England Made Me (Black Box Recorder album)

Last updated

England Made Me
England Made Me UK original.jpg
Studio album by
Released20 July 1998
Recorded1997
Studio
  • Milo, London
  • The Drugstore, London
Genre
Length37:16
Label Chrysalis
Producer
  • Black Box Recorder
  • Phil Vinall
Black Box Recorder chronology
England Made Me
(1998)
The Facts of Life
(2000)
Singles from England Made Me
  1. "Child Psychology"
    Released: 4 May 1998
  2. "England Made Me"
    Released: 6 July 1998

England Made Me is the debut studio album of English rock band Black Box Recorder. It was released through Chrysalis Records on 20 July 1998. After releasing albums with the Auteurs and as Baader Meinhof, in early 1997, musician Luke Haines formed Black Box Recorder with John Moore and Sarah Nixey. Through most of 1997, the band recorded their debut album with Auteurs collaborator-and-producer Phil Vinall in several London studios, including Milo and The Drugstore. The country folk, easy listening and pop album is named for Graham Greene's 1935 novel eponymous novel, and has been compared to the work of Portishead and Young Marble Giants. Bontempi drums and a radio scanner, and samples are used on several tracks. The songs' lyrics criticize the mundane experience of living and growing up in post-Restoration England, and explore the themes of single mothers and teenage sex.

Contents

England Made Me was met with mixed reviews; critics focussed on the album's quality, Nixey's voice and the lyrics. It reached number 110 on the UK Albums Chart. Following an argument between Haines and Moore, which almost saw Black Box Recorder disband, they signed to Chrysalis Records in December 1997. After a brief return to The Auteurs, Black Box Recorder toured the UK in early 1998. "Child Psychology" was released as the album's lead single in May 1998 and reached number 82 in the UK Singles Chart; this was followed by "England Made Me" in July 1998, which peaked at number 89. Black Box Recorder did not tour after the album's release, making a single appearance at that year's Reading Festival. NME included England Made Me on its list of the 50 best releases from 1998, and was reissued as part of a career-spanning box set in 2018.

Background

Between 1993 and 1996, vocalist and guitarist Luke Haines released three albums with the Auteurs; New Wave (1993), Now I'm a Cowboy (1994) and After Murder Park (1996). After Murder Park received critical acclaim but was not as commercially successful as its predecessors. [1] For around a year, [2] singer Sarah Nixey had been working as a backing vocalist in the band Balloon to harmonize with frontman Ian Bickerton. Bickerton, who wanted more musicians to help the band in a recording studio, recruited Haines and former the Jesus and Mary Chain member John Moore. [3] In 1996, Haines released a self-titled album under the moniker Baader Meinhof, [1] which Moore enjoyed. [4] Haines had tired of listening to his voice and decided to form Black Box Recorder with Moore in March 1997. [5] Moore coined the band's name while flying home from Spain. Moore persuaded Volume magazine to include a Black Box Recorder track on their next compilation album, prompting Haines to visit Moore at his residence in Little Venice, London, to make noise. [4]

With fruitless results, the Moore and Haines began creating a song with the idea of having Nixey sing; by this point, Haines had written "Girl Singing in the Wreckage" while Moore had written "England Made Me". The pair habitually wrote material without exerting much effort to create simple compositions. [4] Nixey, who had been helping Moore with his own songs, received a fax promising to make her famous if she sang on "Girl Singing in the Wreckage". [2] She had been aware of the Auteurs through friends, and owned a copy of the Jesus and Mary Chain album Psychocandy (1985) but did not know the pair personally. [3] Nixey was unsure about fronting Black Box Recorder but Moore encouraged her by saying he liked her voice. Nixey initially agreed to sing on one track [3] that was due to be released on the Volume compilation. When this release did not occur, [2] the trio planned to make an extended play (EP) and send demos to record labels. [6]

Recording

Black Box Recorder went to a basement studio in Camberwell, London, with producer and Auteurs collaborator Phil Vinall, where they recorded "Girl Singing in the Wreckage". Moore was aware of Vinall's earlier work with Haines; he calling Vinall a "somewhat intense individual, and the atmosphere was often dark, bordering on Pinteresque", which he felt was appropriate for their forthcoming album. Hut Records, which had released Haines' earlier work, paid the band an advance fee, allowing them to move sessions to the basement of Milo Studios in Hoxton Square, London. Here, they recorded "New Baby Boom" and "England Made Me", the latter of which was recorded the same day Tony Blair became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Moore said "England Made Me" is "new-slow, new-nightmarish, and new-cruel, but definitely not New Labour". Charlie Inskip, who had worked with Haines, became the band's manager. [4]

Despite the lack of commercial appeal, the songs were attracting interest from potential labels such as Island Records. During the season, the band wrote more material at Moore's and Haines' residences in Camden Town. As they ran out of money for recording, connections through The Jesus and Mary Chain saw sessions moved to that band's studio The Drugstore in Walworth Road. In two three-day sessions they recorded "It's Only the End of the World", "Child Psychology", "I. C. One Female", "Swinging", "Kidnapping an Heiress", "Hated Sunday", "Brutality" and "Jackie 60". Sessions then returned to Milo Studios, where Vinall mixed "Ideal Home"; during a Sunday afternoon, Haines and Moore mooted the idea of recording a cover of "Up Town Top Ranking" (1977) by Althea & Donna. The pair had told Nixey she would not be required for that day's session so she went out clubbing. When they called her to record the cover, she had gone to bed. To persuade her, they told her the session would take only an hour but Nixey said she did not know the words, to which they replied they did not either. [4]

To Haines' surprise, Virgin Records, who owned Hut Records, approved another album from The Auteurs; they recorded four tracks before he continued working on England Made Me. [7] Sessions concluded in autumn with the recording of "Wonderful Life", "Lord Lucan Is Missing" and "Factory Radio" at Milo Studios. The band and Vinall produced most of the tracks except "Ideal Home", which was solely produced by the band. Several engineers worked on the album; Vinall, Martin Jenkins, Teo Miller, Pete Hofmann and the band. Miller mixed most of the songs while Vinall mixed one of them. [8] The cover of "Up Town Top Ranking" ends with a reverb-enhanced crashing sound, which came from Vinall kicking amplifiers. When they remixed the song at On-U Sound Studios, London, the sounds were made louder. [4]

Composition and lyrics

Portishead (6209170063).jpg
Ymg 008.jpg
The sound of England Made Me has drawn comparisons to the work of Portishead (top) and Young Marble Giants (bottom).

Overview

The music of England Made Me has been described as country folk, [9] easy listening [1] and pop, [10] and recalls the sound of Young Marble Giants. [9] Pitchfork contributor Michael Sandlin said Black Box Recorder deliver a "mildly morose but slightly tongue-in-cheek Sylvia Plath-meets-Paul McCartney pop sensibility" with elements of the work of Portishead. [11] Black Box Recorder worked as a collective in contrast to the Auteurs, of which Haines was the leader. [12] Jason Ferguson of MTV said "wispy samples will waft through the proceedings or the band will get a little carried away and almost start to rock". [13] Moore said Vinall took pride in refining the drum sound on the album and that they used instruments they had accumulated, including Bontempi drums on "It's Only the End of the World", a musical saw, a santoor imported from Iran, and an ex-police radio scanner on "I. C. One Female". [4]

Moore said Black Box Recorder proposed calling the album Mine Camp and Goodbye Beachy Head before landing on England Made Me. [4] The Quietus 's Jude Rogers wrote Graham Greene's 1935 novel England Made Me , which explores a "disreputable man wrestling with his conscience", gave the album its title. [14] AllMusic reviewer Stanton Swihart wrote the band lambasted life in England, the "bland, dull mundaneness of daily living as well as the stale political world", and that the album deals with issues ranging from "teenage sex and single mothers to repressive family life and wife swapping". [10] Sandlin called it an "anti-tribute to the shame, horror and general degradation that must naturally come" with growing up in post-Restoration England. [11]

Tracks

According to Gil Kaufman of MTV, Nixey acts as a character who starts the album by "surviving a plane crash", giving the band their name. [15] "England Made Me" starts with Nixey inflicting pain on insects; [16] for the rest of the song, she stays off boredom by contemplating staging a murder. [17] Moore called it a "paean to Graham Greene and British seediness"; [4] Niles Baranowski of Consumable Online said on "New Baby Boom", Nixey equates "teen pregnancy [a]s some sort of bad hair day". [18] Moore said the song is about a ghost pregnancy that involved singer Gary Barlow. [4] "It's Only the End of the World" summarizes disillusionment of people in their 20s at the end of the 20th century [11] while Moore said it is about loss of innocence. [4] "Ideal Home" is a homage to property ownership, [19] and according to Tony Fletcher of MTV, the "pettiness of middle class suburban values". [20]

Sandlin said "Child Psychology" describes a child who is intellectually stunted by irreversible neglect by misguided parents. [11] In the song, Nixey repeats the lyric "Life is unfair / Kill yourself or get over it" in a mantra-like way. [10] Moore said the song was influenced by The Tin Drum (1959) by Günter Grass, "Is That All There Is?" (1969) by Peggy Lee and an Open University-operated psychology course he attended. [4] In a review for NME , journalist Kitty Empire called "Up Town Top Ranking" a "warped attempt to reflect Britain's ethnic diversity (possibly)", [21] while Fletcher said Nixey changed the song from a "boastful feminine going-out anthem into a morning-after lament". [20] Elements of trip hop can be found in its breakbeat and frequent loops. [22] Discussing the cover, Nixey described it as "An English woman who sounds very English when singing / speaking in Jamaican Patois". [23] On "Swinging", Moore said Nixey acted as a Blue Remembered Hills -esque character who persuades boys to jump from a cliff face. [4]

"Kidnapping an Heiress" recounts the kidnapping of Patty Hearst; it is sung from the perspective of the Symbionese Liberation Army [18] and includes a reference to The Angry Brigade. [24] The album concludes with "Hated Sunday", which Empire said evokes the work of Morrissey with "its vista of endless, depthless grey days". [21] Ferguson said the addition of four bonus tracks on the US version aided in "extend[ing] the misery" for longer. [13] One of these is a cover of Terry Jacks' 1974 hit "Seasons in the Sun", on which according to Spin 's Joshua Clover, Nixey sounds "as if she's singing the grocery list", [16] while Ink 19 writer Matthew Moyer said the band "pervert [the song] to its most evil and base nature". Moyer also said "Lord Lucan Is Missing" recalls the work of Baader Meinhoff "but with ten times the sugar". [25] Fletcher said it is the album's sole upbeat song, "and that's probably because the central character (a British nobleman who disappeared after a crime spree) is someone other than the singer". [20]

Release and promotion

Nixey lost enthusiasm for working in theatre and was working as a temp across London. She stopped this type of employment a week before the band signed with Chrysalis Records, [3] in December 1997. According to Nixey, A&R representative Gordon Biggins' first words to her asked if she wanted to go solo rather than working with Haines and Moore, who two days earlier had argued and almost disband Black Box Recorder until Nixey mediated between them. The band liked Biggins enough to sign with the label. [4] Between the end of recording England Made Me and its release, the Auteurs recorded How I Learned to Love the Bootboys (1999), [7] which was influenced by the atmospheric nature of England Made Me. [26] In February and March 1998, Black Box Recorder toured the UK. [27]

Chrysalis Records released England Made Me on 20 July 1998. [28] The album's cover features a 1973 photograph of wrestler Adrian Street and his miner father taken by Dennis Hutchinson at Beynon's Colliery in Blaina, Wales. [29] Haines said Street, who was cross-dressing, was showing off his championship belt while his father reproachfully stares at him. Haines said he and Moore used to watch wrestling when they were children until it "got axed because it became too pantomime". [30] Hutchinson's photograph is included in Simon Garfield's book The Wrestling (1996); Garfield put the band in contact with Street to ask his permission to use the photograph for the album. Street was enthusiastic about the prospect, hoping the band would sell a million copies of it. [4]

A photograph of the England football team performing a Nazi salute at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin was planned to be used as the album's cover; [31] journalist Owen Hatherley said had the image been used, the album would have "truly encapsulated British fascism by adding sport to the litany of untrustworthy outsiders". [19] The band did not tour to promote the album [32] but they performed at the Reading Festival the following month. [27] The cover of the US version, which Jetset Records issued on 6 July 1999, [33] depicts a girl in a bed who appears "bored and morbidly introspective – [it] tells you most everything you need to know" about the band, according to Sandlin. [11] The US version includes extra tracks "Wonderful Life", "Seasons in the Sun", "Factory Radio" and "Lord Lucan Is Missing"; [28] Haines said he struggled to get the album issued in the US due to its highly English nature. [12]

The release of "Child Psychology" as the lead single from England Made Me was originally planned for April 1998 [5] but was postponed to 4 May; "Girl Singing in the Wreckage" and "Seasons in the Sun" were included as B-sides. [28] The video for "Child Psychology", which was directed by Clio Barnard, [34] depicts children in a bath that is located in a forested swamp. [35] "Child Psychology" was banned from MTV and radio stations in the UK due to the lyric "Life is unfair / Kill yourself or get over it". [14] Nixey stated at the time; "I think the line was actually incredibly positive ... We just thought it was tough love really, nothing negative about it". [6] Because the song was released in the US shortly after the Columbine High School massacre, disc jockeys played the chorus backwards to avoid causing offence. [14]

"England Made Me" was released as the album's second single on 6 July 1998. The CD version featured "Factory Radio" and "Child Psychology" as the B-sides, [28] while the seven-inch vinyl edition included a cover of "Lord Lucan Is Missing" (1980) by the Dodgems. [36] The video for "England Made Me", directed by Sonja Phillips, [4] opens with an interior shot of an office building with staff members miming to the song. It cuts to children in a park doing the same, before the band members appear to walk down a street. People outside a farm house are seen miming; it ends with more footage of the band members. [37] To promote the single, the band supported Pulp at their show in Finsbury Park, London and performed at the T in the Park festival. [27]

"Wonderful Life", "Seasons in the Sun", "Factory Radio", "Lord Lucan Is Missing", a remix of Uptown Top Ranking" and the music videos for "Child Psychology" and " England Made Me" were included on the compilation album The Worst of Black Box Recorder (2001). [38] England Made Me was included in the career-spanning Life Is Unfair (2018) CD box set alongside the band's other albums. [4] A vinyl edition of this box set was issued the following year. [39] In 2022, "Child Psychology" became a viral sensation on the video platform TikTok; in addition to this, a one-hour looped version was posted on YouTube. Due to the renewed interest in the track, Chrysalis Records posted an edited version of the track to Spotify. [40] Alexis Petridis, writing for SuperDeluxeEdition, attributed the virality to Billie Eilish posting a video of herself enjoying the track. In 2023, England Made Me was re-pressed on vinyl to coincide with the album's 25th anniversary. [22]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svgStar empty.svg [10]
Alternative Press 3/5 [41]
NME 7/10 [21]
Pitchfork 6.2/10 [11]
Q Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [42]
Rolling Stone Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svgStar empty.svg [9]
The New Rolling Stone Album Guide Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [43]
Select 4/5 [44]
Spin 8/10 [16]
The Village Voice A− [45]

Reviews of England Made Me were mixed. According to Swihart, though the album does not immediately appear to be a satirical statement on "anything, but rather an exquisite, even upbeat, bit of pop ... [e]ven when Black Box Recorder do inject a bit of pop cheerfulness into the music, it is seemingly done ironically". [10] Rolling Stone writer James Hunter said Black Box Recorder are "totally of their time, ignoring guitar rock on the one hand and dance music on the other, and insisting on composure and clarity. Along the way, England Made Me gets off on its own erudite kicks". [9] Anna Robinson in The Rough Guide to Rock (2003) called the album a "seductive and perverse listening experience. Sour times wrapped in a sugar coating. Beautiful and change." [1] Clover said; "never once does [Nixey] offer easy emotion; neither does Haines's music let you off the psychological hook with easy melodies". [16] According to Baranowski, the album "isn't without hooks, but musically nothing will catch in your head", except the chorus of "Child Psychology". [18] Ron Hart of CMJ New Music Report said it "provides the perfect soundtrack to those mornings when you're ... wondering what the hell went wrong the night before". [46] Sandlin said at the halfway point, the album slips into "barely-tolerable redundancy" as it loses the "casual, deliberate momentum it'd been building upon". [11]

Some critics commented on Nixey's voice. Hatherley considered England Made Me to be in a "different league entirely" due to the substitution of Haines' "perpetually irritated rasp with the perfect vowels" of Nixey. [24] Empire said Nixey's "opiated debutante tones take Haines' odium to new, discomfiting extremes", [21] while Ferguson called her the band's "secret weapon". [13] According to Moyer, the "innate beauty of Black Box Recorder is that Nixey can sing so sweet and innocently about kidnappings, murder, and the decay of Swinging London". [25] Robert Christgau in The Village Voice said Nixey has a "rich, delicate, contained" voice that is "so neurotic that to expect her to give of herself would be meaningless". [45] Sandlin considered her to have the kind of limited, faint murmur that is "certainly pleasant enough to draw you into her world without hope. But soon, you just feel yourself aching for her to begin screaming her dainty lungs out, just to shake up the melancholic monotony a bit". [11]

Attention was also drawn to the album's lyrics, which critics were mixed on. Swihart said the songs Haines and Moore compose are "cleanly stylized in a way that conceals the raw-nerved lives their characters exist in but are also reflective of the internalization of such relentless barrenness" as the band "seemingly approach their subjects without judgment". [10] Ferguson said the album serves as the "most elegant paean to suicide ever committed to tape. The fact that it's a song-suite almost entirely dedicated to how depressing England is ... you really have to wonder how the trio made it through the studio sessions without any self-inflicted wounds". [13] According to Jamie Kiffel of Lollipop Magazine; "rarely do the lyrics get as specific as their simple singability would imply" as exemplified by "England Made Me". He added the "stories are weird, realistic, and leave plenty of room for your mind to color in the humor with a black marker". [47] Sandlin wrote the band "just keep churning out more quaint songs about resigned depression" and after a while, the listener is "left with empty sorrow and overly reflective gobbledygook". [11] Empire said; "curiously, though, it's the tunes less concerned with dissing Blighty and more preoccupied with escape and revenge that stay with you". [21] Baranowski found it easy to laugh at some of the lyrics, noting Nixey is singing what Haines wrote; in one track Nixey is "pretending to be Haines who is pretending to be a teenaged mother". [18]

England Made Me charted at number 110 on the UK Albums Chart, and "Child Psychology" and "England Made Me" peaked at numbers 82 and 89, respectively, on the UK Singles Chart. [48] NME ranked the album 31st on their list of the year's 50 best releases. [49]

Track listing

All songs written by Luke Haines and John Moore, except for where noted. [8]

  1. "Girl Singing in the Wreckage" – 2:42
  2. "England Made Me" – 4:00
  3. "New Baby Boom" – 2:10
  4. "It's Only the End of the World" – 5:21
  5. "Ideal Home" – 2:39
  6. "Child Psychology" – 4:08
  7. "I. C. One Female" – 2:19
  8. "Up Town Top Ranking" (Althea Forrest, Donna Reid) – 3:57
  9. "Swinging" – 3:52
  10. "Kidnapping an Heiress" – 2:46
  11. "Hated Sunday" – 3:16

Personnel

Personnel per booklet. [8]

Charts

Chart performance for England Made Me
Chart (1998)Peak
position
UK Albums (OCC) [48] 110

Related Research Articles

The Auteurs were a British alternative rock band of the 1990s, and a vehicle for songwriter Luke Haines. Several bands influenced by the Auteurs have taken their names from the band's songs. The Polish band Lenny Valentino name is derived from a song on the Auteurs' album Now I'm a Cowboy and Valet, a band based in Minneapolis took its name from the song "Valet Parking" from another album, New Wave.

Black Box Recorder were an English indie rock band. They debuted in 1998 with England Made Me and followed this up with The Facts of Life, which gave them their first hit with the single of the same name in April 2000. Their third album, Passionoia, was released in 2003. There is also a compilation album, The Worst of Black Box Recorder, a collection of B-sides, cover versions and remixes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gentle Giant</span> British progressive rock band

Gentle Giant was a British progressive rock band active between 1970 and 1980. The band was known for the complexity and sophistication of its music and for the varied musical skills of its members. All of the band members were multi-instrumentalists. Although not commercially successful, the band did achieve a cult following.

<i>The Broadsword and the Beast</i> 1982 studio album by Jethro Tull

The Broadsword and the Beast is the 14th studio album by rock band Jethro Tull, released in April 1982 by Chrysalis Records. The album's musical style features a cross between the dominant synthesizer sound of the 1980s and the folk-influenced style that Jethro Tull used in the previous decade. As such, the band's characteristic acoustic instrumentation is augmented by electronic soundscapes. The electronic aspects of this album would be explored further by the band on their next album, Under Wraps (1984), as well as on Ian Anderson's solo album Walk into Light (1983).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Luke Haines</span> Musical artist

Luke Michael Haines is an English musician, songwriter and author. He has recorded music under various names and with various bands, including The Auteurs, Baader Meinhof and Black Box Recorder.

<i>After Bathing at Baxters</i> 1967 studio album by Jefferson Airplane

After Bathing at Baxter's is the third studio album by the San Francisco psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane, released in 1967 as RCA Victor LSO-1511 (stereo) and LOP-1511 (mono). The cover art is by artist Ron Cobb.

<i>How I Learned to Love the Bootboys</i> 1999 studio album by The Auteurs

How I Learned to Love the Bootboys is the fourth and final album by British rock band the Auteurs. It was released on 5 July 1999 through Hut and Virgin Records. Following their third studio album After Murder Park (1996), Haines started the Baader Meinhof and Black Box Recorder projects. He regrouped with the Auteurs to start work on a concept album under the name ESP Kids, though sessions halted as Black Box Recorder worked on their debut album England Made Me (1998). The Auteurs re-started recording their next album in January 1998 at RAK Studios in London; Hut and Virgin were not happy with the lack of single-sounding songs. After writing "The Rubettes", the band finished recording in April 1998. How I Learned to Love the Bootboys is a glam rock album that takes atmospheric influence from England Made Me.

<i>New Wave</i> (The Auteurs album) 1993 studio album by the Auteurs

New Wave is the 1993 debut album by British rock band the Auteurs. In 2014, British independent record label 3 Loop Music re-released the album on 180gsm Vinyl and as a 2CD Expanded Edition which included b-sides, rarities, radio session tracks and the original 4-track demos that led to the band's signing with Hut Records.

<i>Now Im a Cowboy</i> 1994 studio album by the Auteurs

Now I'm a Cowboy is the 1994 second album by British rock band the Auteurs. On 2 June 2014 Now I'm a Cowboy was reissued alongside After Murder Park and How I Learned to Love the Bootboys. The reissue features unreleased songs and liner notes written by Luke Haines. It was released through 3 Loop Music.

<i>Baader Meinhof</i> (album) 1996 studio album by Baader Meinhof

Baader Meinhof is a 1996 album by Luke Haines, under the pseudonym Baader Meinhof. The name is taken from two of the main members of the Red Army Faction, Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, and the album, composed of 10 tracks, tells the history of group, since the ideas that might have inspired the group, their first actions, their travel to Jordan, their capture, the hijacking of a Lufthansa airplane by the members of the "second generation" of the RAF, in 1977 ("Mogadishu").

<i>The Facts of Life</i> (album) 2000 studio album by Black Box Recorder

The Facts of Life is the second studio album by English rock band Black Box Recorder. It was released on 1 May 2000 through Nude Records. Following the release of their debut album England Made Me (1998), the band did not tour to promote it. By early 1999, they were playing two new songs at shows; by June 1999, they were working on a new album. Recording sessions were produced between the band members and Pete Hoffman, continuing through to the end of the year while Luke Haines was occupied with his other act the Auteurs. The Facts of Life is a new wave, synth-pop and psychedelic-lounge rock album that took elements from the works of Momus, Pet Shop Boys and Saint Etienne. Alongside this, the Saint Etienne comparison extended to the lyrical style and frontwoman Sarah Nixey being seen as a counterpoint to that band's Sarah Cracknell.

<i>Passionoia</i> 2003 studio album by Black Box Recorder

Passionoia is the third and final studio album by British rock band Black Box Recorder. It was released on 3 March 2003 through One Little Indian. Following the promotional cycles for the band's The Facts of Life (2000) and musician Luke Haines' The Oliver Twist Manifesto (2001), they started working on their next album. The band and Pete Hofmann produced the recording sessions; in the midst of this, their label Nude Records went bankrupt. Passionoia is a dance-pop album that was compared to the works of Pet Shop Boys and Saint Etienne, building on the lyrical theme of Britishness that they first explored on their debut album England Made Me (1998).

<i>The Worst of Black Box Recorder</i> 2001 compilation album by Black Box Recorder

The Worst of Black Box Recorder is a 2001 album by Black Box Recorder, whose members include Luke Haines, Sarah Nixey and John Moore. It is a compilation of B-sides from the singles of England Made Me and The Facts Of Life.

Sarah Anne Nixey is an English singer-songwriter, best known as the vocalist in Black Box Recorder. Her debut solo album, Sing, Memory, was released on 19 February 2007, followed by Brave Tin Soldiers, released on 9 May 2011. Her latest album, Night Walks, was released on 5 October 2018. Nixey currently lives in London with her husband, music producer Jimmy Hogarth, whom she married in late 2010 and has one son, Reuben and a daughter, Lola. Nixey has a daughter, Ava from her previous marriage with John Moore.

<i>Without You Im Nothing</i> (Placebo album) 1998 studio album by Placebo

Without You I'm Nothing is the second studio album by British alternative rock band Placebo. Recorded in mid-to-late 1998, it was released on 12 October 1998 by record labels Hut and Virgin Records.

<i>Sing, Memory</i> 2007 studio album by Sarah Nixey

Sing, Memory is the debut album from British Black Box Recorder vocalist, Sarah Nixey. Recorded in London, and produced by James Banbury, the album is split into two halves, Sing and Memory. The title is probably a reference to Vladimir Nabokov's autobiography, Speak, Memory. It was released in the UK on 19 February 2007.

"Child Psychology" is the debut single by English indie rock band Black Box Recorder, released in 1998 from their debut album England Made Me. The song features a mixture of spoken word and a sung chorus. The spoken word tells of various incidents from childhood, including refusing to talk, expulsion from school for disruptive behaviour and parents arguing at Christmas.

John Moore is a British musician, best known for his work as the drummer in the Jesus and Mary Chain and as a member of Black Box Recorder.

<i>Rock and Roll Animals</i> 2013 studio album by Luke Haines

Rock and Roll Animals is a concept album by British alternative rock artist Luke Haines. The album follows its predecessor in the way the concept is introduced, but it is in no case a sequel.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keith Top of the Pops & His Minor UK Indie Celebrity All-Star Backing Band</span> Musical artist

Keith Top of the Pops & His Minor UK Indie Celebrity All-Star Backing Band is a London-based indie rock band led by singer-songwriter Keith Top of the Pops.

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 Robinson 2003, p. 48
  2. 1 2 3 Strutt, Anthony (12 March 2003). "Black Box Recorder - Interview". Pennyblackmusic. Archived from the original on 19 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Sinclair, Paul (2 July 2018). "Sarah Nixey on Black Box Recorder". SuperDeluxeEdition. Archived from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Black Box Recorder (2018). Life Is Unfair (booklet). One Little Indian. TPLP1414CDBOX.
  5. 1 2 Harrison 1998, p. 9
  6. 1 2 Redfern 2001–2002, p. 31
  7. 1 2 The Auteurs (2014). How I Learned to Love the Bootboys (booklet). 3 Loop Music. 3RANGE-30.
  8. 1 2 3 Black Box Recorder (1998). England Made Me (booklet). Chrysalis Records. 7243 4 93907 2 0/493 9072.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Hunter 1999, p. 115
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Swihart, Stanton. "England Made Me – Black Box Recorder". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 6 June 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Sandlin, Michael (6 July 1999). "Black Box Recorder: England Made Me". Pitchfork . Archived from the original on 10 January 2019. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  12. 1 2 Waters, Christopher (1 February 2000). "Black Box Recorder London Kills Me". Exclaim! . Archived from the original on 22 November 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Ferguson, Jason. "Black Box Recorder". MTV. Archived from the original on 14 September 2000. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  14. 1 2 3 Rogers, Jude (1 June 2010). "Uncovering The Ballardian Universe Of Black Box Recorder". The Quietus. Archived from the original on 27 December 2014. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
  15. Kaufman, Gil (20 September 1999). "Gay Dad, Black Box Recorder, Dot Allison Introduce Themselves To U.S." MTV. Archived from the original on 5 May 2023. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Clover 1999, p. 194
  17. Ashare 1999, p. 42
  18. 1 2 3 4 Baranowski, Niles (21 September 1999). "Black Box Recorder, England Made Me- Niles Baranowski". Consumable Online. Archived from the original on 30 August 2002. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  19. 1 2 Hatherley 2021, p. 24
  20. 1 2 3 Fletcher, Tony (24 September 1999). "Cool Britannia". MTV. Archived from the original on 6 May 2023. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  21. 1 2 3 4 5 Empire, Kitty (18 July 1998). "Black Box Recorder – England Made Me". NME . Archived from the original on 17 August 2000. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  22. 1 2 Petridis, Alexis (17 November 2023). "Black Box Recorder / England Made Me". SuperDeluxeEdition. Archived from the original on 17 November 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  23. Lai, Chi Ming (18 July 2011). "Sarah Nixey Interview". Electricityclub. Archived from the original on 25 June 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
  24. 1 2 Hatherley 2021, p. 25
  25. 1 2 Moyer, Matthew (24 August 1999). "Black Box Recorder England Made Me". Ink 19. ISSN   1075-8933. Archived from the original on 6 May 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  26. Hubbard, Michael (5 July 1999). "The Auteurs – How I Learned To Love The Bootboys". musicOMH . Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  27. 1 2 3 "Gig List". Nude Records. Archived from the original on 28 April 2001. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  28. 1 2 3 4 "Discography". Black Box Recorder. Archived from the original on 20 August 2007. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  29. Haines 2011, p. 15
  30. Alexander (23 September 2006). "Blast from the past 2000: Black Box Recorder". The Portable Infinite. Archived from the original on 17 May 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  31. Hatherley 2021, pp. 23–4
  32. "Luke Here for Xmas Cheer". NME. 17 October 1998. Archived from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  33. Sansone ed. 1999, p. 38
  34. Thompson 2000, p. 163
  35. Chrysalis Records (1 November 2017). Black Box Recorder - Child Psychology (Official Music Video) (video). Archived from the original on 4 May 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023 via YouTube.
  36. Black Box Recorder (1998). "England Made Me" (sleeve). Chrysalis Records. CHS 5091/7243 8 85713 7 1.
  37. Chrysalis Records (1 November 2017). Black Box Recorder - England Made Me (Official Music Video) (video). Archived from the original on 5 May 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023 via YouTube.
  38. Black Box Recorder (2001). The Worst of Black Box Recorder (sleeve). Jetset Records. TWA40CD.
  39. Black Box Recorder (2019). Life Is Unfair (sleeve). One Little Indian. TPLP 1414.
  40. Teo-Blockey, Celine (15 August 2022). "First Issue Revisited: Black Box Recorder on 'The Facts of Life'". Under the Radar . Archived from the original on 28 January 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  41. "Black Box Recorder: England Made Me". Alternative Press (134): 92–93. September 1999. ISSN   1065-1667.
  42. "Black Box Recorder: England Made Me". Q (171): 142. December 2000. ISSN   0955-4955.
  43. Harris 2004, p. 29
  44. Wilkinson, Roy (August 1998). "Black Box Recorder: England Made Me". Select (98): 95. ISSN   0959-8367.
  45. 1 2 Christgau, Robert (7 March 2000). "Consumer Guide: Cleanup Time". The Village Voice . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  46. Hart 1999, p. 26
  47. Kiffel, Jamie (1 September 1999). "Black Box Recorder". Lollipop Magazine. OCLC   36854274. Archived from the original on 7 September 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  48. 1 2 Chart Log UK: "Chart Log UK: Darren B – David Byrne". UK Albums Chart. Zobbel.de. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  49. "NME.com". NME. Archived from the original on 17 August 2000. Retrieved 6 May 2023.

Sources