CD TIPP

Cuneiform: Hugh Hopper – 1984 / Dieses Wochenende für FIVE

1984 was always a musical oddity, and it may be a little incoherent and self-indulgent at times, but it has held up well over time, and still contains music of great interest.“ – William Tilland / AllMusic

Bassist/composer Hugh has been involved in many projects during his more than 40 years in music. 1984, originally released in 1973, & his first solo release, remains perhaps his most singular. This combines Hugh’s unique fuzz bass & compositions with tapework, multiple overdubs, & a very avant esthetic & then contrasts those works with short, weirdly devolved James Brown-inspired pieces. Nearly 50 years later, the originality and distinctiveness of Hugh’s vision on 1984 remains untouched.

This is the DEFINITIVE edition, taken from the original master tapes, including a never heard bonus track from the original sessions as well as an alternate version of one of the tracks.

25 years later, the originality and distinctiveness of Hugh’s vision on 1984 remains untouched. This is the DEFINITIVE CD edition, taken from the original master tapes, including a never heard bonus track from the original sessions, as well as an alternate take and six home studio sketches from before he went into the studio to record the album!

released April 28, 1998

[The original album, released in 1973, is tracks 1-6]

All compositions by Hugh Hopper.

Recorded at Advision Studios, July / August 1972.

Engineer : Gary Martin with Mike Dunne.

Tracks 9-14 recorded at home on a 4-track tape recorder.

1) Click this album link: https://cuneiformrecords.bandcamp.com/album/1984
2) Click „Buy Digital Album“
3) Type „10“ into the Name your price field (The discount comes next! 😉 ).
4) Type the word „FIVE“ into the Discount code field.
5) Click „apply“
6) Click „Check out now“ or „Add to Cart“

„Originally released in 1973 by the Soft Machine bassist shortly after the band had lost eccentric drummer/vocalist Robert Wyatt and had begun their evolution into a respectable (and somewhat predictable) jazz-rock ensemble, this was Hopper’s attempt at something more experimental. As he reports in his amusing CD notes, the record label CBS was all in favor of his solo excursion until he let them know what he had in mind, at which point they declined to pay even for studio time, so Hopper had to take out a bank loan to make the recording — which says a lot for Hopper’s belief in his artistic vision, and not much at all for the musical (as opposed to financial) vision of CBS.

Hopper’s 1984 is inspired by George Orwell’s totalitarian fantasy of the same name, and the two longest tracks, „Miniluv“ and „Miniplenty,“ feature Hopper’s multitracked solo work on bass, percussion, mellophone, loops and electronics, with only John Marshall, the Soft Machine drummer, contributing additional percussion on the second piece. This music had an appropriately eerie, ominous quality, with heavy use of chattering tape loops, reverberating bass drones and woozy, sometimes harsh slide work on bass guitar strings.

Terry Riley’s early cyclical trance music was a large influence on Hopper at the time of this recording, and there are also strong echoes of „Poppy Nogood and the Phantom Band,“ for example, in the intertwined, looped sax lines in „Minitrue.“ However, several of the shorter selections on this CD, with the addition of various saxophones, trombones and other horns, are inexplicably tied to a rather twisted and ponderous R&B groove. Hopper suggests, retrospectively, that these several pieces may have represented the „normal“ citizens in Orwell’s dystopia, who were nonetheless a little „bent“ by their soul-destroying environment. However, it is just as likely that Hopper was simply indulging his admitted fondness for James Brown.

– William Tilland / AllMusic

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