Albino Ballerina

Albino Ballerina is a song by English indie rock band Sweet Jesus. It was released (along with B-side Your Baby Loves Me) in 1992 through the Birmingham-based record label Chapter 22.[1][2]

"Albino Ballerina"
Single by Sweet Jesus
Released1992
GenreGlam rock, alternative rock
Length3:17
LabelChapter 22
Producer(s)John Rivers
Sweet Jesus singles chronology
"Real Babe"
(1992)
"Albino Ballerina"
(1992)
Audio sample
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Although the band's earlier material was produced by Ray Shulman (previously of Gentle Giant and The Sugarcubes),[3] Albino Ballerina was produced by John Rivers at Woodbine Studios in Leamington Spa.[4]

CD single

  1. "Albino Ballerina" - 3:17
  2. "Your Baby Loves Me" - 4:07
  3. "Your Baby Loves Me" (original version) - 4:05

7" single

  1. "Albino Ballerina" - 3:17
  2. "Your Baby Loves Me" - 4:07

Personnel

The single was the first release by the band featuring bassist Gavin Priest, following the departure of Dave Priest. Producer John Rivers engineered the record in Leamington Spa's Woodbine Studios, shortly after their installation of a digital ProTools system (being the first studio in Europe to use such a system for multitrack recording).[5]

Critical reception

The single was released through Chapter 22 Records (catalogue number CHAPCD70), a label that worked with the band following the demise of the group's previous label, Rough Trade. This relationship did not last however, and Albino Ballerina proved to be Sweet Jesus's last release. Although the group recorded and release further material through alternative labels and under different names, none of these achieved similar acclaim[6] and the group officially disbanded.[2]

Upon release, the song was chosen by radio DJ and music journalist Mark Radcliffe as the Single of the Year for his 1992 NME end-of-year roundup.[6] This was tied in with promotion of the record via an interview on Radcliffe's "Hit the North" show in October 1992, which saw the band partially sharing the programme with Hank Marvin.[7]

Although the single was not submitted for entry, it won Gary Crowley's Demo Crash Contest on Greater London Radio (now BBC London 94.9) on three consecutive occasions.[8]

gollark: In that case, pigeon neck armour.
gollark: 🦀 praise our pigeon overlords 🦀
gollark: I, for one, submit to our pigeon overlords.
gollark: > they'd pick up on switching being better, tooThey might just insist that the obvious mathematical answer is right and refuse to update.
gollark: Correction: they made the pigeons press buttons which dispensed food.

References

  1. Yell Limited (2008). "Chapter 22 Music Ltd". Yell.com. Retrieved 21 December 2008.
  2. Birdpoo (2004). "Sweet Jesus". BirdPoo.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  3. Lester, Paul (February 1992). "Messiah and Higher". Melody Maker. London: IPC Media. Archived from the original (Reprint) on 2012-06-30. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  4. Discogs.com (2004). "Sweet Jesus - Albino Ballerina / Your Baby Loves Me". Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  5. Woodbine Street Recording Studios (2006). "Woodbine Home". Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  6. Ben Bentley (2005). "Ben Bentley's Peoplesound Profile (CACHED VERSION)". Musician profile. PeopleSound.com. Archived from the original on 7 December 2006. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  7. Scrawnandlard.co.uk (2006). "Chronology Of Hit The North Gubbins". ScrawnAndLard.co.uk. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  8. Gibson, Robin (February 1992). "Oo-er, it's a Girl". Siren. Archived from the original (Reprint) on July 23, 2008. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
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