King Swamp is a showcase for Dominic Miller’s guitar skills – it’s no wonder Sting snapped him up shortly after this album. The songs are brilliant, and high on atmospheric lyrics – which I love, even if they don’t always make literal sense – and both the arrangements and performances are top-drawer. Riding on top of all this is Walter Wray’s epic vocal talent. There are so many reasons why this album sits proudly in my top five of all time.

It’s not as slick as most rock that was around in the mid to late 80s, but neither is it as left-field as the alternative rock bands of the time. Whilst it isn’t as revolutionary as the grunge that would follow within two years, it does feature some satisfying crunchy guitars. I’d say that King Swamp sits in a middle ground between slick and raw, and The Cult would probably be the best reference point.

I don’t think it’s everybody’s cup of tea, and I think some will still find it a bit too commercial, but I’m hoping that some of you can appreciate why I think it’s a lost class.
You and I discussed this before as I don't know them but you suggested I should! As you know I LOVE Gang of Four (Entertainment! is my favo(u)rite record of all time). So I am really glad to get a chance to listen here!

Still can't believe Dave Allen worked for Apple AND Intel!

FYI not on US Spotify per se but someone has made a track list that includes all the songs in order save "Glow". Glow is available via YouTube.
 
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Tough crowd for @Bill Walker this week - just the 8 voters with an average of 5.75 for Pat Metheny's From This Place.

Still a great pick though and as several people have noted, they like being challenged! I think we've all come to appreciate that being "forced" to listen to an album in the same short time frame is the 21st century equivalent of all those shared moments before video recorders, DVD players and streaming!

That's it for round #3 and by popular demand, I'll be kicking off round #4 very soon. Let's see if you're all still saying that when you've heard what I've got up my sleeve.

Remember that this nomination runs for 2 weeks (until 7th September).
Sorry, didn't get back early enough today, and tbh i had only listened twice.....quite hard going for me, so probably a bonus i didn't score!
Looking forward to this one Rob, never heard of them, which is a good thing, a mention of Led Zep influence, another good thing......what could possibly go wrong!

edit, The Cult a reference point....another positive, have a good feeling.
 
You and I discussed this before as I don't know them but you suggested I should! As you know I LOVE Gang of Four (Entertainment! is my favo(u)rite record of all time). So I am really glad to get a chance to listen here!

Still can't believe Dave Allen worked for Apple AND Intel!

FYI not on US Spotify per se but someone has made a track list that includes all the songs in order save "Glow". Glow is available via YouTube.
I did wonder whether it was on US Spotify but yes, it’s also available on YouTube.

Should anybody need them, I’m happy to pass on the MP3s.

Yes, I was surprised when I saw what Dave Allen got up to in later life. He also worked for Beats as well.
 

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