Secrets of the Beehive is the fourth studio album by English singer-songwriter David Sylvian. The album was released on 19 October 1987 in Europe and the United States. The album peaked at No. 37 in the UK album chart.[7] The album was released in Japan on 21 November 1987.[8]
Background
The entire album was quickly written in about two inspired weeks shortly after Sylvian's extensive press tour for Gone to Earth, but for the recording Sylvian ran out of budget and was unable to complete the album the way he envisioned it. Sylvian said that although he liked the material on the album, it was "something of a failure" because the centerpiece was missing.[9] The missing piece was the song "Ride", which was later completed and finally released 2000 on the compilation album Everything and Nothing. Sylvian said : "I was crushed when I wasn't able to finish it first time around due to time and budget constraints."[10]
Sylvian spent the first couple of months of 1987 making demo tapes of songs that would draw on the subtler sides of jazz, folk and orchestral music. Recorded in just 2.5 months Secrets Of The Beehive appeared in October 1987 to universally positive reviews. The emphasis was on the lyrical content more than on the previous albums. Because the material came so easily and had a certain strength in its simplicity, it didn’t require enhancing in terms of studio atmospherics and effects. Sylvian began recording the basic tracks at Chateau Miraval in the South of France because of its exotic location. David Torn, Danny Thompson, Ryuichi Sakamoto and Danny Cummings came down and built up the tracks one by one. In time they would be joined at the studio by Phil Palmer and Steve Jansen. The orchestral overdubs were recorded midway through the album, at Angel Studios and at Air in London. Sakamoto had scored the majority of the songs, except "Orpheus" and "Let the Happiness In", were scored by arranger Brian Gascoigne. Mark Isham also recorded his parts at Angel and Air Studios. Then it was off to Wisseloord at Hilversum in the Netherlands to finish the overdubs and do the vocals. Final additions and mixing were done early summer 1987 at the Wool Hall in Bath with Steve Nye.[11][12][13]
In 2003, a remastered limited digipak version of Secrets of the Beehive was released with the bonus track from the Japanese version "Promise (The Cult of Eurydice)" replacing the original CD bonus track "Forbidden Colours (version)", which was a re-recorded version of the Sakamoto/Sylvian collaboration originally intended for Brilliant Trees, but eventually released as b-side to the "Red Guitar" single. In 2006 it was reissued in a standard jewel-case.
In February 2019, as part of a redesigned monochrome sleeved vinyl reissue batch of his 80s albums. Secrets was released in a gatefold sleeve with different type fonts, but otherwise maintaining the original artwork.
Track listing
All tracks are written by David Sylvian, except as noted
^Carlin, Marcello (November 2003). "Japan: Gentlemen Take Polaroids / Tin Drum / Oil on Canvas, David Sylvian: Brilliant Trees / Alchemy: An Index of Possibilties / Gone to Earth / Secrets of the Beehive / Rain Tree Crow". Uncut. No. 78. p. 129.