Nothing Can Stop Us (album) explained

Nothing Can Stop Us
Type:Compilation album
Artist:Robert Wyatt
Cover:Wyatt-Nothing-cover.jpg
Released:March 1982
Recorded:1980–1981
Genre:Progressive rock, pop rock
Length:39:51
Label:Rough Trade
Producer:Various
Prev Title:The Animals Film
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Old Rottenhat
Next Year:1985

Nothing Can Stop Us is a compilation album by Robert Wyatt released in 1982.

Concept

Consisting primarily of tracks released as singles and B-sides during the late 1970s and early 1980s, it only contains one Wyatt composition (the opening track "Born Again Cretin"). The rest of the songs are cover versions, a selection of musically and thematically disparate songs by a very varied collection of original artists, including Ivor Cutler, 1940s protest songs, Billie Holiday, "The Red Flag", and Spanish-language numbers (including a version of "Caimanera/Guantanamera"). There is a rendition of Chic's "At Last I Am Free".

The two songs not previously issued as singles are "Born Again Cretin" (taken from an NME compilation cassette) and "The Red Flag" (which was previously unreleased.) This was the only full-length LP released by Wyatt in the ten years between Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (1975) and his fourth solo studio album Old Rottenhat (1985)

In 1979, Peter Blackman read his poem Stalingrad (about the Soviet Union's fight against Nazi Germany during the Battle of Stalingrad) to an enthusiastic audience that included Jack Dash, a famous communist trade unionist and leader of many British dock workers. After hearing Blackman perform the poem, Wyatt convinced him to record it.[1] The recording ended up as the B-side of Wyatt's 1981 single Stalin Wasn't Stallin', a cover of a Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet song about the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. The lyrics of which praise the Soviet people and especially Joseph Stalin (the Soviet leader of the time and namesake of the city of Stalingrad, where the battle happened) for fighting back against the Nazi invaders. Wyatt recorded the cover to remind the Western World that although they were enemies of the Soviet Union during the Cold War during the 1980s, they were allies of them against the bigger enemy of the Nazis during World War II in the 1940s when the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet wrote and recorded the original Stalin Wasn't Stallin.

Release

In America, Nothing Can Stop Us was released on CD paired with Old Rottenhat under the title Compilation.[2]

Reception and later recordings

The song "Born Again Cretin" is sampled in the 1999 Italian single "Re-Born Again Cretin" by Almamegretta and Dub Colossus, featuring the vocals of Julianna, which originally appeared on the 1998 album Robert Wyatt e Noi - The Different You, a compilation on CPI Records.

Track listing

  1. "Born Again Cretin" (Robert Wyatt) – 3:10
  2. "At Last I Am Free" (Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards) – 4:17
  3. "Caimanera" (Carlos Puebla, Joseíto Fernández) - 5:18
  4. "Grass" (Ivor Cutler) – 2:39
  5. "Stalin Wasn't Stallin' (Willie Johnson) – 3:22
  6. "Shipbuilding" (Elvis Costello, Clive Langer) - 3:06 (Bonus track added to reissues after 1983)
  7. "Red Flag" (Traditional; arranged by Jim Connell) – 3:09
  8. "Strange Fruit" (Lewis Allan)– 3:37
  9. "Arauco" (Violeta Parra) – 4:35
  10. "Trade Union" (Abdus Salique) – 3:44
  11. "Stalingrad" (Peter Blackman) – 5:46

Personnel

Album cover

The sleeve artwork is by Wyatt's wife Alfreda Benge.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Meddick, Simon . Red Lives: Communists and the Struggle for Socialism . Manifesto Press Cooperative Limited . 2020 . 978-1-907464-45-4 . UK . 12.
  2. Web site: Compilation: Nothing Can Stop Us/Old Rottenhat - Robert Wyatt | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic. AllMusic.