Wolf (Hugh Cornwell album) explained

Wolf
Type:studio
Artist:Hugh Cornwell
Cover:Wolf_Album.jpg
Released:June 1988
Studio:Crescent Studios, Bath
Eden Studios, Chiswick
Soundlab Studios, Loughton, Essex
Length:40:30
Label:Virgin
Producer:
Prev Title:Nosferatu
(with Robert Williams)
Prev Year:1979
Next Title:CCW
(with Roger Cook, Andy West)
Next Year:1992

Wolf is the debut solo album by English musician Hugh Cornwell, released in June 1988 on Virgin Records[1] and produced by Cornwell and Ian Ritchie, with additional production on two tracks by Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley.[2] The other musicians involved included drummers Graham Broad and Manny Elias, keyboardists Jools Holland and Simon Clark, brass players Don Weller, Pete Thoms, Steve Dawson and Alex Gifford, singer Haywoode, and guitarist Gus Isadore.[3]

Reception

Cornwell was still in the Stranglers when Wolf was released; writing in Trouser Press Record Guides, Ira Robbins described the album as “a dull stab at playing lightweight dance-pop outside the Stranglers’ sphere” adding that it “contains nothing the Stranglers couldn't have done just as well”.[2] That opinion was shared by the Encyclopedia of Popular Music, which described it as “a hugely disappointing affair, a limp attempt to carve a pop niche”.[4]

Though the album failed to chart, the single "Another Kind of Love", released in September 1988, reached No. 11 on the US Alternative charts.[5] [6] The accompanying music video was directed by the acclaimed surrealist film maker Jan Švankmajer.[7] The Los Angeles Times described the combination as a "fun song and a visual treat".[8] Another review of the live action/stop motion clip suggests that it is the only music video made by Švankmajer,[9] though his work is known to have strongly influenced the Brothers Quay, who worked on the video for Peter Gabriel’s "Sledgehammer" two years before.

Interviewed in February 1998, Cornwell claimed that a number of tracks on Wolf had been so well-received by American radio stations that Virgin US had wanted him to go over on tour to promote the album.[10] It was arranged for him to support A Flock of Seagulls, who had taken their name from a Stranglers song and offered to act as his backing band as well as playing their own greatest hits set, but the tour fell through when Cornwell was sacked by Virgin UK.[10] Cornwell was in New York for promotional interviews at the time.[10]

Appropriately enough, Wolf was re-released in the United States on Velvel Records in December 1999[4] (appropriately since Velvel means 'wolf' in Yiddish). The same label had already released and re-released a number of Cornwell's other albums during the course of the year.

Track listing

All tracks composed by Hugh Cornwell

Personnel

Credits adapted from the album liner notes.[11]

Technical

Production information

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalogue
United KingdomJune 1988Virgin RecordsVinylV 2420
CassetteV 2420
CDCDV 2420
EuropeJune 1988Virgin (France) RecordsVinyl124201
United States1988Virgin (USA) RecordsVinyl790947-1
CD790947-2

External links

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hugh Cornwell Discography. Invisible Hands Music. Official Hugh Cornwell website. 15 June 2011.
  2. Ira Robbins, "The Stranglers" Trouser Press Record Guides link. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
  3. Wolf, Hugh Cornwell website link
  4. Web site: Hugh Cornwell Biography. Encyclopedia of Popular Music . 15 June 2011.
  5. Web site: Songs by Hugh Cornwell – Chart Singles Discography. Music VF. Howard Drake. 14 June 2011.
  6. Web site: [{{BillboardURLbyName|artist=hugh cornwell|chart=all}} Hugh Cornwell – chart history]. Billboard. 15 June 2011.
  7. Web site: Hugh Cornwell: Interview. 22 October 2006. Clarkson. John. Penny Black Music. 15 June 2011.
  8. Chris Willman, "Sound & Vision: Sam Kinison Reaches for a New Low", Los Angeles Times, 18 December 1988. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
  9. Michael Brooke "Another Kind of Love" Illuminations website link. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
  10. Kinson, Tony, "Hugh Cornwell Interview", The Torture Garden. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  11. Web site: Wolf. Discogs. 7 February 2022.
  12. Web site: Wolf (US). Discogs. 7 February 2022.