Liquid (album)

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Liquid
No cover image exists
Studio album by Recoil
Released March 21, 2000
Recorded July 1998 to June 1999, The Thin Line, Sussex
Genre Electronica
Length 77:16
Label Mute - STUMM 173
Producer Alan Wilder
Professional reviews
Recoil chronology
Unsound Methods
(1997)
Liquid
(2000)
subHuman
(2007)

Liquid is a Recoil studio album, released by Mute Records on March 21, 2000. It was recorded at Alan Wilder's home studio, The Thin Line, in Sussex, during sessions that lasted from July 1998 to June 1999. The album was produced by Alan Wilder, with production assistance and co-ordination by Hepzibah Sessa, and additional production and sound design by PK. Liquid is Recoil's fifth album release.

Liquid's music continues in much the same vein as his previous album, Unsound Methods, but it considered to be a concept album revolving around a near-death experience in 1994. Wilder and his partner, Hepzibah Sessa, were driving in Scotland and a Tornado Bomber hit a hillside in front of them, and two airmen were killed. The idea of the album, especially the bookending track "Black Box", centered around what was going through the pilot's last moments of life.

Recoil again picked a diverse set guest vocalists - internationally acclaimed (and fellow Mute artist) Diamanda Galás, 1940s gospel singers the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet, New York spoken word performers Nicole Blackman and Samantha Coerbell, and Catalan narrator (and Recoil fan) Rosa Torras. Additional musicians utilized were Curve's Dean Garcia (bass) and Steven Monty (drums), Ian Dury and the Blockheads' Merlin Rhys-Jones (guitar), and Miranda Sex Garden's Hepzibah Sessa (violin).[1]

Of note is the track "Jezebel", which features the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet. Some had thought that Wilder had taken his inspiration from Moby, who had used Alan Lomax field recordings in his Play album released in 1999, the year before. This is not true. Wilder had used an old track to similar effect on "Electro Blues for Bukka White" on Recoil's 1992 Bloodline album. Especially since Moby appeared on the Bloodline album, it could be argued that Moby got his idea from Recoil, but not vice-versa.

Nine Inch Nails played the Liquid album before taking the stage during their Fragility tour in 2000.


Contents

All music written by Alan Wilder

  1. "Black Box, Part 1" (Words: Wilder)
  2. "Want" (Words: Nicole Blackman)
  3. "Jezebel" (Words: Traditional/Orlandus Wilson)
  4. "Breath Control" (Words: Blackman)
  5. "Last Call for Liquid Courage" (Words: Samantha Coerbell)
  6. "Strange Hours" (Words: Diamanda Galás)
  7. "Vertigen" (Words: Wilder)
  8. "Supreme" (Words: Coerbell)
  9. "Chrome" (Words: Blackman)
  10. "Black Box, Part 2" (Words: Wilder)

  1. "Strange Hours" (Radio Edit, by Wilder)
  2. "Jezebel" (Filthy Dog Mix, by Wilder)
  3. "New York Nights" (Non-album track; Music: Wilder, Words: Coerbell)
  4. "Don't Look Back" (Non-album track; Music: Wilder, Words: Sonya Madan)
  5. "Strange Hours" (Video)
  6. "Drifting" (Video, from the album Unsound Methods)
  7. "Stalker" (Video, from Unsound Methods)
  8. "Faith Healer" (Video, from the album Bloodline)

  1. "Jezebel" (Radio Edit)
  2. "Jezebel" (The Slick Sixty vs. RJ remix)
  3. "Electro-Blues for Bukka White" (2000 Version; Music: Wilder, Words: Bukka White)
  4. "Black Box" (Complete)
  5. "Jezebel" (Video)

  • Diamanda Galás performs on this album, but this is the second time she appears on a Recoil release. She recites The Lord's Prayer between two tracks on the 1992 album Bloodline.
  • "Want" re-uses a shortened piece that Nicole Blackman had written entitled "What I Want For Christmas". She originally performed it with Scanner, and it was released on the compilation Teleconned: We Want the Airwaves in 1998. Another "What I Want For Christmas", on the compilation A Christmas Present For You from Zero Hour, is a humorous piece recorded over the telephone and with no musical backing, and has nothing in common with the Scanner track other than the name.
  • "Black Box" was intended to be placed on the album in its complete version. Because the album approached eighty minutes (the limitation of a compact disc's length), the song was split in two, and shortened considerably. The complete version was released on the "Jezebel" single.

  1. ^ From Recoil's official website: [Shunt]
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