they were first transmitted on The John Peel Show on BBC Radio 1 on 22nd August 1979.
The complete session recorded at studio number four at BBC Radio‘s Maida Vale Studiosby Echo & The Bunnymen on 15th August 1979 for the John Peel show on BBC Radio 1 and they were first transmitted on The John Peel Show on BBC Radio 1 on 22nd August 1979.
Echo and The Bunnymen were Ian Mcculloch (Guitar, Vocals) Will Sergeant (Guitar) Les Pattinson (Bass) Dave Balfe (Keyboards, Percussion, Drum Machine)
Tracklist:
1. Read It In Books (0:07)
2. Stars Are Stars (2:39)
3. I Bagsy Yours (5:46)
4. Villiers Terrace (8:41)
I’ve always said that The Killing Moon is one of the greatest song ever written. The Killing Moon is more than just a song. It’s a psalm, almost hymnal. It’s about everything, from birth to death to eternity and God – whatever that is – and the eternal battle between fate and the human will. It contains the answer to the meaning of life. It’s my “To be or not to be …”
Singer Songwriter Ian McCulloch says I love it all the more because I didn’t pore over it for days on end. One morning, I just sat bolt upright in bed with this line in my head: “Fate up against your will. Through the thick and thin. He will wait until you give yourself to him.” You don’t dream things like that and remember them. That’s why I’ve always half credited the lyric to God. It’s never happened before or since. I got up and started working the chords out. I played David Bowie’s Space Oddity backwards, then started messing around with the chords. By the time I’d finished, it sounded nothing like Space Oddity.
The rest of the lyrics came quickly, almost as if I knew them already. The title and a lot of the astronomical imagery, such as “your sky all hung with jewels”, came about because, as a kid, I’d always loved The Sky at Night and Star Trek, and I remembered the moon landing. I was up all night wishing I had a telescope.
The song was recorded in Bath and Liverpool. I wasn’t happy with the drums or the way it sounded in Bath, so I refused to sing on it. Plus I’d got a cold after staying out one night with Adam Peters, the cello player. So me and Pete de Freitas, our drummer, went to Amazon studios in Kirkby and finished it with Gil Norton mixing. I got home around 9am, slightly the worse for wear, and [former wife] Lorraine had a cob on with me for being out all night. I played her the song and said, “That’s what we’ve been doing”, and she cried.
Will Sergeant, guitarist
On a trip to Russia we visited a museum of tractor parts – and came back with that mandolin sound
For me, it was a trip to Russia that fed into The Killing Moon. Me and Les Pattinson, our bassist, knew some people at the polytechnic in Liverpool who were going, and they said we could come. It was £200 for 10 days, including flights. We went to Leningrad, then this place called Kazam, where nobody from outside Russia had been since 1943 or something. We went to a museum full of tractor parts and this very strange party organised by the young communists where everyone wore pressed Bri-nylon flares. But there was a lot of music and we came back full of ideas of Russian balalaika bands, which Les used for the middle of the song – this rumbling, mandolin-style bass thing.
During the recording, we went for a curry round the corner, and when we came back the producer had found this twangy thing on tape that I’d done tuning the guitar. He insisted it go in the song. It became the best-known guitar line in our entire catalogue.
Mac might have come up with the lyrics and all that, but it was definitely a team effort. The strings are just AdamPeters on cello and the producer on some state-of-the-art keyboard thing he had. Mac says he suggested that Pete play the drums with brushes, but I know Pete had already been inspired by the gentler, jazzier way of playing on Dave Brubeck’s Take Five, which we’d all been listening to.
I still love The Killing Moon. The lyrics are mysterious and it’s open to interpretation. It’s got a timeless quality. Years after it was a hit, we got an email saying this bloke wanted to use the song in a film, Donnie Darko, which we didn’t think would go anywhere, so accepted a one-off £3,000. Then when the director did the director’s cut he replaced The Killing Moon with Never Tear Us Apart by INXS. Aren’t some people knobheads?
• Echo and the Bunnymen are on tour from 22 May. Details: bunnymen.com
Year in, year out, and Renato Malizia continues the saga of ‘hard working man’ Rock B side, pouring singles, EPs and albums tribute in our heads through his label, The Blog That Celebrates Itself Records.
After the disk of Rio John Candy, latest release of TBTCI to give the guys on PCP, already came into the world two other albums, and the third – and latest – wheel now in our virtual jukebox. With you, Gods Will Be Gods – The reverence to the Bunnymen.
As the title delivery, this is a tribute to Echo and The Bunnymen, with 16 bands rereading 16 Fab Four tracks (ops) that between 1980 and 1987 released large jobs and then … well, then we can say that came out of our list favorite.
As is characteristic of tributes released by Mr. Malizia, there is a lot of distortion and shadows in versions, but all present on the disk preferred here are two not as noisy or as dark: “The Cutter” at the hands of gauchos Josephines; and “Ocean Rain”, re-recorded by the previously sunken Grenade.
Listen and download the album, and get ready because very soon – for sure – the new paint TBTCI.
setlist:
01.Going Up
02.With A hip
03.All That Jazz
04.All My Colours (Zimbo)
05.Silver
06.The Cutter
07.The Killing Moon
08.Rescue
09.Never Stop
10.Over The Wall
11.Crocodiles
12.Do It Clean
Echo & the Bunnymen are an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1978. The original line-up consisted of vocalist Ian McCulloch, guitarist Will Sergeant and bass player Les Pattinson, supplemented by a drum machine. By 1980, Pete de Freitas joined as the band’s drummer.
Released this day 30 years ago and a classic album of the 1980’s, this was the Echo and the Bunnymen’s Fourth album release and featured some of the bands most enduring songs, The Killing Moon, Silver and Seven Seas. Beautiful, Dark, gorgeous warm and poetic heartbreaking dramatic and majestic. Most of the album was recorded in Paris using a 35 piece orchestra with other sessions in Bath and Liverpool. When released the album was received with mixed reviews.Two songs were recorded for the “Play at Home” TV series “Killing Moon” and “Silver”, Also a Peel session in September 1982 featured four of the songs to be released on the album. A live TV special from Channel 4 the Tube named “A CRYSTAL DAY” the band played “Killing Moon”,”Nocturnal Me”, “Ocean Rain”, “Thorn of Crowns” (then called Cucumber)
Echo and the Bunnymen return with a new album and tour in the UK, desrcibed as one of their best in years, the album is out in early May with quite a few dates in the UK and summer European shows
Ian feels this is the best work for some time the English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1978 have a new album “METEORITES” issued on May 26th produced by Youth, a new tour already arranged they will be at Leamington Spa Assembly rooms on May 2nd