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Julian Cope - Black Sheep

Black Sheep by Julian Cope

BLACK SHEEP is Julian Cope’s new album for 2008CE, and is a musical exploration of what it is to be an outsider in modern Western Culture. Across 11 songs and one epic poem, Cope examines the idea of social outcasts and how they — through their sheer obstinacy and strength of personality — carve a path for themselves in the normal world, often changing societyís own concepts of normality in the process. On BLACK SHEEP, Cope attributes his personal descent into outsider-dom to his 9th birthday on which 116 children his own age died in the infamous Aberfan Disaster. Cope also asserts that the West has been rigorously directed towards the outsider concept, first by the rejected ‘Black Sheep’ prophet Jesus Christ, whose own people ignored his revelation, and secondly by St. Paul, another ‘Black Sheep’ whose singular take on Christianity has come down to us through the Roman Empire. Available on two half-hour-long CDs and later on gatefold double-vinyl to be released later this year, the 11 songs of BLACK SHEEP reveal Cope at a pinnacle of songwriting and feature sumptuous lashings of orchestral Mellotron, orchestral percussion and marching bass drums, plus oboe, wah guitar, rumbling synthesizers and gorgeous harmony vocals. 2LP available soon (details will follow in a later Cargo mailout). The front cover depicts International Anarchist flag and C.G. Jung quote hand-painted in oil-on-canvas by Cope himself.

Tracks : Disc 1: Return of the Native : 1. Come The Revolution, 2. It's Too Late To Turn Back Now, 3. These Things I Know, 4. Psychedelic Odin, 5. Blood Sacrifice, 6. The Shipwreck of St. Paul. Disc 2: Return of the Alternative : 1. All The Blowing-Themselves-Up Motherfuckers (Will Realise The Minute They Die That They Were Suckers), 2. Feed My Rock'n'Roll, 3. Dhimmi is Blue, 4. The Black Sheep's Song, 5. I Can Remember This Life.

5...according to .

For me, this is the best Cope release since maybe as far back as the mid 90's. After the previous ok but patchy "You Gotta Problem With Me" this one delivers and then some.

Stronger lyrics, better band dynamics, far more coherent melody...it's all back. Imagine a stronger Jehovahkill with some of Interpreters musical direction and you'll not be far off. On the downside it's another of Cope's "one album split over two discs seemingly for purely aesthetic reasons" which is attractive to look at but annoying to play.

Still, after 25+ albums that's not bad for the only real negative point. If you are, or have been, a Cope fan at any recent point then this is a buy you should be making without worry. The Drude is back in the zone.....

5...according to .

I'm a Julian Cope fan but believe me: It's his best record in years!!! Very very good.

Rating: 5 out of 5

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