A Black Box

A Black Box
Studio album by Peter Hammill
Released Aug 1980
Recorded November 1979- April 1980
Sofa Sound, Wiltshire
Genre Art rock
Label S-Type Records
Producer Peter Hammill
Peter Hammill chronology
pH7
(1979)
A Black Box
(1980)
Sitting Targets
(1981)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]
Record Mirror(elusive) [2]

A Black Box is an album by Peter Hammill, originally released on S-Type Records in August 1980.

Hammill performed nearly all the instrumentation himself, including the drum parts, a task he had first undertaken on his previous album pH7. His ex-Van der Graaf Generator colleague David Jackson also made a guest appearance, along with David Ferguson of the new-wave band Random Hold, whose debut album Hammill had produced.

Side 1 of the record featured a collection of songs, while side 2 was devoted to "Flight", a lengthy multi-section song. This was the first time Hammill had included a lengthy song of this type on one of his solo albums.

The short-lived S-Type label (the name was a pun on "stereo-type"), on which the album was originally released, was set up by Hammill and his then manager Gail Colson. Colson had formerly been a director at Hammill's previous record company, Charisma Records, who had dropped him from their roster just prior to the recording of A Black Box. The S-Type label does not appear to have been a successful business project, and the album was later licensed to Virgin Records, who have since also acquired Hammill's Charisma catalogue.

Track listing

All songs written by Peter Hammill, except where indicated.

  1. "Golden Promises"
  2. "Losing Faith in Words"
  3. "Jargon King"
  4. "Fogwalking"
  5. "The Spirit"
  6. "In Slow Time" (Hammill, David Ferguson)
  7. "The Wipe"
  8. "Flight"
  • Flying Blind
  • The White Cane Fandango
  • Control
  • Cockpit
  • Silk-Worm Wings
  • Nothing Is Nothing
  • A Black Box

Personnel

Technical

References

  1. Sinclair, Ali. A Black Box at AllMusic
  2. Record Mirror review

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.