Guns is the fifth studio album by English rock band Cardiacs.[10] It was recorded and mixed at Apollo 8 in London and released on 21 June 1999. After a brief period of unavailability, the album was re-pressed in August 2007.[11]

Guns
Original print cover[b]
Studio album by
Released21 June 1999[1][2][a]
StudioApollo 8 (London)
GenreRock[7]
Length45:57
LabelAlphabet Business Concern
ProducerTim Smith
Cardiacs chronology
Sing to God
(1996)
Guns
(1999)
Cardiacs and Affectionate Friends
(2001)
Singles from Guns
  1. "Sleep All Eyes Open"
    Released: 5 July 1999[8]
  2. "Signs"
    Released: 2 August 1999[8]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[9]

Music

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Compared to other Cardiacs releases, Guns is often considered to be the band's most accessible album. A reviewer for Echoes and Dust describes the album as "Rock’n’Roll with more than a touch of the baroque" and as having "a very intimate feel." The musical style present on Guns has been compared to the music of Spratleys Japs, a side project that features Cardiacs band leader Tim Smith and Guns guest vocalist Joanne Spratley.[12]

Despite being considered relatively accessible for Cardiacs, a few tracks on Guns are among the most intricate compositions that the band released. For example, the end of the fifth track, "Jitterbug (Junior Is A)", had Tim Smith using several pieces of paper in order to keep track of his ideas instead of his self-imposed limit of one. According to Tim Smith, "I used to score it all out on reams and reams of paper like a twat, but nowadays I limit myself to one bit of paper just as reminders (as my memory is crap). Although one song on the ‘Guns’ album had me doing the ‘reams and reams of paper’ thing, it had to be done, there was no other way. I sat there for 36 hours solid and didn’t stop until it sort of brought itself to its end and when I looked back at it I wondered where the fuck it had come from because I couldn’t remember doing it."[13]

Themes

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Guns features several of the lyrical themes typical of Cardiacs, including dogs (cover art, tracks 6 and 12) and dirtiness (tracks 7, 8, 9, and 12).[12] In addition, Guns also introduces several new themes that appear throughout the album and in future works. There is a clear fixation on eyes (tracks 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10), with the repeated line "brand them in the eye" present in "Cry Wet Smile Dry" and "Ain't He Messy Though," as well as in later works. Lambs, often "innocent lambs," also make frequent appearances (tracks 3, 7, 8, and 10).

Some of the lyrics seem to have been written using 'found' text and the cut-up technique. One known source is the 1955 film The Night of the Hunter, which provides seemingly all of "Clean That Evil Mud out Your Soul" including the song's title; its chorus, for example, uses "Merciful heaven only knows what unholy sights and sounds all we innocent babes has made in them dens," adapted from "Oh, heaven only knows what unholy sights and sounds them innocent babes has heard in the dens of perdition where she dragged 'em." Several lines from "Wind and Rains Is Cold," including the song's title, also originate from the film. For example, the line "Hide your hair it's waving all lazy and soft like meadow grass under the flood" is adapted from the line "With her hair wavin' soft and lazy like meadow grass under flood water." Cardiacs references to The Night of the Hunter are not unique to this album; notably, the cover from their previous album, Sing to God, also takes inspiration from the film.[14]

I will defend that fucker to the muddy grave.

—Tim Smith, about Guns not being reviewed as favorably as Cardiacs' other albums[15]

Another notable lyrical source is the celebrated Portuguese to English phrasebook English as She Is Spoke, which is well-known for its inaccurate and often humorous attempts at translation. "Cry Wet Smile Dry" borrows heavily from the "Familiar Dialogues" section of the book, featuring direct quotes from the subsections "For make a visit in the morning," "For to see the town," and especially from "For to write." The song "Sleep All Eyes Open" uses quotes from the subsections "For make a visit in the morning" and "The weather," but also borrows several lines from the "Familiar phrases" section, including the lines "You mistake you-self heavily" and "That may dead if I lie you."[16] English as She Is Spoke is a lyrical source shared by Pony, an album released the same year as Guns by Cardiacs side project Spratleys Japs.

Track listing

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All tracks are written by Tim Smith. Riffs and arrangements by Jon Poole and Tim Smith; additional lyrics by Bob Leith.[17]

No.TitleGuest vocalist(s)Length
1."Spell with a Shell"
  • Sarah Smith
  • Sharron Saddington
3:17
2."There's Good Cud" 2:17
3."Wind and Rains Is Cold"
  • Smith
  • Saddington[a]
3:20
4."Cry Wet Smile Dry" 3:27
5."Jitterbug (Junior Is A)" 7:31
6."Sleep All Eyes Open"Joanne Spratley2:58
7."Come Back Clammy Lammy"Spratley4:07
8."Clean That Evil Mud Out Your Soul"Saddington2:25
9."Ain't He Messy Though" 2:03
10."Signs" 4:25
11."Song of a Dead Pest" 2:37
12."Will Bleed Amen"Saddington7:31
Total length:45:57

Notes

  • ^[a] Saddington is not credited on "Wind and Rains Is Cold" on streaming services.[5]
  • "Will Bleed Amen" contains a hidden track titled "Secret Like Swans" which begins after 50 seconds of silence.

Personnel

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Adapted from liner notes of Guns and AllMusic.[17][4]

With:

  • Sarah Smith – saxophones, vocals on "Spell with a Shell" and "Wind and Rains Is Cold"
  • Joanne Spratley – vocals on "Sleep All Eyes Open" and "Come Back Clammy Lammy"
  • Sharron Saddington – vocals on "Spell with a Shell", "Wind and Rains Is Cold", "Clean That Evil Mud..." and "Will Bleed Amen"
  • Chris Brierly, Catherine Morgan, Mark Pharaoh, Robert Woolard – string quartet
  • Rob Deschamps – trombone, French horn

Technical

  • Captin John Hooks – art direction, supervisor
  • Kavus Torabi – guitar technician, stage technician

Notes

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  1. ^ Apple Music and AllMusic indicate later release dates of 24 September and 7 December 1999 respectively.[3][4] Tidal also supports the 7 December release date.[5]
  2. ^ Reissue covers feature the album title moved further to the bottom right.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Guns Album Flyer -". 2 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Cardiacs - Guns: lyrics and songs". Deezer. 21 June 1999. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  3. ^ "Credits / Guns / Cardiacs". Apple Music. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Cardiacs - Guns Album Reviews, Songs & More". AllMusic. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Guns by Cardiacs". Tidal. 22 January 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  6. ^ Cardiacs (6 March 2018). "Guns". Bandcamp. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  7. ^ Benac 2021, p. 115.
  8. ^ a b "News". The Cardiacs. Archived from the original on 8 March 2000. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  9. ^ Larkin 2006, p. 182, Note: Search "Alphabet 1999" (with quotation marks).
  10. ^ Reed, Nick (20 May 2014). "Once In A Lifetime: On Land And In The Sea By Cardiacs Revisited". The Quietus. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  11. ^ "Guns Album Flyer". Cardiacs Museum & Mares Nest. 2 August 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  12. ^ a b Benjamin, Stuart (12 July 2015). "Echoes of the Past: Cardiacs - Guns". Echoes and Dust. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  13. ^ Putaux, Jean-Luc (May 2000). "INTERVIEW: Tim Smith". Cardiacs. France. Retrieved 24 March 2020 – via Harmonie Magazine.
  14. ^ Kitching, Sean (4 July 2014). "Reviews: Cardiacs: Sing to God (Reissue)". The Quietus. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  15. ^ "The home of CARDIACS on the World Wide Web".
  16. ^ Carolino, Pedro (1884). English As She Is Spoke.
  17. ^ a b Guns liner notes.

Sources

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