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* Released April 21, 2015
* Released April 21, 2015
== Retrospectives ==
[[Mayo Thompson]], 2010<ref>https://archive.org/details/documenteyewitne0000tayl/page/113/mode/1up</ref><blockquote>By 1978, things with [[Art & Language]] weren't working out and I'd come to England unsure what I was doing. I'd read about [[Rough Trade]] [...] and went in one time and asked to hear "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo", the [[Pere Ubu]] single [...] That was my first visit. I came back a while later and took twenty-five copies of ''Corrected Slogans'', an album I had made with Art & Language, in to see if they would buy them. Geoff [Travis] said that he could sell them all, a claim that later turned out not to be true, but gradually more copies found their way into the system: more importantly, I found ''my'' way into the system.</blockquote>


== Reviews ==
== Reviews ==

Revision as of 23:11, 26 June 2023

Corrected Slogans
Studio album by Art & Language
Released 1976
Recorded 1974-1975
Studio


Label
/

Track listing

Background

Further reading: Lisson ON AIR podcast episode with Art & Language on their collaboration with the Red Krayola (2019)

Personnel

Music

Technical

Releases

First pressing

  • Initial pressing of 1000 copies
  • Self-released in the US and UK
  • First sold at Art & Language's 'Music-Language' exhibition on June 18, 1976
  • Cover design consisted of glued-on text labels

Robert Self gallery version

  • Alternate sleeve with artwork from Art & Language's series "Ten Posters: Illustrations for Art-Language". This image, reportedly a caricature of Joseph Beuys[1], was used for all subsequent issues of the record. This is the only version that says "Art & Language" on the front cover.
  • Sold at Art & Language's exhibition at Robert Self gallery starting June 28, 1977

Recommend Records reissue

  • In October 1982, the German zines Spex and Sounds reported that People's Records was releasing the first reissue of the record. However it appears that the label folded before this could come to fruition
  • This reissue was distributed by Recommended Records who would also release Black Snakes in 1983

Drag City reissues

CD reissue

LP reissue

  • Released April 21, 2015

Retrospectives

Mayo Thompson, 2010[2]

By 1978, things with Art & Language weren't working out and I'd come to England unsure what I was doing. I'd read about Rough Trade [...] and went in one time and asked to hear "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo", the Pere Ubu single [...] That was my first visit. I came back a while later and took twenty-five copies of Corrected Slogans, an album I had made with Art & Language, in to see if they would buy them. Geoff [Travis] said that he could sell them all, a claim that later turned out not to be true, but gradually more copies found their way into the system: more importantly, I found my way into the system.

Reviews

Art Monthly

December 1977, no. 13[3]

Peter Smith

Interview

January 1978, vol. 8, iss. 1[4]

Glenn O'Brien

The best LP I borrowed this month was Music-Language: Corrected Slogans by Art & Language. You won't find this in any record stores, but maybe at a great art book store like Jaap Riteman (W. Broadway & Spring). It's words and music by a noted bunch of conceptual art agitators and sounds for the most part like Monty Python gone to Stalinism and folk music, but one cut really knocks me out and that's "An Harangue" which features a Velvet Underground influenced New York garage-rock rhythm guitar solo with an Oxford accented Marxist/Leninist/Anarchist/et seq. class analysis tract overdubbed.

OP Magazine

198?[5]

Bonnie Gordon and Edward Kaplan

Combine the nerdiest aspects of folk music with the creepiest parts of political rhetoric, and add a dash of "music" that is nearly inaudible. To give an example of some of the rhetoric: "The struggle for realism, a social practice is vitiated by private commitment. The only first step is the performance of concrete organizational tasks. Organization on class lines against the institutional ideology." Now take these words, and sing-talk them, just off the top of your head, the way a nine year old might do it. Only try to do it with as little imagination as possible. Also: sing as if you're tone deaf. Pluck a few guitar strings, sounding as lame as possible. You're getting the idea. you just can't dance to it. A lot of language here, very little art.

The Trouser Press Guide to New Wave Records

1983[6]

SG

[...] Rather unusual even for that time, [The Red Crayola] faded into limbo until turning up to do sessions in 1976 with the art rock band, Art & Language, which yielded the demos collected on Corrected Slogans; work on the album parallels the serious/silly music of Robert Wyatt. Largely acoustic in nature, with extremely simple songs, complex with satirical/political lyrics, and operatic vocals, Corrected Slogans qualifies as rock only by association.

Image gallery

References