Marjory Razorblade

Marjory Razorblade is a double-LP by English rock singer Kevin Coyne and was one of the earliest releases on Virgin Records, which had launched four months earlier in June 1973. The double album includes the song "Marlene", which was issued as a single, and "Eastbourne Ladies", which was featured among the selection of tracks played by John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) at the height of the Sex Pistols notoriety on the Capital Radio show A Punk & His Music, broadcast in London in the summer of 1977.[3]

Marjory Razorblade
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1973
GenreRock
Length78:40
LabelVirgin VD 2501
ProducerSteve Verroca
Kevin Coyne chronology
Case History
(1972)
Marjory Razorblade
(1973)
Blame lt On The Night
(1974)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Christgau's Record GuideB+[1]
Tom HullB+[2]

The gatefold album sleeve was designed by prominent graphic artist Barney Bubbles utilising photographs of Coyne by Phil Franks; Bubbles also designed the distinctive logo carrying the album title and artist name, though was content not to receive a credit himself.[4] Twenty five years later, in 1998, Virgin's financial director Ken Berry recalled that, on his first day at the company's west London offices, he was presented with artist royalty statements scrawled on the back of Bubbles' invoice for the Marjory Razorblade design.[5]

Reviewing the album for the BBC in 2010, Mike Diver described the album as "a synthesis of individual ability into one effective, enchanting end product."[6]

Reception

Awarding the album a B+, Robert Christgau wrote:

Another British eccentric with a voice scratchy and wavery enough to make Mick Jagger sound like Anthony Newley, only this one can write songs. The annoying kid-stuff tone of the perversity here purveyed is redeemed by the fact that there isn't a chance it will sell, not even with the Brit double-LP condensed down to one. Also, "House on the Hill" is as convincing a madman's song as I know."[1]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Kevin Coyne except where indicated.

Side 1
  1. "Marjory Razorblade"
  2. "Marlene"
  3. "Talking to No One"
  4. "Eastbourne Ladies"
  5. "Old Soldier"
Side 2
  1. "I Want My Crown" (Traditional)
  2. "Nasty"
  3. "Lonesome Valley" (A. P. Carter)
  4. "House on the Hill"
  5. "Cheat Me"
Side 3
  1. "Jackie and Edna"
  2. "Everybody Says"
  3. "Mummy"
  4. "Heaven in My View" (A. P. Carter)
  5. "Karate King"
Side 4
  1. "Dog Latin"
  2. "This Is Spain"
  3. "Chairman's Ball"
  4. "Good Boy"
  5. "Chicken Wing"

Personnel

Musicians

  • Kevin Coyne - vocals, guitar
  • Gordon Smith - guitar, mandolin
  • Jean Roussel - piano
  • Tony Cousins - bass, tuba
  • Chili Charles - drums, congas
  • Steve Verroca - acoustic case and piano
  • Malcom Healey - synthesizer
  • Dave Clague - guitar
  • Ed DeGenaro - guitar

Technical

  • Producer: Steve Verroca at The Manor and at Saturn Studios
  • Engineers: Tom Newman, Simon Heyworth, Phil Newell
  • Sleeve design (uncredited) - Barney Bubbles
  • Photography - Phil Franks

Other releases

The record was also released, as a single LP, in the US (Virgin VR 13-106) with a truncated track listing of: "Eastbourne Ladies", "Old Soldier", "Marlene", "Everybody Says", "Lovesick Fool", "House On The Hill", "Nasty", "Talking To No One", "Dog Latin", "I Want My Crown" and "Marjory Razorblade".[7]

In 2010 the album was released in Europe by Virgin an EMI, as a double CD, (Virgin VDR 2501, EMI VDR 2501), with 24-bit digital remastering at The Audio Archiving Company and with 16 bonus tracks.[8]

gollark: As planned.
gollark: Just add `\n` to the end of `local pattern = "\n?%-%-%[%[ SIGNATURE: (.-) %]%]%-%-"`.
gollark: It appears to not remove the newline after the signature comment.
gollark: Maybe it's some whitespace which isn't being stripped properly.
gollark: I could assimilate it into potatOS if it's good then.

References

  1. Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: C". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved February 23, 2019 via robertchristgau.com.
  2. Hull, Tom (April 1975). "The Rekord Report: Third Card". Overdose. Retrieved June 26, 2020 via tomhull.com.
  3. "Music - Review of Kevin Coyne - Marjory Razorblade". BBC. 1970-01-01. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  4. Gorman, Paul (2008). Reasons To Be Cheerful: The Life & Work Of Barney Bubbles. Adelita. ISBN 978-0-9552017-3-8.
  5. "Reasons to be Cheerful» Blog Archive » Virgin's world domination – blame Barney Bubbles!". Barneybubbles.com. 2010-01-31. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  6. Diver, Mike. "BBC - Music - Review of Kevin Coyne - Marjory Razorblade". .bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
  7. "Marjory Razor Blade by Kevin Coyne". Retrieved 30 June 2019 via rateyourmusic.com.
  8. "EMI 2010 REISSUES". kevincoynepage.free.fr. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
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