Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Feeding of the 5000 (album)

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Released
  
February 1979

Length
  
31:50

Release date
  
1978

Label
  
Small Wonder Records

Recorded
  
29 October 1978

Artist
  
Crass

Producer
  
Crass

Genre
  
Anarcho-punk

The Feeding of the 5000 (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen887Cra

The Feeding of the 5000 (1978)
  
Stations of the Crass (1979)

Similar
  
Crass albums, Anarcho-punk albums, Other albums

Crass the feeding of the 5000


The Feeding of the 5000 is the first album by the anarcho-punk band Crass. The album was recorded on October 29, 1978, by John Loder at Southern Studios and was released the same year. It was considered revolutionary in its time due to what was considered an extreme sound, frequently profane lyrical content and the anarchist political ideals in the lyrics. The album also saw the introduction of Crass's policy of ensuring cheap prices for their records. This album is considered one of the first punk albums to expound serious anarchist philosophies.

Contents

Crass asylum 1978


Album information

The record was made when Pete Stennett, owner of Small Wonder Records, heard a demo that the band had recorded. Impressed by all of the material, he decided that rather than release a conventional single by the band, he would put all of their set onto an 18-track 12" EP. However, problems were encountered when workers at the Irish pressing plant contracted to manufacture the record refused to handle it due to the allegedly blasphemous content of the track "Reality Asylum" (referred to as "Asylum" on the record sleeve). The record was eventually released with this track removed and replaced by two minutes of silence, retitled "The Sound of Free Speech". This incident also prompted Crass to set up their own record label in order to retain full editorial control over their material, and "Reality Asylum" was issued shortly afterwards in a re-recorded and extended form as a 7" single. A later repress of The Feeding of The 5000 (subtitled The Second Sitting) released on Crass records in 1980 restored the missing track.

Crass helped reinitiate the influence of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the wider peace campaign in the UK with the songs like "They've Got a Bomb", "Fight War Not Wars" and the adoption of the CND Symbol at their live concerts.

"They've got a Bomb" also has a period of silence within it, inspired by John Cage's "4'33"". The band have acknowledged the influence of Cage, and said that the idea of the space in the song, when performed live, was to suddenly stop the energy, dancing and noise and allow the audience to momentarily "confront themselves" and consider the reality of nuclear war.

"The feeding of the five thousand" is a well-known phrase in Christian tradition, being the name of a Biblical miracle in which a small amount of food is said to have fed 5,000 people. According to the band's drummer and spokesperson, Penny Rimbaud, "We named the album The Feeding of The Five Thousand because 5,000 was the minimum number that we could get pressed and some 4900 more than we thought we'd sell. Feeding is now only a few hundred short of going golden, though I don't suppose we'll hear too much about that in the music press".

On 16 August 2010, The Feeding of the 5000 was rereleased as the first volume of The Crassical Collection. As well as being digitally remastered from the original analogue studio tapes, the release also contains additional artwork by Gee Vaucher, bonus material and a 64-page booklet of lyrics and liner notes by Rimbaud and Steve Ignorant.

Side one

  1. "Asylum" - 2:06
  2. "Do They Owe Us a Living?" - 1:24
  3. "End Result" - 2:04
  4. "They’ve Got a Bomb" - 3:48
  5. "Punk is Dead" - 1:48
  6. "Reject of Society" - 1:08
  7. "General Bacardi" - 0:59
  8. "Banned from the Roxy" - 2:14
  9. "G’s Song" - 0:36

Side two

  1. "Fight War, Not Wars" - 0:42
  2. "Women" - 1:15
  3. "Securicor" - 2:28
  4. "Sucks" - 1:38
  5. "You Pay" - 1:44
  6. "Angels" - 2:08
  7. "What a Shame" - 1:11
  8. "So What" - 3:05
  9. "Well?...Do They?" - 1:32

Crassical Collection bonus tracks

Ignorant & Rimbaud In Duo [Stormtrooper]

  1. "Do They Owe Us a Living?"
  2. "Blackburn Rovers - thread track"

Crass In Soho

  1. "Heartbeat of the Mortuary"
  2. "Do They Owe Us a Living?"
  3. "Demolition"
  4. "I Don't Like It"
  5. "Pissedorf - thread track"

Crass In Demo

  1. "End Result"
  2. "G's Song"
  3. "General Bacardi"
  4. "Securicor"
  5. "Angela Rippon"
  6. "Major General Despair"
  7. "Do They Owe Us a Living?"
  8. "Punk is Dead"
  9. "Come to Southern Studios - run out track"

Personnel

  • Crass - producer
  • Steve Ignorant - vocals
  • Joy De Vivre - voices
  • Eve Libertine - voices on tracks 1, 11.
  • Phil Free - lead guitar, backing vocals
  • N.A.Palmer - rhythm guitar, backing vocals
  • Pete Wright - bass guitar, backing vocals, lead vocals on tracks 12, 13, 14.
  • Penny Rimbaud - drums, radio
  • John Loder - engineer
  • G (Gee Vaucher) - artwork
  • Songs

    1The Sound of Free Speech2:06
    2Do They Owe Us a Living?1:25
    3End Result2:04

    References

    The Feeding of the 5000 (album) Wikipedia