Marc Almond – Violent Silence
Label: | Virgin – 208 050, Some Bizzare – 208 050, Virgin – 208050, Some Bizzare – 208050 |
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Format: | Vinyl, Mini-Album, LP |
Country: | Germany |
Released: | |
Genre: | Pop |
Style: | Ballad, Vocal |
Tracklist
A1 | Blood Tide | |
A2 | Healthy As Hate | |
A3 | Things You Loved Me For | |
B1 | Body Unknown | |
B2 | Unborn Stillborn |
Companies, etc.
- Record Company – Ariola Eurodisc GmbH
- Published By – Copyright Control
- Recorded At – Wave Studios
- Engineered At – Milo Studios
- Mixed At – Milo Studios
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Some Bizzare
- Copyright © – Some Bizzare
Credits
- Engineer, Mixed By – Charlie Gray*
- Featuring – Annie Hogan, Billy McGee, Martin McCarrick
- Illustration [Logo & Graphic] – Huw Feather
- Liner Notes – Paul Buck
- Photography By – Ben Thornberry
- Written-By – Hogan* (tracks: A1), Marc Almond (tracks: A2 to B2)
Notes
German only issue.
Songs Of Love And Murder - Written 1984. Recorded 1984. Performed at 'Violent Silence - The Celebration Of Georges Bataille' on Wednesday 26th September 1984.
Released 1986. Mixed 1986. Special thank you to Paul Buck.
All songs published: Copyright Control.
Thanks to Langy.
℗ & © 1986 Some Bizzare
The runouts are stamped; 020 is etched.
Songs Of Love And Murder - Written 1984. Recorded 1984. Performed at 'Violent Silence - The Celebration Of Georges Bataille' on Wednesday 26th September 1984.
Released 1986. Mixed 1986. Special thank you to Paul Buck.
All songs published: Copyright Control.
Thanks to Langy.
℗ & © 1986 Some Bizzare
The runouts are stamped; 020 is etched.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Rights Society: STEMRA/GEMA/BIEM
- Label Code: LC 3098
- Matrix / Runout (Side A label): S 208 050 A
- Matrix / Runout (Side B label): S 208 050 B
- Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): 020 208050 A-1
- Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): 208050 B-1
Recommendations
Reviews
- For those having trouble reading the notes on the back of the mini-album here they are in full:
MARC ALMOND GEORGES BATAILLE TRACKS
During a week in September 1984, a festival to celebrate the French writer, Georges Bataille, was presented in London at the Bloomsbury Theatre by Paul Buck and Roger Ely. Amongst the plethora of writers, film-makers, musicians, actors, performance artists and dancers was Marc Almond. Drawing from sympathies with Bataille's writings he selected a handful of new songs to form a bouquet of heavily-thorned roses. Late in the evening of the 26th, dressed simply in black, he walked quietly onto the stage, Blood Tide acting as an overture. Twenty-three minutes later, after the numbers you are about to hear had been delivered, he stepped slowly backwards, fading into the darkness, still intoning: "I will never love again". No bows, encores or more. An artist knowing the moment belonged to Bataille and not the self.
PAUL BUCK
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