Tales from the Lush Attic | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | IQ |
Cover: | IQ_-_Tales_From_The_Lush_Attic.jpg |
Released: | 9 September 1983[1] |
Recorded: | 2–5 August 1983 |
Studio: | Flame (London) |
Genre: | Neo-prog |
Length: | 45:51 |
Label: | The Major Record Company |
Producer: | IQ |
Prev Title: | Seven Stories into Eight |
Prev Year: | 1982 |
Next Title: | The Wake |
Next Year: | 1985 |
Tales from the Lush Attic, released in 1983, is the debut album by neo-prog group IQ, following the cassette-only demo Seven Stories into Eight. It was also among the first neo-progressive releases, alongside Marillion's Script for a Jester's Tear, released in the same year.
In the style of some classic progressive rock albums, Tales from the Lush Attic consists of one epic song filling out almost an entire side of the original vinyl and shorter songs composing the other side.
The Giant Electric Pea 2006 re-release features a bonus track, "Just Changing Hands", which is credited as running for 5:12 but in reality is 10:18 long and features a hidden track, a short nameless exotic sounding instrumental.
In a retrospective review, Mike DeGagne of AllMusic commented that while the album is highly derivative of progressive rock-era Genesis, "there's an air to this album that gathers attention, especially on the synth-ridden passages." He praised the songs for running long enough for the listener to reflect on the playing, and the numerous unexpected changes in tempo. Paul Stump, in his History of Progressive Rock, commented that "the band are tight enough, and are redeemed by a sense of mission, self-belief and even fun", making particular note of the use of satire ("a commodity as rare as hen's teeth [in progressive rock]") in "My Baby Treats Me Right".[2]
All songs written by IQ.