"Movin' On Up" Released: October 1991 (United States); January 1992 (as the Dixie-Narco EP; United Kingdom)
"Damaged" Released: August 1992 (Japan)
Screamadelica is the third studio album by Scottish rock band Primal Scream. It was first released on 23 September 1991 in the United Kingdom by Creation Records and on 8 October 1991 in the United States by Sire Records. The album marked a significant departure from the band's early indie rock sound, drawing inspiration from the blossoming house music scene and associated drugs such as LSD and MDMA. Much of the album's production was handled by acid house DJ Andrew Weatherall and engineer Hugo Nicolson, who remixed original recordings made by the band into dance-oriented tracks.[10]
Screamadelica, featuring Manchester-born singer Denise Johnson, was the band's first album to be a commercial success, peaking at number eight on the UK Albums Chart upon its release.[11] It received wide praise from critics, and has been frequently named one of the best albums of the 1990s in various polls. It won the first Mercury Music Prize in 1992[12] and has sold over three million copies worldwide.
Background, music, influences and recording
When asked what his influences were for Screamadelica, singer Bobby Gillespie said that Primal Scream were like a rock'n'roll band who had quite diverse taste. Many genres interested them like free jazz, funk, soul, country, blues, electronic music, post-punk, ambient music and psychedelic music from the 1960s.[13] When naming the post-punk bands he listened to during his formative years, he explained: "a lot of those ideas are entrenched in Primal Scream, and maybe the last great rock bands were Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Buzzcocks and Joy Division. [...] The ideas in the music and the lyrics for those three bands completely influenced Primal Scream".[13]Screamadelica was also influenced by the Beach Boys' album Pet Sounds (1966). Gillespie says that after discovering the album, their songs became much softer.[14] Gillespie has also cited Nico's album The Marble Index as a major influence when they were making Screamadelica, claiming he "listened to [it] all the time."[15] The band were also "big fans of '70s reggae and dub. These 12” sounded like dub records".[13]
Drawing inspiration from the acid house scene,[13] which was blossoming at the time, the band enlisted house DJs Andrew Weatherall and Terry Farley on producing duties. Weatherall and Gillespie bonded over "Thin Lizzy, dub-reggae, Mott The Hoople, disco music" and they were both attracted by "industrial, experimental funk".[13] The band loved the fact that Weatherall was a DJ who had never been a producer at the helm in a studio before.[13] Gillespie commented on: "It was just this natural talent to make this music and structure and arrange music in a way that we’d never heard before. So he could take our songwriting and our instrumental[s] [...] And the melodies and the gospel singers and the strings and the slate guitars, we played a lot of synthesisers as well. [...]". Weatherall selected the parts he liked and rearranged it: "he was really great at taking all this stuff and rearranging it and making it into this fantastic music". Acid house gave him an opportunity to work with the band.[13]
"Loaded" was the first track on which Weatherall took part.[13] He began remixing "I'm Losing More Than I'll Ever Have", from their previous album, and the resulting track disassembled the song, adding a drum loop from an Italian bootleg mix of Edie Brickell's "What I Am" and a sample from the Peter FondaB movieThe Wild Angels.
Although the band wrote a track also called "Screamadelica", it does not appear on the album. The ten-minute dance track was also produced by Weatherall and sung by Denise Johnson. It appears on the Dixie-Narco EP, released in 1992, and is featured in the opening credits of the now rare ScreamadelicaVHS video tape.
Artwork
The album cover for Screamadelica was painted by Creation Records' in-house artist Paul Cannell.[16] Cannell was inspired by a damp water spot he'd seen on the Creation Records offices ceiling after taking LSD.[17]
Screamadelica was among ten album covers chosen by the Royal Mail for a set of "Classic Album Cover" postage stamps issued in January 2010.[18][19]
The artwork also inspired a Fender Stratocaster for the album's 30th anniversary.
Release and commercial performance
The lead single "Loaded" reached the top 20 in the UK Singles chart in early 1990.
Screamadelica was released on 23 September 1991 in the UK. It reached number 8 on the UK Albums Chart,[20] and was later certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry.[21] The album has sold 715,000 copies as of September 2020.[22] The single "Movin' On Up" was the band's breakthrough hit in the United States: as it was heavily played on alternative rock radio, it peaked at number 2 on the BillboardModern Rock Tracks chart. It also reached number 28 on the BillboardMainstream Rock Tracks chart as it was played on rock radio stations.
Screamadelica was very well received by critics. In a contemporary review for Spin, Simon Reynolds called it a "totally mind-blowing" record whose best songs were "almost unclassifiable".[33]AllMusic writer Stephen Thomas Erlewine deemed Screamadelica "an album that transcends its time and influence."[23] AllMusic lists the album as the band's best. It was voted number 135 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd Edition (2000).Pitchfork praised the album on their 2003 list of the "Top 100 albums of the '90s," saying: "Screamadelica's atmospheric and imaginative hybrid of past, present and future captured its moment in vivid color and splendor, and it still radiates with a kaleidoscopic glow."[34]Robert Christgau of The Village Voice, on the other hand, assigned it a "neither" rating, indicating an album that does not warrant repeated listening despite coherent craft and one or two highlights.[35]
It was Melody Maker's album of the year in 1991.[36] It was also Select's album of the year in 1991,[37] while NME placed it at no. 3 in its "Best Albums of 1991" list.[38] The album won the first Mercury Music Prize in 1992. In 1996, Select named it as the number 1 album of the 1990s. In 2000, Q placed the album at number 18 on their list of the "100 Greatest British Albums."[39] In 2001, Q placed it at number 81 on a list of the "Top 100 Albums of All Time."[40] The album ranked number 2 in Q's "Best 50 Albums of Q's Lifetime" list.[41] In 2003, NME placed it at no. 23 in its "100 Best Albums Ever" list.[42] In 2003, Pitchfork placed it at number 77 in a list of the "Top 100 Albums of the '90s."[34] Also in 2003, the album topped The Scotsman's list of 100 Best Scottish Albums.[43] In 2006, the magazine also placed it at no. 15 in its "Greatest British Albums Ever" list.[44] It appeared in Channel 4's list of the "100 Greatest Albums of All Time."[45] In a 2009 review, the BBC hailed the album as "a solid gold classic."[46]NME also named it the "Druggiest Album Ever" in 2011.[citation needed] It was ranked number 437 in the 2020 revised edition of Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time,[47] and No. 1 on BrooklynVegan's "Creation Records' 21 Best Records" list.[48]
Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo of French electronic duo Daft Punk, who drew inspiration from the rock and acid house in the United Kingdom during the early 1990s, referred to Screamadelica as the record that "put everything together in terms of genre".[49]
To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the release of the album, Primal Scream performed the entire album live at Olympia London in West London on 26 and 27 November 2010. The performance included a full gospel choir and horn section.[50] The first of these gigs was broadcast live on BBC6 Music, presented by Steve Lamacq.[51] These gigs were followed by a UK tour in March 2011, where the band performed the album in full.
For the album's 30th anniversary in 2021, Fender created a limited run of custom Stratocasters depicting the album's artwork on the body.[52] Additionally, Columbia released the Demodelica album on 15 October 2021, with early demos and work-in-progress mixes, accompanied by notes by Jon Savage. "Most of these demos were produced by Andrew Innes at his home studio on the Isle of Dogs and at the band's studio in Hackney in 1990. The Jam and Eden Studio demos were produced by the band in 1991."
A^ The lyrics of "Slip Inside This House" were truncated and altered in places in comparison to the song's original recording by the 13th Floor Elevators. A notable example of such modification is in the chorus, where "Slip inside this house" was altered to "Trip inside this house".
B^ On the American pressings of the album, the Terry Farley mix of "Come Together" was featured in place of the original UK mix. The Farley mix runs 8:06.
C^ the piano part on * "Movin' On Up" was recorded in Brighton by Les Field.
"Loaded" contains samples from "What I Am" by Edie Brickell, "I Don't Want to Lose Your Love" by the Emotions, "I'm Losing More than I'll Ever Have" by Primal Scream, and dialogue from the film The Wild Angels.
"I'm Comin' Down" contains dialogue from the film Paris, Texas.
^Pitchfork Staff (2 October 2009). "The 200 Best Albums of the 2000s". Pitchfork. Retrieved 28 April 2023. ...the Scream's urban-guerrilla guise was as much a fleeting phase as the acid-house love-in of 1991's Screamedelica...
^Bailie, Stuart (21 September 1991). "Soyuz Your Illusion". NME. London. p. 33. Archived from the original on 13 November 1999. Retrieved 16 November 2015.