The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter

UK cover / US rear cover
Studio album by The Incredible String Band
Released March 1968
Recorded December 1967
Studio Sound Techniques, London
Genre Psychedelic folk, acid folk[1]
Length 49:51
Label Elektra / WEA
Producer Joe Boyd
The Incredible String Band chronology
The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion
(1967)
The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter
(1968)
Wee Tam and the Big Huge
(1968)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
Pitchfork Media9.0/10[3]
Rolling Stone(unfavourable)[4]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[5]

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter is the third album by the Scottish psychedelic folk group, The Incredible String Band (ISB), and was released in March 1968 on Elektra Records (see 1968 in music). It saw the band continuing its development of the elements of psychedelic folk and enlarging on past themes, a process they had begun on their previous album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion. Instrumentally, it was the ISB's most complex and experimental album to date, featuring a wide array of exotic instruments. In addition, the album captured the band utilising multi-tracks and overdubbing.[6]

Upon release, the album peaked at number five on the UK Albums Chart and number 161 on the Billboard Top LP's listings in America, becoming the group's highest charting album in both countries.[7][8] The album brought critical and financial success for the band, including their first solo tour and a Grammy nomination. It was considered their most ambitious work to date, having an impactful influence on the psychedelic folk genre.[9]

Background

In December 1967, the band completed their Hangman's Beautiful Daughter album at Sound Techniques in Chelsea, London. For the ISB's developments, they attempted to recreate as vividly as possible a live performance of their compositions. Lyrically, the compositions reflected upon past themes of life, mythology, and religious properties in a freelanced musical structure, eccetricism becoming a consistent anchor in their recordings.[10]

The album features a series of vividly dreamlike Robin Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody sung from the point of view of the mythical beast. Its centrepiece is Mike Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love, and amoebas, whose complex structure incorporates a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight", originally recorded by the Pinder Family[11][12]). The last part of "A Very Cellular Song", "May the Long Time Sun Shine", is sometimes wrongly referred to as a Sikh hymn or an Irish blessing, but is in fact an original song written by Mike Heron. The album's layered production style employs multitrack recording techniques[13] and a wide array of instruments from across the world, including sitar, gimbri, shenai, oud, harpsichord, panpipes and kazoo.

Artwork and title

The album's cover art – which on original LP issues was the back cover, as the front showed just Williamson and Heron – consists of a photograph taken on Christmas Day 1967. It shows both musicians, their girlfriends Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson, friends Roger Marshall and Nicky Walton, several children of their friend Mary Stewart, and Robin's dog Leaf.[10]

Regarding the title, Mike Heron said at the time: "The hangman is death and the beautiful daughter is what comes after. Or you might say that the hangman is the past twenty years of our life and the beautiful daughter is now, what we are able to do after all these years. Or you can make up your own meaning – your interpretation is probably just as good as ours."[10]

Commercial performance

Owing largely to the band gaining much airplay from famous DJ John Peel,[14] The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter was a major commercial success in the UK, staying in the charts for 21 weeks[7] with a peak of number 5. It has sold 800,000 copies in the UK to date.[15] In the US, the ISB always remained underground and the album struggled to number 161 during a two-month chart run. It was nominated for a Grammy in the folk music category.

Legacy and influence

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter has been widely acclaimed by many critics. It appears at number 88 in Joe S. Harrington's Top 100 Albums[16] and was listed by Keenan in The Best Albums Ever...Honest.[17] In its entry in Robert Dimery's book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, Max Reinhardt describes the album as "a potent seed of the current 'world music' movement", adding: "[The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter] revealed a sustained grandeur of vision, lyrics, and musicality that the group were never to approach again … Each track is closer to a suite than a song, as Celtic folk, rock 'n' roll, gospel, plainsong harmonies, near qwaali moments, and North African and Indian sonics all drift effortlessly before the ears."[1] In the February 2016 edition of UNCUT magazine it was placed 98th in the top 100 Albums of All Time.

The artwork has been referenced on the cover to David Keenan's book England's Hidden Reverse, Current 93's album cover to their LP Earth Covers Earth, Devendra Banhart's Cripple Crow LP,[18] and Feathers' eponymous debut.

Robert Plant credited The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter with influencing the direction of Led Zeppelin's first album.[19]

The amoeba section of "A Very Cellular Song" was covered by actor Nigel Planer, in character as "Neil the Hippy" from the UK television show The Young Ones, on his 1984 LP Neil's Heavy Concept Album.[20]

Track listing

All tracks written by Robin Williamson, except tracks 4, 5 and 9 by Mike Heron.

No.TitleLength
1."Koeeoaddi There"  4:49
2."The Minotaur's Song"  3:22
3."Witches Hat"  2:33
4."A Very Cellular Song"  13:09
5."Mercy I Cry City"  2:46
6."Waltz of the New Moon"  5:10
7."The Water Song"  2:50
8."Three Is a Green Crown"  7:46
9."Swift As the Wind"  4:53
10."Nightfall"  2:33

Personnel

Chart positions

Chart Entry
date
Peak
position
Weeks charted
UK Albums Chart[7] 4 June 1968 5 21
US Billboard Top LP's[8] 20 July 1968 161 9

References

  1. 1 2 Dimery, Robert, ed. (2011). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. London: Cassell. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-84403-699-8.
  2. link
  3. link
  4. Pomeroy, James (14 September 1968). "Records". Rolling Stone. San Francisco: Rolling Stone.
  5. ISBN 0-86369-643-0.
  6. Thom Jurek. "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  7. 1 2 3 Chart Archive – Incredible String Band(Link redirected to OCC website)
  8. 1 2 Whitburn, Joel; Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Albums, 1955–1996; p. 366. ISBN 0898201179
  9. "The Incredible String Band – The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter". thebeesknees.com. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  10. 1 2 3 Adrian Whittaker (ed.), Be Glad: The Incredible String Band Compendium, 2003, ISBN 1-900924-64-1
  11. The Bahamas: The Real Bahamas in Music and Song Nonesuch Records site
  12. Waterson : Carthy | Keeping it in the Family – Sleep on Beloved
  13. Joe Boyd, White Bicycles, 2005, ISBN 1-85242-910-0
  14. Robin Williamson interview; Perfect Sound Forever
  15. http://dearscotland.com/2009/07/15/the-incredible-string-band-part-1/
  16. Blastitude 14: Joe S. Harrington's Top 25 Albums of All Time
  17. The Best Albums Ever... honest
  18. Jurek, Thom. "Devendra Banhart – Cripple Crow". AllMusic. Retrieved 2015-02-24.
  19. Jurek, Thom. "The Increduble String Band – The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter". Retrieved 2015-02-24.
  20. "The Incredible String Band – The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter". Making Time. December 1999. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  21. Wolfgang Rostek: The Incredible String Band
  22. Judy Dyble discography
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