Axe Victim | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Be-Bop Deluxe |
Cover: | Be Bop Deluxe Axe Victim.jpg |
Released: | June 1974 |
Studio: | Air London; CBS Studios, London; Audio International Studios, London |
Genre: | Glam rock |
Length: | 43:20 |
Label: | Harvest |
Producer: | Ian McLintock |
Next Title: | Futurama |
Next Year: | 1975 |
Axe Victim is the debut album by English rock band Be-Bop Deluxe, released in June 1974.[1]
The music of Axe Victim incorporated elements of progressive rock, blues and folk rock.[2] Overall, the album's sound has been classified as glam rock[2] [3] [4] and art rock.[2]
The material is different from later releases; it was released at the height of the glam rock era in Britain, with the band's music and image being influenced by the musical zeitgeist. Several songs, such as the title track "Axe Victim", demonstrated this glam influence, whilst others, for example, the future concert staple "Adventures in a Yorkshire Landscape", showed their progressive tendencies. At the time of its release, the band's glam image and music was being criticised as being too similar to that of David Bowie, a comparison that would ultimately lead to Be-Bop Deluxe's disbanding as band leader Bill Nelson strived to make more and more unconventional music.[5]
The song "Jets at Dawn", a re-recording of the earlier Smile Records version, holds the distinction of being the longest Be-Bop Deluxe album track, lasting 7:20. The only longer studio recordings are the Sunburst Finish-era B-side "Shine" (at 7:49) and the multi-track "Modern Music" suite.
The album was first released on CD in 1990 with three live bonus tracks. Q Magazine called the album 'painfully contrived [where] only "Adventures in a Yorkshire Landscape" emits that incongruous whiff or originality.
Axe Victim was recorded in AIR London, Audio International Studios and CBS Studios, all located in London, England.[6]
This incarnation of the band, featuring Bill Nelson on vocals and lead guitar, Ian Parkin on rhythm guitar, Robert Bryan on bass, and Nicholas Chatterton-Dew on drums, would only last for this album, before Nelson disbanded Be-Bop Deluxe following the Axe Victim tour and reformed it with several other musicians for the following year's Futurama.
All songs written by Bill Nelson, except "Rocket Cathedrals" by Robert Bryan.
with: