Wednesday, 18 April 2018
This Too Shall Pass Away
I found myself humming this song to myself while at work earlier this week- not sure what that tells you. This Too Shall Pass Away was on World Of Twist's 1991 album Quality Street, the 3rd track in after the magnificent opening one-two punch of Lose My Way and Sons Of The Stage. Fading in on some studio chatter and tons of echo and a bubbling bassline, it is a gently sung, swirly piece of psychedelic pop, FX and atmospherics courtesy of producers The Grid. This Too Shall Pass Away is a cover, one of two covers on the album along with their terrific cover of The Stones' She's A Rainbow (and also Sly Stone's Life And Death on the cd version). It was originally by 60s pop combo The Honeycombs, who had a million selling number one with the Joe Meek produced Have I The Right?
This Too Shall Pass Away
Quality Street is often seen as a 'lost' album, a record that slightly missed the boat. The band lost momentum and broke up. Part of this was down to the failure of the album (and not having a massive hit single) which led to the band being dropped. The Manchester wave crested and broke. But it was partly down to the album itself (not that there is anything wrong with the songs or the production). It's the mastering of the volume. It's too quiet. Tony Ogden, who died in 2006, was interviewed about the record and said 'We wanted to make the greatest psychedelic dance rock album ever and there was a lot of coke and E in the studio. But the album came out at half normal volume. We'd spent £250,000 making an album with the smallest bollocks in pop history! The band just fell apart. We were smoking marijuana for breakfast and that led to communication problems. I didn't wanna sing, the guitarist didn't wanna play. When the company didn't get a hit they threw us in the bin. I was devastated - I spent four years on smack watching Third Reich movies because the good guys always win. I'm really sorry for letting our fans down. But I'd ask anyone to play that World of Twist album 20 times with every dial on full. If it doesn't rock, come and smash it over my head.'
I wonder why I can't download your tracks anymore.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the great work, by the way.
Regards from sunny São Paulo.
Thanks naguiar2003. I don't know why you can't download the tracks- sorry about that.
ReplyDeleteShame it can't get a proper remaster.I always found the production a bit reedy or thin. Something I think can also to a much less obvious degree on The Stone Roses' debut too.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if it was partly due to the album being produced by different producers so the final mix flattened it all out to the same level.
ReplyDeleteThe definiative version of Life & Death is by Chairman of the Board and I think this is the version WOT’s is closest to.
ReplyDeleteIt’s progressive funk, proto disco, head fuckmusic.
https://youtu.be/cVFUr66Xk1c
@tedloaf