Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2023

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
21.04.2023

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1Nothing Left To Lose03:45
  • 2Run A Red Light03:39
  • 3Caution To The Wind04:06
  • 4When You Mess Up03:48
  • 5Time And Time Again02:51
  • 6No One Knows We’re Dancing04:09
  • 7Lost03:25
  • 8Forever03:41
  • 9Interior Space02:24
  • 10Karaoke03:53
  • Total Runtime35:41

Info zu Fuse

Ein bemerkenswertes Comeback vollziehen 24 Jahre nach ihrem letzten Album die in dieser langen zeit mit Soloalben aktiven Tracey Thorn und Ben Watt. Urbaner elektronischer Triphop-Soul, der von schimmernden Synth-Sounds und der nach wie vor vereinnahmenden, berührenden, facettenreichen Stimme von Thorn lebt und ein bisschen wie ein Jungbrunnen für die Generation Triphop wirkt. Dabei kombinieren die beiden in die Tiefe gehendes, mit einer wunderschönen melancholie ausgestattetes Songwriting und weitreichende Bezüge zu elektronischen Spielarten und Clubkultur. Musikalisch exzellent in Szene gesetzte Beschreibungen urbanen Lebens, tags und nachts, losgelöst von Zeit und Alter und deshalb aus vielen Gründen ein überaus spannendes, weil emotional vereinnahmendes Album über Generationen hinweg.

Tracey Thorn, Gesang, Hintergrundgesang
Ben Watt, Schlagzeug und Soundprogrammierung, Klavier, Synthesizer, E-Gitarre, Hintergrundgesang

Aufgenommen und gemischt von Bruno Ellingham in den Riverside Studios, Bath
Gemastert von Miles Showell in den Abbey Road Studios, London
Produziert und arrangiert von Everything But The Girl




Everything But The Girl
was formed in 1982 by singer-songwriter-musicians Tracey Thorn and Ben Watt after the pair met as students, aged 19, at Hull University in October 1981. Coincidentally both were already separately signed as emerging artists to London independent record label, Cherry Red – Tracey with her lo-fi minimal girl group, Marine Girls, formed while still at school; Ben as a young guitarist and singer-songwriter. Their meeting had been suggested by Cherry Red A&R man, Mike Alway.

Intended as a one-off collaboration, their debut 7″ single – a stark and stripped-back cover version of Cole Porter’s Night and Day – was released in March 1982 on Cherry Red. The recording of Night and Day had been an afterthought, laid down in a spare fifteen minutes at the end of the session; the flipside cuts, Ben’s Feeling Dizzy and On My Mind (a Marine Girls song written by Tracey) were originally intended as the A and B side. Tracey’s unflashy autumnal voice over Ben’s jazz-folk chords stuck out in a year of punk-funk, and the release climbed to Number 6 on the UK Independent Singles Chart in June of the same year, staying on the chart for thirty weeks.

The duo’s name was taken from the slogan on the front of Turner’s furniture shop in Hull.

It would be two years before another Everything But The Girl recording would appear. In the interim the pair remained prolific. Two weeks after Night and Day, Cherry Red released Ben’s atmospheric five-track EP Summer into Winter featuring Robert Wyatt on backing vocals and piano. In September Tracey’s eight-song minimalist mini-album, A Distant Shore, recorded in a friend’s garden shed, reached number 2 on the UK Independent Album Charts, staying on the chart for 43 weeks. February 1983 saw the release of Ben’s debut album North Marine Drive (UK Independent Album Chart, No 9), and a second and final Marine Girls album, Lazy Ways (UK Independent Album Chart, No 4) appeared in April.

The period was also marked by an unexpected approach from Paul Weller only days after he had split up The Jam in late 1982. The upshot was Weller’s surprise appearance on stage singing and playing guitar with Ben and Tracey at the ICA in London in January 1983 as part of the NME rock week, and weeks later he invited the pair to contribute to the debut album by his new band the Style Council; Tracey and Ben both performed on The Paris Match.

In the summer of 1983 Ben and Tracey – now a couple both privately and professionally – decided to pool new songs for the debut Everything But The Girl album, Eden. Recorded with producer Robin Millar (chosen for his work with Weekend and The Pale Fountains) at Power Plant Studios in Willesden, it featured Weekend’s Simon Booth on second guitar, This Heat’s Charles Hayward on drums, and South American musicians Chucho Merchan (double bass) and Bosco D’Oliveira (percussion) plus a clutch of top horn players from the English jazz scene. It was released on the newly-formed Blanco Y Negro through Warner, and signalled Everything But The Girl’s move from an independent to a major label. The album, released in May 1984, spawned a UK Top 40 hit – the acerbic latin pop of Each and Every One – and went on to sell over half a million copies around the world.

Intent on new work, the pair moved on from Eden immediately and released two fresh three-track singles in the summer of 1984 – Mine and Native Land – and as Sire Records signed the duo for North America, a special US album was created entitled Everything But The Girl later in the year featuring all six of the new tracks plus six songs from their debut.

The next three albums charted different and idiosyncratic paths. The folk-jazz of Eden was replaced by the politicised guitar-pop of Love Not Money (1985) featuring Young Marble Giants’ Phil Moxham on bass and The Mo-Dettes’ June Miles-Kingston on drums. 1986 saw further change with the ambitious wall-of-sound of Baby, The Stars Shine Bright, scored for orchestra by Ben, recorded at Abbey Road with Mike Hedges, and featuring the radio hit, Come On Home. And in 1988 came the more introspective self-produced drum-machine-pop of Idlewild, engineered by Jerry Boys. All three went gold in the UK, selling over 100,000 copies.

Pressed by the record company for another chart hit, in the summer of 1988 the duo recorded a cover of Danny Whitten’s I Don’t Want To Talk About It. On release it peaked at number 3 on the UK Top 40 and was later included on new editions of Idlewild.

The following year Ben and Tracey teamed up with US jazz and soul producer Tommy Lipuma, travelled to Los Angeles and spent six weeks recording the 1990 album The Language Of Life in some of the top LA studios. Featuring the cream of West Coast session musicians and a guest appearance from jazz legend Stan Getz, the album spawned their first serious US hit as Driving dominated adult radio playlists.

It was a mixed blessing. The Language of Life may have become Everything But The Girl’s second half-million-selling album, but it divided fans at home, and pushed the pair further from their independent roots. The duo responded swiftly with the self-produced Worldwide (1991) but it met with a muted response; European audiences seemed to have turned away.

Returning to basics, in 1992 they recorded the four-song Covers EP including versions of Cyndi Lauper’s Time After Time and Mickey and Sylvia’s Love Is Strange, which received extensive radio play. It saw the duo return to the charts. The Covers EP peaked at number 13 on the UK Top 40 and was expanded into an album, Acoustic, for North America, but on the verge of a tour to promote it, Ben was dramatically admitted to a London hospital with a life-threatening illness.

Diagnosed with a rare vasculitic auto-immune disease and lucky to survive, he underwent several life-saving operations, spent nine weeks in and out of intensive care, and lost 50lbs (23kg) over the summer of 1992.

Shell-shocked but unbowed, the pair returned to work in 1993 with two 4-track EPs, the lead tracks on each – I Didn’t Know I Was Looking For Love and a cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s The Only Living Boy in New York – produced by New York veteran Phil Ramone. I Didn’t Know I Was Looking For Love would later become a UK Top 10 hit for Karen Ramirez. ...



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