Chris
Conway - Alien Salad Abduction
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1 |
Homeworld |
2 |
Andromeda
Bound |
3 |
Hold
On |
4 |
Deep
Space Phone |
5 |
Alien
Salad Abduction |
6 |
Unicorn
Girl |
7 |
Skyrider |
8 |
Fly
High |
9 |
The
Alien Jellyfish Song |
10 |
Echoes |
11 |
Take
Me Away |
12 |
Space
Temple |
13 |
Virtual
Girl |
14 |
Planet
Theremin |
15 |
Wonder |
16 |
So
Long Blue |
Chris
Conway - |
vocals, keyboards, guitars, theremin, tin & low whistles,
kalimba, zither, percussion, samples, effects, vegetables |
- The
Talking Fish
Debbie Robinson - vocals
2
Mick Oxtoby - electric violin 2, 15
Neil Segrott - bass, guitar 6, 11
Andy Fitzsimons - congas 2, 6, 8
Dan Britton - bodhrans 2, 11
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+ special
guests
Andy Nicholls - tenor
sax 10, 12
Carl Peberdy - sitar, vocals 2, 6
Vikki Clayton - vocals
11
Kate Easton - vocals 7, 9
Roger Pugh - vocals 9
Andrea Dale - phone voice 4
- Urban
Tapestry
Jodi Krangle - vocals 2, 9, 15
Allison Durno - vocals 9
Debbie Ridpath Ohi - flute 9 |
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A
huge album of songs on themes of outer space.
Featuring theremins, harmonies,instruments galore, electronica,
strange songs and stranger interludes.
" A beguiling mish mash of Tamla, Steely Dan, bossa nova
and cod cosmics." - Mojo Magazine
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background
Christo
was getting more involved with the Filk Community, and it gave
him the idea of gathering his space songs together for a Filk
album. It also allowed him to record in a more adventurous way
than a folk-roots album would. Things also altered with the arrival
of CCs new keyboard the Korg Triton and the Theremin.
Popular with filkers and non-filkers alike, there is some of CCs
best song work on here. The instrumental interludes paved the
way towards his later work in electronic and new age music.
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influences
Paul
Kantner, Country Joe McDonald, Teddy Randazzo, Little Anthony,
Brian Wilson, The Gentle People, The Flower Kings, Lydia Kavina,
Cheryl Wheeler, LTJ Bukem
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trivia
This
is CCs best selling songs album to date.
Recorded (and released) at the same time as My
Minds Island album - anything too spacey or weird was syphoned
off onto this album, where it grew into a filk based album.
Filk is science fiction folk music.
Deep Space Phone was taken froma genuine ansaphone message
from Andrea Dale.
The 30 second interlude Planet Theremin has been used in a music
education 15 CD and is also one of CCs most popular downloads.
So Long Blue was originally a jazz tune and can be heard
as such on Chris Conway's Happy Landings
CD Sky High
The closing section of Unicorn Girl started out in
a jazz piece too and can be heard on Around Every Corner on Chris
Conway's Happy Landings CD - Think Blue, Count Two
Unicorn Girl was very loosely inspired by the Michael Kurland
book of the same name.
Echoes - the lyrics were written by Nicky Retallick
Planet Theremin was used in an American education 15CD
pack called Music in Our Lives
CC's
fave track - Wonder
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track
by track |
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1.
Homeworld
I wrote this playing piano in a restaurant as the snow came
down outside and I was reading a short story by Edward Bryant
which was also snowbound.
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2.
Andromeda Bound
A complex history. The chorus was inpired by a Cheryl Wheeler
song, the verse riff was inspired by a song by The Dead Poppies.
The bridge came from another song of mine. I was always going
to write "proper" lyrics to this but these just stuck.
This was the first time I recorded with the theremin.
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3.
Hold On
A song written when I was a bit low and it inspired me to get
stronger. I changed the rhythm to this Brian Wilson-like arrangement.
A big inspiration was Teddy Randazzo's songwriting for Little
Anthony.
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4.
Deep Space Phone
Andrea Dale left me a message on my ansafone. I had this image
of an ansafone in orbit. Andrea's message was perfect for this
- I alienized her voice a bit.
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5.
Alien Salad Abduction
Totaly inspired by the album cover art by Joel Nakamura which
I found on the web. The melody was one I did on the whistle
on a Dave Kirk album which must've stuck in my head. Recording
the vegetables was quite a hard task - and a very silly one.
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6.
Unicorn Girl
Inspired by the book of the same name by Michael Kurland. Been
singing this one for quite a while - used to play it with the
Talking Fish. The end melody in 5/8 came from a jazz tune I
used to play with Happy Landings. I think listening to The Flower
Kings inspired this arrangement.
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7.
Skyrider
I found an old book of lyrics I never used. At first i added
them to Space Temple but I prefered that without words. Then
when Kate came round it seemed like a perfect thing for her
to sing.
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8.
Fly High
The time dilation effect with faster than light travel is a
theme I had wanted to write about since reading Lem's Return
From The Stars.
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9.
The Alien Jellyfish Song
Already on the JBR and Live albums I still had to have this
song on a filk album. Wanted to record with Urban Tapestry and
when they started including this song in their set it seemed
a good idea to re-record this classic, and to make it different
do it kinda beaty. Jodi was a great female alien jellyfish.
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10.
Echoes
Space sister Nitallicka sent me this amazing post-apocolyptic
prose out of the blue. It seemd to call out for spacey music.
I was really pleased when the sax went on as it added a more
human feel to the song. The first time I ever wrote music to
another's words.
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11.
Take Me Away
Wrote this when I was fooling around with a new guitar tuning.
The Grey Lady kinda from Life Magic & Love and Call of the
Wild and Earth Child makes a re-appearance here.
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12.
Space Temple
Was fooling with theremin, vocals through a harmonizer, zither,
and tin whistle - the sax just seemed right.
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13.Virtual
Girl
This was the first thing I did on my Korg Triton.This originally
had a different rhythm and I was really just playing with the
new machine. I liked it and it stuck. The words gave me a chance
to blend 2 favourite things, cyberspace, and old movies.
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14.
Planet Theremin
I just had to overdub my new theremin. On a couple of tracks
it is effected - once by a harmonizer and the other by flange
echoe from my guitar effects.
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15.
Wonder
This nearly was on the MMI album but I wanted more acoustic
stuff on this album and it is a pretty spacey song. Jodi recorded
her part in Georgia when she was attending a filk con there.
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16.
So Long Blue
Used to be a Talking Fish favourite, then fell into disuse.
Again the Triton rhythm brought this one back. Mastering this
was a real headache, but I was happy in the end.
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reviews |
Holding
Together magazine - bp |
Two
new shiny circles from Leicester's own David Crosby, both featuring
our man on a plethora of instruments - guitars, keyboards, theremin,
kalimba, zither, vegetables etc - and his trusty lieutenants
the Talking Fish in support.
"Alien Salad Abduction" is a departure, and one of
which Paul Kantner of Jefferson Starship would approve - a collection
of songs with a spacey connection, a journey through the space-time
continuum. if you like. "Andromeda Bound" even name-checks
Grace and the Doktor of Space - and it's a suitably fine exploration.
The title track, a highly amusing novelty song the first time
around, is such a cleverly constructed composition it actually
grows on you with repetition.
"Fly High" features more of those multi-Christos dissolving
into each other like ghostly images; "Virtual Girl"
a wry and witty musing on the vaguaries of modern romance ;
and lets not forget the atmospheric linking pieces, XM/Copernican
Rumbles style between several of the selections.
Both albums are recommended.
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I
never cease to be amazed at this prolific guy and the sheer
amount of stuff he produces. Not only does he keep down a full-time
pivotal role as multi-instrumentalist within the Vikki Clayton
Band, but he's a prodigiously talented musician, singer, songwriter,
composer and producer in his own right. This time he's released
- simultaneously! - two brand new albums which showcase these
talents to the hilt.
Describing
Chris's music to the uninitiated is not easy, for its definitively
genre-hopping nature ensures that it falls between an awful
lot of stools - although it often settles on one or the other
for long sittings! My Mind's Island is ostensibly the rootsier
of the two albums, wherein we experience to the full Chris's
skill in producing well-crafted and thoughtful songs with predominantly
acoustic-based settings. Having said that, there's a fair helping
of Celtic folk and ambient grooves in these songs too, and the
relaxed yet committed, often deeply touching and generally life-affirming
nature of the lyrics makes for an attractive 55 minutes of listening.
The overlap with Alien Salad Abduction occurs in Chris's use
of guest performers - notably selected members of band The Talking
Fish augmenting Chris's own impressive array of instruments
on around half of the tracks, with special guest contributions
from ancillary vocalists (Vikki C, Judith Silver, Jodi Krangle
et al.) too.
The
songs on Alien Salad Abduction, though (as the title might well
imply to the astute!), major more on the overtly witty, frivolous
side of Chris's writing, the fully fledged space hippie having
(almost) come of age on a veritable galaxy of songs embracing
world, fusion, electronic, funky pop and nouvelle-jazz influences
and embodying an intrinsic (if scattergun) whimsy that probably
owes as much to Daevid Allen and Gong as to anything else in
the musical universe. To be absolutely honest, I find some of
Alien Salad a mite disposable, and you certainly have to be
in the right mood to get the most out of this album, whereas
My Mind's Island is more equitable and consistent (and lasting)
in its impact. Chris may be hard to keep up with, but there's
no denying the man's serious creativity or his perennial inventiveness.
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Songbook - Dave White
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Give
'My Mind's Island' a listen. You can't fail to enjoy the intelligently
constructed songs, shimmering with musical colour, rich vocal
harmonies and stunning instrumental work. Chances are you'll
head straight back to the record store for 'Alien Salad Abduction',
which offers more of the same though with a sci-fi/outer space
theme (not at all as naff as one might reasonably expect) and
with Conway's sense of humour more apparent.
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Mojo
Magazine
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A beguiling mish mash of Tamla, Steely Dan, bossa nova and
cod cosmics.
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Chris
Conway is a US born musician who has not been unknown in the
British folk scene. He just released two cd's in the same year.
The first is called alien salad abduction and the second one
My mind's island.
Conway's style is singer/songwriter with a good folkrock touch.
He gets help from Vikki Clayton and a whole group of good musicians.
His cd My mind's island is I think the most popular one of the
two. Nice songs brought in a relax and professional way. His
voice is nice to listen to and he arranged his original songs
into catchy pieces of music. Sometimes with only guitar but
mostly with band. Strong fact is that even with band his music
still sounds small and honest
Alien salad abduction has the same ingredients but has a less
serious undertone. He experiences more with sounds and his arrangements
are more adventures. Suddenly he also sounds much more modern,
did he put more pleasure in this album than in the other one?
The sound is just a little bit better. Both albums show a
talented and singer songwriter who brings his music with fantasy
and the right feeling. Both cd's are welcome additions to
my collection.
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