Disinterest (album) explained

Disinterest
Type:studio
Artist:the Servants
Cover:Disinterest (album).jpg
Released:1990
Recorded:17–18 April 1990
Studio:Golddust, Bromley
Genre:Indie rock, art rock
Length:42:40
Language:English
Label:Paperhouse
Producer:Mark Dawson
Next Title:Small Time
Next Year:2012

Disinterest is the first album by English indie band the Servants. The record was released in 1990 on Paperhouse Records.

Recording

Disinterest was recorded by Mark Dawson.

On the context of the recording, David Westlake says: “The album came out of a set of unspeakable frustrations and miscellaneous perversity.”[1] There were label issues: “We ended up with the record company for whom we did the album not directly through choice.”[2]

The album was recorded cheaply. Luke Haines later wrote: “The initial plan is to record with Steve Albini, but this never happens. Then Kramer’s name is mentioned as a possible producer. Nope. Eventually the album is recorded and mixed in office hours over five days in a demo studio in Bromley.”[3]

Release history

Paperhouse Records issued Disinterest in LP and CD formats in 1990.

Paperhouse took the song “Look Like a Girl” from the album for release as a 7” single in August 1990 (the Servants' fourth single). Two live recordings appear on the B-side: “Bad Habits Die Hard” (otherwise unrecorded), and “It’s My Turn” (the Servants' previous single); both live tracks were recorded on 4 May 1989 at AJZ Gaskessel in Biel/Bienne, Switzerland. The words “in case of Fire break Glass” are etched into the single’s run-out groove: a Westlake comment on record-label Paperhouse resulting from an ill-omened partnership, between Glass Records and Fire Records.[2]

Disinterest has long been unavailable. Interviewed in 2014, David Westlake said: “Unfortunately, the album was deleted not long after release. It hasn’t been available for more than twenty years and I don’t see it being reissued.”[1] Likewise, Luke Haines says Disinterest is “stuck in an irretrievable record company quagmire, where it looks set to remain.”[3]

Reception

Mojo magazine included Disinterest in its December 2011 list of the greatest British indie records of all time; Clive Prior described the album as “Arty, experimental and notable for Westlake’s fabulously mordant lyrics.”[4] Tim Peacock at Record Collector magazine observed in 2013 that: “while it’s recently been dusted down for critical reappraisal, [''Disinterest''] remains out of print.”[5] Matthew Fiander at PopMatters called Disinterest “a great record.... Angular and bittersweet.”[6]

Luke Haines describes Disinterest as “art rock, ten years too late and fifteen years too early”.[7] [8]

Track listing

Side one

  1. Move Out (3:40)
  2. The Power of Woman (3:25)
  3. Restless (3:47)
  4. Third Wheel (3:06)
  5. Thin-Skinned (2:42)
  6. Self-Destruction (2:45)

Side two

  1. Hush Now (5:40)
  2. They Should Make a Statue (2:58)
  3. Hey, Mrs John (2:55)
  4. Look Like a Girl (4:07)
  5. Big Future (2:51)
  6. Afterglow (4:44)

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: David Westlake interview . Strutt . Anthony . 6 June 2014 . pennyblackmusic.co.uk . 25 August 2023 .
  2. Web site: Interview with David Westlake . Carry . Mark . 19 May 2014 . Fractured Air . 25 August 2023 . 18 May 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150518090809/http://fracturedair.com/2014/05/19/time-has-told-me-the-servants/ . bot: unknown .
  3. Small Time . Small Time (album) . Luke . Haines . Luke Haines . . 2012 . 4 . booklet . . CDB RED 535 . London.
  4. Prior . Clive . December 2011 . 100 Greatest British Indie Records of All Time . Mojo – Indie Special . London . . 6 September 2023.
  5. Peacock . Tim . January 2013 . The Servants: Small Time/Hey Hey We're The Manqués . 100 . Record Collector . . 25 August 2023.
  6. Web site: The Servants: Hey Hey We're the Manqués . Fiander . Matthew . 14 January 2014 . PopMatters . 25 August 2023 .
  7. Reserved . Luke . Haines . Luke Haines . . 2006 . 11 . booklet . . CDM RED 297 . London.
  8. Book: Haines, Luke . Luke Haines . 2009 . Bad Vibes . London . William Heinemann . 10 . 9780434018468.