LC (album)

Last updated

LC
LC album cover.gif
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1981
Genre Post-punk, dream pop
Length41:30
Label Factory
Producer Stewart Pickering, Vini Reilly
The Durutti Column chronology
The Return of the Durutti Column
(1980)
LC
(1981)
Another Setting
(1983)

LC is the second studio album by English band The Durutti Column. It was released in November 1981 through Manchester record label Factory.

Contents

Background

The album was the first to feature drummer and percussionist Bruce Mitchell. The song "The Missing Boy" is a tribute to songwriter Vini Reilly's friend and label-mate Ian Curtis of Joy Division, who committed suicide in the previous year.

Release

LC was released in November 1981.

It was reissued in January 2013 on the reactivated Factory Benelux as a double-CD package. [1]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Vini Reilly.

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Sketch for Dawn (1)"5:15
2."Portrait for Frazier"3:32
3."Jaqueline"2:18
4."Messidor"2:32
5."Sketch for Dawn (2)"4:34
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."Never Known"6:46
2."The Act Committed"5:03
3."Detail for Paul"2:00
4."The Missing Boy"6:35
5."The Sweet Cheat Gone"2:49

2013 track listing

The 2013 reissue includes the Sordide Sentimental single "Danny"/"Enigma", the Deux Triangles 12" (the original FBN-10), the tracks on A Factory Quartet, Crépuscule compilation album tracks, and demo versions of tracks from LC. [1]

Disc one
  1. "Sketch for Dawn (1)"
  2. "Portrait for Frazier"
  3. "Jaqueline"
  4. "Messidor"
  5. "Sketch for Dawn (2)"
  6. "Never Known"
  7. "The Act Committed"
  8. "Detail for Paul"
  9. "The Missing Boy"
  10. "The Sweet Cheat Gone"
  11. "Danny"
  12. "Enigma"
  13. "For Mimi"
  14. "For Belgian Friends"
  15. "Self-Portrait"
  16. "Favourite Painting"
  17. "Zinni"
Disc two
  1. "Mavuchka"
  2. "Experiment in Fifth"
  3. "Portrait for Paul"
  4. "The Act Committed"
  5. "Portrait for Frazier"
  6. "Never Known"
  7. "Untitled LC Demo"
  8. "For Patti"
  9. "Weakness and Fever"
  10. "The Eye and the Hand"
  11. "Party"
  12. "One Christmas for Your Thoughts"
  13. "Hommage to Martinů"
  14. "Sleep Will Come"
  15. "Piece for an Ideal"
  16. "Piece of Out of Tune Grand Piano"

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [2]

AllMusic wrote, "As great as Return is, this is perhaps even better, signaling a full flowering of [Vini] Reilly's talents throughout the album." [2]

Brian Eno claimed Reilly's album LC as his all-time favourite album. [3]

Personnel

The Durutti Column
Additional personnel

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Factory Records</span> British record label

Factory Records was a Manchester-based British independent record label founded in 1978 by Tony Wilson and Alan Erasmus.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Durutti Column</span> English post-punk band

The Durutti Column are an English post-punk band formed in 1978 in Manchester, England. The band is a project of guitarist and occasional pianist Vini Reilly who is often accompanied by Bruce Mitchell on drums and Keir Stewart on bass, keyboards and harmonica. They were among the first acts signed to Factory Records by label founder Tony Wilson.

<i>Viva Hate</i> 1988 studio album by Morrissey

Viva Hate is the debut solo studio album by English singer Morrissey. It was released on 14 March 1988 by HMV, six months after the final studio album by the Smiths, Strangeways, Here We Come (1987).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vini Reilly</span> Musical artist

Vincent Gerard "Vini" Reilly is an English musician and leader of the post-punk group the Durutti Column. He is known for his distinctively clean, fluid guitar style, which stood out from his punk-era contemporaries in its incorporation of jazz, folk, and classical elements. In addition to his work under that group, Reilly has also collaborated with artists such as Morrissey, John Cooper Clarke, Pauline Murray, Anne Clark, and others.

The Wake are a British post-punk, synth-pop and later indie pop band, formed in Glasgow in 1981 by Gerard "Caesar" McInulty, Steven Allen (drums) and Joe Donnelly (bass), the latter replaced by Bobby Gillespie. Steven's sister Carolyn Allen also joined on keyboards, and remained in the band thereafter. Gillespie left the band in 1983, replaced by Martin Cunning and then by Alexander 'Mac' Macpherson.

Olive were a British trip hop group from London, England. The founding membership consisted of producer, instrumentalist and songwriter Tim Kellett, producer and keyboard programmer Robin Taylor-Firth, and singer Ruth-Ann Boyle. The band has released two albums, the second without Taylor-Firth. Their 1996 single "You're Not Alone" reached number one on the UK Singles Chart.

Ruth-Ann Boyle is an English pop singer. Together with producers Tim Kellett and Robin Taylor-Firth, she formed the British band Olive. The band's single "You're Not Alone" reached number 1 in the UK Singles Chart on its second release in 1997.

John Metcalfe is a British-based composer, arranger and violist, member of the Duke Quartet and a former member of the band the Durutti Column.

The Nosebleeds are a punk band formed in Wythenshawe, Manchester, England in 1976. The band is well known in modern rock history for the later successes of its individual members, notably Morrissey, Billy Duffy, and Vini Reilly. During their early days, they were known as Ed Banger and the Nosebleeds, until the departure of singer Ed Banger.

<i>The Weed Tree</i> 2005 studio album by Espers

The Weed Tree is the second album from Espers, released on Locust Music in 2005. It was, for the most part, a covers album, although it did feature the original song "Dead King". The artists covered were The Durutti Column, Nico, Michael Hurley and Blue Öyster Cult. It also included two traditional songs drawing influence from recordings by Bert Jansch and The Famous Jug Band. The songs were performed in the psychedelic folk style of the band.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Invisible Girls</span> British rock band

The Invisible Girls were a British rock band, formed in Salford, Greater Manchester in 1978, to provide a musical backdrop to the recorded output of Salford punk poet John Cooper Clarke. The band's nucleus was Joy Division and New Order producer Martin Hannett and keyboardist Steve Hopkins, with contributions from, amongst others, Pete Shelley of Buzzcocks and Bill Nelson of Be-Bop Deluxe. The band also played on the first solo album by Pauline Murray, the eponymous Pauline Murray and the Invisible Girls and some singles, and later with Nico for the single "Procession".

<i>The Return of the Durutti Column</i> 1980 studio album by The Durutti Column

The Return of the Durutti Column is the debut studio album by English band The Durutti Column. It was released in January 1980, through record label Factory.

8vo was a London-based graphic design firm formed in 1985 by Simon Johnston, Mark Holt and Hamish Muir. It closed in July 2001.

<i>A Factory Sample</i> 1979 EP by Various artists

A Factory Sample is a 7-inch double sampler EP released in January 1979 by Factory Records of Manchester, England. Funded by a small inheritance which had recently been bequeathed to Tony Wilson, it was the first vinyl recording to be released by the label. The cover of the EP is made of rice paper, dyed silver and sealed inside a thin plastic bag.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruce Mitchell (drummer)</span> Musical artist

Bruce Mitchell is an English jazz drummer, who plays regularly with Vini Reilly in the Durutti Column.

"Searching for Heaven" is the third and final single from Pauline Murray and The Invisible Girls, released in April 1981 on Illusive Records. It was produced by Martin Hannett.

Toby Toman, is a drummer who played with various British bands including The Nosebleeds, Ludus, The Durutti Column, Blue Orchids, and Primal Scream, working often with German singer Nico, known for her role with The Velvet Underground, while she was living in Manchester, England through the 1980s.

<i>Another Setting</i> 1983 studio album by The Durutti Column

Another Setting is the third studio album by English band The Durutti Column, released in August 1983.

<i>Without Mercy</i> (album) 1984 studio album by The Durutti Column

Without Mercy is the fourth studio album by English band The Durutti Column, released in October 1984 on Factory Records. After the band and label boss Tony Wilson were unanimous in their dislike of Another Setting (1983), Wilson pushed the band towards progressing to a new, classical-inspired sound. The band went on to record Short Stories for Pauline, which went unreleased when Wilson refused to release it, though one track, "Little Mercy", kept Wilson's attention. He asked the band to use it as the foundation for a different album, ultimately becoming Without Mercy.

<i>Obey the Time</i> 1990 studio album by The Durutti Column

Obey the Time is the eighth studio album by English band The Durutti Column, released in 1990 by Factory Records. Conceived during the middle of the popularity of acid house in the band's native Manchester, band leader Vini Reilly chose to combine acid house, and other electronic dance music styles, with his signature guitar playing on a new album. He created the album in his home studio with engineer Paul Miller. Drummer Bruce Mitchell only plays on one song, with his slot being filled by drum machines on the remaining tracks. As such, critics have described Obey the Time as a Vini Reilly solo album.

References

  1. 1 2 "Cerysmaticfactory.info".
  2. 1 2 Raggett, Ned. "LC – The Durutti Column : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards : AllMusic". AllMusic . Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  3. Taylor, Paul (25 April 2003). "Durutti Column man speaks out". CityLife – M.E.N. Media. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 28 August 2011.