Kings of Oblivion is the third album by the UK underground group Pink Fairies, released in 1973.
Kings of Oblivion | ||||
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Released | June 1973 | |||
Recorded | 1973 | |||
Studio | Chipping Norton Recording Studios, Oxfordshire | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 38:01 | |||
Label | Polydor | |||
Producer | David Hitchcock | |||
Pink Fairies chronology | ||||
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Paul Rudolph had quit the group on the release of What a Bunch of Sweeties, thus briefly deactivating the band. Duncan Sanderson and Russell Hunter formed a new band with Steve Peregrin Took and guitarist Mick Wayne, before splitting from Took and reactivating the Pink Fairies with Wayne as singer/guitarist. This new three piece recorded one single, "Well, Well, Well"/"Hold On", but Sanderson and Hunter were unhappy with the musical direction Wayne was taking the band. Convincing Larry Wallis (formerly of Took's 1970 band Shagrat) to join the group as a second guitarist, they then sacked Wayne passing songwriting and singing duties onto the inexperienced Wallis.[4]
The album was named after a line from a David Bowie track titled "The Bewlay Brothers". The cover, by Edward Barker, parodied the popular flying ducks ornaments of the time but with flying pigs instead, pigs having become a motif for the band. An inner foldout sheet contained individual portraits of the group members in their chosen scenes of oblivion.
After this album the group continued touring, but Wallis, who wanted to be in "a very slick two guitar rock band", was at odds with Sanderson and Hunter's attitude of being "content to get up and jam for ten minutes". Eventually he would leave to join Lemmy in the first incarnation of Motörhead. "City Kids" was rerecorded for On Parole, Motorhead's 1976 cancelled debut album (eventually released 1979) with Wallis on guitar. It was rerecorded yet again by Motorhead for the B-side of their 1977 single Motorhead, this time with "Fast" Eddie Clarke on guitar.
The Pink Fairies had not finished recording Kings of Oblivion before Polydor took the master tapes. According to one commentator, the label then "hastily mixed the LP while the Fairies were away on tour, even leaving the vocal tracks off one cut, 'Raceway'."[5] Released to tie in with their concurrent tour,[6] it was the band's third album, and first and only released in the United States.[7][8] In 2002, all three of the band's albums were re-released on CD by Polydor.[9]
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AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
On release, Kings of Oblivion was considered to be Pink Fairies' best album.[10] Dan Nooger in The Village Voice praised the album and considered "City Kids" and "I Wish I Was a Girl" to communicate "more of what it's like being a Mod than all of Quadrophenia."[7] In a 1975 retrospective for NME, Mick Farren said that Kings of Oblivion "solved the Fairies' problem of original songs", adding that although Wallis was heavily influenced by Alice Cooper's work with Bob Ezrin, the resultant album was tight and tuneful.[5] In a 1980 review, Ira Robbins of Trouser Press described the album to be an "amazing powerhouse", comprising "good heavy rock'n'roll" songs with careful structures, smart lyrics and "hot jamming". He felt that the band "could have been an English Cheap Trick if only the world had been ready."[8]
In the third edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide, David Fricke wrote that despite "flat production and a slim songbook", the album adequately captured Pink Fairies' "neo-psychedelic bashing".[3] In the fourth edition, an uncredited writer described Kings of Oblivion as a "long-forgotten ramp" that will appeal to "unreconstructed punks and thrash fans alike".[11] Dave Thompson of AllMusic wrote that the introduction of Wallis to the band saw them create some of their most remarkable and concise music, with the band stirring towards an "affirmative guttercat stance that so effectively predicted the rudiments of punk rock. Indeed, if any album could be said to have been born ahead of its time, Kings of Oblivion, conceived in 1973 but sounding just like 1977, is it." He concluded that the album remains "a tightly adrenalined beast, the summation of everything that the Pink Fairies promised and all that subsequent reunions have continued to deliver."[10] In a review for Uncut, Carol Clerk wrote that the album saw the band finally become a "great rock'n'roll band", adding that the music fulfilled their initial promise and commenting on the band's influence on punk and heavy metal, including on "an unusually complimentary John Lydon".[12] BBC Music's Chirs Jones similarly underscored the influence of punk and metal.[9]
The new line-up made Kings of Oblivion (1973), for which Wallis wrote or co-wrote all the material, and shifting The Fairies' sound towards hard rock.
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