Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish explained

Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish
Type:studio
Artist:Colin Newman
Cover:Colin_Newman_–_Provisionally_Entitled_The_Singing_Fish.jpg
Released:1981
Studio:Scorpio, London, England
Genre:Post-punk
Language:English
Label:Beggars Banquet, 4AD
Producer:Colin Newman
Prev Title:A-Z
Prev Year:1980
Next Title:Not To
Next Year:1982

Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish is the second studio album by Colin Newman, lead singer of post-punk band Wire. It was released in 1981, through record labels Beggars Banquet and 4AD.

The album is entirely instrumental, with each song titled simply "Fish One," "Fish Two," and so on. Newman took inspiration in part from the experimental work of Newman's Wire bandmates Bruce Gilbert and Graham Lewis as Dome, and from Brian Eno's ambient work. It marked a break from his partnership with producer Mike Thorne over disagreements about pursuing a more commercial, chart-friendly sound.

Record label 4AD reissued both Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish and Newman's third solo album, Not To, as a single disc in 1988.[1]

Critical reception

The album received mixed reviews, and less attention than other albums in Newman's discography. AllMusic gave it 3 out of 5 stars but no written review. Richard Cook of the British music magazine NME called the album, along with Newman's previous work A-Z, "erratic and needlessly fussy affairs that creak under pretensions to alchemy when studio pottering is nearer the mark."[2]

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: TrouserPress.com :: Wire . DeRogatis . Jim . Neate . Wilson . . 2021-05-31.
  2. Book: Paul Lester. Lowdown: The Story of Wire. 11 November 2009. Music Sales. 978-0-85712-041-0.