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XTC, Coat of Many Cupboards CD cover artwork

XTC, Coat of Many Cupboards

Audio CD

Disk ID: 428758

Disk length: 54m 24s (15 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2002

Label: Unknown

View all albums by XTC...

Tracks & Durations

1. Brianiac's Daughter (Psonic Psunspot version) 4:03
2. Vanishing Girl (Psonic Psunspot version) 2:44
3. Terrorism (home demo) 3:20
4. Find the Fox (home demo) 2:37
5. Season Cycle (Skylarking version) 3:21
6. The Troubles (home demo) 3:17
7. Mayor of Simpleton (early work tape) 2:47
8. King for a Day (home demo) 3:14
9. Chalkhills and Children (Oranges and Lemons version) 5:06
10. The Ballad of Peter Pumpkinhead (early home demo) 5:34
11. Omnibus (Nonsuch version) 3:20
12. The Disappointed (home demo) 3:20
13. Bungalow (Nonsuch version) 2:49
14. Didn't Hurt a Bit (Nonsuch out take) 3:54
15. Books are Burning (live on The Late Show, BBC TV) 4:47

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Coat of Many Cupboards finishes the job that the 1990 collection Rag 'N' Bone Buffet started, unearthing a deluge of outtakes, demos, home recordings, acoustic versions, and rare live tracks from XTC's long, adventurous existence. Buffet and the band's other singles collections and box sets only scratched the surface of what's out there; any serious XTC collector knows about the mountains of material that have been recorded throughout the band's 26-year existence, living in third-generation tapes passed around from fan to fan. The four-disc Cupboards tracks an awful lot of it down, cleans it up, and puts it all together, showing off the overwhelming creativity and songcraft that XTC's Andy Partridge and Colin Moulding have displayed over the decades. In all, 41 of the 60 tracks here have never before been released, with lo-fi versions of favorites like "Dear God" turning this into an interesting journey for casual fans and a dream collection for die-hard fanatics.

Precious and rare live material pops up early on the first disc in the form of "Spinning Top" and "Traffic Light Rock," documenting a jagged, brash sound that seems a far cry from the meticulous approach and intricate layers of later records like 1989's Oranges and Lemons. The first two discs track that evolution in detail, exploring the band's early Clash-like pop-punk and the skewed social commentary of records like 1980's Black Sea, while offering up intriguing nuggets like a demo version of "Senses Working Overtime" from the amazing English Settlement. The last two discs comprise XTC's later incarnation as a studio band after Partridge's mid-'80s mental breakdown and subsequent retirement from the stage. Moving through the revolutionary Skylarking, including a stunning demo of "Grass," the music slowly morphs into the densely produced, late-Beatles sound of Oranges and 1992's Nonsuch.

The set also includes a 60-page booklet as well as track-by-track commentary from Partridge and Moulding, making this a must-have for collectors even if they have somehow tracked down all this stuff themselves. One final note: the band does leave off material from Apple Venus Pt. 1 and Wasp Star (Apple Venus Pt. 2), but only because it's already been well-documented with the outtake records Homespun and Homegrown. --Matthew CookeThe first ever box set devoted to XTC, 60 tracks covering XTC's 10 classic 1978-1989 period albums (including their Dukes Of Stratosphear side project). All tracks have been digitally remastered. 2002.

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