Are You Are Missing Winner

Are You Are Missing Winner
Studio album by The Fall
Released 5 November 2001
Recorded 2001
Genre Post-punk
Length 47:47
Label Cog Sinister / Voiceprint
Producer Mark E. Smith, Jim Watts, Spencer Birtwistle, Ed Blaney
The Fall chronology
Liverpool 78
(2001)
Are You Are Missing Winner
(2001)
2G+2
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
BBC Musicfavourable[2]
Q[3]
The Times(2/3)[4]
The Wirefavourable[5]

Are You Are Missing Winner is the twenty-second album by British post-punk band The Fall, released in November 2001 on CD and in January 2002 as a vinyl picture disc. Since the previous year's release of the critically acclaimed The Unutterable, Fall front man Mark E. Smith had replaced his entire band with a new line-up, a fact he acknowledges in a refrain in the album's opening track: "We are the new Fall". The Unutterable's flirtation with drum and bass is replaced on Are You Are Missing Winner by a more rockabilly-influenced sound.

The album features a cover version of the northern soul track "Gotta See Jane", originally by R. Dean Taylor (The Fall had previously achieved a minor hit in 1987 with a version of Taylor's "There's a Ghost in My House"). Also featured are versions of Lead Belly's "The Bourgeois Blues", as "Bourgeois Town"; and of Iggy Pop's "African Man", as "Ibis-Afro Man"; the latter being particularly experimental with different recordings of the track frequently playing simultaneously throughout. "Kick the Can" takes its title from an episode of The Twilight Zone.

Critical reception to Are You Are Missing Winner was somewhat mixed, often focusing unfavourably on the contrast with The Unutterable. Among the album's more negative reviews is that of John Bush of Allmusic, who suggests, "Are You Are Missing Winner represents a rare misstep for the mighty Fall.[6]" Edwin Pouncey, writing in The Wire, is more upbeat: "…Smith scatterguns half remembered lyrics and conducts a whirlpool of splintered guitar, dishevelled drum and battered bass sounds with a Quasimodic Gene Vincent leather gloved fist that claws even deeper into the raw clay of innovation that birthed rock 'n' roll and continues to fuel Smith's unique vision.[7]"

Track listing

  1. "Jim's "The Fall"" (Mark E. Smith, Jim Watts) – 2:39
  2. "Bourgeois Town" (Lead Belly, arr. Smith) – 3:41 (credited incorrectly to Robert Johnson in album liner notes)
  3. "Crop-Dust" (Smith, Spencer Birtwistle) – 5:31 (based on a sample of "I Just Sing" by The Troggs, though uncredited)
  4. "My Ex-Classmates' Kids" (Smith, Ed Blaney) – 4:51
  5. "Kick the Can" (Smith, Ben Pritchard) – 5:13
  6. "Gotta See Jane" (R. Dean Taylor) – 2:23
  7. "Ibis-Afro Man" (Iggy Pop, Scott Thurston, Smith, Watts) – 9:32
  8. "The Acute" (Smith, Brian Fanning) – 3:19
  9. "Hollow Mind" (Smith, Blaney) – 3:32
  10. "Reprise: Jane – Prof Mick – Ey Bastardo" (Birtwistle, Blaney) – 7:00

Some CD copies have tracks 4 and 5 in the reverse order, despite the order being listed as above.

2006 edition

The album was remastered and expanded by Castle Music in 2006. The sound quality is audibly less erratic than on the original edition and 6 extra tracks are added as follows:

  1. "Rude (All The Time)" (Smith, Blaney) – 2:44
  2. "I Wake Up In The City" (Smith, Blaney) – 4:40
  3. "New Formation Sermon" (Smith) – 2:04
  4. "Distilled Mug Art" (Smith, Blaney) – 3:33
  5. "My Ex-Classmates' Kids" (live in Cologne 23rd October 2001) – 4:59
  6. "Where's The Fuckin' Taxi? Cunt" (Smith, Blaney, Fanning, Les Fisher) – 5:09

"Rude (All The Time)" and "I Wake Up In the City" were previously issued on a 7" single by Flitwick Records in an edition of 500, all of which were given away to subscribers free of charge. "...City", "New Formation Sermon" and "Distilled Mug Art" were included on 2G+2. The live "...Ex-Classmates'..." was included on the single release of "Theme From Sparta F.C. #2". The final track was taken from the controversial "Rude (All The Time)" EP issued by Voiceprint in 2005 and is little more than a recorded discussion amongst the credited personnel.

Personnel

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. BBC Music review
  3. Q review
  4. The Times review
  5. The Wire review
  6. Bush, John. Review. Allmusic. Retrieved 6 February 2006.
  7. Pouncey, Edwin (Feb. 2002). Review. The Wire.

External links

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