XTC
Skylarking


5.0
classic

Review

by 3FingeredHoek USER (1 Reviews)
April 1st, 2010 | 170 replies


Release Date: 1986 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Skylarking is XTC's worthy analogy for Pet Sounds and Sgt. Pepper's. It may also stand as their like in quality.

XTC has been something of a well hidden secret by their limited but frighteningly zealous fan base. They did enjoy minimal commercial success that was given passage by their singles “Making Plans for Nigel” and “The Mayor of Simpleton”. Nowadays, hearing one of these songs resounding dimly through the mall or feebly coming through the radio at Subway, one might relegate XTC in their mind as some antiquated 80’s pop band whose music will soon be forgotten, drifting intangibly through the airwaves like lost balloons. This is tragic, because XTC have an immensely impressive and rather sizable treasure trove of a back-catalog which their singles only hint at.

Skylarking occurs somewhere in the middle of the band’s twelve-album sequence. They released 5 studio albums with a consistent lineup before vocalist/co-songwriter Andy Partridge fell victim to debilitating stage fright, which led the band to retire from touring and station themselves in the studio, after which drummer Terry Chambers withdrew his membership. There was a palpable evolution and maturation in XTC’s sound that could be traced to Chamber’s secession, though he had no hand in the songwriting. Their music, which was streamlined and usually anchored in a simple, repetitious groove, began to diversify, and augmented its dynamic range. This musical growth comes to sublime fruition on Skylarking.

The band also eased away from their endearingly quirky power-pop with a new-wave tilt, to the grounded but appropriately exploratory chamber pop found on this album. Though the influence was apparent since their beginning, the band is unabashedly forthright about drawing from The Beatles and The Beach Boys. Indeed, you can unmistakably hear XTC channeling Pet Sounds through songs like “Season Cycle” and “Sacrificial Bonfire”, the former whose structure and balmy, buoyant character echoes The Beach Boy’s own “Wouldn’t it be Nice”. The latter, written by bassist and co-writer Colin Moulding, would be right in its element on Brian Wilson’s Smile.

The musical and lyrical atmosphere that pervades the record (at least until the final track, which oozes religious disillusionment, and contains the album's only emotional crescendo), evokes a breezy, fertile spring day. “Summer’s Cauldron” begins with synthesized cricket and bird chirps, which brilliantly coalesce to form the rhythmic motif that supports the first two tracks. The album proceeds in this fashion for most of its duration; it knows no emotional highs or lows (until “Dear God”, that is). Partridge and Moulding sound unassailably content here, with Partridge taking lyrical cues from Oscar Wilde, and Moulding, tenderly reminiscing on times past, i.e. “Grass”.

The brilliance and relish that Skylarking offers owes much credit to Todd Rundgren’s spacious production, and generous but temperate orchestral arrangements. Take “1000 Umbrellas”, one of the best songs on the album. Without its thick fringe of strings, it would be a mere skeleton of a song, with only Partridge’s vocals and his acoustic guitar on a chromatic trip southward. Rundgren’s presence is prominent throughout Skylarking. More strings wash over the opening bars of “Grass”. A cello significantly adds gravity and urgency to “Dear God”. A solitary violin zips with impressive dexterity through the chorus of “Sacrificial Bonfire”. Rundgren was to Skylarking what George Martin was to The Beatles. The album is an unqualified classic, and a worthy analogy for Sgt. Pepper’s and Pet sounds, and although it didn’t generate anywhere near as much critical hubbub, it may also stand as their like in quality and completeness.


user ratings (334)
4.1
excellent
other reviews of this album
IndieNoChill (5)
Change must be earned....



Comments:Add a Comment 
PirateSquid
April 1st 2010


1881 Comments


"Dear God" is such a great song.

This whole band is just epically amazing.

sickofantsid
April 1st 2010


129 Comments


'This is fantastic for a first review, by the way.'

Great to see Xtc reviewed here.

Rhino
April 2nd 2010


71 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Really well done review, although I think comparing this to Sgt Pepper or Pet Sounds is a pretty big leap. Also, this review must be for a reissue, as the original release did not have Mermaid Smiled on it, and Dear God (not a bonus track 24 years ago) came before Dying. Nicely done review, though!

AggravatedYeti
April 2nd 2010


7683 Comments


very nice review

3FingeredHoek
April 2nd 2010


19 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Thanks for the positive words everyone. Review wasn't as thorough as it seemed in my mental outline.

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
November 5th 2010


27375 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

1000 umbrellas is GREAT

miked89
September 30th 2011


4 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Great review. Well said.

PagePlant
June 12th 2012


44 Comments


"Dear God" is overrated as hell. Good album though, "Summers Cauldron", "Grass", "Earn Enough for Us" and "Big Day" are classics. Still, the first disc of English Settlement is better than this album.

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
June 12th 2012


27375 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

1000 umbrellas is the best

cjrmack
March 25th 2013


2 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Actually "Dear God" was not even on this when it was released. It was the flip side of the import single "Grass". They took off "Mermaid Smiled" and put it on when it started to create such a sensation.

AgainAnd
September 20th 2013


281 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Sacrificial Bonfire is playing right now. This is such a sunny and beautiful album.

KILL
February 26th 2014


81580 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

what an album

menawati
February 26th 2014


16715 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

yeh its grand

KILL
February 26th 2014


81580 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

heard wilsons remixing this soon, a lot of layers to mess around with too should be good

DikkoZinner
June 17th 2014


5368 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Summer's Cauldron, good tune.

NorthernSkylark
January 1st 2015


12134 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

i might be an ape



but i used to feel super, supergiirrl

MrGumby
March 28th 2015


28 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

This is definitely among the best album of the 80s. Maybe even among the best of all time.

AmericanFlagAsh
August 19th 2015


13224 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

SUUUPER SUUUPERGIRL



This is fucking amazing, why haven't I listened before

DikkoZinner
August 19th 2015


5368 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

A fine album indeed.

AmericanFlagAsh
August 24th 2015


13224 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

This might be a 5 tbh



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