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25 O'Clock

 
Album Review: 25 O'Clock

Review

XTC spent the first half of the '80s dropping out of the new wave rat race in favor of cultivating an eccentric English garden. It was a move that mirrored the Kinks ignoring psychedelia for songs about subdivisions and afternoon tea, but when XTC decided to cut loose, they did so by adopting alter egos to create a riotous tribute to the very psychedelia the Kinks shunned. They turned into the Dukes of Stratosphear and cut the EP 25 O'Clock, a brilliant, clever distillation of the sounds of 1967, filled with knowing allusions and outright thievery from psychedelic classics both popular and well-known. For those well-versed in '60s rock, it's irresistible to draw parallels to the Beatles, the Yardbirds, the Move, and Pink Floyd, but 25 O'Clock practically begs listeners to connect the dots through its swirling kaleidoscope of phased tapes, fuzz guitars, murmured voices, and burbling Mellotrons -- and that's not even taking into account lyrical allusions, like how "Bike Ride to the Moon" twists around Tomorrow's "My White Bicycle." All this makes 25 O'Clock something closer to pop art than mere homage, but what makes it enduring -- even strangely timeless -- pop music is how XTC's reinvigorated creativity extends far beyond the mere form to the songs themselves. The six songs on the EP are XTC at their very best, their braininess tempered by the discipline of writing six songs that could have been legitimately seen as forgotten gems from the late '60s (which indeed this EP was initially presented as upon its April Fools Day release in 1985). Although there is certainly considerable pleasure in peeling back the layers of the production to puzzle out the references or simply revel in its sound, what is striking about 25 O'Clock is how joyous and immediate it feels, a trait it shares with the very best pop music -- which it certainly is. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
25 O'Clock Sir John Johns The Dukes of Stratosphear (5:01)
Bike Ride to the Moon Sir John Johns The Dukes of Stratosphear (2:24)
My Love Explodes Sir John Johns The Dukes of Stratosphear (3:54)
What in the World??... The Red Curtain The Dukes of Stratosphear (5:01)
Your Gold Dress Sir John Johns The Dukes of Stratosphear (4:35)
The Mole from the Ministry Sir John Johns The Dukes of Stratosphear (5:50)

Credits

Lord Cornelius Plum (Piano), Lord Cornelius Plum (Organ), E.I.E.I. Owen (Drums), Sir John Johns (Guitar), Sir John Johns (Vocals), The Red Curtain (Bass (Electric)), Lord Cornelius Plum (Mellotron), Lord Cornelius Plum (Fuzz Guitar), John Leckie (Producer)
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Wikipedia: 25 O'Clock
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25 O'Clock
EP by XTC as The Dukes of Stratosphear
Released 1 April 1985
Recorded December, 1984
Chapel Lane Studios, Hereford, England
Genre Neo-psychedelia
Pop rock
Length 26:43
Label Virgin Records
Producer Swami John Leckie and The Dukes
Professional reviews
XTC as The Dukes of Stratosphear chronology
The Big Express
(1984)
25 O'Clock
(1985)
Skylarking
(1986)
Singles from 25 O'Clock
  1. "The Mole from the Ministry"
    Released: April 1985

25 O'Clock is a mini-album from XTC which was released under the pseudonym The Dukes of Stratosphear, and was also the title song from that release. Joined by XTC member Dave Gregory's brother Ian on drums, the Dukes indulged in the stylistic tropes of 1960s psychedelia, particularly the British variety.

Released on April Fools Day, 1985, the mini-album was a tongue in cheek homage to the heyday of psychedelic rock. Several of the tracks were made to sound like individual bands (like the Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd sound of "Bike Ride to the Moon"). Others were simply a pastiche of the styles of the period as a whole. Though recorded on contemporary 1980's equipment, the mixing and overdubs closely replicate production techniques used in the mid-to-late 1960s. The album is also notable for its cover art (drawn by Partridge) which resembled the cover on the 1967 LP Disraeli Gears by Cream.

The band issued a single and made a promotional film for "The Mole from the Ministry" (a song that owes a great deal to The Beatles' "I Am the Walrus").

The material on the 25 O'Clock mini-album (including the "hidden message" at the end of side two) was merged with the 1987 album Psonic Psunspot for release as Chips from the Chocolate Fireball: An Anthology on CD, simultaneous with Psonic Psunspot's vinyl release.

A remastered and expanded version of 25 O'Clock was released on 20 April 2009 by Andy Partridge's Ape House record label. This edition of 25 O'Clock is credited to "XTC as The Dukes of Stratosphear"

Contents

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Sir John Johns, except where noted.

EP: WOW 1

Side A
# Title Length
1. "25 O'Clock"   5:03
2. "Bike Ride to the Moon"   2:24
3. "My Love Explodes"   3:50
Side B
# Title Length
1. "What in the World??..." (The Red Curtain) 5:01
2. "Your Gold Dress"   4:38
3. "The Mole from the Ministry"   5:12

CD: APECD023

# Title Length
1. "25 O'Clock"   5:02
2. "Bike Ride to the Moon"   2:23
3. "My Love Explodes"   3:48
4. "What in the World??..." (The Red Curtain) 5:00
5. "Your Gold Dress"   4:41
6. "The Mole from the Ministry"   5:49
7. "25 O'Clock (Demo)"   2:25
8. "Bike Ride to the Moon (Demo)"   1:30
9. "My Love Explodes (Demo)"   1:54
10. "What in the World??... (Demo)" (Curtain) 3:40
11. "Nicely Nicely Jane (Demo)"   1:17
12. "Susan Revolving (Demo)"   1:24
13. "Black Jewelled Serpent of Sound (Radio Caroline Edit)"   2:17
14. "Open a Can of Human Beans" (Curtain) 4:44
15. "Tin Toy Clockwork Train"   3:17

Also includes the promotional video for "The Mole from the Ministry" as a QuickTime file.

Personnel

Credits

  • Produced by John Leckie, Swami Anand Nagara and The Dukes

Other versions

On the tribute album A Testimonial Dinner: The Songs of XTC, They Might Be Giants contributed a cover version of "25 O'Clock".



 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "25 O'Clock" Read more