I Can See Your House from Here explained

I Can See Your House from Here
Type:studio
Artist:Camel
Cover:I Can See Your House from Here.jpg
Released:October 1979
Recorded:1979
Studio:Farmyard Studios, Little Chalfont, England
Genre:Progressive rock
Length:46:04
Label:Gama/Decca
Producer:Rupert Hine
Prev Title:Breathless
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:Nude
Next Year:1981

I Can See Your House from Here is the seventh studio album by English progressive rock band Camel. Released in 1979, a new line up was introduced with founding members Andrew Latimer (guitar) and Andy Ward (drums) joined by bassist Colin Bass (to replace Richard Sinclair) and keyboardists Jan Schelhaas (who joined in 1978 for the Breathless tour) and Kit Watkins (ex-Happy The Man) who replaced Dave Sinclair. At one point, the album was going to be called Endangered Species.[1] [2]

Recording

Work started on the album in summer 1979, collaborating with producer Rupert Hine, at the Farmyard Studios in Little Chalfont. The process also took place in an Elizabethan country house, a residential recording studio that suited the band well. The orchestral overdubs were added at London's AIR Studios. Mel Collins (who also worked with Caravan) contributed to the band's sound on the saxophone, while Phil Collins was chosen to play percussion. Andy Latimer was pleased with the end product, saying Hine "was great fun to work with, he was really up and zappy. I enjoyed making that record. We did it rather quickly and it wasn't a lengthy production."

The album was released in October 1979. It spent three weeks in the chart in late October and early November, reaching No. 45. An accompanying single was planned, but shelved. Instead a maxi single containing an edited version of Andy Latimer and Kit Watkins "Remote Romance" was backed with "Rainbow's End" from Breathless (1978) and a Camel / Mick Glossop production of "Tell Me", first released on Rain Dances (1977). It did not reach the charts. The single "Your Love is Stranger than Mine" / "Neon Magic" followed in February 1980.

Cover artwork

The cover image is based on a joke that was somewhat popular at the time, in which Jesus, while hanging up on the Cross dying, calls out for his disciple Peter to come to him, who does so with great difficulty. The punchline is that Jesus merely wants to tell Peter, "I can see your house from here."[3]

It also pays homage to the 1951 painting Christ of Saint John of the Cross by Salvador Dalí.

Tour

The world tour began on 8 October at The Dome, Brighton, England, following France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Belgium, Spain, Portugal and ended on 29 January 1980 in Koseinenkin Hall of Tokyo, Japan.

Track listing

All credits adapted from the original releases.[4]

Personnel

Camel
Additional musicians

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.magenta.co.il/camel/notes/cdnotes/icsnotes.htm John Tracy's liner notes on I Can See Your House from Here album's Decca 1989 CD edition
  2. http://www.rajaz.co.uk/ Camel – I Can See Your House from Here (1979) album review at www.rajaz.co.uk
  3. Web site: Camel Discography and FAQ – in Jokes.
  4. http://www.discogs.com/Camel-I-Can-See-Your-House-From-Here/release/5690163 Camel – I Can See Your House from Here (1979) album releases & credits at Discogs.com