NEWS
Andy Partridge Floods Marketplace With Albums
Though the sun may have set on the slightly-geeky pop the boys of XTC spent nearly a quarter-century churning out, reports of his own band's demise must've lit a fire under chief songwriter Andy Partridge, whose Ape House Records will unleash no fewer than four Partridge-family projects on US shores April 3 thanks to their distribution deal with Rykodisc. There's Monstrance, the overdub-free, entirely-improvised, self-titled double-disc set from Partridge and mates Barry Andrews and Martyn Barker of Shriekback. There's Orpheus the Lowdown, conceived over thirteen years worth of sessions between Partridge and Slapp Happy singer and Leviathan cartoonist Peter Blegvad. On the Partridge-free tip, there's The Secret Life of the Milk and Honey Band, a disc of gossamer pop not far removed from Skylarking-era XTC. Finally, there's the hushed tones and gurgling synths of Veda Hille's Return of the Kildeer. If that seems like a lot at once, know that all but Monstrance have seen release on Partridge's side of the Black Sea in the last few years. MP3: Monstrance: I Lovely Cosmonaut [from the Monstrance LP] |
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NEWS
Andy Partridge: XTC "Well and Truly in the Fridge"
Following the release of the Fuzzy Warbles Collector's Album box set, Andy Partridge is keeping busy, though the possibility of him releasing new music under the XTC moniker seems doubtful. Partridge revealed the news to David Garland of WNYC's "Spinning on Air" for an episode of the radio show that will air this Sunday night, February 11, and Garland was nice enough to share a transcript of a piece of the interview with us. Partridge says, "At the moment, XTC is well and truly in the fridge. Purely, really, for the reason that [partner] Colin [Moulding] doesn't want to write anymore. He's either taking a break, or that break could become permanently in place. He told me some months back that he's not interested in music anymore, and doesn't want to write, and basically said, 'Our paths will cross again or they'll be involved in some way.' And then he proceeded to move away from his house-- I have no idea where he's living right now, I have no idea what his phone number is, don't really know how to contact him, and so Colin is obviously wanting to leave the world to some extent. And I guess he's got the right to do that, so I'm not going to pester him and say, 'Come on, what's the matter with you, get it together.' With the XTC name or not, however, Partridge is still writing and recording music. Or, in the case of his collaboration with former XTC keyboardist Barry Andrews and Andrews' Shriekback bandmate Martyn Barker, not writing. The trio will release Monstrance-- a double album of live improvisation sans overdubs-- via Ape House on April 3. Merv Carswell and Future Sound of London guitarist Stuart Rowe edited and mixed the eight hours' worth of material the trio accrued in three sessions together. And with songs like "Oodoo" and "Priapple", we're guessing none of that time was spent thinking of song titles. Interview transcript: Andy Partridge: At the moment, XTC is well and truly in the fridge. Purely, really, for the reason that Colin doesn't want to write anymore. He's either taking a break, or that break could become permanently in place. He told me some months back that he's not interested in music anymore, and doesn't want to write, and basically said, "Our paths will cross again or they'll be involved in some way." And then he proceeded to move away from his house-- I have no idea where he's living right now, I have no idea what his phone number is, don't really know how to contact him, and so Colin is obviously wanting to leave the world to some extent. And I guess he's got the right to do that, so I'm not going to pester him and say, "Come on, what's the matter with you, get it together." David Garland: Well, even though you've been able to sort of make XTC be whatever you needed it to be as your songwriting has changed a bit over the years, is this maybe now a moment that you can be free of that category? AP: Well, certainly it does seem a shame that I have to sort of, I suppose,
legally wave goodbye to the name XTC. Because it was my name, and I've been
working on making the XTC brand-- if you want to call it that-- a reliable, and
sort of a quality brand. It's almost like: if it's an XTC record, you know it's
going to be interesting, and it's going to take you places. It seems a shame
that I have to sort of legally leave that name in the fridge. But I'm going to
be working under my own name, I guess, and under projects like Monstrance and
that sort of thing, for as long as I've got breath to draw. Yeah, I can't
stop. DG: So we've sort of found you at a crossroads. AP: Yeah, a very interesting one; also scary; and this is the first time since 1969 I've not been in a group. And, you know, musically I'm sure there's a lot more left in me, or I hope there is; I feel there is. But it's like: the direction I want to go in-- I'm wrestling a little internally at the moment. DG: Well good luck with it. I think your experimentation has always paid off, so keep doing that. AP: Thank you. I just hope with this wrestling I don't have to wear a mask. [laughter] DG: If you want to scare yourself and intimidate yourself, that helps. AP: Yeah, that's what you do, you do it with a mirror and a mask-- a badly made homemade mask! |
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NEWS
XTC Become Action Figures
2006 has been a banner year for musicians undergoing toy-ification, and now it's time to add the members of XTC to the pile of tiny, limited edition musical figures. The band's Idea Records has commissioned Irregular Miniatures' Ian Kay "to bring to life what is hoped will be a whole range of XTC collectors' figures in metal. Each set will show the band from a period in their history commencing with the White Music era. You'll get Andy [Partridge], Colin [Moulding], Terry [Chambers], and Barry [Andrews] in a live setting with relevant instruments (e.g. Barry comes with his Crumar Organ and Lawrence Piano), dressed in their monochrome best. All figures (55mm high) and equipment are cast in white metal and are hand painted, held securely in foam, and clad in a pictorial card sleeve which will be signed by Andy and Colin. Andy says, 'These figures are going to be charming. I know; I've seen them. So hurry and order yours today,'" according to a press release. The White Music figures are in a limited edition of 200 sets, and as you can see from the picture on the left, Barry Andrews not only comes with his organ and piano but is also apparently wearing a Nixon mask. More pictures of the figures can be seen here... if you dare. |
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NEWS
Mon: 10-31-05
XTC: "Spiral" Andy Partridge might stop making music; that's what he threatened to this writer last spring. Personally, I think Partridge has a few tricks left, though "Spiral" isn't one of them. Whether it's a new XTC track or a leftover from Wasp Star, "Spiral" is a weak tea copy of "Playground" without the killer riff. The lyrics, a tribute to the way his favorite 45s make him feel, are weak and weirdly vacant — he uses "spinal" as a noun just to finish a rhyme, which is beneath him — and the strength of his singing and the passion of the synthesized orchestra don't compensate. It's not as grating as that song Rod Stewart wrote about playing his old Motown records, but "Spiral" barely cuts it as a B-side. [Chris Dahlen] |
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NEWS
Mon: 10-31-05: 12:26 p.m. CST XTC Release Another Box Set
Zach Vowell reports: Today, the two core members of XTC will re-release 1999's Apple Venus, Volume One and 2000's Wasp Star as one album (as they had originally intended, before former label TVT had their say), accompanied by a slew of rarities in a handy box set. The Apple Box will be augmented by two CDs of demos, 1999's Homespun and 2001's Homegrown, as well as new artwork, liner notes and lyrics. Since XTC will be releasing this four-CD set on their own label, Idea Records, they won't be offering an American edition, and that's where your computer enters the picture. Fans ordering the set from the XTC website will receive a "content card" which will allow them to download two brand new XTC tracks, "Spiral" and "Say It", as well as an XTC ringtone, for free. Super duper fans can order the limited-edition "Apple Set", which contains the box set, two t-shirts, a badge and a mysterious "extra item." Apple Box tracklist: Disc 1 - Apple Venus: 01 River of Orchids Disc 2 - Wasp Star: 01 Playground Disc 3 - Homespun Demo Recordings: Disc 4 - Homegrown Demo Recordings: 01 Playground Foraging even deeper into cyberspace, Partridge is making the catalogue of his record label, Ape, available on iTunes, including his bewildering six-volume Fuzzy Warbles set of demos he wrote for XTC, but which never made it on an album. Call him prolific, and he'll throw a song at you. Ape has also released a collaborative album by Partridge and Peter Blegvad (of Slapp Happy) and albums by The Milk and Honey Band and Canadian singer/songwriter Veda Hille. Finally, if you're too cheap to jump at Apple Box, XTC will soon be mounting a Quicktime player on their site which will stream the two latest XTC tracks, plus selections from Ape releases. If all that doesn't smack of a good faith effort to make up for the complete lack of live performances, then you're probably not an XTC fan. But at least they're trying. * Pitchfork Review: XTC: Apple Venus, Volume One |
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TRACK REVIEWS
March 22nd, 2004 Andy Partridge
[2004]
“I Wonder Why the Wonderfalls”
Ever since The Gilmore Girls started licensing XTC songs, I've become aware of
how family-friendly Andy Partridge has gotten; his happiest songs are as bright
and frothy as cotton candy. The theme song that he wrote for Fox's sweet,
weird new show Wonderfalls-- catch it now, before they cancel it-- is
damnably charming, from the witty guitar and pizzicato Apple Venus
synth-strings, to the sight of starlet Caroline Dhavernas lip-syncing the words
in the music video. The lyrics are nonsense, and not in a psychedelic way;
"I wonder why the wonderfalls" is a silly pun, at least until he
adds, "on me." But the music is winningly catchy, and just sharp
enough to stave off over-endearment. Partridge sounds sweet even when he
leaves out the bitter, and maybe this was just easy money, but it's more than a
made-for-TV throwaway.
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XTC DVD Dissed By Virgin; Andy Partridge Reserves Jizz For Summer
Gives unfortunate new double-meaning to "Are You Receiving Me?"
[Posted Friday, October 31st, 2003 04:00:00 Pitchfork Central Time] Jeremy C. Baron reports: But wait, there's more! Andy Partridge, XTC frontman-to-the-max, has been working with singer Sophie Ellis Baxter. One of the songs to result from this classy collaboration, entitled "I Come All Over Summer" (did I say classy?) will appear as a b-side. That's it. Oh, oh, wait... just kidding! Andy, being the busy guy that he is, has been working with Fox TV to pen the theme song to its new show, Wonderfalls. According to the official site, six songs were recorded, one of which is called "These Voices" and another one super-cleverly entitled "I Wonder Why The Wonderfalls." Did I make fun of these guys for being crazy-ass hippies yet? If one of these compositions doesn't make it to America's fourth-finest network soon, I'm sure there will be ample fuel to ignite several more volumes of Fuzzy Warbles. .: Pitchfork Review: XTC: Coat of Many Cupboards.: Pitchfork News: Andy Partridge Gets Lowdown With Blegvad .: XTC: http://www.xtcidearecords.co.uk |
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Andy Partridge Gets Lowdown With Blegvad
Eat your vegetables; they'll put fuzz on your
warbles
[Posted Thursday, October 16th, 2003 04:00:00 Pitchfork Central Time] John L. Ferrer reports: 01 Savannah This news comes not long after XTC's official site announced that a long-in-development collaboration with Robert Schneider has fallen through. Supposedly over 30 songs were recorded with Andy and the Apples in Stereo frontman, and there are no plans for any sort of release. Our collaboration went great; we recorded dozens of songs; it's never coming out. Check. Perhaps most interestingly, XTC's psychedelic alter-egos The Dukes of Stratosphear have woken from a 16-year slumber and, like Rip Van Ruben, stumbled directly into a recording studio to lay down a brand new song called "Open A Can (Of Human Beans)" exclusively for The Wish List, an upcoming comp in aid of the Multiple Sclerosis Society, also featuring Graham Coxon, Martin Newell, and frequent Partridge collaborator Harold Budd. One item we haven't heard one whit about in months is XTC's next record, which was at one time known as Tunes To Help You Breathe More Easily and later, after a little good-natured curiousity got out of hand, Tunes We Hope You Internet Creeps Choke On. Mood swings, guys! .: Pitchfork Review: XTC: Coat of Many Cupboards.: Pitchfork Review: Andy Partridge: Fuzzy Warbles Volumes 3 & 4 .: Pitchfork News: XTC's Andy Partridge Readies More Fuzzy Warbles .: XTC: http://www.xtcidearecords.co.uk .: Ape House: http://www.ape.uk.net |
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Thursday, May 1st, 2003 XTC's Andy Partridge Readies More Fuzzy
Warbles
Unheard demo sessions with Danny Bonaduce on bass not
included-- this time!
Will Bryant reports: Among the dorkier offerings are "I'm Playing My Fano", a commercial endorsement of Fano guitars that was originally issued as an MP3 on their website, early versions of the Dukes of Stratosphear classics "Collideascope" and "Braniac's Daughter", and a rarely heard cover of "Strawberry Fields Forever". Dude, it sounds just like The Beatles! Tracklists: Fuzzy Warbles, Volume 3: Fuzzy Warbles, Volume 4: As previously reported, Ape House will be releasing a collaborative album between Partridge and avant-garde musician/artist Peter Blegvad, a modern-day interpretation of the myth of Orpheus in "vocal, words, sound and music pictures, a bit part play for the fable minded, a film for your mind's eye." Hmmm, sounds like Uncle Andy oughta lay off the Wonka bars for a while. The material on Orpheus, The Lowdown was recorded in fits and spurts over the last 13 years, and almost destroyed when a vital DAT cassette snapped during mastering. Fortunately, the music was rescued by the rarely deployed Andy Partridge Side-Project Data Recovery Team at Metropolis Mastering (sure, it sounds important, but they all have day jobs). Orpheus, The Lowdown is also due in the UK this June. Tracklist: 01 Savannah : Pitchfork Review: Andy Partridge: Fuzzy Warbles, Vol. 1 & 2 |
All written material copyright 2003,
Pitchforkmedia.com
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reviews archive features archive news archive |
Features: Found Sound '02
by the Pitchfork staff Mon:02-24-03 Last year, after returning from our annual break for the holidays, we debuted a feature called Found Sound, in which we each picked a couple of non-2001 albums we discovered during the year. Well, we decided it'd be nice if we reprised the feature with similar selections from 2002. Frankly, it's nice to steal a break from cranking out 400-word essays on the latest 6.0's from all your favorite labels and let you in on the records we adore, even if they came out in 1961 and your dad likes 'em. (Your dad is awesome, by the way.) So let's get to the fun stuff. Please, no pushing. Proceed in an alphabetical fashion. XTC: A Coat Full Of Cupboards / Fuzzy Warbles Volumes 1
& 2 [Virgin; 2002 / Ape; 2002] |
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News
Tuesday, November 12th, 2002 XTC Unveil Tracklist for Fuzzy Warbles
But clean-shaven warbles appear larger, more robust
Will Bryant reports: Unlike the Coat of Many Cupboards box set released earlier this year, the first two volumes of Fuzzy Warbles present material spanning 20+ years, in non-chronological order, with everything from late-70s Drums and Wires material on up through 2000's Wasp Star. As expected, both volumes include some-- but not all-- of XTC's fanclub-only cassettes Jules Verne's Sketchbook (1987) and The Bull with the Golden Guts (1992); two demos recorded, but rejected, for the 1996 animated film James and the Giant Peach; four Apple Venus-era demos which were not included on the albums or as b-sides; and one selection from Andy's 1994 contribution to They Might Be Giants' mailorder-only Hello Recording Club. Other cuts announced are unheard even outside the voracious circle of diehard XTC collectors. One of the most bizarre inclusions is a cut titled "Born Out of Your Mouth", which was actually composed by Partridge at Microsoft's behest. MSN hired Partridge to compose original music for an interactive project called Rifff in 1997, and Partridge programmed the song to be playable on pre-MP3 era sound cards. The tune was accompanied by animation and sound cues that changed as the user navigated MSN's Rifff environment (a similar idea is employed on the main menu of XTC's official website). The first two volumes of Fuzzy Warbles were mastered by long-time XTC engineer Ian Cooper and, according to the Idea Records website, both sound "fantastic". Naturally. Tracklists: Fuzzy Warbles, Vol. 1: 01 Dame Fortune [Apple Venus demo] Fuzzy Warbles, Vol. 2: 01 Ridgeway Path [The Bull With The Golden Guts cassette] .: Pitchfork News: XTC Recording New LP; Robert Schneider Collaboration on Hold .: We Are The World: Digging through their Drawers: Classic Unreleased XTC Demos .: XTC: http://www.xtcidearecords.co.uk |
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News
Thursday, August 15th, 2002 XTC Recording New Full-Length; Robert Schneider Collaboration on Backburner
"Snapple Venus" ad campaign keeps band in recording funds, raspberry lemonade
Will Bryant reports: In addition, Partridge reports that his collaboration with Elephant 6 principal Robert Schneider has been put on hold until Schneider has completed promotional commitments for the Apples in Stereo's Velocity of Sound, due October 8th on SpinArt. Partridge and Schneider have written approximately 35 pieces of music for the project, which has been known as Orchestre Fantastique. Partridge and Schneider had planned to record the album this fall in London. As previously reported, the Apples kick off a fall tour with Clinic September 24th in Lexington, Kentucky. XTC are also proceeding with an ambitious plan to release twelve albums' worth of outtakes, home demos, and unreleased music spanning the entire career of the band. Originally conceived as a box set, Fuzzy Warbles will now be released two albums at a time, with the first titles available as early as October. Earlier this year, XTC released a number of alternate versions, demos, and previously unreleased recordings as the box set Coat of Many Cupboards. The material amassed for the Fuzzy Warbles series now numbers around 250 tracks total, according to XTC's webmaster. .: Pitchfork Review: XTC: A Coat of Many Cupboards.: XTC: http://www.xtcidearecords.co.uk .: The Apples In Stereo: http://www.applesinstereo.com |
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Copyright 2002, Pitchforkmedia.com. |
Friday, April 19th, 2002 Digging through their Drawers:
Classic Unreleased XTC Demos You can tell more about a band from their raw, uncensored demos and cast-offs than from their best albums. This is especially true of brilliant pop legends XTC, who have written and recorded dozens of songs that they never officially released. Some of these demos are better than anything an average band ever writes; others are just fucked up. XTC's recent box set, Coat of Many Cupboards, digs up just a few of those gems, and until the band releases the rest in their upcoming Fuzzy Warbles series, here are a few rare songs worth looking for that show them at their best and worst-- even if some might dig just a little too deeply into the head of Andy Partridge.
-Chris Dahlen |
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Copyright 2002, Pitchforkmedia.com. |
Reviews
1997 XTC
Upsy Daisy Assortment: The Best of... [Geffen]
Rating: 86% This seminal punk/pop band has been recording brilliant material since the mid-'70s. They're considered one of the most influential bands of their time and have recorded well over 200 songs in the course of their career. And until now, they've never had a greatest hits collection. Well, it's high time. Upsy Daisy Assortment is a chronological archive of some of XTC's best work, though it does omit two classics -- "Radios in Motion" from White Music and "Are You Receiving Me?" from Go 2. In fact, this compilation skips those first two albums entirely, starting with "Life Begins at the Hop" and "Making Plans For Nigel," both from XTC's American debut, Drums and Wires. Aside from that, Assortment briefly covers the rest of the XTC catalog. If you've never heard of the band and you want to have a clue about music, you should be interested in starting with this compilation. Having just broken their nasty contract with Virgin Records, XTC are said to have three albums worth of new material ready for release. Their next record will be their first in six years. -Ryan Schreiber |
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Copyright 1997 pitchfork.internet.media. |
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