Classic Pop April 2019

(Martin Jones) #1
“The band had made good money from The
Colour Of Spring and touring, and wanted to
experiment. It was purely ‘art’. No one told the
musicians what to play or gave a hint of direction.”
PHILL BROWN

The band paid a commercial price for their
free will and invention, though Spirit Of Eden
is now rightly hailed as a masterpiece

where to place the instrument
in the room, what instrument
it should be, what notes we
should keep and their fi nal
location in the track. Once,
we spent fi ve 12-hour days
perfecting a guitar sound!
I know the album feels like
seven guys playing live in
a room, but every note is
‘placed’ where it is. The album
is an illusion.”
Aspden fi rst heard Spirit
Of Eden after its completion.
“Mark and Tim were pleased
with what they’d achieved,” he
recalls, “and were confi dent
the album would be successful.
Tim [who, according to Brown,
believed the record sounded
like a 1960s concept album]
told me he thought it would sell
at least four million copies.”

In the years since, Spirit
Of Eden has come to be
recognised as a masterwork


  • an infl uence on the likes
    of Radiohead and Elbow,
    and a precursor to what
    became known as post-rock.
    Its free-spirited, free-form
    attitude, unfamiliar structures
    and unexpected bursts of
    both silence and discordancy
    make it a challenging listen,
    but it boasts an irrefutable,
    courageous grandeur that’s
    both emotionally breathtaking
    and intellectually thrilling.
    Quite apart from Hollis’
    peerless vocal performances,
    its arrangements overfl ow with
    unusual but enchanting sounds:
    harmonium, clarinet, bassoon,
    trumpet, violin, even the choir
    of Chelmsford Cathedral. Often
    compared to the work of Van
    Morrison, Miles Davis and
    Debussy, the truth is it sounds
    like nothing else at all.
    Legend has it that when
    Talk Talk’s A&R fi rst heard the
    record, he cried – and not just
    at its beauty. Even Aspden
    concedes: “My immediate
    question was how would it
    be promoted with no live
    work or singles for radio. The
    market didn’t exist at the time
    for this record, no matter how
    brilliant it was. With just Mark
    and Tim involved, there was
    no balance, no perspective,
    no big picture. They took the
    reins and drove the coach
    and horses right off the cliff.
    When the album was delivered
    to EMI, the disappointment
    was apparent, and I could
    sense budgets being revised
    downwards as we listened.
    The reality and experience of
    producing a record ‘before
    its time’ is that nobody likes it
    when it’s most important.”
    To Hollis, the experience
    was bewildering. The album,
    he insisted to Q at the time,
    was “only radical in the
    modern context. It’s not
    radical compared to what was
    happening 20 years


“He said he can spend six
hours writing thousands of
words,” he’d admired, “and
then throw almost all of them
away. It’s the same with
songwriting. It’s worth it for the
stuff you’re left with at the end.”
“The band had made
good money from The Colour
Of Spring and touring, and
wanted to experiment.
It was purely ‘art’,” Brown
states categorically of their
meticulous working practices.
“No one told the musicians
what to play or even gave a
hint of direction. Mark and
Tim didn’t want to infl uence
them, and wanted the ‘input’
from whichever musician was
there at the time. There was no
urgency because we had no
time restraint or budget. The
attitude was it took as long as it
took to get the right result.”
Asked whether this might
have been due to Hollis and
Friese-Greene’s inability to
articulate what they were
looking for, Brown concedes,
“I think we only knew what we
liked once we heard it, plus we
tried out every possibility until
we stumbled on it. These would
include which mics to use,


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