Peter Hammill is set to release his first ever covers album ‘In Translation’, his first ever covers album, now you know this news is going to excite aruond these parts. Here’s what the press release that just landed here tells us…

“The album comprises songs from a variety of musical worlds; Classical, American Songbook, Italian Pop, and Tango.  In all but three cases, Hammill has also translated the lyrics into English. These songs have remarkable stories behind them.   While true to the original spirit, they have gone through subtle mutations. Hammill makes each his own, fresh and new”.

Peter Hammill on his forthcoming album ‘In Translation’…

    “This collection seems to fit together as a group, not least because most of these songs are to do with measures of dislocation, of loss, of some kind of imagined future which didn’t arrive.”

    “Only three of the songs here were originally in English; I’ve translated the rest, having had a some experience of song translation over the years. I didn’t feel that I could do proper justice to the songs if I sang them in the original languages. My approach has always been to make cultural rather than strictly linguistic translations, so that the spirit of the song rather than its precise narrative is rendered.”

    “I was unfamiliar with several of these songs before I began this project. One discovery led on to another in a kind of paper trail. It’s worth noting that many of the back stories to the songs are interesting and some of the writers and singers had a spectacularly dramatic time of things. I doff my hat to these sometimes complicated lives. I hope I’ve addressed the material, the writers, and the original performers, with due and proper respect. Inevitably though there’s spin here, mine all mine.”

    “These recordings were made, of course, in the time of Covid and lockdown. But also in the knowledge that Brexit – in all its horror – was fast approaching. So these performances of, for the most part, European songs were my last as a European singer, with all the rights and privileges that has brought me for so many years.”

Peter Hammill ‘In Translation’ — Album release on CD and Digital date TBC

Peter Hammill ‘In Translation’ — Album release on White Vinyl date TBC

Here comes the tracklisting

  1. The Folks Who Live On The Hill – 1937 piece by Kern/Hammerstein
  2. Hotel Supramonte – composed by Fabrizio De André
  3. Oblivion – composer Astor Piazzola
  4. Ciao Amore – 1967 song by Luigi Tenco
  5. This Nearly Was Mine – from the musical South Pacific by Rogers/Hammerstein
  6. After A Dream – by Gabriel Fauré
  7. Ballad For My Death – a second Piazzolla piece
  8. I Who Have Nothing – originally an Italian song by Carlo Donida and Giulio ‘Mogol’ Rapetti. The English lyrics are by songwriting giants Leiber and Stoller. Recorded by Ben E King and Shirley Bassey
  9. Il Vino – composed by Piero Ciampi
  10. Lost To The World – written by Gustav Mahler

Previously on these fractured pages

ORGAN THING: A first taste of a new Cheer Accident album, the day they covered Peter Hammill, some Tainted Love and the times Marc Almond did as well…

ORGAN THING: The Stranglers fronted by Peter Hammill, with Robert Fripp in the mix, posted today in celebration of Dave Greenfield…

ORGAN THING: The Stranglers fronted by Peter Hammill, with Robert Fripp in the mix, posted today in celebration of Dave Greenfield…

ORGAN THING: A man just knocked on the door, a postman, a package, the latest Peter Hammill album, a live album called X…

9 responses to “ORGAN THING: Peter Hammill is set to release his first ever covers album…”

  1. Just want notifies

  2. I am thrilled and look forward to this album with impatience!

    1. don’t well, more news soon hopefully

  3. […] blue announcement of Peter Hammill’s first ever album of other people’s songs and the news piece we ran this morning, the question of the tracklist and well, here comes a taste of the choices in the shape of the […]

  4. […] year old verison version of the Organ website by the way – Organ has been around since 1986), the original news story is here. We’ll be along with a review closer to the release date. Oh! Wow, that version of I Who have […]

  5. […] ten year old verison version of the Organ website by the way – Organ has been around since 1986), the original news story is here. We’ll be along with a review closer to the release date. Oh! Wow, that version of I Who have […]

  6. […] And while we’re here and listening to the excellent new Peter Hammill album that really is everything you all hope, we’ll par kthis pieceof 1975 delight […]

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