NEW RELEASE
Lady June’s Linguistic Leprosy
(Market Square MSMCD144)
Released April 24th 2007 via Proper Music Distribution
70s Poetry Pleaser reissued with new notes and images
Conjoining music, poetry with visual art was a logical step in the climate
of the early 70's. And when not gigging or exhibiting, ‘Lady’ June
Campbell-Cramer - writer, painter and eccentric – travelled.
Her frequent trips around the Mediterranean were to take June into the orbit
of Soft Machine's Kevin Ayers and Daevid Allen, and all were to be fellow
passengers on the burgeoning hippy scene of Mallorca, where both she and
Ayers were to buy homes.
1974 saw the first performances of June’s 'Uppers and Downers' show in
Amsterdam, the poems from which would form the basis of ‘Linguistic
Leprosy'. The book was published by Virgin Books in 1975, sold out and ran
to a reprint.
Virgin’s Caroline label homed the audio equivalent. In keeping with the
label ethos, the album was delightfully unfettered by hype, personality or
commercialism.
Whilst a creation of the pooled talents June’s musician friends, the larger
part of the music and production of the album fell to Ayers, whose career
was at its most commercially successful.
He had a new album, ‘The Confessions Of Dr Dream’, and a switch to Island
Records, which also released a live set (‘June 1st 1974) by Ayers together
with label mates, Brian Eno, Nico (who guested on ‘Dr Dream’) and her former
Velvet Underground colleague, John Cale.
In contrast to the pressures of a career within a mainstream channel, the
gentle approach of 'Linguistic Leprosy' saw Ayers, surrounded by his oldest
friends, relaxed and enjoying himself. Ayers wrote most of the music
settings to June’s poems, exceptions being Eno's music for 'Optimism' and
Kim Solomon's tune for 'Am I'.
Recording was done in synthesizer virtuoso David Vorhaus' Kaleidophon studio
in Camden High Street, London.
The album itself is an extraordinary melange of semi-spoken pastiche and
nonsensical nursery rhyming. The diversity of June's vocal delivery is
matched throughout the album by a delightful array of musical soundscapes.
In addition to Ayers’ trademark melodies and arrangements, a percussive
storm swells and erupts from the muted heartbeat of 'Everythingsnothing'
whilst the most delicate of pianos twists almost inaudibly through the
strange images of ‘The Letter'.
There are echoes of Ayers’ ‘The Oyster and The Flying Fish' in 'Mangel /
Wurzel’ and the rumble of his beloved calypso can be heard in 'Bars', with
Pip Pyle on drums.
Brian Eno's influence is strong particularly on the short 'Optimism' and the
longer, Gong-like meanderings of Tunion', the latter combining a foretaste
of Eno's later 'ambient' music with a hypnotic space whisper where voices
blend eerily and inseparably into the language of the synthesizer.
David Vorhaus mixed the final ‘Touch-downer' around a whispered tape loop
that will surprise headphone listeners with its strange subliminal
harmonies.
The album proved one of Caroline’s most successful, selling its entire run
of 5,000 and lending it subsequent collectable status.
This reissue on Market Square re-presents these timeless recordings together
with revised booklets notes by Ayer’s archivist Martin Wakeling and personal
and humorous recollections of June, who sadly in 1997, by surviving relative
Tim Campbell-Todd.
Timeless beyond its genesis, the originality of this work together with its
Canterbury connections have ensured the collectable status of “Lady June's
Linguistic Leprosy”.
TRACKS
1. Some Day Silly Twenty Three
2. Reflections
3. Am I
4. Everythingsnothing
5. Tunion
6. Tourist
7. Bars
8. Letter
9. Mangel/Wurzel
10. To Whom It May Not Concern
11. Optimism
12. Touch Downer
ends
Issued March 2007 by Market Square Records
www.singsongpr.biz
Contact: Pat Tynan on tel 00 44 (0) 1895 636935
pat@singsongpr.biz
T 00 44 (0)1296 715228
F 00 44 (0)1296 715486
Main
Menu