He Said / Hail
Artist He Said
Album Title: Hail
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Rock: General Rock
Format CD
Released 00/00/1986
Label Mute Records Ltd.
Catalog No CD STUMM 29
Bar Code No none
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. Pump (6:11)
2. Shapes To Escape (4:26)
3. Kidnap Yourself (4:02)
4. I Fall Into Your Arms (5:16)
5. Only One I (4:05)
6. Com'era Dov'era (5:27)
7. FlagWearing (5:38)
8. Do You Mean That? (3:41)
9. Pump (Inst) (2:23)
10. Pulling 3gs (3:45)
11. Pale Feet (4:43)
12. Only One I - II (7:49)
13. To & Fro (4:31)
Date Acquired 10/24/1992
Personal Rating
Acquired from Roadrunner Records
Purchase Price 6.00

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Wilson Neate

On first hearing, Graham Lewis' 1986 debut solo album -- released under the name He Said -- must have sounded like a considerable change in direction for the Wire bassist. In contrast with the often abrasive, deconstructed rock of early Wire records like Pink Flag and Chairs Missing and the abstract soundscapes Lewis recorded with Bruce Gilbert as Dome in the early '80s, He Said marked a thoughtful foray into more mainstream territory with one eye on the dancefloor. For the most part, Hail is an accessible, electronically oriented album boasting atmospheric arrangements and programmed beats. On numbers like "Pump" and the plaintive "Com'era Dov'era," the combination of drifting grooves and deep, laid-back vocals finds Lewis making himself over as an alternative Bryan Ferry. (Former Roxy Music cohort Brian Eno even contributes keyboards on "I Fall Into Your Arms.") Some tracks wouldn't have sounded out of place in the charts at the time, particularly those with more melody, like the upbeat "Only One I" or the duet "Do You Mean That?" (with Angela Conway). He Said's pop leanings notwithstanding, Hail has roots in the experimental ethos informing previous Lewis projects like Dome, for which idiosyncratic aural collages were constructed from loops of found sound, fragmented instrumentation, and repetitive rhythms. While Hail tends toward more orthodox song arrangements, it incorporates familiar Gilbert/Lewis ingredients. The specter of Dome makes its presence heard on the quirky "Kidnap Yourself," with its jumpy beat and recurrent, cartoonish noise bursts, and on "Flagwearing," which features snatches of gospel singing and a rare vocal turn from Bruce Gilbert, who also plays the possibly apocryphal "three-hand guitar." Working more than before within a mainstream idiom, Lewis brings a characteristically intelligent twist to his material. This sensibility would be further explored on He Said's 1988 follow-up, Take Care.
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