Airborne | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | Curved Air |
Cover: | Curved_Air_Airborne.jpg |
Released: | 1976 |
Recorded: | Spring 1976 |
Studio: | Trident Studios (London) |
Genre: | Progressive rock, folk rock |
Length: | 39:40 |
Label: | BTM |
Producer: | Dennis MacKay, Curved Air |
Prev Title: | Midnight Wire |
Prev Year: | 1975 |
Next Title: | Lovechild |
Next Year: | 1990 |
Airborne is the sixth studio album by Curved Air and was recorded in 1976. Like their last few releases, it was not a significant commercial success. After a follow-up non-album single, "Baby Please Don't Go" b/w "Broken Lady", the group disbanded. Drummer Stewart Copeland went on to form The Police, while violinist Darryl Way and lead singer Sonja Kristina both pursued solo careers. Bassist Tony Reeves and guitarist Mick Jacques both later became members of the semiprofessional band Big Chief.
The Police covered "Kids to Blame" in early performances, using a stripped-down punk arrangement of the song. Stewart Copeland also reused a guitar riff from "Desiree" in his solo single as Klark Kent, "Don't Care".
The album sessions marked the debut of Stewart Copeland as a songwriter. Around the release of Midnight Wire, he was informed about publishing royalties for songwriters, and responded by churning out compositions until the band accepted a few of his contributions.[1]
Producer Dennis McKay quit the project midway through recording, leaving the remaining four tracks to be produced by Curved Air themselves.
Allmusic described Airborne as an overlooked record and "a strong summation of all that made the group so important in the first place." While appraising the album as a whole as weaker than their first three, claiming it veers towards generic 1970s rock, they regarded "Desiree" and "Heaven (Never Seemed So Far Away)" as equal to anything on the band's strongest releases.
Music and lyrics credits per original issue on BTM records.