Robyn Hitchcock; The Egyptians / Element of Light
Artist Robyn Hitchcock; The Egyptians
Box Set Title: Luminous Groove
Album Title: Element of Light
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: Indie
Format CD (5)
Released 08/19/2008
Label Yep Roc Records
Catalog No YEP-2614
Bar Code No 6 34457 26142 6
Packaging Box Set (5 Disk)
Tracks
1. If You Were A Priest (3:01)
2. Winchester (4:59)
3. Somewhere Apart (2:49)
4. Ted, Woody and Junior (2:52)
5. The President (4:17)
6. Raymond Chandler Evening (2:14)
7. Bass (3:01)
8. Airscape (5:10)
9. Never Stop Bleeding (2:47)
10. Lady Waters & the Hooded One (5:44)
11. The Black Crow Knows (3:34)
12. The Crawling (3:20)
13. The Leopard (4:20)
14. Tell Me About Your Drugs (2:42)
15. Sprinkling Dots (1:08)
16. Upside Down Church Blues (2:52)
17. Into it (2:12)
18. Neck (2:07)
19. Bass [Demo] (4:02)
20. Lady Waters Mix 1 (5:31)
Date Acquired 03/27/2009
Personal Rating
Acquired from Yep Roc Records

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by James Christopher Monger
The second installment in Yep Roc's mammoth Robyn Hitchcock reissue series introduces the Egyptians (bass player Andy Metcalfe and drummer Morris Windsor) into the mix, collecting Fegmania!, the live Gotta Let This Hen Out!, and Element of Light, along with a double disc of B-sides called A Bad Case of History. Luminous Groove, like its 2007 predecessor, I Wanna Go Backwards, makes available all of its components (with the exception of the "rarities" compilation) separately, which may be maddening to longtime fans who already replaced their original copies with the early-'90s Rhino reissues and just want the bonus stuff. Like the Rhino releases, each album is stocked with B-sides, most of which fall in the "demo" or "typically surreal" categories -- Hitchcock seemingly records every idea he has, making the prospect for bonus cuts on future reissues mind-boggling. The two remastered studio albums represent a creative peak for the notoriously eccentric Englishman, laying the foundation for his more commercial A&M years, but it's the Bad Case of History overview that makes Luminous Groove worth the price for "a cardboard box with five CDs stuffed in it." Unlike I Wanna Go Backwards' bonus disc, which grabbed tracks from previously released collections (specifically 1995's You & Oblivion), History revels in its obscurity, boasting 15 unreleased studio tracks (many of which, like a laconic dream pop rendition of the beloved Highland ballad "Wild Mountain Thyme" and a sneering punk rock face-peeler called "Zipper in My Spine," are absolute gems) and 17 mid-'90s live cuts that dip into A&M territory. Sure, it's a typically "Hitchcockian" mess of competing genres, melodic left turns, and obscure references to fish and fowl, but it only reinforces his "outsider" cultural significance, and dutifully whets the appetite for this tasty meal's third course.


Element of Light review:

Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Element of Light, Hitchcock's second studio album with the Egyptians, remains one of his finest moments and offers a convincing argument for his talents as a pop craftsman. Using John Lennon's work for Revolver and The Beatles as a template, Hitchcock wrote an elegant set of songs for Element of Light, songs that contained all of his cryptic lyrical sensibilities, yet featured more refined melodies and song structures. The Egyptians play with a subtle grace, moving between the stately "Winchester" and light psychedelia of "If You Were a Priest" to the bracing attack of "Tell Me About Your Drugs" with ease. While it sacrifices some of the edgy tension of Hitchcock's earlier work, Element of Light is his most melodic and eerily beautiful record. [In 2008, Yep Roc released a new edition of Element of Light which included the original album re-mastered, six bonus cuts (four of which had never seen the light of day) and expanded packaging.]
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