An Old Man's Dream (single): Difference between revisions
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=== Cover art ===  | === Cover art ===  | ||
The cover art was created by [[Art & Language]] based on "War" by Jackson Pollock. It's overlapped by a reproduction of the soviet mosaic that inspired "[[The Milkmaid]]".<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">  | The cover art was created by [[Art & Language]] based on "War" by Jackson Pollock. It's overlapped by a reproduction of the soviet mosaic that inspired "[[The Milkmaid]]".<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">  | ||
File:Pollock-War.jpg|"War" by Jackson Pollock, 1947  | File:Pollock-War.jpg|"War" by Jackson Pollock, 1947  | ||
File:Deyneka-Milkmaid.jpg|Milkmaid by [[Aleksandr Deyneka]], 1962  | File:Deyneka-Milkmaid.jpg|Milkmaid by [[Aleksandr Deyneka]], 1962  | ||
File:A-L-Courbet-Expressing-3.jpg|"Gustave Courbet's 'Burial at Ornans'; Expressing States of Mind that are Vivid and Compelling" by [[Art & Language]], 1981<ref>https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/art-language-gustave-courbets-burial-at-ornans-expressing-a-sensuous-affection-expressing-t03453</ref>  | |||
</gallery>  | </gallery>  | ||
Revision as of 13:52, 17 April 2023
| An Old Man's Dream | |
|---|---|
| [[File:|center|frameless]] | |
| Single by The Red Crayola with Art & Language | |
| Released | 1981 | 
| Recorded | 1980 | 
| Studio | 
 
  | 
| Label | |
| File:Logo-IMDB.svg / File:Logo-Archive.svg | |
Track list
Background
- 1981 single with two tracks from Kangaroo?
 
Personnel
Cover art
The cover art was created by Art & Language based on "War" by Jackson Pollock. It's overlapped by a reproduction of the soviet mosaic that inspired "The Milkmaid".
- 
			
			"War" by Jackson Pollock, 1947
 - 
			
			Milkmaid by Aleksandr Deyneka, 1962
 - 
			
			"Gustave Courbet's 'Burial at Ornans'; Expressing States of Mind that are Vivid and Compelling" by Art & Language, 1981[1]
 
Reviews
Adventuring into Basketry
1981[2]
Allegedly attracting 'disco action', the first 45 for over a year is a gloriously brutal bass maze. The 'Milkmaid' coupling doubles its justification for singularity, but invest in the wonderful 'Kangaroo?' LP instead.
