Curly's Airships

Curly's Airships is a double CD by Judge Smith, released in October 2000. Smith regards the album as a new form of narrative rock music, which he calls "songstory".[5] Curly's Airships tells about the R101 airship, crashing in France during its maiden overseas voyage in 1930. Amongst many others, Peter Hammill, Hugh Banton, Arthur Brown, David Jackson, John Ellis and Pete Brown perform on the project.[6]

Curly's Airships
Studio album by
Released5 October 2000
Recorded1994–2000
Masters of Art Studio, Sussex; The Organ Workshop, Lymm, Cheshire and on location in England, France & Holland[1]
GenreArt rock, songstory
Length143:56
LabelMasters Of Art
Judge Smith chronology
Dome of Discovery
(1993)
Curly's Airships
(2000)
The Full English
(2005)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
New Horizons(not rated)[3]
No Warning(not rated)[4]

Smith believes that the 2 hr 20 min work might be one of the largest and most ambitious single piece of rock music ever recorded.[1][7] The Clash's album Sandinista! (1980) is 13 seconds longer.

Production

Smith worked on the project for many years, between 1993 and its release in 2000. The writing alone took two years.[6] Smith was able to finance the project thanks to a small grant from the National Lottery, distributed by the Arts Council in a scheme called A4E, Arts For Everyone.[6] A part of the recording was done in the Cathedral of Saint Pierre in Beauvais, the city near the R101 disaster, where Hugh Banton played the organ. Another part was recorded in Cardington parish church, which was the local church for the Airship Works, and yet another part was recorded inside the (extremely large) R101's shed at Cardington.[6] Mixing and mastering of the album, by David Lord, took almost a year to complete.[1][8]

Release

On HTV, 10 July 1997, a documentary about the project was shown in the arts series Frieze Frame. The film contains parts where Lene Lovich can be seen, playing Marthe, Princess Bibesco, who was Lord Thomson's lover. However, Lene Lovich/Marthe Bibesco does not perform in the songstory.

The release of Curly's Airships on 5 October 2000 coincided with the 70th anniversary of the R101 disaster of 1930.[6] On exactly the same point where the original airship crossed the English coast on its maiden voyage to India in 1930, some of the creators of Curly's Airships launched two model airships on their way to France, each one carrying a voucher for a free copy of the album.[6]

Themes

Musically, Curly's Airships embraces rock, jazz, tango, Indian music and eerie atmospherics, with repeated passages identifying key characters' appearances.[6] Basically, the line-up is vocals, guitars, organs, bass and drums, with some saxophone touches.[6] There is no rhyme and no regular metre, and the vocal lines of many sections are single, non-repeating tunes. This sets Curly's Airships musically apart from many "regular" rock or rock opera albums.

As for its subject matter, Curly's Airships sketches images of post-WW1 bravery, obedience and stupidity, resulting in the disaster. The events are seen through the eyes of Curly McLeod, a fictional aviator. Almost all other persons and events though are based on reality, like Lord Thomson, whose part is performed by Peter Hammill. The libretto (a 44-page booklet) contains many 1920s slang words.[6]

Cover art

The cover art was done by Glide Design of Eastbourne. The front cover shows a picture of Smith as Curly McLeod on fire in period airship officers' uniform. The double CD contains two booklets, one of 44 pages with the libretto, and one of 48 pages with essays, photos of all musicians in their persona, a glossary and bibliography.

Track listing

The track listing for Curly's Airships comprises twenty-six songs, divided into fifteen chapters.[1]

Disc One

Chapter One: Curly Comes Through

  1. "Voices From A Crystal Set"
  2. "Walking Her Out"

Chapter Two: Curly's Conducted Tour

  1. "Curly Takes Us Up"
  2. "Drifting About Like a Bad Smell"

Chapter Three: Curly In The Clouds

  1. "Curly In The Clouds"

Chapter Four: Catastrophe

  1. "A Capital Idea"
  2. "A Shrieking Of Aluminium"

Chapter Five: Curly On Civvy Street

  1. "Curly On Civvy Street"

Chapter Six: A Great British Compromise

  1. "That Imperial Airship Scheme"
  2. "From The Sidelines"

Chapter Seven: A Kindly Sort Of Cove

  1. "A Kindly Sort Of Cove"

Chapter Eight: Curly At Cardington

  1. "Curly At Cardington"

Chapter Nine: Lord Of A Continent

  1. "A Creature Of Grace"
  2. "A Byronic Sort Of Blighter"

Disc Two

Chapter Ten: Big Chief And Some Minor Bugs

  1. "Big Chief And Some Minor Bugs"

Chapter Eleven: Curly's Close Shave

  1. "The Canadian Run"
  2. "Conan Doyle & The Flying Sieve"
  3. "Horrors At Hendon"

Chapter Twelve: Cutting The Lady In Half

  1. "As Safe As A House"
  2. "A Ship Of Fools"

Chapter Thirteen: Curly Gets The Creeps

  1. "The Night Before"
  2. "The Morning After"

Chapter Fourteen: Curly Cashes His Chips

  1. "Bedford To Hastings"
  2. "Hastings To Beauvais"

Chapter Fifteen: Carry On Curly

  1. "The Muffled Drum"
  2. "The Final Taboo"

Personnel

References

  1. Curly's Airships (booklet). Judge Smith. Masters Of Art. 2000.CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. François Couture. "Curly's Airships – Judge Smith – Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards – AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  3. "Chris Judge Smith CDs". elrose.co.uk. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  4. "nowarning.htm". libero.it. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  5. "Songstory". Judge Smith. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  6. "MergedFile - Curlys-Airships-Website.pdf" (PDF). www.judge-smith.com. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  7. "Curly's Airships Double CD « Judge Smith". www.judge-smith.com. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  8. "Sofa Sound – Newsletters". sofasound.com. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
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