Godbluff

<i>Godbluff</i>

Godbluff

1975 studio album by Van der Graaf Generator


Godbluff is the fifth album released by English progressive rock band Van der Graaf Generator. It was the first album after the band reformed in 1975 and was recorded after a European tour.[1]

Quick Facts Godbluff, Studio album by Van der Graaf Generator ...

As the first self-produced album by the band, it featured a tighter, more pared-down sound than the band's earlier recordings with producer John Anthony. Hammill said "we did not want to make 'Son of Pawn Hearts' with a big long side two and lots of studio experiments".[2] Van der Graaf Generator would never work with an outside producer from this point forward. Hammill made extensive use of the Hohner Clavinet D6 keyboard,[3] which he had first started using on his previous solo album, Nadir's Big Chance (1975).[citation needed]

The first release of the record in the United States was on Mercury Records. The 2005 reissue added live performances by the band of two songs from Peter Hammill's album The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage (1974), recorded at a concert at L'Altro Mondo, Rimini, Italy.

Artwork

Godbluff's album cover was minimal, consisting of a band logo and "stamped" red album title on an otherwise black sleeve. The band logo that first appeared here was designed by John Pasche;[4] it would also be used on the next two albums, Still Life (April 1976) and World Record (October 1976). Godbluff's sleeve design was later parodied on the cover of Fall Heads Roll by The Fall.

Reception

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In Melody Maker, the reviewer said that "in a very real sense, [Godbluff] is the sound of the mid-seventies: uncomfortable, coherent, unremitting, courageous".[7] Geoff Barton of Sounds deemed Godbluff "simply, an essential buy".[8] A negative review appeared in the Lancashire Evening Post in November 1975, in which Bob Papworth wrote that the album contained "the type of studiously avant-garde rock which so many other groups play infinitely better." Papworth added that "Guy Evans couldn't drum his way out of a paper bag and David Jackson's saxes and flutes are a little too simplistic to be credible."[9]

In a May 2002 review in Mojo magazine, Julian Cope praised the album.[2] A retrospective review in 2011 by AllMusic's Steve McDonald wrote: "Godbluff was a bravura comeback – only four cuts, but all were classics."[5]

Track listing

All tracks written by Peter Hammill, except where indicated.

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Bonus tracks on CD reissue

  1. "Forsaken Gardens" – 7:58
  2. "A Louse Is Not a Home" – 12:47
    • Both recorded live at L'altro Mondo, Rimini, Italy on 9 August 1975

Personnel

Van der Graaf Generator
Technical
  • Produced by Van der Graaf Generator
  • Engineered by Pat Moran
  • Cut by George Peckham at The Master Room

References

  1. "Europe in May/June 1975". Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  2. "Run For Your Lives! Van Der Graaf Generator". Mojo. May 2002. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  3. "Van Der Graaf Generator: "Things went a bit mad after a while"". Uncut. 2 November 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  4. McDonald, Steven (2011). "Godbluff – Van der Graaf Generator". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2 July 2011.
  5. "Van der Graaf Generator: Godbluff (Charisma)". Melody Maker. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  6. Barton, Geoff. "Graaf's bluff is just enough". Sounds. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  7. Papworth, Bob (17 November 1975). "Van too many". Lancashire Evening Post.
  8. Scharf 2016-01-27T18:00:00.260Z, Natasha (27 January 2016). "My Prog Hero: Inspiring the wider music world…". loudersound.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

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