The Seaside | |
Type: | demo |
Artist: | Cardiacs |
Cover: | Cardiacs The Seaside.png |
Caption: | Original cassette cover |
Released: | 1984 |
Recorded: | 1980–1983 |
Studio: | Crow (London) |
Length: | 57:06 |
Label: | Alphabet |
Prev Title: | Toy World |
Prev Year: | 1981 |
Next Title: | Rude Bootleg |
Next Year: | 1986 |
The Seaside is the third demo album from English rock group Cardiacs. The album originally featured the second recording of what would become the band's only hit single, "Is This the Life?". It is the last of the band's releases to feature keyboard player/drummer/singer Mark Cawthra and the first to feature keyboard player William D. Drake (as well as being the only album to feature two other musicians who were briefly Cardiacs members - Graham Simmonds and Marguerite Johnson).
The album is composed of material the band had written and performed between 1980 and 1983. Initially The Seaside was only produced on cassette (as with earlier Cardiacs album releases), and was only made available through the band's fan club and at concerts. It is notable for having been the first formal release on the band's own label, the Alphabet Business Concern, and a showcases a much cleaner, fuller sound than their previous cassette tapes. The cassette has three known versions - the first featuring a stamped sleeve, the second a black and white picture of bass player Jim Smith, and the third a coloured version.[1]
Several tracks on the cassette album were re-recorded for subsequent releases. "Is This the Life?", "A Little Man and a House" and "R.E.S." were all re-recorded and released five years later on Cardiacs' 1988 album A Little Man and a House and the Whole World Window. "Nurses Whispering Verses" was eventually re-recorded a decade later for the band's 1996 album Sing to God (albeit with different lyrics). Earlier recordings of "Nurses Whispering Verses" and "Is This the Life?" had previously appeared on the Toy World cassette.
The album captures the band in a transitional phase, with two distinct lineups of the band featured. Both featured Mark Cawthra (who moved between drums and keyboards during different recording sessions) and his voice is featured prominently on the album, occasionally sharing lead vocals with Tim Smith. Cawthra would leave the band amicably during the sessions for The Seaside in order to pursue his own projects.
The Seaside was reissued on CD in 1995, with "Nurses Whispering Verses", "Is This the Life?", "A Little Man and a House" and "Dinner Time" all removed from the track listing. The reason provided for these omissions was that the master tape containing those four songs had been damaged and the recordings lost. Despite that, November 2015 saw the release of box set which reinstated, and remastered, all the original tracks.
All tracks written and arranged by Tim Smith, except where noted. Writing credits per the Cardiacs Book;[2] lyrics not credited on album.
Additional musicians
Technical
Seaside Treats | |
Type: | video |
Artist: | Cardiacs |
Released: | 31 December 1984 |
Length: | 22:38 |
Label: |
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Producer: | Tim Smith |
Director: | Tim Smith |
Seaside Treats | |
Type: | EP |
Artist: | Cardiacs |
Cover: | Seaside_Treats_12.jpg |
Released: | 1985 |
Length: | 18:38 |
Label: | Alphabet |
Producer: |
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Seaside Treats is a video and extended play (EP) consisting of three and four songs from The Seaside respectively. The video could be found in the very small number of "Seaside bags" sold at concerts which also contained the EP, the Cardiacs Book, a poster, a badge and a stick of Cardiacs seaside rock. The VHS, featuring alternative comedy sketches by the band, was released on 31 December 1984,[3] and the 12-inch EP in 1985. A promo video for "A Little Man and a House" also appeared on the Jettisoundz compilation VHS Pirates of the Panasoniks.[4]
All tracks written and arranged by Tim Smith; lyrics of "To Go Off and Things" by Mark Cawthra.
Cardiacs
with:
Other musicians