Popular Soviet Songs And Youth Music

Archive release

Popular Soviet Songs And Youth Music

Zoviet France · 1985 · Tape · GB · Singing Ringing

<div> <div id="tracklist" class="section tracklist" data-toggle="tracklist">Tracklist <div>&nbsp;</div> <div class="section_content">A1 Tier Of Veils &nbsp; <br /> A2 Ram &nbsp; <br /> &nbsp; Stains And Filth In The Convent AOUEI <br /> A3 Duir &nbsp; <br /> A4 Zone &nbsp; <br /> A5 Straif (La M&egrave;re Du Bois) Z Estrif &nbsp; <br /> A6 White Track (Fire Frost) &nbsp; <br /> A7 Veil &nbsp; <br /> A8 Pesach &nbsp; <br /> A9 Decoy &nbsp; <br /> A10 Yezidi &nbsp; <br /> B1 ?????? ???? &nbsp; <br /> &nbsp; Yezidi Circle Trap <br /> B2 Signal &nbsp; <br /> B3 Sidi &nbsp; <br /> B4 Birch Brake &nbsp; <br /> B5 Sein &nbsp; <br /> B6 Spin (Helissein) &nbsp; <br /> B7 Tan-Tal &nbsp; <br /> B8 Ma-Ja &nbsp; <br /> B9 Whip &nbsp; <br /> B10 Veil &nbsp; <br /> B11 Fearn &nbsp; <br /> C1 Burning Bush &nbsp; <br /> &nbsp; Beak And Snout <br /> C2 Sidhe (Riuben) &nbsp; <br /> C3 Marsh &nbsp; <br /> C4 Swine &nbsp; <br /> C5 Marsh &nbsp; <br /> C6 Signal (Circe) &nbsp; <br /> C7 Migration &nbsp; <br /> C8 Burning Bush &nbsp; <br /> C9 Sheol &nbsp; <br /> D1 Veil (Sloe Semen) &nbsp; <br /> D2 Signal &nbsp; <br /> &nbsp; Charm <br /> D3 Chirm Ela &nbsp; <br /> D4 Chirm Geis &nbsp; <br /> D5 Charm Aliso &nbsp; <br /> D6 Shewel &nbsp; <br /> D7 Yezidi (Say) &nbsp;</div> </div> <div class="section credits toggle_section toggle_section_remember" data-toggle-section-id="credits" id="credits">Credits <div class="section_content toggle_section_content"> <ul class="list_no_style"> <li>Composed By [Uncredited], Performer [Uncredited] &ndash; Ben Ponton, Paolo Di Paolo, Robin Storey</li> </ul> </div> </div> <div class="section notes toggle_section toggle_section_remember" data-toggle-section-id="notes" id="notes">Notes <div class="section_content toggle_section_content">Feathers collected from the shores of the Irish Sea, the most radioactive area of seawater on Earth. <br /> <br /> 2 x cassettes come packaged inside a ceramic pot, with a stick, feathers, a flag, etc. There is also an instruction sheet, telling you what to do with these elements. Some instructions were serious, and others were silly.</div> </div> </div>

Tracklist

  1. A1Tier Of Veils
  2. A2Ram
  3. A3Duir
  4. A4Zone
  5. A5Straif (La Mère Du Bois) Z Estrif
  6. A6White Track (Fire Frost)
  7. A7Veil
  8. A8Pesach
  9. A9Decoy
  10. A10Yezidi
  11. B1?????? ????
  12. B2Signal
  13. B3Sidi
  14. B4Birch Brake
  15. B5Sein
  16. B6Spin (Helissein)
  17. B7Tan-Tal
  18. B8Ma-Ja
  19. B9Whip
  20. B10Veil
  21. B11Fearn
  22. C1Burning Bush
  23. C2Sidhe (Riuben)
  24. C3Marsh
  25. C4Swine
  26. C5Marsh
  27. C6Signal (Circe)
  28. C7Migration
  29. C8Burning Bush
  30. C9Sheol
  31. D1Veil (Sloe Semen)
  32. D2Signal
  33. D3Chirm Ela
  34. D4Chirm Geis
  35. D5Charm Aliso
  36. D6Shewel
  37. D7Yezidi (Say)
  38. 3Stains And Filth In The Convent AOUEI
  39. 13Yezidi Circle Trap
  40. 25Beak And Snout
  41. 36Charm

Credits & notes

Composed By [Uncredited], Performer [Uncredited] –

Format
Tape
Catalog no.
Singing Ringing
Country
GB
Year
1985
Condition
2xC90

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Archive notes

★★★★

Of all the odd school packaging of cassettes that appeared in the magic era that was the 80s, this double cassette by Zoviet France is one of my favourites. Not only do the cassettes contain some amazing music, the packaging is way beyond belief. And, in those days of DIY-yore, the sky for packaging was the limit - as long as you and your friends had enough free time (read: if you were unemployed) to create and assemble the often stunning product packaging concepts. And Zoviet France was a big player in that field. In 1980 Ben Ponton and Mark Warren had joined forces to create unconventional music as well as unconventional product packaging using material such as aluminium foil, hessian fabric, tar and other intriguing substances to pack up their releases. None however, turned out more spectacular or labour-intense than their 1985 double cassette Popular Soviet Songs And Youth Music. Rumour has it that only 200 copies were assembled, which makes sense – just imagine the amount of work involved in packing a hand-painted stick, a piece of rope, a parody on the American flag (featuring hammer and sickle instead of stars and stripes) silk screened on muslin, several hand-printed paper art inserts plus a radio-active feather collected from the beach at Seascale – near the Sellafield nuclear reactor – into a specially sculpted ceramic box and sealing the whole thing off with wax. Even multi-lingual user instructions were included, urging buyers to ‘discard burned cassettes and retain box’. The cassettes themselves feature over two and a half hours of non-compromising music. Less user- and listener-friendly than many of Zoviet France’s ambient releases, Popular Soviet Songs And Youth Music is an alienated grittier, and admittedly at times patchy affair. Zoviet France clearly refused to make any compromises, with as much exuberance in the music as in the packaging. Popular Songs and Soviet Music is a confrontational but fascinating statement – this is us and this is what we feel to be important to us it almost screams. And I agree; of all the Zoviet France releases that I used to have, this one is the only one left in my collection. Popular Soviet Songs and Youth Music is an important artistic statement that somehow has transcended time and place. As such, it almost seems inevitable that copies with all content complete and correct are near-impossible to locate.

2018-03-19T13:19:00.000Z