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"...The Emperor In His War-Room..."
Named after the American
Engineer Robert Van De Graaff's surname and his particle accelerator device for
creating static electricity - Van Der Graaf Generator's second studio album for
1970 came hot on the heels of their January debut - "The Least We Can Do
Is Wave To Each Other". Released December 1970 by the newly formed
Charisma Records - home of Audience, Rare Bird, Everyone, Merrill Moore, Atomic
Rooster, (Keith Emerson's) The Nice and that other huge British Progressive
Rock band Genesis – VDGG’s second platter expanded the experimental musical
horizons laid down by their acclaimed debut.
Equal to its predecessor's
quirky moniker - "H To He Who Am The Only One" is reckoned by Prog
Rockers and VDGG fans alike to be up there as one of the Manchester boys
wildest and best outings – a boundary pusher resplendent with mad Paul
Whitehead artwork (a fave of the Genesis lads too). And this rather brill
little 2005 CD Remaster (complete with two lengthy bonus cuts) bears that out.
Here are the Houses with No Doors...
UK released 30 May 2005 -
"H To He Who Am The Only One" by VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR on
Virgin/Charisma CASCDR 1027 (Barcode 724347488825) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD
Reissue and Remaster with Two Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (71:29
minutes):
1. Killer [Side 1]
2. House With No Door
3. The Emperor In His
War-Room Part 1. The Emperor Part 2. The Room
4. Lost Part 1. The Dance In
Sand And Sea Part 2. The Dance In Frost [Side 2]
5. Pioneers Over C
Tracks 1 to 5 are their
second studio album "H To He Who Am The Only One" - released January
1970 in the UK on Charisma Records CAS 1027 and March 1971 in the USA on
Dunhill/ABC Records DS 50097. Produced
by JOHN ANTHONY - Track 1 was written by Peter Hammill, Hugh Banton and
Stratton Smith, Tracks 2, 3 and 4 written by Peter Hammill with Track 5 written
by Peter Hammill and David Jackson.
BONUS TRACKS:
6. Squid 1/Squid 2/Octopus
[15:24 minutes]
7. The Emperor In His
War-Room (First Version) [8:50 minutes]
VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR was:
PETER HAMMILL - Lead Vocals,
Acoustic Guitar and Piano on "House With No Door"
HUGH BANTON - Vocals,
Hammond and Farfisa Organs, Piano, Oscillator and Bass on "House With No
Door" and "Killer"
DAVID JACKSON - Vocals,
Alto, Tenor and Baritone Saxophones and Flute
GUY EVANS - Drums, Tympani
and Percussion
Guests:
NIC POTTER (of The
Misunderstood) - Bass on "Killer", "The Emperor In His War Room”
and "Lost"
ROBERT FRIPP (of King
Crimson) - Guitar on "The Emperor In His War-Room"
The 20-page booklet is a
pleasingly thorough affair with new liner notes from MARK POWELL - soon to be
head honcho at Esoteric Recordings over at Cherry Red UK - home to all things Avant
Garde, Left Of Field and Proggy. There are period photos of the four-piece
hairy men live, loitering in parks and outside French cafes, lyrics, the inner
gatefold of the original release repro'd on the centre pages, trade adverts and
their 9-album strong catalogue of Virgin/Charisma Remasters listed on the last
page next to the extensive re-issue credits. It's all very tastefully done.
All four members of the band
had a hand in Remastering consultation (including principal songwriter PETER
HAMMILL) with the tape transfers done by KATHY BRYAN at Abbey Road Studios. I
had this album on one of those early 'Pink Scroll' Label Charisma pressings
with Audio that was always good but never great. Here the instruments have real
power and even the two Bonus Cuts sound like they could have made the grade.
Let's dance in the Static Sea...to the music...
We're informed by the opener
"Killer" that someone who lives at the bottom of the sea is lonely –
a solitary predator made manifest by earnest men with saxophones and doom-laden
churchy organs. The 8-minutes of Side 1's "Killer" is in fact more
Atomic Rooster than VDGG in my books. Things become very melodic on "House
With No Door". That hissy beginning is still there, but there's warmth and
clarity in the bass now and the piano feels less muddled than it did on the LP.
It's a dark song actually - a home with no roof that lets in the rain and cold
at night - Hammill's hurting vocals at times sounding like a melancholic David
Bowie circa "The Man Who Sold The World".
Things get deathly heavy
with "The Emperor In His War-Room" - a tin-pot dictator cradling his
gun in his chamber of ghosts (dig those cascading flutes and chunky organ
stabs) - Robert Fripp's very King Crimson guitar notes sailing into "The
Room" just when the piece needs some Prog uplift. Speaking of KC - the
11-minutes of "Lost" is probably the most Crimson-sounding piece on
the album - ideas and had-all-my-chances lyrics falling over each other as
instrument piles on instrument. Album No. 2 ends with nearly fourteen minutes
of "Pioneers Over C" - VDGG stretching out everywhere and thinking
intergalactic travel will be commonplace in 1983 and they have the Bass Lines.
Sexy Saxophones and Fiery Keyboard sounds to prove it.
In truth VDGG were never nearly
as commercial or frankly as good as Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett and Co over in
Genesis – but there is a lot to like in this adventurous and challenging album.
"...One last brief
whisper in our loved one's ears..." – Hammill sang on tone of the lovelier
passages in "Pioneers Over C" - David Jackson's saxophone slipping in
soft at first and then going solo mad after that. Mad after that – a bit like
VDGG and their music really...