The Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow (2019)
The Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow (subtitled 50th Anniversary Box) is a seventeen-CD plus one-DVD box set by English avant-rock group Henry Cow; it was released by RēR Megacorp in November 2019. The box set comprises the previously released 2006 Henry Cow Box (excluding the bonus CD-single: "Unreleased Orckestra Extract") and the 2009 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set (including the bonus CD: A Cow Cabinet of Curiosities), totalling over sixteen hours. A bonus CD: Ex Box – Collected Fragments 1971–1978 was given to advance subscribers of the 2019 Box Redux, and contains newly recovered and previously unreleased recordings, plus the contents of the 2006 box set bonus CD-single: "Unreleased Orckestra Extract". The 2019 Box Redux plus the Ex Box bonus CD contains all the officially released studio and live recordings of Henry Cow, excluding "Bellycan" as released on the 1991 East Side Digital version of Legend,[a] and the complete version of "The Glove" from the 1991 East Side Digital version of Unrest.
The Henry Cow Box Redux was released to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the formation of Henry Cow. Included in the box set are three 60-page booklets: Book 1: The Studio Volumes 1–7; Book 2: The Road Volumes 8–12; and Book 3: The Road Volumes 13–17. All the studio CDs were remastered by Bob Drake. RēR Megacorp also released the Ex Box bonus CD as a free-standing album.
In December 2022, a supplemental CD was released, Volume 20: Glastonbury and Elsewhere containing unreleased material uncovered after the release of the Redux box set in 2019.
A review of The Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow in Moors Magazine called Henry Cow "one of the most fascinating and best British bands ever".[2] It described their music as having "the mentality of free jazz and the discipline of the intelligent rock of Zappa".[2] It was always "exciting" and "surprising" music and just as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. The reviewer concluded that "[t]his box is an absolute must for lovers of intelligent jazz rock."[2]
Reviewing the box set in the British progressive rock magazine, Prog, Mike Barnes called Henry Cow "one of the most exploratory groups of the 70s".[3] He praised their studio albums in the box, from the "dazzling" Canterbury-influenced debut, Legend, to the "concise, chamber ensemble feel" of Western Culture. The remainder of the collection, their live recordings, completes the Henry Cow story. He said the band's improvisations were "rare in progressive rock", but felt that while much of their music was "extraordinary", not all of it worked.[3] For example, Barnes described the Trondheim concert as "desultory instrumental conversations", and Tim Hodgkinson's "severe, serialist 16-minute" "Erk Gah" on the DVD in Verey "a very tough nut to crack".[3] But Barnes complemented the performance in Bremen of Fred Frith's "New Suite", and the concert in Halsteren where the band played with themes from Hodgkinson's "Living in the Heart of the Beast".[3]
Roger Trenwith wrote in The Progressive Aspect that this box set "messes with your preconceptions of compositional construction and recording techniques".[4] He said Henry Cow's music "is not ... easy listening", but it is "hugely imaginative, often intentionally humorous, more than occasionally terrifying, and always interesting".[4] He complimented Bob Drake on his remastering of the band's studio albums, adding that their "clarity ... is stunning". Trenwith stated that Henry Cow's studio work illustrates how varied their music was and how it progressed from one album to the next. He called In Praise of Learning "frighteningly good", but felt that Western Culture was "an academic exercise [that] is quite satisfying, but ... lack[ing] something". Of the live recordings, Trenwith listed the Bremen CD as the highlight, with its "thrilling display of quality chamber rock" in "New Suite", and the "Der Kunst Der Orgel" improvisation that he felt is "less ethereal, and ... more involving" than the Trondheim set.[4] Trenwith concluded that the three booklets are full of interesting material and "are worthy of a review themselves".[4]
The bonus tracks "The Glove" and "Torch Fire" that appear on the 1991 East Side Digital CD release of Unrest are included on the Cow Cabinet of Curiosities and Ex Box – Collected Fragments 1971–1978 bonus CDs respectively,[10] although only an excerpted version of "The Glove" is included.
On the LP and CD releases of In Praise of Learning, "Beginning: The Long March" and "Morning Star" are credited to Henry Cow and Slapp Happy[12]
The bonus track "Lovers of Gold" that appears on the 1991 East Side Digital CD release of In Praise of Learning is included on the Cow Cabinet of Curiosities bonus CD[13]
The bonus tracks "Viva Pa Ubu", "Look Back (alt)" and "Slice" that appear on the CD releases of Western Culture are included on the Ex Box – Collected Fragments 1971–1978 bonus CD[14]
The CD track listing incorrectly credits Greaves as appearing on "Göteborg 1"; this error is noted in the liner notes (see Stockholm & Göteborg for details)
This is a 250-copy limited edition CD given to subscribers of the Box Redux, although RēR Megacorp also sold the disk as a free-standing album. The CD was compiled by Chris Cutler and mastered by Bob Drake at Studio Midi-Pyrenees in France in October 2019. It comprises previously unreleased recordings, bonus tracks that appeared on reissues of some of Henry Cow's studio albums, plus the two tracks by the Orckestra that were released on the bonus CD-single, "Unreleased Orckestra Extract" that was given to subscribers of the 2006 Henry Cow Box.[6]
Track 1: A demo recorded in 1971 in Cambridge and features Henry Cow's second drummer, Sean Jenkins;[b] it was sent to John Peel's Rockertunity Knocks competition, which resulted in the composition being performed by Henry Cow on the John Peel Show on 4 May 1971 in London.[15][17]
Tracks 2–3: Remixed versions of "Amygdala" (with Cooper playing bassoon) and "Nine Funerals of the Citizen King" from Henry Cow's first album, Legend by Hodgkinson at Cold Storage Studios in London in 1990; previously released in 1991 on the East Side Digital CD reissue of Legend.
Tracks 4–7: Taken from a cassette recording of a concert at the Theatre Royal in Sheffield on 9 June 1974 while on tour with Captain Beefheart; "Free" is a bridge, while "Fugue" is an extract from Frith's "With the Yellow Half-Moon and Blue Star".
Track 8: Taken from a cassette recording made during Henry Cow's May 1976 tour of Scandinavia where as a quartet of Cooper, Cutler, Frith and Hodgkinson they improvised their performance in the dark; another recording from the tour in Trondheim was released in The 40th Anniversary Henry Cow Box Set#Volume 4–5: Trondheim.
Track 9: An outtake from recordings for side two of Unrest; previously released as a bonus track in 1991 on the East Side Digital's CD reissue of Unrest.
Tracks 10–11: Taken from a cassette recording of an Orckestra concert in Europe in March–May 1978; previously released on a bonus mini-CD, "Unreleased Orckestra Extract" that was given to subscribers of the 2006 Henry Cow Box.
Tracks 12–14: Outtakes from Henry Cow's recordings at Sunrise Studios in Kirchberg, Switzerland in January 1978 ("Viva Pa Ubu") and July–August 1978 ("Slice", "Look Back, Alt Version");[c] previously released in 2001 and 2002 on the Recommend and East Side Digital CD reissues of Western Culture respectively.[14]
Tracks 15–17: Taken from a cassette recording of a concert at the Teatro Olimpico in Parma, Italy on 20 February 1977.
Released in December 2022 as a supplement to The Henry Cow Box Redux, it contains additional unreleased material uncovered after the release of the box set in 2019.[18] Cutler stated in the liner notes that these recordings "are not hi fidelity", but in some instances are the only surviving recordings to feature these Henry Cow lineups".[18]
Glastonbury and Elsewhere was released in two forms, as a standalone digipak, and in a sleeve designed to fit into the Redux box.
Lindsay Cooper is credited playing on "Half Asleep, Half Awake" but as the song was recorded at the Manor in November 1973 during Greasy Truckers Live at Dingwalls Dance Hall recordings Geoff Leigh was still playing with the band instead.
Track 2: Recorded at The Manor, Oxfordshire in November 1973; extract of a studio session recorded by a film crew
Track 3: Recorded live at Chaumont, Salles de Fetes, France in November 1976; additional extracts from the Chaumont concert (see Volume 14: Later and Post-Virgin); this improvisation runs into Frith's "Ruins"
Track 4: Recorded live somewhere in France in April 1978 with Phil Minton;[e] Minton (from the Mike Westbrook Brass Band) had joined Frith, Hodgkinson and Cutler (all that remained of Henry Cow at the time), and calling themselves "The Lions of Desire", they performed in Spain and France in April 1978;[17] includes extracts from Frith's "Ruins" and Westbrook's "Mourn not the Dead", "Lady Howard's Coach" and "Virgin of Illinois"; this is the only known recording from this lineup
Track 5: Recorded live in Bilbao, Teatro S. Vincente, Spain in November 1977; includes extracts from Frith's "Teenbeat", two untitled Frith compositions, and Thelonious Monk's "Jackie-ing"
^ abThe demo recording of "Poglith Drives a Vauxhall Viva" did not feature Martin Ditcham on drums as the "Ex Box" liner notes state,[6] but Henry Cow's previous drummer, Sean Jenkins.[15][16][17]
^The "Ex Box" liner notes incorrectly state that "Slice" and "Look Back, Alt Version" were recorded at Sunrise Studios in January 1978.[6] They were recorded at Sunrise Studios in July–August 1978.[14]
^"Poglith Drives a Vauxhall Viva" was recorded in June 1971, not 1972 as the Glastonbury and Elsewhere liner notes state;[18] Martin Ditcham (on drums) was only with Henry Cow between May and September 1971.[17]
^"The Lions of Desire, with Phil Minton" was recorded in April 1978,[17] not 1977 as the Glastonbury and Elsewhere liner notes state.[18]
Cutler, Chris, ed. (2019a). "Book 1: The Studio – Official Releases". The Henry Cow Box Redux: The Complete Henry Cow (box set booklet). Henry Cow. London: Recommended Records.