Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts
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Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts is the second album by the British indie and psychedelic rock band Kula Shaker.[2] The album was released on 8 March 1999 and reached #9 in the UK Albums Chart, during a chart stay of 10 weeks.[3][4] It was less successful in the U.S., however, where it failed to break into the Billboard 200 album chart.[5] It was preceded in April 1998 by the "Sound of Drums" single which reached #3 on the UK Singles Chart.[4] Two further singles were taken from Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts: "Mystical Machine Gun", which was released concurrently with the album and peaked at #14 in the UK, and "Shower Your Love", which was released in May 1999 and also reached #14 on the UK charts.[4] None of the album's accompanying singles charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in America.[5]
Initial recording sessions for the album were produced by John Leckie but the band soon decided to bring in producers George Drakoulias and Rick Rubin instead.[2] Eventually Drakoulias and Rubin were rejected by the band and Bob Ezrin was brought in to complete the album.[2] As a result of this, the production credits for the album's lead single, "Sound of Drums", name Drakoulias and Rubin as producers, while the rest of Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts is produced by Ezrin. Like its predecessor, K, the album continues the band's hybrid of 1960s-style psychedelic rock, groovy indie pop, and Indian instrumentation, albeit with a more progressive rock slant than on previous releases.[2] Musically, many of the songs make use of Beatles-influenced psychedelic effects, swirling guitars, and Indian chants.[2] This musical eclecticism prompted the band themselves to refer to Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts as their "kitchen sink album".[6]
The album was partly recorded at the Astoria recording studio, a houseboat-studio owned by Pink Floyd guitarist, David Gilmour. During production, the album was given the working title of Strangefolk, as lead vocalist Crispian Mills revealed during a BBC Radio 2 interview on 10 September 2007. Mills explained that the album's title was only changed to Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts at the last minute before release. However, the rejected album title was later reused for the band's 2007 comeback album, Strangefolk.
In addition, Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts was originally intended to feature the song "Strangefolk", a 10-minute long track that began with the spoken introduction "In the beginning was the word, and the word was...'Om Keshavaya namah aum'."[6] Ultimately, this track was not released on the album but an excerpt of it was included as a hidden track on the 2002 compilation album, Kollected: The Best of Kula Shaker.[6] Another song entitled "Strangefolk" was included on the 2007 reunion album but despite its identical title, this song is not the same as the Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts outtake.
Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts was re-released in a 10th Anniversary, 2 CD edition on 20 January 2010.[7][8] The 10th Anniversary edition included an expanded running order for the original album, with the outtake song "Strangefolk" included, as the band originally intended.[7] It also featured previously unreleased demos, alternate versions of songs, and new artwork.[7]
Track listing
1999 Original Edition
- "Great Hosannah" (Crispian Mills)
- "Mystical Machine Gun" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "S.O.S." (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Radhe Radhe" (traditional, arranged by Crispian Mills, Gouri Choudhury)
- "I'm Still Here" (Crispian Mills)
- "Shower Your Love" (Crispian Mills)
- "108 Battles (of the Mind)" (Crispian Mills, Alonza Bevan)
- "Sound of Drums" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Timeworm" (Crispian Mills, Alonza Bevan)
- "Last Farewell" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Golden Avatar" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Namami Nanda-Nandana" [aka "Nanda-nandanāṣṭakaḿ"] (traditional, arranged by Crispian Mills)
- "Stotra" [hidden track]
2010 Deluxe Edition
Disc 1
- "Great Hosannah" (Crispian Mills)
- "Mystical Machine Gun" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "S.O.S." (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "I'm Still Here" (Crispian Mills)
- "Radhe Radhe" (traditional, arranged by Crispian Mills, Gouri Choudhury)
- "Shower Your Love" (Crispian Mills)
- "108 Battles (of the Mind)" (Crispian Mills, Alonza Bevan)
- "Sound of Drums" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Timeworm" (Crispian Mills, Alonza Bevan)
- "Last Farewell" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Golden Avatar" (Crispian Mills, Kula Shaker)
- "Namami Nanda Nandana" (traditional, arranged by Crispian Mills)
- "Strangefolk" [the original title track]
- "Stotra"
Disc 2 (Astronauts Anthology)
- "Sound of Love" [Bearsville Studios Session, which became Sound of Drums]
- "Avalonia"
- "Golden Avatar" [Band Demo]
- "Strangefolk" [Band Demo]
- Roger Morton Interview with Crispian and Alonza recorded on 13 November 2009 in London about the making of Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts
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