Egon Bondy's Happy Hearts Club Banned | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | the Plastic People of the Universe |
Cover: | Egon Bondys Happy Hearts Club Banned.jpeg |
Released: | 1978 |
Recorded: | 1974–1975 |
Genre: | Rock |
Length: | 52:54 |
Label: | Globus Music |
Next Title: | Pašijové hry velikonoční |
Next Year: | 1978 |
Egon Bondy's Happy Hearts Club Banned is an album by Czech underground band the Plastic People of the Universe.[1] It was recorded in 1974/75, mainly at Houska Castle, enabled by the castle's then warden Svatopluk Karásek, with some songs being recorded in Prague.[2] The album could not be officially released and distributed under the former Communist regime in Czechoslovakia; instead fans duplicated tapes with one another, often resulting in poor technical quality. It was released in 1978 in France by SCOPA Invisible Production.[3] In the Czech Republic a remastered version was published in 2001 by Globus Music. The album title is a parody of the Beatles' album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Most of the songs on the record are settings of poems by Egon Bondy.[4] The author of the album title is Ivan Hartl, a Czechoslovak emigrant living in London.
Music critic Robert Christgau named the album one of the few import-only records he loved yet omitted from (1981).[5] The Globe and Mail wrote: "They clearly define a heavy bass-drums bottom over which the soloists duel wonderfully with these incredibly sinister riffs. It's a sort of musique noir, evoking images out of Carol Reed's The Third Man, Welles' The Trial and the dark doings and damp streets of Fritz Lang's films noirs of the late 1940s. The album's opening cut, '20', typically sounds like eccentric Procol Harum, though in place of one of Robin Trower's guitar solos Brabanec lays out a devastating sax solo in the manner of Coltrane."[6] The Spin Alternative Record Guide praised the album's "sardonic pleasures."
All music composed by Milan Hlavsa; texts are listed.