Skylarking

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Skylarking album cover
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EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 49:27

eMusic Review 1

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Austin L. Ray

eMusic Contributor

For more than 10 years, Austin L. Ray has been writing about entertainment and culture. He's sat in a dark tent with Zach Galifianakis, walked Savannah, Ga.'s s...more »

01.04.12
Quintessential, whimsical pop music, complete with Big Ideas and dark edges
2003 | Label: CAROLINE ASTRALWERKS - CAT

Unlike many of XTC’s other albums (Drums & Wires, The English Settlement, Black Sea), Skylarking doesn’t evoke easy comparisons to new-wave/post-punk compatriots (Talking Heads, B-52s, The Cars,) like so much low-hanging referential fruit. Perhaps that’s why it stands as the tallest member of a catalog with several very real highlights, even with 25 years’ worth of time to pick it apart. Eschewing the jittery, bounce ‘n’ roll of the band’s late-’70s material, Skylarking opts instead for pop pomposity and all the big melodies, elegant arrangements and witty lyrics that brings with it.

“Psychedelic” is a word often employed to describe Skylarking — notable critics from Rolling Stone and Pitchfork hailed the album as “the most accomplished neo-psychedelic LP to date” and a “beacon of psychedelic greenery,” respectively. But this is psych-rock more in step with The Kinks’ Village Green Preservation Society or The Zombies’ Odessey and Oracle than Nuggets or, say, Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealstic Pillow. All of which is to say that it’s quintessential, whimsical pop music, complete with Big Ideas and dark edges.

With topics covering marriage (“Big Day”), theism (“Dear God”), public sex (“Grass”) and providing for a family (“Earn Enough for Us”), Skylarking is ambitious, no doubt, but it’s… read more »

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Classic

DC10

This is a beautiful album from start to finish. Let's face it, if you are an XTC fan, then you have this; if you are not, then this is the ideal place to start.

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Classic 80s album

Macklind

I am 17 again, and it's 1986 -- summertime -- driving down the interstate in my beat-up Volkswagen beetle. Humid July air pressing into the cabin, vent windows open, my windshield wipers useless against the coming rain. I am playing "Skylarking" at full volume, the intoxicating scent of fresh-cut grass mingles with the heat and thunderstorm. This album is the soundtrack of my maturation from boy to man -- losing my virginity, graduating from high school, giving up on religion. It's all here. It's a record of memories for me.

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Better than The Beatles AND the Beach Boys

mintchip21

It's about time eMusic gets one of the best albums ever! Imagine The Beatles in John Lennon's psychedelic Rolls-Royce in a collision with The Beach Boys in their woody station wagon, and you end up with XTC's masterpiece.

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eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of XTC’s Skylarking

By Austin L. Ray, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Working with producer Todd Rundgren didn’t necessarily bring XTC a sense of sonic cohesion — after all, every record since English Settlement followed its own interior logic — but it did help the group sharpen its focus, making Skylarking its tightest record since Drums and Wires. Ironically, Skylarking had little to do with new wave and everything to do with the lush, post-psychedelic pop of the Beatles and Beach Boys. Combining the charming pastoral feel of Mummer with the classicist English pop of The Big Express, XTC expand their signature sound by enhancing their intelligently melodic pop with graceful, lyrical arrangements and sweeping, detailed instrumentation. Rundgren may have devised the sequencing, helping the record feel like a song cycle even if it doesn’t play like one, but what really impresses is the consistency and depth of Andy Partridge’s and Colin Moulding’s songs. Each song is a small gem, marrying sweet, catchy melodies to decidedly adult lyrical themes, from celebrations of love (“Grass”) and marriage (“Big Day”) to skepticism about maturation (“Earn Enough for Us”) and religion (“Dear God”). Moulding’s songs complement Partridge’s songs better than before, and each writer is at a melodic and lyrical peak, which Rundgren helps convey with his supple production. The result is a pop masterpiece — an album that has great ambitions and fulfills them with ease. [The initial release of Skylarking didn't feature "Dear God," which was originally the B-side of "Grass." After "Dear God" became an unexpected hit, "Mermaid Smile" was pulled from the album so the hit single could be added.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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  • 05.25.12 Wait,did I mention HAVE YOU SEEN YOUR MOTHER BABY,STANDING IN THE SHOWERS? .....sorry.....sorry