Skunkworks (album) explained

Skunkworks
Type:studio
Artist:Bruce Dickinson
Cover:Skunkworks_cover.jpg
Caption:Cover design by Storm Thorgerson
Studio:Great Linford Manor (Milton Keynes, England)
Genre:
Length:47:29
Label:Raw Power/Castle
Producer:Jack Endino
Prev Title:Alive in Studio A
Prev Year:1995
Next Title:Accident of Birth
Next Year:1997

Skunkworks is the third solo studio album by English heavy metal vocalist Bruce Dickinson, released in 1996. It is the first and only studio album recorded with the musicians Dickinson put together for the tour supporting the album Balls to Picasso (1994). They disbanded by the end of 1996.

Overview

Bruce Dickinson had intended Skunkworks to be the debut album of a band by the same name. However, his label would not issue the record under any name other than Bruce Dickinson. The album moved from Iron Maiden's traditional heavy metal style to a sound similar to that of bands such as Rush and Soundgarden. The album name refers to the Lockheed code name for an elite military design group. It was produced by Jack Endino, best known for Nirvana's debut album Bleach.

"I had this argument with (my manager) Rod," Dickinson recalled, "and he told me, 'You're a heavy metal singer. You can't change. You can try, but you're stuck with it.' I object to that… I don't mind being a heavy metal singer, but I object to anyone telling me I can't fucking change… Anyway, off we went into the Skunkworks thing… At the end of it all, I was gutted. I should have had a grunge career right then, because I was very angry, very disaffected and I was poor."[2]

The band began touring in the UK and the US in August 1996 in support of the album.[3] Despite his musical evolution, the tour for the album was the first on which Dickinson included a song from his former band: a slightly reworked version of "The Prisoner". Live performances were recorded and filmed in Pamplona and Gerona, Spain on 31 May and 1 June 1996 and four songs were released in an EP titled Skunkworks Live in Japan only in October 1996, through Victor Entertainment. A live video of the shows was released in Japan as Skunkworks Live Video.

The band did not last and, for his next solo project, Accident of Birth, Dickinson reunited with guitarist Roy Z (from Balls to Picasso).

A 2005 rerelease of Skunkworks included previously unreleased songs, and the Skunkworks Live EP.

Cover art

Hipgnosis designer Storm Thorgerson produced the cover art, starting with a hired tree with foliage shaped somewhat like a brain – a play on the town of Braintree, Essex. The tree was trucked to a lake in Scotland, and a photograph was taken with Dickinson standing under the tree. Hipgnosis freelance artist Richard Manning digitally shaped the foliage in Photoshop, and a mirror image was applied. Alterations were made to each side to break the mirrored perfection. Inside the album, bandmember faces were also represented in mirror image, showing one side of their face copied to the other side.[4] [5]

Personnel

Band members
Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bruce Dickinson - Skunkworks. Metal Reviews.com.
  2. Classic Rock No. 36. Classic Rock. 36. January 2002. 44.
  3. Web site: Interview with Bruce Dickinson of Skunkworks . Samudrala . Ram . Ram.org . 8 November 2020 .
  4. Web site: Bruce Dickinson Skunkworks 1995 . Manning . Richard . richardmanning.co.uk . 8 November 2020 .
  5. Web site: Skunkworks - Album 1996 . Hipgnosiscovers.com . 8 November 2020 .
  6. Book: Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970–2005. Oricon Entertainment. Roppongi, Tokyo. 2006. 4-87131-077-9. ja.