The Black Album (The Damned album) explained

The Black Album
Type:studio
Longtype:with live tracks
Artist:the Damned
Cover:Thedamnedblackalbum.jpg
Recorded:May–June and 26 July 1980
Venue:Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, 26 July 1980
Studio:Rockfield Studios, Monmouth, Wales, May–June 1980
Genre:
Label:Chiswick
Producer:
Prev Title:Machine Gun Etiquette
Prev Year:1979
Next Title:Strawberries
Next Year:1982

The Black Album is the fourth studio album by English punk rock band the Damned, and the first to feature Paul Gray on bass guitar. It was released on 3 November 1980 by Chiswick as a double album, with "Curtain Call" filling the whole of side 3, and a selection of live tracks recorded at Shepperton Studios at a special concert for Damned fan club members on side 4. The album peaked at No. 29 on the UK Charts.[4]

Background

The Black Album represented a change in the career of the group and an expansion of their sound. AllMusic critic Ned Raggett noted that "some of the numbers show the band following their original punk vein, but by this point the four...were leaving straight, three-chord thrash to the cul-de-sac revivalists", and that it was "a chance for the band to try everything from straightforward rock to gentler atmospherics". Raggett described "Wait for the Blackout" as a "dramatic psych/punk surge" with "overtly-serious goth affectations", and qualified "Drinking About My Baby" as "goofy but still enjoyable". Captain Sensible later said that Dave Vanian's vocals were moving to a darker direction, and stated "It is goth; we didn't set out to do that but that is just the way it is. He did have a hearse, he was a gravedigger".[5]

The song "13th Floor Vendetta" paid tribute to the film The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971), opening with the lyrics "...the organ plays to midnight on Maldine Square tonight".[6]

Reissues

The Damned's Chiswick back catalogue was acquired by Big Beat in 1981, and The Black Album was reissued in August 1982 as a single album that omitted "Curtain Call" and the live tracks. The artwork for the reissue parodied the sleeve of the Beatles' The White Album, rendered in black with no details other than the group's name embossed in capitals. "It was said that the Beatles had their White Album, we had our Black Album", said Vanian. "The sleeve isn't related to the Beatles in any way". However, Scabies said: "Of course it was to do with the Beatles, I was so sick about the debates of what we should have on the front of it. I said: 'Put the thing in a plain black sleeve and we'll have a go at the Beatles and The White Album". The live tracks were reissued in their own right, with four extra tracks, as Live Shepperton 1980.

The first subsequent reissue of The Black Album on CD reinstated "Curtain Call" and the original artwork, and the 2005 double-CD reissue also reinstated the live tracks.

Tour

The 28-date Black Album UK tour began in November 1980,[7] with reformed 1970s street punk band the Straps as support.

Critical reception

In a retrospective review for AllMusic, critic Ned Raggett called the album hit-or-miss, but added that "tracks of note are still thick on the ground" and that "it's still a surprisingly good blast, a tour de force for Vanian particularly".

Stewart Voegtlin of Stylus Magazine praised the album saying it is "Truly a tale of four sides, this mildly schizophrenic record oscillates between a single side of neon'd, less than zero pop and three slabs of punk songs that sound like a besotted U.K. Subs intoning glee club favourites from boarding school's past." noting Vanian's vocals as "baritone sneers, part dandy, part deviant," describing the album as "Drums and guitars spar; voices wrap their arms around one another and try to outlung the lot: all spit, smiles, and undulating uvulas."[8]

Ian Fortnam of Louder in a glowing review stated "it still stands as The Damned’s psychedelic goth-punk magnum opus." and said "Sounding for all the world like the best album the late-60s Who never made (with ex-Hot Rods bassist Paul Gray channelling his inner Entwistle), Wait For The Blackout, 13th Floor Vendetta and the side-long Curtain Call are well worth the hefty price of admission alone."[9]

Track listing

Note

2005 deluxe edition

Disc oneThe first disc contains the 12 tracks from side one to side three of the original release.
  • Disc twoThe second disc contains the 6 tracks from side four of the original release plus 9 bonus tracks.
  • Notes[10]
  • Personnel

    Credits adapted from the 2005 edition liner notes.[11]

    The Damned
    Additional musicians
    Technical

    Notes and References

    1. https://post-punk.com/the-damned-the-black-album/ Retrieved 15 May 2023.
    2. Web site: Stegall . Tim . These 5 albums embody the Damned’s punk-rock magnificence These 5 albums embody the Damned’s punk-rock magnificence These 5 albums embody the Damned’s punk-rock magnificence . . 28 April 2023.
    3. https://www.loudersound.com/reviews/the-damned-the-black-album The Damned: The Black Album
    4. Web site: 1980-11-29 . THE BLACK ALBUM . 2024-07-15 . Official Charts . en.
    5. Louie Bones. "Interview with captain sensible". "Bigwheelsmagazine.com". 11 November 2011. Retrieved 15 July 2011
    6. The Damned – the Chaos Years: An Unofficial Biography by Barry Hutchinson
    7. Web site: The Damned: Live Performances. whiterabbitskgs.co.uk. 2015-10-31.
    8. Web site: 2009-06-02 . England Fades Away: Stylus Magazine’s Guide to Goth - Article - Stylus Magazine . 2024-06-24 . web.archive.org.
    9. Web site: Fortnampublished . Ian . 2015-08-12 . The Damned: The Black Album . 2024-06-24 . louder . en.
    10. The Black Album . CD liner notes. The Damned. Chiswick Records. 2005.
    11. The Black Album . CD liner notes. The Damned. Chiswick Records. 2005.