Followers

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Box set of The Verve's 'A Northern Hymn' set for next month


On Sept. 9, UMe will release expanded editions of The Verve’s seminal album A Northern Hymn. Remastered by Chris Potter (co-producer of the band’s Urban Hymns) at Metropolis studios, the albums feature previously unreleased and never-heard-before tracks, EP and B-sides material and BBC sessions.

Presented as a 3CD box set, the super deluxe edition of
A Northern Hymn comes with a booklet featuring new interviews and previously unseen photos. Limited edition, remastered vinyl versions of the original LPs for both A Northern Hymn (2LP gatefold) and their 1993 debut album A Storm in Heaven (1LP) will also be released in faithful reproductions of the original packaging.

Both the 3CD box set and remastered vinyl will also be made available digitally at all participating online retail outlets.

Released in the UK on June 21, 1993,
A Storm in Heaven was a modest UK hit (No. 27 in the album chart) but over the past two decades has come to be regarded as something of a psychedelic classic. Drenched in echo and reverb it is highly atmospheric, extremely nuanced and, for many long-term fans, remains the band’s ‘lost’ masterpiece.

For a debut it was as adventurous and audacious as they come - with Richard Ashcroft’s semi-hallucinatory lyrics of hope, love, isolation and insanity reflecting the burgeoning mood of a generation. Life under post-Thatcher Tory rule might have been grim, but as Ashcroft sang in “Slide Away”: ‘These are our times and your highs.’
 

"It was pretty much improvised. It was quite bold on our part to actually blag that, and not tell the record company that we didn’t have enough material to make a record. We had the ability but we didn’t have the material. That really put the pressure on making that record, but we didn’t want to put the singles on the album. When it was done, the feeling was all really positive. As a band we were happy – we’d made something we could be proud of, especially considering how young we were. We’d had arguments with the record company over the second and third EPs, but when we delivered the album they seemed pretty happy with it because they thought there were singles on it. We’d taken on board what they’d wanted, and without compromising too much, had delivered something a bit more concise and focused. The Americans, especially, were delighted. We picked up a big following on college radio and did a tour across the whole country. We had a big underground following and Slide Away was being played on MTV all the time. In the climate that existed then, it worked.”
- Simon Jones (bass guitar)
 

Released on July 3, 1995, A Northern Soul, which spawned three UK Top 40 hit singles- “This Is Music,” “On Your Own” and “History” was well-received by critics and fans alike, reaching No. 13 on the UK album chart. Over the past two decades it has continued to gather acclaim. Readers of Q Magazine voted it the 53rd greatest album ever in 1998 while the NME ranked it the 28th best album of all time in 2003 and the 13th best British album in 2006. Undoubtedly, it is one of the most powerful British ‘indie-rock’ statements ever.

A darker, starker, and more personal affair than their debut,
A Northern Soul saw Ashcroft eschewing the strung-out positivism of their debut for sober ruminations on the human condition. The result? Timeless ballads like “On Your Own” that contrasted with ambitious workouts even more explosive than before - notably “A New Decade” and the titanic “This Is Music.” A general mood of doubt, and even ennui, however, is there as an undercurrent, best exemplified by the prophetic torch song “History,” a Top 30 hit. When news of the band’s break up came shortly before its release it sounded like it might even become the band’s epitaph.

For this super deluxe edition reissue, the album has been remastered and, once again, augmented by the inclusion of all associated B-sides, two previously unreleased BBC radio sessions and seven unreleased studio tracks, including powerful early versions of “The Rolling People” and “Come On” (later re-recorded for Urban Hymns) as well as “Mover” and “Muhammad Ali,” songs that were to be revisited for The Verve’s 2008 reunion album, Forth.

The package comes in a lift off lid box, covered with silver mirri board as with the original 2LP vinyl release, and features four post cards, a poster and a 36-page book featuring interviews with the band (Richard aside) and never-before-seen photos by bass player Simon Jones, Chris Floyd and Michael Spencer Jones.

“It was all about waiting for the inspiration. Feel was everything. And if it wasn’t there, we’d get really, really depressed. The song would sound good but there wasn’t that magic. We were waiting for the magic all the time. Then it’d just happen. But like any experience in life, when you go really up – when you reach the peaks – the comedown is incredible. And after six weeks of going up and crashing down, everything you’ve been doing takes its toll. You start losing it. I was elated with the record. I’ve heard of artists who tie themselves to the masts of ships so they could get more inspiration. They’d sail out in a huge storm. And it felt like that. It felt like I’d been through a huge emotional storm. But I got something out of it. Out of all the torment I had a diamond. And that’s what great groups survive on.”
- Richard Ashcroft, NME, May 1995

“By the time we came to record A Northern Soul it felt a bit more serious. It had to go down properly. We had to get what the band was all about down. We were a great live band by that point. We were all confident players, but we were exploratory players as well. We wanted to do that justice in the studio because we hadn’t really captured what we did as a unit. It was such an intense period – it was engineered to be intense really. We engineered a situation that was stressful in some respects to get the most intense thing we could down on tape. Part of our culture as a band was that we played all the time anyway, but when it came to going into the studio there had to be that extra ingredient. We were always striving for this extra factor, of taking it to a new level. Because of that, we felt like we were under some kind of self-imposed stress and all the shenanigans that went on were part and parcel of our ceremonial approach to making music. When it worked it was incredible…”
- Nick McCabe (guitar, 2016)
 

Formed at Winstanley Sixth Form College in Wigan in 1989, and versed in everything from The Stones and Funkadelic to Can, this youthful four-piece stood out from the very beginning. While the Nirvana-led grunge scene wallowed in misery and rejection, Verve radiated positivity. And while their British peers gazed forlornly at their shoes, Verve looked defiantly to the stars.

Signed to Hut Records in 1991, early singles “All In The Mind,” “She’s A Superstar” and “Gravity Grave” – all indie No.1’s- were skyscraping displays of intent.

A tempestuous band relationship and break-ups ensued. Britpop, “Bittersweet Symphony,” the legal battles and eventual triumphant resurrection with Forth were still to come, but with these two extraordinary albums, (The) Verve created a new horizon for British rock.

“The Verve are one of the only bands that I've ever begged to work with. I chased and hassled them, and that wasn't something I'd done before. I've always been really lucky – people have come to me. I first saw them by accident at The Falcon in Camden. I went to see another band and they were the support. I just couldn't believe what I was witnessing. That whole dramatic light and shade – loud and quiet. They’d take it down to absolute silence and you'd be able to hear a pin drop. Richard would be on the floor and then suddenly it would explode. It was totally special for me. So I went to see them again at The Venue in New Cross just to make sure it wasn't a dream.”
-John Leckie (producer)

A Northern Soul (3CD Super Deluxe Edition)

CD1: The Remastered Album

A New Decade
This Is Music
On Your Own
So It Goes
A Northern Soul
Brainstorm Interlude
Drive You Home
History
No Knock On My Door
Life’s An Ocean
Stormy Clouds
(Reprise)

CD2: B-Sides

This Is Music
Let The Damage Begin
You And Me
On Your Own
I See The Door
Little Gem
Dance On Your Bones
History
History (radio edit)
Back On My Feet Again
On Your Own (Acoustic)
Monkey Magic (Brainstorm Mix)
Grey Skies
Life’s Not A Rehearsal

CD3 – Unreleased Studio and BBC Sessions
 

Brake Lights
Mover
Funky Jam (aka The Rolling People)
Echo Bass
Muhammad Ali
Come On
King Riff (aka This Is Music)

BBC Radio 1 Session – 28/6/1995
On Your Own
So It Goes

BBC Radio 1 Session (19/6/1995)
A New Decade
This Is Music
Life’s An Ocean
Come On

No comments: