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Plays by Peel of various artist (v/a) compilations released by 4AD. |
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*[[26 August 1980]]: [[Modern English]]: Home |
*[[26 August 1980]]: [[Modern English]]: Home |
Revision as of 01:10, 23 March 2020
4AD is a British independent record label, founded by Ivo Watts-Russell and Peter Kent in 1980. It was originally funded by, and an imprint of, Beggars Banquet. Watts-Russell invited graphic designer Vaughan Oliver and photographer Nigel Grierson to create sleeve art for the label, and as a result, 4AD acquired a visually distinctive identity. The label gained prominence in the 1980s for releasing albums from alternative rock, post-punk, gothic rock and dream pop artists, such as Bauhaus, Cocteau Twins, Modern English, Dead Can Dance, Clan of Xymox, Pixies, Throwing Muses and Watts-Russell's own musical project This Mortal Coil.
In 1987, the label scored an international hit with the dance music single "Pump Up the Volume" by the one-off project M/A/R/R/S. 4AD continued to have success in the 1990s and 2000s with releases from Breeders, Lush, Red House Painters, Camera Obscura, TV On The Radio, St. Vincent and Bon Iver.
(Read more at Wikipedia.)
Links To Peel
“Without John Peel none of us would have had a shot. He was my professor. I was kicked out of school but it didn’t matter – it gave me more time to concentrate on what proved to be my education and my passion.”[1](4AD co-founder Ivo Watts-Russell recalls listening to Perfumed Garden and Top Gear as a teenager)
4AD was one of Britain's key indie record labels from the turn of the 1980s, releasing a string of landmark records that Peel played heavily on his shows in the Thatcher years and beyond, from notable session regulars and Festive Fifty mainstays of the era including Birthday Party, Cocteau Twins and Pixies. In 1999, the DJ included three tracks released by the label among his Peelenium selections to celebrate the previous 100 years of music.
Until the mid-1990s, the label’s distinctive roster reflected the personal tastes of 4AD co-founder Ivo Watts-Russell, who was namechecked in the title of a song by Cocteau Twins that reached #16 in the 1984 Festive Fifty. The label boss also put together This Mortal Coil, a loose collective featuring 4AD musicians and others who scored a #4 placing in the 1983 Festive Fifty with a cover of ‘Song To The Siren’, originally by 1960s Peel session artist Tim Buckley.
Far from 4AD’s gothic and dream pop reputation, Watts-Russell was also responsible for the label's reissue of the LP ‘Le ‘Mystère Des Voix Bulgares’, featuring female choir music from Bulgaria, which had first been released in 1975.[2] Helped by airtime from both Peel and Andy Kershaw, [3] the album was a surprise independent chart hit in 1986, as was its followup two years later.[4]
In 1987, 4AD released the unexpected international chart smash "Pump Up the Volume", a one-off collaboration of label artists Colourbox and A.R. Kane under the name M/A/R/R/S. Although this placed unwelcome strains on relationships, with none of the musicians recording for 4AD again, the label soon found a fresh direction with a new generation of American alternative bands including Pixies, Breeders and Throwing Muses, who were all played by Peel.
Watts-Russel eventually decamped to Los Angeles, before selling 4AD to Beggars Banquet and retiring to New Mexico in 1997. Although 4AD continued to prosper under new management, and Peel did feature occasional sessions by its newer bands, its heyday on his show had now passed.
Long after Peel’s death, Bella Union label head and former Cocteau Twins bassist Simon Raymonde compiled the eighth in an online series on record boxes selected from the DJ’s Record Collection.[5] Focused on the Eighties decade, Raymonde’s choices included three releases on 4AD.
Sessions
List below of Peel sessions by 4AD artists includes sessions by 4AD when on other labels. The 4AD roster during the 1980s also included former members of session band Wire.
- Bauhaus: (2 sessions, 1980-82)
- Birthday Party: (4 sessions, 1980-82)
- Frank Black: (3 sessions, 1994-99)
- Blonde Redhead: (1 session, 2000)
- Camera Obscura: (5 sessions, 2001-04)
- Cocteau Twins: (4 sessions, 1982-84)
- Dead Can Dance: (2 sessions, 1983-84)
- In Camera: (1 session, 1980)
- Lush: (1 session, 1990)
- Modern English: (2 sessions, 1980-81)
- Mountain Goats: (2 sessions, 2003-04)
- Pale Saints: (1 session, 1989)
- Piano Magic: (1 session, 2000)
- Pixies: (4 sessions, 1988-91)
- Stereolab: (6 sessions, 1991-2001)
- Thievery Corporation: (1 session, 1998)
- Tindersticks: (3 sessions, 1993-96)
- Unrest: (1 session, 1992)
- Xmal Deutschland: (4 sessions, 1982-85)
Festive Fifty
According to The Festive Fifty by Mark Whitby (1st edition, 2005, pg195), 4AD had the joint third highest number of Festive Fifty entries of any label in Peel's lifetime (with 51, level with Polydor and Virgin, behind only Rough Trade and Factory), and the second highest number of separate tracks (48, behind Rough Trade).
The list below covers Festive Fifty entries on 4AD; it does not include entries by 4AD artists on other labels. Please add any missing entries.
- Birthday Party: 1981 Festive Fifty: Release The Bats #19 // 1982 Festive Fifty: Release The Bats ATFF#28 / Deep In The Woods #43 // 1983 Festive Fifty: Sonny's Burning #46
- Breeders: 1993 Festive Fifty: Cannonball #08
- Cocteau Twins: 1982 Festive Fifty: Wax And Wane #37 // 1983 Festive Fifty: Musette And Drums #5 / Sugar Hiccup #14 / From The Flagstones #16 / Peppermint Pig #28 / Hithertoo #38 // 1984 Festive Fifty: Pearly Dewdrops’ Drops #2 / The Spangle Maker #4 / Ivo #16 / Donimo #22 / Pandora #38 / Beatrix #39 / Pepper Tree #49 // 1985 Festive Fifty: Aikea-Guinea #5 // 1986 Festive Fifty: Love's Easy Tears #21 / Those Eyes, That Mouth #38 // 1988 Festive Fifty: Carolyn's Fingers #26
- Colourbox: 1986 Festive Fifty: The Official Colourbox World Cup Theme #46
- Lush: 1990 Festive Fifty: Sweetness & Light #27
- M/A/R/R/S: 1987 Festive Fifty: Pump Up The Volume #46
- Pale Saints: 1989 Festive Fifty: Sight Of You #11 / She Rides The Waves #25
- Pixies: 1988 Festive Fifty: Bone Machine #45 / River Euphrates #39 / Where Is My Mind? #30 / Gigantic #07 // 1989 Festive Fifty: Dead #43 / Here Comes Your Man #37 / Wave Of Mutilation #36 / Monkey Gone To Heaven #05 / Debaser #03 // 1990 Festive Fifty: Dig For Fire #49 / Allison #48 / Velouria #31 / The Happening #24 // 1991 Festive Fifty: Bird Dream Of The Olympus Mons #47 / Motorway To Roswell #46 / Planet Of Sound #26 // 2000 Festive Fifty: Debaser ATFF #30
- This Mortal Coil: 1983 Festive Fifty: Song To The Siren #04 / 1984 Festive Fifty: Another Day #33 / Kangaroo #21 / 2000 Festive Fifty: Song To The Siren ATFF#10
- Xmal Deutschland: 1983 Festive Fifty: Qual #32 / Incubus Succubus II #13
Peelenium
- Peelenium 1981: Birthday Party: Release The Bats
- Peelenium 1983: This Mortal Coil: Song To The Siren
- Peelenium 1989: Pixies: Wave Of Mutilation
Compilations
Plays by Peel of various artist (v/a) compilations released by 4AD.
(12" - Presage(s))
- 26 August 1980: Modern English: Home
- 03 September 1980: Modern English: Home
- 27 September 1980 (BFBS): Modern English: Home
(LP - Lonely Is An Eyesore)
- 30 June 1987: Cocteau Twins: Crushed
- 01 July 1987: Cocteau Twins: Crushed
- 21 December 1987: Cocteau Twins: Crushed
See Also
- Record Boxes: Simon Raymonde: includes records by Birthday Party, Dif Juz.
- Festive Fifty Session Broadcasts: Peel's best-of-year selections included Maida Vale recordings by 4AD artists Birthday Party (1981), Cocteau Twins (1982) and Xmal Deutschland (1982, 1983).
- Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie