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Liberation

 
Album Review: Liberation

  • Artist: The Divine Comedy
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1993 08
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Jettisoning the rest of the band but keeping the name, Neil Hannon as the Divine Comedy becomes as art pop as it gets with his first full album, but with an extreme Englishness that even Ray Davies might be hard-pressed to keep up with. Liberation is mostly a self-composed and performed release, aside from a couple of string players, a French horn performer, and a drummer, plus a song lyric borrowed from Wordsworth, giving "Lucy" a crisp, gentle rock recasting here. Otherwise it's Hannon's hyper-elegant show all the way, practically begging to be equally played in a Victorian drawing room, at a swank '20s club, at a swinging beautiful people party in London, or at an end-of-the-century Britpop disco. Slightly more rock/poppy tunes like "Bernice Bobs Her Hair" groove along with MOR backing vocals and understated energy, while others pile on the artsy touches: the harpsichord underlying the entirety of "Death of a Supernaturalist" and the mournful string arrangement that provides all of the music on "Timewatching." A few songs rock in a more straightforward manner, but often only just so: "I Was Born Yesterday" interrupts its persistent pounding with a spoken word break referring to ballerinas and standing en pointe while a cello plays; the acoustic guitar-based "Victoria Falls" has a fragile, frosty feeling to it. Hannon, meanwhile, belies his Northern Ireland upbringing to an astounding degree with his clipped, toff singing style. As for subject matter, Hannon tackles everything from borrowing "Your Daddy's Car" to the jaunty, XTC-inspired "The Pop Star's Fear of the Pollen Count," slipping in as much wry humor as he does gentle pathos and reflection -- plenty of all three. "Europop" is particularly sharp -- a self-descriptive new wave synth-plus-guitar dance tune with rather lugubrious vocals from Hannon, reflecting on everything from science and finance to the strange nature of love. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Festive Road Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (1:55)
Death of AA Supernaturalist Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (3:19)
Bernice Bobs Her Hair Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:00)
I Was Born Yesterday Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (3:31)
Your Daddy's Car Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (3:55)
Europop Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:31)
Timewatching Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (3:53)
The Pop Singer's Fear of the Pollen Count Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:19)
Queen of the South Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:27)
Victoria Falls Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:11)
Three Sisters Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:42)
Europe by Train Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:28)
Lucy Neil Hannon The Divine Comedy (4:38)

Credits

Lucy Castle (Viola), Neil Hannon (Arranger), Lucy Castle (Violin), Darren Allison (Percussion), Quentin Hutchinson (French Horn), Kevin Westenberg (Photography), Darren Allison (Drums), Darren Allison (Engineer), Rob Crane (Sleeve Design)
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Wikipedia: Liberation (The Divine Comedy album)
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Liberation
Studio album by The Divine Comedy
Released August 16, 1993
Recorded March 1993
Genre Baroque Pop
Length 51:57
Label Setanta
Professional reviews
The Divine Comedy chronology
Fanfare for the Comic Muse
(1990)
Liberation
(1993)
Promenade
(1994)

Liberation is a 1993 album by The Divine Comedy, released on Setanta. It was the second album to be released by The Divine Comedy, although the band's leader, Neil Hannon, often refers to it as the first due to the stylistic differences of the earlier album, Fanfare for the Comic Muse. The album was recorded over the space of twelve days in March, 1993 by Hannon and Darren Allison. Hannon played most of the instruments on the album, while Allison was the recording engineer and drummer.

The album was released to much critical acclaim but little commercial success. It features harpsichord, violin, viola, cello, French horn, and a Hammond B3 organ. Several of the songs are inspired by (or refer to) works of literature: "Bernice Bobs Her Hair" is based on the short story of the same name by F. Scott Fitzgerald; "Three Sisters" is about the play of the same name by Anton Chekhov; "Lucy" is an amalgam of three of the Lucy poems by William Wordsworth; "Timewatching" is inspired by the popular song "When I Fall In Love"; "Death of a Supernaturalist" is preceded by a quote from A Room with a View by E. M. Forster, spoken by Julian Sands and Daniel Day-Lewis and sampled from the Merchant-Ivory film of the same name. More playfully, "Festive Road" is a tribute to the children's television programme Mr Benn.

Track listing

  1. "Festive Road"
  2. "Death of a Supernaturalist"
  3. "Bernice Bobs Her Hair"
  4. "I Was Born Yesterday"
  5. "Your Daddy's Car"
  6. "Europop"
  7. "Timewatching"
  8. "The Pop Singer's Fear of the Pollen Count"
  9. "Queen of the South"
  10. "Victoria Falls"
  11. "Three Sisters"
  12. "Europe by Train"
  13. "Lucy"

Personnel

  • Neil Hannon - Vocals, guitars, bass guitar, piano, keyboards, harpsichord, and organ
  • Darren Allison - Drums and Percussion
  • Lucy Castle - Viola and Violin
  • Monica Scott - Cello
  • Quentin Hutchinson - French horn

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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 "Liberation (The Divine Comedy album)" Read more