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Hex Enduction Hour

 
Album Review: Hex Enduction Hour
 

  • Artist: The Fall
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1982 03
  • Total Time: 60:01
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The Fall already had a slew of brilliant records under their belt by the time Hex Enduction Hour emerged, but when it did, the result was a bona fide classic on all fronts. Honing the vicious edge of his lyrics to a new level of ability, Smith led his by-now seasoned band -- at this time sporting the double-drumming lineup of Paul Hanley and Karl Burns -- to create a literal hour's worth of entertaining bile. The Marc Riley/Craig Scanlon team had even more of a clattering, industrial edge than before, now inventing its own style of riff and melody that any number of later groups would borrow, with varying degrees of success. "Iceland" itself tips its hat toward where part of the album was recorded, and it's little surprise that the Sugarcubes and any number of contemporaneous bands from that country ended up with a deep Fall fetish. Of the many song highlights, perhaps the most notorious was the opening "The Classical," an art rock groove like no other, racketing around with heavy-duty beats and stabbing bass from Steve Hanley. Apparently, the band was on the verge of signing with Motown, at least until they heard Smith delivering the poisonous line, "Where are the obligatory niggers?/Hey there, f*ckface!" Politically correct or not, it set the tone for the misanthropic assault of the entire album, including the hilarious dressing down of "misunderstood" rock critics, "Hip Priest" ("He...is...not...ap-PRE-ciated!") and the targeting-everyone attack "Who Makes the Nazis?" Musically, all kinds of approaches are assayed and the results are a triumph throughout, from "Hip Priest" and its tense exchange between slow, dark mood and sudden guitar bursts to the motorik drone touch of "Fortress/Deer Park." As a concluding anti-anthem, "And This Day" ranks up with "The N.W.R.A.," ten minutes of ramalama genius. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Classical Marc Riley, Karl Burns, Paul Hanley, Steve Hanley, Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith The Fall (5:17)
Jawbone and the Air-Rifle Marc Riley, Steve Hanley, Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith The Fall (3:43)
Hip Priest Marc Riley, Steve Hanley, Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith The Fall (7:44)
Fortress/Deer Park Karl Burns, Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith, Sam Riley The Fall (6:39)
Mere Pseud Mag. Ed. Mark E. Smith The Fall (2:48)
Winter Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith The Fall (4:24)
Winter, No. 2 Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith The Fall (4:29)
Just Step Sideways The Fall, Mark E. Smith The Fall (3:21)
Who Makes the Nazis? Mark E. Smith The Fall (4:27)
Iceland/Island Steve Hanley, Craig Scanlon, Mark E. Smith, Sam Riley The Fall (6:41)
And This Day Steve Hanley, Mark E. Smith, Sam Riley The Fall (10:22)
Look, Know [*] Karl Burns, Steve Hanley, Mark E. Smith, Sam Riley The Fall (4:36)
I'm into C.B. [*] Mark E. Smith The Fall (6:29)

Credits

The Fall (Main Performer), Marc Riley (Organ), Marc Riley (Bass), Marc Riley (Guitar), Marc Riley (Piano), Marc Riley (Piano (Electric)), Karl Burns (Drums), Karl Burns (Vocals), Karl Burns (Tape), Karl Burns (Tapes), Kay Carroll (Percussion), Kay Carroll (Vocals), Paul Hanley (Guitar), Paul Hanley (Drums), Steve Hanley (Bass), Steve Hanley (Guitar (Bass)), Steve Hanley (Vocals), Richard Mazda (Producer), Richard Mazda (Production Concept), Craig Scanlon (Guitar), Craig Scanlon (Piano), Craig Scanlon (Vocals), Mark E. Smith (Guitar), Mark E. Smith (Vocals), Mark E. Smith (Producer), Mark E. Smith (Tape), Mark E. Smith (Artwork), Mark E. Smith (Cover Design), Mark E. Smith (Tapes), Tony J. Sutcliffe (Engineer), Alan Skinner (Artwork), Alan Skinner (Cover Art Concept), Alan Skinner (Cover Design)
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Wikipedia: Hex Enduction Hour
Top
Hex Enduction Hour
Hex Enduction Hour cover
Studio album by The Fall
Released 8 March 1982
Recorded September and December 1981
Genre Post punk
Length 60:08
Label Kamera
Producer Richard Mazda
Professional reviews
The Fall chronology
Live in London 1980
(1982)
Hex Enduction Hour
(1982)
A Part of America Therein, 1981
(1982)

Hex Enduction Hour is a 1982 album by The Fall. It showcased a new two-drummer lineup, and the most accessible music they had yet produced. The music remained raw and noisy, but with a more pronounced melodic sense. The album was partly recorded in Iceland during the group's 1981 visit, with the remainder being completed in a disused cinema in Hitchin, England. A single, "Look, Know" / "I'm Into C.B.", was recorded contemporaneously but not included on the album, standard practice for the group until 1986.

Mark E. Smith told journalist Sandy Robertson that he had envisaged Hex as being the group's final album and that he would not have continued in music had this been the case [1]. However, the record received very positive reviews and was the first Fall album to make the official chart, spending 3 weeks in and peaking at #71.

In 1984, Motown Records expressed an interest in signing the band to a new UK division and asked to hear their back catalogue. "Hex" was the only album Smith had to hand. The letter the group received back stated "I see no commercial potential in this band whatsoever". Smith publicly speculated that this might have had something to do with the lines "Where are the obligatory niggers? / Hey there, fuckface" from album opener "The Classical". (Brian Edge - Paintwork - Omnibus Press 1989, p72)

"The Classical" was later covered (though with altered lyrics) by Pavement, who had frequently been accused of copying The Fall in their early career. Their version is currently available on the expanded edition of Brighten The Corners.

One of the record's most recognised tunes is side one's "Hip Priest", with its lyrical riff of "He is not appreciated." Smith later reworked the song for the band's 1988 work I Am Kurious Oranj, while the original track was used as the soundtrack to the climax of the 1991 film The Silence of the Lambs.

Colin Wilson, a writer on the occult and existensialist philosophy is mentioned in the refrain of "Deer Park".

The album went out of print when the Kamera label folded in 1983 but a German edition on the Line imprint was widely imported with copies pressed on white vinyl. Line also issued a CD edition. In 2002, a remastered edition was released via Mark E. Smith's Cog Sinister imprint adding both sides of the "Look, Know" single. It was remastered and reissued again in January 2005 via Sanctuary with a disc of bonus material (omitting "Look, Know" but not its b-side). In April 2007, a single disc edition containing just the original album was issued in a digipak sleeve at midprice.

Contents

Legacy and influence

Neal Casal, of Ryan Adams and the Cardinals, lists Hex Endunction Hour as one of his favourite albums of all time.[1]

Track listing

Side one

  1. "The Classical" (Mark E. Smith, The Fall) – 5:16
  2. "Jawbone and the Air-Rifle" (Smith, The Fall) – 3:43
  3. "Hip Priest" (Smith, The Fall) – 7:45 (The Fall Hip Priest.ogg sample )
  4. "Fortress" / "Deer Park" (Smith, Craig Scanlon, Marc Riley, Karl Burns) – 6:41
  5. "Mere Pseud Mag. Ed." (Smith) – 2:50
  6. "Winter (Hostel-Maxi)" (Smith, Scanlon) – 4:26

Side two

  1. "Winter, No. 2" (Smith, Scanlon) – 4:33
  2. "Just Step S'ways" (Smith) – 3:22
  3. "Who Makes the Nazis?" (Smith) – 4:27
  4. "Iceland" (Smith, Scanlon, Riley, Steve Hanley) – 6:42
  5. "And This Day" (Smith, The Fall) – 10:18

2005 bonus disc

  1. "Deer Park" (Scanlon, Riley, Burns, Smith) – 4:26
  2. "Who Makes the Nazis?" (Smith) – 2:57
  3. "I'm into C.B." (Kay Carroll, Scanlon, Smith) – 6:30
    • originally released as B-side on the single "Look, Know" in 1982
  4. "Session Musician" (Smith, Riley, Scanlon, Hanley) – 9:11
  5. "Jazzed Up Punk Shit" (Scanlon, Riley, Hanley, Smith) – 4:10
  6. "I'm into C.B. (Stars on 45 Version)" (Carroll, Scanlon, Smith) – 3:14
  7. "And This Day" (Smith, The Fall) – 6:13
  8. "Deer Park" (Scanlon, Riley, Burns, Smith) – 9:34
  9. "And This Day (Revisited)" (Scanlon, Riley, Burns, Hanley, Paul Hanley, Smith) – 5:24

Personnel

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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 GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hex Enduction Hour" Read more

 

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