"Erk Gah" | |
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Song by Henry Cow | |
from the album The 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set | |
Released | September 2008 January 2009 |
Recorded | 25 August 1976, Vevey, Switzerland 9 May 1977, Stockholm, Sweden 22 March 1978, Bremen, West Germany |
Genre | |
Length | 18:28 (Vevey) 16:46 (Stockholm) 13:04 (Bremen) |
Label | Recommended |
Songwriter(s) | Tim Hodgkinson |
Producer(s) | Henry Cow |
"Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine" | |
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Song by Tim Hodgkinson | |
from the album Each in Our Own Thoughts | |
Released | 1994 |
Recorded | 1993 |
Studio | Wolf Studios, London |
Genre | |
Length | 16:43 |
Label | Woof |
Songwriter(s) | Tim Hodgkinson |
Producer(s) | Tim Hodgkinson |
"Erk Gah" (later retitled "Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine") is a song written by Tim Hodgkinson for the English experimental rock group Henry Cow. "Erk Gah" was performed live by the band between 1976 and 1978, but was never recorded in the studio; three live performances of the song would later be released on the live album Stockholm & Göteborg in 2008 and the compilation The 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set in 2009. In 1993, fifteen years after Henry Cow disbanded, Hodgkinson recorded the composition under the title "Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine" for his solo album Each in Our Own Thoughts (1994), featuring former Henry Cow members Chris Cutler, Lindsay Cooper, and Dagmar Krause.
"Erk Gah" was the second of two "epic" compositions that Hodgkinson wrote for Henry Cow, the first being "Living in the Heart of the Beast" from In Praise of Learning (1975). [1]
Hodgkinson wrote the lyrics and music for "Erk Gah" in mid-1976. It is a seventeen-minute, "12-tone, atonal" extended song that he described as "dry, astringent, angular, with no compromise to rock music". [2] Known for his "complicated" compositions for Henry Cow (such as "Amygdala" from Legend and "Living in the Heart of the Beast" from In Praise of Learning ), "Erk Gah" was initially a challenge for the group to learn, [1] but by the end of 1976 they had performed it live several times. Hodgkinson's initial set of lyrics takes the form of a soliloquy by a character awaiting execution.
In December 1976 Hodgkinson requested that "Erk Gah" be withdrawn from the band's repertoire until he could rewrite the lyrics. The rest of the group, however, felt that it should remain on their set list while awaiting the new lyrics, and they continued to perform it live. [3] In July 1977 the group, already having made anti-capitalist statements in their music, [4] wanted to make an anti-fascist statement to "critique the rightist elements" in the burgeoning punk rock movement; [5] it was suggested that "Erk Gah"'s new lyrics should reflect this stance. [3] In January 1978, as Henry Cow prepared to depart for Switzerland to record Western Culture, Hodgkinson presented his revised lyrics to the group. The rest of the group rejected the new lyrics, and asked drummer Chris Cutler to write a third set of lyrics. Cutler was unable to do so in the short period of time left before the recording sessions were due to begin, and so "Erk Gah" was not recorded. [1]
Henry Cow continued to perform "Erk Gah" live several times in 1978, though rearranged as an instrumental due to vocalist Dagmar Krause's departure from the group. [6] The group returned to the studio in July for what would become their final recordings before disbanding later that year, but "Erk Gah" was again not recorded. [7]
In 1993 Hodgkinson – along with Krause, Cutler, and former Henry Cow woodwind player Lindsay Cooper – recorded "Erk Gah" with his original lyrics as "Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine" for his solo album Each in Our Own Thoughts . [8] [9] However, in 2008 he would state that "in retrospect I far prefer the Cow version to the later studio version." [9]
When Henry Cow guitarist Fred Frith first saw the sheet music for the then-untitled piece, he exclaimed "Erk Gah", a nonsense expression used by Don Martin in his cartoons for Mad magazine. [2] [10] "Erk Gah" thus became the composition's provisional title, and had not been changed by the time the group disbanded in 1978. Hodgkinson retitled it "Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine" for its recording in 1993.
"Erk Gah" is a fully notated, eighteen-minute twelve-tone serialist work comprising five large movements linked to five sections of text. In his 2019 book Henry Cow: The World Is a Problem , musicologist Benjamin Piekut wrote that Hodgkinson built the piece around the vocal melody, unlike his earlier long-form piece "Living in the Heart of the Beast" which had its lyrics and vocal melody added last. Hodgkinson described the piece as "a wild, shifting, fluid chaos of transient forms"; Piekut states that "tonal, textural, and rhythmic elements mutate often throughout the work". [11]
The first movement of the piece summarizes musical styles and motifs that appear in the subsequent movements. Piekut notes that here Hodgkinson presents "an oscillating figure that marks the entire piece; often appearing in the voice, this figure has Krause rocking back and forth between two pitches". [12] Also present is "a rhythmic figure in which successive beats are divided into an increasing or decreasing number of attacks", or "acceleration or deceleration [that] takes place inside a steady tempo". [12] The second movement begins with the trial of the song's protagonist and narrator. Here the timbre and texture of the work changes, which now features "contrapuntal relations among the various instruments". [12] Cello, flute, saxophone, organ, and guitar are heard in "a twelve-tone pitch space that refuses any tonal center". [13]
In the third movement, the narrator reflects on the optimism of the past, and the music "re-centers around E, a tritone up from the B-flat tonal center" that the piece began with. [13] Krause sings "long melodies in a pitch sequence from the first movement" that soon begins oscillating between C and B♭. Piekut stated that Hodgkinson "modulates the meter and tempo such that Krause's voice remains un-disturbed while the rhythms shift erratically underneath". [13] In the next movement the narrator experiences "loss and nothingness", and this is the only movement that does not start with singing. Piekut described this section as having a "chamber music feel, with many instruments offering atomistic and brittle gestures that cohere at times into unison lines". [13] In this movement Hodgkinson "introduces a new rhythmic motive shared by all but heard frequently in the bass with an oscillating tritone". [13] The final movement, in which the narrator expresses "fury", brings the work to a close with "long tones in the bass that support counterpoint between organ and voice".
Piekut concludes that "Erk Gah" "holds little converse with rock convention" and "sounds more like modernist chamber music scored mainly for amplified instruments". [13] He adds that "[t]here is very little repetition and no single drumbeat to speak of" in the piece, although there are recurrent "eruptive squeals" suggestive of free jazz. [6]
In a review of the archival Henry Cow live album Stockholm & Göteborg in Clouds and Clocks, Beppe Colli felt that "Erk Gah" was too similar to "Living in the Heart of the Beast", and found Krause's vocals "bordering on kitsch in [their] emphasis", but praised the piece's final instrumental movement. [14] François Couture of AllMusic considered the Stockholm & Göteborg recording "a tour de force of complex avant-garde rock" in his review of the album. [15]
Henry Cow never recorded "Erk Gah" in the studio, but did perform it live between 1976 and 1978: [16]
Henry Cow were an English experimental rock group, founded at the University of Cambridge in 1968 by multi-instrumentalists Fred Frith and Tim Hodgkinson. Henry Cow's personnel fluctuated over their decade together, but drummer Chris Cutler, bassist John Greaves, and bassoonist/oboist Lindsay Cooper were important long-term members alongside Frith and Hodgkinson.
Dagmar Krause is a German singer, best known for her work with avant-rock groups including Slapp Happy, Henry Cow, and Art Bears. She is also noted for her coverage of songs by Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill and Hanns Eisler. Her unusual singing style makes her voice instantly recognisable and has defined the sound of many of the bands with whom she has worked.
Chris Cutler is an English percussionist, composer, lyricist and music theorist. Best known for his work with English avant-rock group Henry Cow, Cutler was also a member and drummer of other bands, including Art Bears, News from Babel, Pere Ubu and (briefly) Gong/Mothergong. He has collaborated with many musicians and groups, including Fred Frith, Lindsay Cooper, Zeena Parkins, Peter Blegvad, Telectu and The Residents, and has appeared on over 100 recordings. Cutler's career spans over four decades and he still performs actively throughout the world.
Timothy "Tim" George Hodgkinson is an English experimental music composer and performer, principally on reeds, lap steel guitar, and keyboards. He first became known as one of the core members of the British avant-rock group Henry Cow, which he formed with Fred Frith in 1968. After the demise of Henry Cow, he participated in numerous bands and projects, eventually concentrating on composing contemporary music and performing as an improviser.
The Henry Cow Legend is the debut album of British avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was recorded at Virgin Records' Manor studios over three weeks in May and June 1973, mixed in July 1973, and released in September 1973.
In Praise of Learning is a studio album by British avant-rock group Henry Cow, recorded at Virgin Records' Manor studios in February and March 1975, and released in May 1975. On this album, Henry Cow had expanded to include members of Slapp Happy, who had merged with the group after the two had collaborated on Desperate Straights in 1974. The merger ended after recording In Praise of Learning when Peter Blegvad and Anthony Moore from Slapp Happy left the group.
Western Culture is a studio album by English avant-rock group Henry Cow, recorded at Sunrise Studios in Kirchberg, Switzerland in January and July–August 1978. It was their last album and was released on Henry Cow's own private label, Broadcast, in 1979. Later editions appeared on Interzone in the US and Celluloid in France. Only the UK Broadcast pressing used the custom label artwork design.
Hopes and Fears is the debut album by the English avant-rock group Art Bears. It comprises tracks by Henry Cow, Art Bears's predecessor, recorded at Sunrise Studios, Kirchberg in Switzerland in January 1978, and tracks by Art Bears, recorded at Kaleidophon Studios in London in March 1978.
Henry Cow Box is a seven-CD limited edition box set by English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was released in December 2006 by Recommended Records and comprises the six original albums Henry Cow released between 1973 and 1979, including those recorded with Slapp Happy. A bonus 3" CD-single was given to advance subscribers of the box set which contains previously unreleased material taken from live performances in Europe by the Orckestra, a merger of Henry Cow, the Mike Westbrook Brass Band and folk singer Frankie Armstrong in 1977. The two bonus CD Orckestra tracks were later reissued on the 2019 Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow bonus CD, Ex Box – Collected Fragments 1971–1978.
Each in Our Own Thoughts is a 1994 solo album by English experimental music composer and performer Tim Hodgkinson. It is his second solo album, after Splutter (1985), and comprises six unreleased pieces composed by Hodgkinson between 1976 and 1993. They were recorded in 1993 and co-released in 1994 on CD by Woof Records in the United Kingdom and Megaphone Records in the United States.
Volume 6: Stockholm & Göteborg is a live album by English avant-rock group Henry Cow, and is disc 6 of the 10-disc 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set. It was released in September 2008 by RēR Megacorp as a free-standing album in advance of the box set release in January 2009.
The 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set is a nine-CD plus one-DVD limited edition box set by English avant-rock group Henry Cow, and was released by RēR Megacorp in January 2009. It consists of almost 10 hours of previously unreleased recordings made between 1972 and 1978 from concerts, radio broadcasts, one-off projects, events and the studio. Included are new compositions, over four hours of free improvisation, and live performances of some of Henry Cow's original LP repertoire.
"Living in the Heart of the Beast" is a 1975 song written by Tim Hodgkinson for the English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was recorded in 1975 by Henry Cow with Slapp Happy, who had recently merged with Henry Cow after the two groups had recorded a collaborative album, Desperate Straights the previous year. The song was released on In Praise of Learning in May 1975 by Virgin Records. The song's title is a quote from the nineteenth-century Cuban poet and liberation fighter José Martí. "Living in the Heart of the Beast" was the first of two "epic" compositions Hodgkinson wrote for Henry Cow, the second being "Erk Gah" (1976), later known as "Hold to the Zero Burn, Imagine".
The Orckestra were a 12-piece English avant-garde jazz and avant-rock ensemble formed in March 1977 with the merger of avant-rock group Henry Cow, the Mike Westbrook Brass Band and folk singer Frankie Armstrong. They gave two performances in London in March and June 1977, and then embarked on two tours of Europe between September 1977 and May 1978, where they performed in Italy, France and Sweden.
The Virgin Years – Souvenir Box is a three-CD limited-edition box set by English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was released in 1991 by Recommended Records and East Side Digital Records, and contains three albums Henry Cow made for Virgin Records between 1973 and 1975: Legend, Unrest and In Praise of Learning. Included in the box set is a 24-page souvenir booklet and a Henry Cow fold-out family tree.
"Ruins" is a 1974 instrumental composed by Fred Frith for the English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was recorded in February and March 1974 by Henry Cow, and released on their May 1974 album, Unrest by Virgin Records.
"Beautiful as the Moon – Terrible as an Army with Banners" is a 1975 song composed by Fred Frith with lyrics by Chris Cutler for the English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was recorded in February and March 1975 by Henry Cow and Slapp Happy, and released in May 1975 on their collaborative album, In Praise of Learning by Virgin Records.
"Nine Funerals of the Citizen King" is a 1973 song written by Tim Hodgkinson for the English avant-rock group Henry Cow. It was recorded in May and June 1973 by Henry Cow, and released in September 1973 on their debut album, Legend by Virgin Records.
The Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow is a seventeen-CD plus one-DVD box set by English avant-rock group Henry Cow; it was released by RēR Megacorp in November 2019. The box set comprises the previously released 2006 Henry Cow Box and the 2009 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set, totalling over sixteen hours. A bonus CD: Ex Box – Collected Fragments 1971–1978 was given to advance subscribers of the 2019 Box Redux, and contains newly recovered and previously unreleased recordings, plus the contents of the 2006 box set bonus CD-single: "Unreleased Orckestra Extract". The 2019 Box Redux plus the Ex Box bonus CD contains all the officially released studio and live recordings of Henry Cow, excluding "Bellycan" as released on the 1991 East Side Digital version of Legend, and the complete version of "The Glove" from the 1991 East Side Digital version of Unrest.
"Teenbeat" is a 1973 suite of three instrumentals, "Teenbeat Introduction", "Teenbeat" and "Teenbeat Reprise", by the English avant-rock group Henry Cow. The three pieces were composed by Henry Cow, Fred Frith and John Greaves, and Fred Frith respectively. They were recorded in May and June 1973, and released on Henry Cow's debut album, Legend by Virgin Records in September 1973.