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1981 studio album by the Stranglers

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[7]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[8]
The Great Rock Discography5/10[9]

The Gospel According to the Meninblack (sometimes referred to as just The Meninblack) is the fifth album by English rock band the Stranglers, an esoteric concept album released 9 February 1981[10][11] on the Liberty label. The album deals with conspiratorial ideas surrounding alien visitations to Earth, the sinister governmental men in black, and the involvement of these elements in well-known biblical narratives. This was not the first time the Stranglers had used this concept; "Meninblack" on the earlier The Raven album and subsequent 1980 single-release "Who Wants the World?" had also explored it.

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Álbums chronology

The Raven
The Raven
21/9/1979
La Folie
La Folie
9/11/1981

The Gospel According to The Meninblack

The Stranglers

1981 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 9 Marzo 1981 · Fecha Grabación: Febrero 1981 -
    Discográfica: Liberty · Estudio de grabación: Musicland Studios (Munich); Pathé Marconi Studios (Paris); Startling Studios (Berkshire); RCA Studios (Rome)[2]; Pebble Beach Sound Studio (Worthing); Eden Studios (London) · Productor: The Stranglers
    1
    Waltzinblack
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:39
  • 2
    Just Like Nothing On Earth
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:55
  • 3
    Second Coming
    The Stranglers • 1981
    4:22
  • 4
    Waiting For The Meninblack
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:44
  • 5
    Turn The Centuries, Turn
    The Stranglers • 1981
    4:36
  • 6
    Two Sunspots
    The Stranglers • 1981
    2:32
  • 7
    Four Horsemen
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:40
  • 8
    Thrown Away
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:30
  • 9
    Manna Machine
    The Stranglers • 1981
    3:17
  • 10
    Hallow To Our Men
    The Stranglers • 1981
    7:26
  • Singles


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    Singles

    The Raven
    The Raven
    21/9/1979
    La Folie
    La Folie
    9/11/1981
    The Gospel According to the Meninblack
    Studio album by
    Released9 February 1981
    RecordedJanuary–August 1980
    ("Two Sunspots", May 1979)[1]
    Studio
    [3][4][5]
    Genre
    Length40:28
    LabelLiberty
    ProducerThe Stranglers
    The Stranglers chronology
    The Raven
    (1979)
    The Gospel According to the Meninblack
    (1981)
    La Folie
    (1981)
    Singles from The Gospel According to the Meninblack
    1. "Thrown Away"
      Released: January 1981
    2. "Just Like Nothing on Earth"
      Released: March 1981[6]

    Review

    1981 studio album by the Stranglers

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[7]
    Encyclopedia of Popular Music[8]
    The Great Rock Discography5/10[9]

    The Gospel According to the Meninblack (sometimes referred to as just The Meninblack) is the fifth album by English rock band the Stranglers, an esoteric concept album released 9 February 1981[10][11] on the Liberty label. The album deals with conspiratorial ideas surrounding alien visitations to Earth, the sinister governmental men in black, and the involvement of these elements in well-known biblical narratives. This was not the first time the Stranglers had used this concept; "Meninblack" on the earlier The Raven album and subsequent 1980 single-release "Who Wants the World?" had also explored it.

    Leer más

    History

    The album is an elaboration of concepts first introduced by the band on the aforementioned track from their preceding album, The Raven. Hugh Cornwell, former singer-songwriter and guitarist with the group, has stated his belief that the album is the pinnacle of the Stranglers` artistic and creative output, and he cites it as his favourite album by the band.[12] In a 2022 interview promoting his solo release Moments of Madness Cornwell reiterated this position saying "I think that we were all at the top of our game when we made ‘Men in Black’ and it comes through."[13] The Stranglers` bassist, Jean-Jacques Burnel, shares this opinion, stating in a 2014 interview "It was a bit of a low point when The Meninblack came out and it wasn’t regarded as the masterpiece that I thought it was."[14] Burnel regards the album as often techno in essence,[5] though The Meninblack predates the emergence of that genre by some years.

    The single releases from the album were "Thrown Away", which reached UK chart position 42[15] and "Just Like Nothing on Earth", their first single to miss the top 50.[10]

    The opening instrumental "Waltzinblack" was originally intended to be the second single release from the album, but was withdrawn by Liberty, which deemed it "unrepresentative".[10] It was later used as the theme music for Keith Floyd`s BBC TV series. The band developed a tradition of using the track to open their live performances.

    The album initially sold around 50,000 copies, their worst-selling UK album to date,[10] peaking at number eight on the UK Albums Chart; it spent five weeks in the listings.[15]

    In a 2015 interview on British TV, Burnel stated that the band experimented with heroin to help their creative process, and this album was the result.[16]

    Legacy

    Chris Roberts of Classic Rock writes that the Stranglers "retained full artistic freedom, and in The Gospel According to the Meninblack made what some have described as the first goth album, and others as the first techno album."[17] Rob Hughes, also of Classic Rock, believes it to be "[t]he closest The Stranglers ever got to a full-on prog album," adding: "In the almost total absence of guitars, synths and electronic effects dominate, be it on the very strange `Manna Machine` or the fairground-like `Waltzinblack`."[18]

    Burnel remains fond of the album for being "completely off-the-wall." He believes that while the album is now sonically "quite modern", at the time the album was viewed negatively because it was by the Stranglers, adding: "It was never regarded as an art album, because people just didn`t see us in that light, apart from Billboard`s reviewer who said it was a work of genius. If you`re going out having punch-ups, being physical savages, you`re not allowed to have intellectual pretensions. But we had a foot in both camps, really."[17] Hugh Cornwell considers it "probably" his favourite Stranglers album, "Because I like the underdog. It underachieved. And I love the spaceships landing."[17]

    Track listing

    All tracks written and arranged by the Stranglers.

    Side A
    No.TitleLead vocalsLength
    1."Waltzinblack"(instrumental)3:38
    2."Just Like Nothing on Earth"Hugh Cornwell3:55
    3."Second Coming"Cornwell4:22
    4."Waiting for the Meninblack"Cornwell3:44
    5."Turn the Centuries, Turn"(instrumental)4:35

    Side B
    No.TitleLead vocalsLength
    6."Two Sunspots"Cornwell2:32
    7."Four Horsemen"Dave Greenfield3:40
    8."Thrown Away"Jean-Jacques Burnel3:30
    9."Manna Machine"Cornwell3:17
    10."Hallow to Our Men"Cornwell7:26
    Total length:40:28

    2001 CD reissue bonus tracks
    No.TitleOriginLength
    11."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single3:27
    12."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single4:27
    13."Tomorrow Was the Hereafter"Non-album single, 1980 [n 1][19]4:01
    Total length:52:33

    2018 CD reissue bonus tracks
    No.TitleOriginLength
    11."Who Wants the World?"Non-album single, 19803:14
    12."The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)""Who Wants the World?" single3:36
    13."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single3:28
    14."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single4:26
    15."Vietnamerica"IV, 19804:03
    16."Tomorrow Was the Hereafter"Non-album single4:02
    17."G.m.B.H" (extended album version)IV3:51
    Total length:67:08

    2018 expanded vinyl edition

    Self-released by the Stranglers, The Gospel According to the Meninblack received a deluxe vinyl reissue in 2018, limited to 1000 numbered copies. The original 10-track album is coupled with a bonus 12-track album, entitled The Meninblack - Revelations, which features non-album singles, associated B-sides, demos, alternate versions, live tracks, and the brass band reworking "Marchinblack".[20]

    • Side one and two as per original vinyl edition

    Themeninblack - Revelations

    Side three
    No.TitleOriginLength
    1."Who Wants the World?"Non-album single
    2."Bear Cage" (7" single edit)Non-album single
    3."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single
    4."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single
    5."The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)""Who Wants the World?" single
    6."The Freezer"Previously unreleased [n 2]

    Side four
    No.TitleOriginLength
    7."Who Wants the World?" (demo)Previously unreleased
    8."Two Sunspots" (demo)Previously unreleased
    9."Thrown Away" (live in Paris, April 2014)Previously unreleased
    10."Justlikenothingonearth" (live at Brixton Academy, London, March 2018)Previously unreleased
    11."Bear Cage" (live at Brixton Academy, London, March 2018)Previously unreleased
    12."Marchinblack"Previously unreleased [n 3][21]

    Personnel

    Credits adapted from the album liner notes, except where noted.[22]

    The Stranglers

    • Hugh Cornwell ("Hughinblack") – guitar, vocals, concept
    • Dave Greenfield ("Daveinblack") – keyboards, vocals
    • Jean-Jacques Burnel ("JJinblack") – bass, vocals
    • Jet Black ("Jetinblack") – drums, vocals, percussion[23]

    Technical

    • The Stranglers – producer
    • Steve Churchyard – engineer, mixing
    • Alan Winstanley – engineer ("Waiting for the Meninblack" and "Two Sunspots")
    • Aldo Bocca – engineer ("Just Like Nothing on Earth" and "Turn the Centuries, Turn")
    • Laurence Diana – engineer ("Waltzinblack" and "Four Horsemen")
    • Leonardo da Vinci – original gatefold sleeve painting[10]
    • John Pasche – art direction, design
    • Jim Gibson – calligraphy

    Bonus tracks

    • Baz Warne – guitar, vocals (2014 and 2018 live tracks)
    • Jim Macaulay – drums (2014 and 2018 live tracks)
    • The Stranglers – producer (all tracks, except 2014 and 2018 live tracks and "Marchinblack")[24]
    • Alan Winstanley – producer ("Bear Cage" and "The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)"), engineer ("Bear Cage")[24]
    • Gary Edwards – engineer ("Who Wants the World")[25]
    • Laurence Diana – engineer ("Who Wants the World")[25]
    • Steve Churchyard – producer ("G.m.B.H")[25], engineer ("Top Secret", "Maninwhite", "Vietnamerica",[25] "G.m.B.H", "The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)", "Bear Cage")[24]
    • Louie Nicastro – producer, mixing (2014 and 2018 live tracks and "Marchinblack")[24]

    1981 studio album by the Stranglers

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[7]
    Encyclopedia of Popular Music[8]
    The Great Rock Discography5/10[9]

    The Gospel According to the Meninblack (sometimes referred to as just The Meninblack) is the fifth album by English rock band the Stranglers, an esoteric concept album released 9 February 1981[10][11] on the Liberty label. The album deals with conspiratorial ideas surrounding alien visitations to Earth, the sinister governmental men in black, and the involvement of these elements in well-known biblical narratives. This was not the first time the Stranglers had used this concept; "Meninblack" on the earlier The Raven album and subsequent 1980 single-release "Who Wants the World?" had also explored it.

    History

    The album is an elaboration of concepts first introduced by the band on the aforementioned track from their preceding album, The Raven. Hugh Cornwell, former singer-songwriter and guitarist with the group, has stated his belief that the album is the pinnacle of the Stranglers` artistic and creative output, and he cites it as his favourite album by the band.[12] In a 2022 interview promoting his solo release Moments of Madness Cornwell reiterated this position saying "I think that we were all at the top of our game when we made ‘Men in Black’ and it comes through."[13] The Stranglers` bassist, Jean-Jacques Burnel, shares this opinion, stating in a 2014 interview "It was a bit of a low point when The Meninblack came out and it wasn’t regarded as the masterpiece that I thought it was."[14] Burnel regards the album as often techno in essence,[5] though The Meninblack predates the emergence of that genre by some years.

    The single releases from the album were "Thrown Away", which reached UK chart position 42[15] and "Just Like Nothing on Earth", their first single to miss the top 50.[10]

    The opening instrumental "Waltzinblack" was originally intended to be the second single release from the album, but was withdrawn by Liberty, which deemed it "unrepresentative".[10] It was later used as the theme music for Keith Floyd`s BBC TV series. The band developed a tradition of using the track to open their live performances.

    The album initially sold around 50,000 copies, their worst-selling UK album to date,[10] peaking at number eight on the UK Albums Chart; it spent five weeks in the listings.[15]

    In a 2015 interview on British TV, Burnel stated that the band experimented with heroin to help their creative process, and this album was the result.[16]

    Legacy

    Chris Roberts of Classic Rock writes that the Stranglers "retained full artistic freedom, and in The Gospel According to the Meninblack made what some have described as the first goth album, and others as the first techno album."[17] Rob Hughes, also of Classic Rock, believes it to be "[t]he closest The Stranglers ever got to a full-on prog album," adding: "In the almost total absence of guitars, synths and electronic effects dominate, be it on the very strange `Manna Machine` or the fairground-like `Waltzinblack`."[18]

    Burnel remains fond of the album for being "completely off-the-wall." He believes that while the album is now sonically "quite modern", at the time the album was viewed negatively because it was by the Stranglers, adding: "It was never regarded as an art album, because people just didn`t see us in that light, apart from Billboard`s reviewer who said it was a work of genius. If you`re going out having punch-ups, being physical savages, you`re not allowed to have intellectual pretensions. But we had a foot in both camps, really."[17] Hugh Cornwell considers it "probably" his favourite Stranglers album, "Because I like the underdog. It underachieved. And I love the spaceships landing."[17]

    Track listing

    All tracks written and arranged by the Stranglers.

    Side A
    No.TitleLead vocalsLength
    1."Waltzinblack"(instrumental)3:38
    2."Just Like Nothing on Earth"Hugh Cornwell3:55
    3."Second Coming"Cornwell4:22
    4."Waiting for the Meninblack"Cornwell3:44
    5."Turn the Centuries, Turn"(instrumental)4:35

    Side B
    No.TitleLead vocalsLength
    6."Two Sunspots"Cornwell2:32
    7."Four Horsemen"Dave Greenfield3:40
    8."Thrown Away"Jean-Jacques Burnel3:30
    9."Manna Machine"Cornwell3:17
    10."Hallow to Our Men"Cornwell7:26
    Total length:40:28

    2001 CD reissue bonus tracks
    No.TitleOriginLength
    11."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single3:27
    12."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single4:27
    13."Tomorrow Was the Hereafter"Non-album single, 1980 [n 1][19]4:01
    Total length:52:33

    2018 CD reissue bonus tracks
    No.TitleOriginLength
    11."Who Wants the World?"Non-album single, 19803:14
    12."The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)""Who Wants the World?" single3:36
    13."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single3:28
    14."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single4:26
    15."Vietnamerica"IV, 19804:03
    16."Tomorrow Was the Hereafter"Non-album single4:02
    17."G.m.B.H" (extended album version)IV3:51
    Total length:67:08

    2018 expanded vinyl edition

    Self-released by the Stranglers, The Gospel According to the Meninblack received a deluxe vinyl reissue in 2018, limited to 1000 numbered copies. The original 10-track album is coupled with a bonus 12-track album, entitled The Meninblack - Revelations, which features non-album singles, associated B-sides, demos, alternate versions, live tracks, and the brass band reworking "Marchinblack".[20]

    • Side one and two as per original vinyl edition

    Themeninblack - Revelations

    Side three
    No.TitleOriginLength
    1."Who Wants the World?"Non-album single
    2."Bear Cage" (7" single edit)Non-album single
    3."Top Secret""Thrown Away" single
    4."Maninwhite""Just Like Nothing on Earth" single
    5."The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)""Who Wants the World?" single
    6."The Freezer"Previously unreleased [n 2]

    Side four
    No.TitleOriginLength
    7."Who Wants the World?" (demo)Previously unreleased
    8."Two Sunspots" (demo)Previously unreleased
    9."Thrown Away" (live in Paris, April 2014)Previously unreleased
    10."Justlikenothingonearth" (live at Brixton Academy, London, March 2018)Previously unreleased
    11."Bear Cage" (live at Brixton Academy, London, March 2018)Previously unreleased
    12."Marchinblack"Previously unreleased [n 3][21]

    Personnel

    Credits adapted from the album liner notes, except where noted.[22]

    The Stranglers

    • Hugh Cornwell ("Hughinblack") – guitar, vocals, concept
    • Dave Greenfield ("Daveinblack") – keyboards, vocals
    • Jean-Jacques Burnel ("JJinblack") – bass, vocals
    • Jet Black ("Jetinblack") – drums, vocals, percussion[23]

    Technical

    • The Stranglers – producer
    • Steve Churchyard – engineer, mixing
    • Alan Winstanley – engineer ("Waiting for the Meninblack" and "Two Sunspots")
    • Aldo Bocca – engineer ("Just Like Nothing on Earth" and "Turn the Centuries, Turn")
    • Laurence Diana – engineer ("Waltzinblack" and "Four Horsemen")
    • Leonardo da Vinci – original gatefold sleeve painting[10]
    • John Pasche – art direction, design
    • Jim Gibson – calligraphy

    Bonus tracks

    • Baz Warne – guitar, vocals (2014 and 2018 live tracks)
    • Jim Macaulay – drums (2014 and 2018 live tracks)
    • The Stranglers – producer (all tracks, except 2014 and 2018 live tracks and "Marchinblack")[24]
    • Alan Winstanley – producer ("Bear Cage" and "The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)"), engineer ("Bear Cage")[24]
    • Gary Edwards – engineer ("Who Wants the World")[25]
    • Laurence Diana – engineer ("Who Wants the World")[25]
    • Steve Churchyard – producer ("G.m.B.H")[25], engineer ("Top Secret", "Maninwhite", "Vietnamerica",[25] "G.m.B.H", "The Meninblack (Waiting for `Em)", "Bear Cage")[24]
    • Louie Nicastro – producer, mixing (2014 and 2018 live tracks and "Marchinblack")[24]

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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